How can I get neovim to load my init.vim file when in sudo mode?

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I'm having an issue with neovim on a Raspberry Pi coding with Python.



I have installed it by sudo apt-get install neovim, and it works using just the nvim in commandline.
For some reason I can create a file with nvim filename.py, but it will end as a readonly file.



If I run neovim as sudo nvim instead, then I can write to the file but my init.vim file is not being loaded then.
I have created it here: /home/pi/.config/nvim/init.vim
Does it have to be placed elsewhere or can I make some sort of link to it?



I have also tried giving filename.py writing permission with:
sudo chmod a+w filename.py but that just leads me to an errorcode E509 when trying to save by :wq. It will save with :wq! though










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  • 1





    I am not familiar with NeoVim (I just use vim), It sounds like you start in Read Only mode. Once you opened your file in vim, could you try: :set noro? That should disable read only mode. If that works, you are setting ro somewhere in your init.vim.

    – Johan
    Jan 14 at 16:06











  • I am not sure how init.vim is located, I assume it uses $HOME. Could you show me the output of this command? sudo env | grep HOME

    – Johan
    Jan 14 at 16:14















0















I'm having an issue with neovim on a Raspberry Pi coding with Python.



I have installed it by sudo apt-get install neovim, and it works using just the nvim in commandline.
For some reason I can create a file with nvim filename.py, but it will end as a readonly file.



If I run neovim as sudo nvim instead, then I can write to the file but my init.vim file is not being loaded then.
I have created it here: /home/pi/.config/nvim/init.vim
Does it have to be placed elsewhere or can I make some sort of link to it?



I have also tried giving filename.py writing permission with:
sudo chmod a+w filename.py but that just leads me to an errorcode E509 when trying to save by :wq. It will save with :wq! though










share|improve this question

















  • 1





    I am not familiar with NeoVim (I just use vim), It sounds like you start in Read Only mode. Once you opened your file in vim, could you try: :set noro? That should disable read only mode. If that works, you are setting ro somewhere in your init.vim.

    – Johan
    Jan 14 at 16:06











  • I am not sure how init.vim is located, I assume it uses $HOME. Could you show me the output of this command? sudo env | grep HOME

    – Johan
    Jan 14 at 16:14













0












0








0








I'm having an issue with neovim on a Raspberry Pi coding with Python.



I have installed it by sudo apt-get install neovim, and it works using just the nvim in commandline.
For some reason I can create a file with nvim filename.py, but it will end as a readonly file.



If I run neovim as sudo nvim instead, then I can write to the file but my init.vim file is not being loaded then.
I have created it here: /home/pi/.config/nvim/init.vim
Does it have to be placed elsewhere or can I make some sort of link to it?



I have also tried giving filename.py writing permission with:
sudo chmod a+w filename.py but that just leads me to an errorcode E509 when trying to save by :wq. It will save with :wq! though










share|improve this question














I'm having an issue with neovim on a Raspberry Pi coding with Python.



I have installed it by sudo apt-get install neovim, and it works using just the nvim in commandline.
For some reason I can create a file with nvim filename.py, but it will end as a readonly file.



If I run neovim as sudo nvim instead, then I can write to the file but my init.vim file is not being loaded then.
I have created it here: /home/pi/.config/nvim/init.vim
Does it have to be placed elsewhere or can I make some sort of link to it?



I have also tried giving filename.py writing permission with:
sudo chmod a+w filename.py but that just leads me to an errorcode E509 when trying to save by :wq. It will save with :wq! though







vim






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share|improve this question











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asked Jan 14 at 13:03









Brian FrandsenBrian Frandsen

1




1







  • 1





    I am not familiar with NeoVim (I just use vim), It sounds like you start in Read Only mode. Once you opened your file in vim, could you try: :set noro? That should disable read only mode. If that works, you are setting ro somewhere in your init.vim.

    – Johan
    Jan 14 at 16:06











  • I am not sure how init.vim is located, I assume it uses $HOME. Could you show me the output of this command? sudo env | grep HOME

    – Johan
    Jan 14 at 16:14












  • 1





    I am not familiar with NeoVim (I just use vim), It sounds like you start in Read Only mode. Once you opened your file in vim, could you try: :set noro? That should disable read only mode. If that works, you are setting ro somewhere in your init.vim.

    – Johan
    Jan 14 at 16:06











  • I am not sure how init.vim is located, I assume it uses $HOME. Could you show me the output of this command? sudo env | grep HOME

    – Johan
    Jan 14 at 16:14







1




1





I am not familiar with NeoVim (I just use vim), It sounds like you start in Read Only mode. Once you opened your file in vim, could you try: :set noro? That should disable read only mode. If that works, you are setting ro somewhere in your init.vim.

– Johan
Jan 14 at 16:06





I am not familiar with NeoVim (I just use vim), It sounds like you start in Read Only mode. Once you opened your file in vim, could you try: :set noro? That should disable read only mode. If that works, you are setting ro somewhere in your init.vim.

– Johan
Jan 14 at 16:06













I am not sure how init.vim is located, I assume it uses $HOME. Could you show me the output of this command? sudo env | grep HOME

– Johan
Jan 14 at 16:14





I am not sure how init.vim is located, I assume it uses $HOME. Could you show me the output of this command? sudo env | grep HOME

– Johan
Jan 14 at 16:14










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