The `vim` directory here is what gets symb linked to `~/.vim`, `~/.nvim`, and `~/.config/nvim`.
Inside, the `init.vim` file will also get symblinked to `~/.vimrc` and `~/.nvimrc`. The other included
directories are mostly standard vim directories that provide some additional configuration files.
The exceptions would be `backup`, which becomes the new default location for storing backup files
while editing. The `tmp` directory is for storing session information. The `rc` directory is where
all the `vimrc` work gets done.
The rc Files
------------
The `init.vim` file essentially just sets vim up to import the rc files from the `rc` directory.
The actual configuration exists almost entirely in the `rc` directory. Each file should be fairly
self explanatory.
One problem with syncing rc file between different machines, is that you may have different usages.
That is solved by this framework by making use of `local.rc` files. For every `*.rc.vim`, you may
provide a `*.local.rc.vim` file which will be loaded after the shared one. Here you can override
or add anything to the synced configuration without fear of it causing problems on any other machine.
Note
----
I am not the original creators of some of the files included in the vim directory and only re-host them out of convienince. If I am missing any licensing information I'd be happy to attach it.