1*gui.txt* For Vim version 7.4. Last change: 2014 Mar 08 2 3 4 VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar 5 6 7Vim's Graphical User Interface *gui* *GUI* 8 91. Starting the GUI |gui-start| 102. Scrollbars |gui-scrollbars| 113. Mouse Control |gui-mouse| 124. Making GUI Selections |gui-selections| 135. Menus |menus| 146. Extras |gui-extras| 157. Shell Commands |gui-shell| 16 17Other GUI documentation: 18|gui_x11.txt| For specific items of the X11 GUI. 19|gui_w32.txt| For specific items of the Win32 GUI. 20 21{Vi does not have any of these commands} 22 23============================================================================== 241. Starting the GUI *gui-start* *E229* *E233* 25 26First you must make sure you actually have a version of Vim with the GUI code 27included. You can check this with the ":version" command, it says "with xxx 28GUI", where "xxx" is X11-Motif, X11-Athena, Photon, GTK, GTK2, etc., or 29"MS-Windows 32 bit GUI version". 30 31How to start the GUI depends on the system used. Mostly you can run the 32GUI version of Vim with: 33 gvim [options] [files...] 34 35The X11 version of Vim can run both in GUI and in non-GUI mode. See 36|gui-x11-start|. 37 38 *gui-init* *gvimrc* *.gvimrc* *_gvimrc* *$MYGVIMRC* 39The gvimrc file is where GUI-specific startup commands should be placed. It 40is always sourced after the |vimrc| file. If you have one then the $MYGVIMRC 41environment variable has its name. 42 43When the GUI starts up initializations are carried out, in this order: 44- The 'term' option is set to "builtin_gui" and terminal options are reset to 45 their default value for the GUI |terminal-options|. 46- If the system menu file exists, it is sourced. The name of this file is 47 normally "$VIMRUNTIME/menu.vim". You can check this with ":version". Also 48 see |$VIMRUNTIME|. To skip loading the system menu include 'M' in 49 'guioptions'. *buffers-menu* *no_buffers_menu* 50 The system menu file includes a "Buffers" menu. If you don't want this, set 51 the "no_buffers_menu" variable in your .vimrc (not .gvimrc!): > 52 :let no_buffers_menu = 1 53< NOTE: Switching on syntax highlighting also loads the menu file, thus 54 disabling the Buffers menu must be done before ":syntax on". 55 The path names are truncated to 35 characters. You can truncate them at a 56 different length, for example 50, like this: > 57 :let bmenu_max_pathlen = 50 58- If the "-U {gvimrc}" command-line option has been used when starting Vim, 59 the {gvimrc} file will be read for initializations. The following 60 initializations are skipped. When {gvimrc} is "NONE" no file will be read 61 for initializations. 62- For Unix and MS-Windows, if the system gvimrc exists, it is sourced. The 63 name of this file is normally "$VIM/gvimrc". You can check this with 64 ":version". Also see |$VIM|. 65- The following are tried, and only the first one that exists is used: 66 - If the GVIMINIT environment variable exists and is not empty, it is 67 executed as an Ex command. 68 - If the user gvimrc file exists, it is sourced. The name of this file is 69 normally "$HOME/.gvimrc". You can check this with ":version". 70 - For Win32, when $HOME is not set, "$VIM\_gvimrc" is used. 71 - When a "_gvimrc" file is not found, ".gvimrc" is tried too. And vice 72 versa. 73 The name of the first file found is stored in $MYGVIMRC, unless it was 74 already set. 75- If the 'exrc' option is set (which is NOT the default) the file ./.gvimrc 76 is sourced, if it exists and isn't the same file as the system or user 77 gvimrc file. If this file is not owned by you, some security restrictions 78 apply. When ".gvimrc" is not found, "_gvimrc" is tried too. For Macintosh 79 and DOS/Win32 "_gvimrc" is tried first. 80 81NOTE: All but the first one are not carried out if Vim was started with 82"-u NONE" and no "-U" argument was given, or when started with "-U NONE". 83 84All this happens AFTER the normal Vim initializations, like reading your 85.vimrc file. See |initialization|. 86But the GUI window is only opened after all the initializations have been 87carried out. If you want some commands to be executed just after opening the 88GUI window, use the |GUIEnter| autocommand event. Example: > 89 :autocmd GUIEnter * winpos 100 50 90 91You can use the gvimrc files to set up your own customized menus (see |:menu|) 92and initialize other things that you may want to set up differently from the 93terminal version. 94 95Recommended place for your personal GUI initializations: 96 Unix $HOME/.gvimrc or $HOME/.vim/gvimrc 97 OS/2 $HOME/.gvimrc, $HOME/vimfiles/gvimrc 98 or $VIM/.gvimrc 99 MS-DOS and Win32 $HOME/_gvimrc, $HOME/vimfiles/gvimrc 100 or $VIM/_gvimrc 101 Amiga s:.gvimrc, home:.gvimrc, home:vimfiles:gvimrc 102 or $VIM/.gvimrc 103 104The personal initialization files are searched in the order specified above 105and only the first one that is found is read. 106 107There are a number of options which only have meaning in the GUI version of 108Vim. These are 'guicursor', 'guifont', 'guipty' and 'guioptions'. They are 109documented in |options.txt| with all the other options. 110 111If using the Motif or Athena version of the GUI (but not for the GTK+ or 112Win32 version), a number of X resources are available. See |gui-resources|. 113 114Another way to set the colors for different occasions is with highlight 115groups. The "Normal" group is used to set the background and foreground 116colors. Example (which looks nice): > 117 118 :highlight Normal guibg=grey90 119 120The "guibg" and "guifg" settings override the normal background and 121foreground settings. The other settings for the Normal highlight group are 122not used. Use the 'guifont' option to set the font. 123 124Also check out the 'guicursor' option, to set the colors for the cursor in 125various modes. 126 127Vim tries to make the window fit on the screen when it starts up. This avoids 128that you can't see part of it. On the X Window System this requires a bit of 129guesswork. You can change the height that is used for the window title and a 130task bar with the 'guiheadroom' option. 131 132 *:winp* *:winpos* *E188* 133:winp[os] 134 Display current position of the top left corner of the GUI vim 135 window in pixels. Does not work in all versions. 136 Also see |getwinposx()| and |getwinposy()|. 137 138:winp[os] {X} {Y} *E466* 139 Put the GUI vim window at the given {X} and {Y} coordinates. 140 The coordinates should specify the position in pixels of the 141 top left corner of the window. Does not work in all versions. 142 Does work in an (new) xterm |xterm-color|. 143 When the GUI window has not been opened yet, the values are 144 remembered until the window is opened. The position is 145 adjusted to make the window fit on the screen (if possible). 146 147 *:win* *:winsize* *E465* 148:win[size] {width} {height} 149 Set the window height to {width} by {height} characters. 150 Obsolete, use ":set lines=11 columns=22". 151 If you get less lines than expected, check the 'guiheadroom' 152 option. 153 154If you are running the X Window System, you can get information about the 155window Vim is running in with these commands: > 156 :!xwininfo -id $WINDOWID 157 :!xprop -id $WINDOWID 158 :execute '!xwininfo -id ' . v:windowid 159 :execute '!xprop -id ' . v:windowid 160< 161 *gui-IME* *iBus* 162Input methods for international characters in X that rely on the XIM 163framework, most notably iBus, have been known to produce undesirable results 164in gVim. These may include an inability to enter spaces, or long delays 165between typing a character and it being recognized by the application. 166 167One workaround that has been successful, for unknown reasons, is to prevent 168gvim from forking into the background by starting it with the |-f| argument. 169 170============================================================================== 1712. Scrollbars *gui-scrollbars* 172 173There are vertical scrollbars and a horizontal scrollbar. You may 174configure which ones appear with the 'guioptions' option. 175 176The interface looks like this (with ":set guioptions=mlrb"): 177 178 +------------------------------+ ` 179 | File Edit Help | <- Menu bar (m) ` 180 +-+--------------------------+-+ ` 181 |^| |^| ` 182 |#| Text area. |#| ` 183 | | | | ` 184 |v|__________________________|v| ` 185 Normal status line -> |-+ File.c 5,2 +-| ` 186 between Vim windows |^|""""""""""""""""""""""""""|^| ` 187 | | | | ` 188 | | Another file buffer. | | ` 189 | | | | ` 190 |#| |#| ` 191 Left scrollbar (l) -> |#| |#| <- Right ` 192 |#| |#| scrollbar (r) ` 193 | | | | ` 194 |v| |v| ` 195 +-+--------------------------+-+ ` 196 | |< #### >| | <- Bottom ` 197 +-+--------------------------+-+ scrollbar (b) ` 198 199Any of the scrollbar or menu components may be turned off by not putting the 200appropriate letter in the 'guioptions' string. The bottom scrollbar is 201only useful when 'nowrap' is set. 202 203 204VERTICAL SCROLLBARS *gui-vert-scroll* 205 206Each Vim window has a scrollbar next to it which may be scrolled up and down 207to move through the text in that buffer. The size of the scrollbar-thumb 208indicates the fraction of the buffer which can be seen in the window. 209When the scrollbar is dragged all the way down, the last line of the file 210will appear in the top of the window. 211 212If a window is shrunk to zero height (by the growth of another window) its 213scrollbar disappears. It reappears when the window is restored. 214 215If a window is vertically split, it will get a scrollbar when it is the 216current window and when, taking the middle of the current window and drawing a 217vertical line, this line goes through the window. 218When there are scrollbars on both sides, and the middle of the current window 219is on the left half, the right scrollbar column will contain scrollbars for 220the rightmost windows. The same happens on the other side. 221 222 223HORIZONTAL SCROLLBARS *gui-horiz-scroll* 224 225The horizontal scrollbar (at the bottom of the Vim GUI) may be used to 226scroll text sideways when the 'wrap' option is turned off. The 227scrollbar-thumb size is such that the text of the longest visible line may be 228scrolled as far as possible left and right. The cursor is moved when 229necessary, it must remain on a visible character (unless 'virtualedit' is 230set). 231 232Computing the length of the longest visible line takes quite a bit of 233computation, and it has to be done every time something changes. If this 234takes too much time or you don't like the cursor jumping to another line, 235include the 'h' flag in 'guioptions'. Then the scrolling is limited by the 236text of the current cursor line. 237 238 *athena-intellimouse* 239If you have an Intellimouse and an X server that supports using the wheel, 240then you can use the wheel to scroll the text up and down in gvim. This works 241with XFree86 4.0 and later, and with some older versions when you add patches. 242See |scroll-mouse-wheel|. 243 244For older versions of XFree86 you must patch your X server. The following 245page has a bit of information about using the Intellimouse on Linux as well as 246links to the patches and X server binaries (may not have the one you need 247though): 248 http://www.inria.fr/koala/colas/mouse-wheel-scroll/ 249 250============================================================================== 2513. Mouse Control *gui-mouse* 252 253The mouse only works if the appropriate flag in the 'mouse' option is set. 254When the GUI is switched on, and 'mouse' wasn't set yet, the 'mouse' option is 255automatically set to "a", enabling it for all modes except for the 256|hit-enter| prompt. If you don't want this, a good place to change the 257'mouse' option is the "gvimrc" file. 258 259Other options that are relevant: 260'mousefocus' window focus follows mouse pointer |gui-mouse-focus| 261'mousemodel' what mouse button does which action 262'mousehide' hide mouse pointer while typing text 263'selectmode' whether to start Select mode or Visual mode 264 265A quick way to set these is with the ":behave" command. 266 *:behave* *:be* 267:be[have] {model} Set behavior for mouse and selection. Valid 268 arguments are: 269 mswin MS-Windows behavior 270 xterm Xterm behavior 271 272 Using ":behave" changes these options: 273 option mswin xterm ~ 274 'selectmode' "mouse,key" "" 275 'mousemodel' "popup" "extend" 276 'keymodel' "startsel,stopsel" "" 277 'selection' "exclusive" "inclusive" 278 279In the $VIMRUNTIME directory, there is a script called |mswin.vim|, which will 280also map a few keys to the MS-Windows cut/copy/paste commands. This is NOT 281compatible, since it uses the CTRL-V, CTRL-X and CTRL-C keys. If you don't 282mind, use this command: > 283 :so $VIMRUNTIME/mswin.vim 284 285For scrolling with a wheel on a mouse, see |scroll-mouse-wheel|. 286 287 2883.1 Moving Cursor with Mouse *gui-mouse-move* 289 290Click the left mouse button somewhere in a text buffer where you want the 291cursor to go, and it does! 292This works in when 'mouse' contains ~ 293Normal mode 'n' or 'a' 294Visual mode 'v' or 'a' 295Insert mode 'i' or 'a' 296 297Select mode is handled like Visual mode. 298 299You may use this with an operator such as 'd' to delete text from the current 300cursor position to the position you point to with the mouse. That is, you hit 301'd' and then click the mouse somewhere. 302 303 *gui-mouse-focus* 304The 'mousefocus' option can be set to make the keyboard focus follow the 305mouse pointer. This means that the window where the mouse pointer is, is the 306active window. Warning: this doesn't work very well when using a menu, 307because the menu command will always be applied to the top window. 308 309If you are on the ':' line (or '/' or '?'), then clicking the left or right 310mouse button will position the cursor on the ':' line (if 'mouse' contains 311'c', 'a' or 'A'). 312 313In any situation the middle mouse button may be clicked to paste the current 314selection. 315 316 3173.2 Selection with Mouse *gui-mouse-select* 318 319The mouse can be used to start a selection. How depends on the 'mousemodel' 320option: 321'mousemodel' is "extend": use the right mouse button 322'mousemodel' is "popup": use the left mouse button, while keeping the Shift 323key pressed. 324 325If there was no selection yet, this starts a selection from the old cursor 326position to the position pointed to with the mouse. If there already is a 327selection then the closest end will be extended. 328 329If 'selectmode' contains "mouse", then the selection will be in Select mode. 330This means that typing normal text will replace the selection. See 331|Select-mode|. Otherwise, the selection will be in Visual mode. 332 333Double clicking may be done to make the selection word-wise, triple clicking 334makes it line-wise, and quadruple clicking makes it rectangular block-wise. 335 336See |gui-selections| on how the selection is used. 337 338 3393.3 Other Text Selection with Mouse *gui-mouse-modeless* 340 *modeless-selection* 341A different kind of selection is used when: 342- in Command-line mode 343- in the Command-line window and pointing in another window 344- at the |hit-enter| prompt 345- whenever the current mode is not in the 'mouse' option 346- when holding the CTRL and SHIFT keys in the GUI 347 348Since Vim continues like the selection isn't there, and there is no mode 349associated with the selection, this is called modeless selection. Any text in 350the Vim window can be selected. Select the text by pressing the left mouse 351button at the start, drag to the end and release. To extend the selection, 352use the right mouse button when 'mousemodel' is "extend", or the left mouse 353button with the shift key pressed when 'mousemodel' is "popup". 354The selection is removed when the selected text is scrolled or changed. 355 356On the command line CTRL-Y can be used to copy the selection into the 357clipboard. To do this from Insert mode, use CTRL-O : CTRL-Y <CR>. When 358'guioptions' contains a or A (default on X11), the selection is automatically 359copied to the "* register. 360 361The middle mouse button can then paste the text. On non-X11 systems, you can 362use CTRL-R +. 363 364 3653.4 Using Mouse on Status Lines *gui-mouse-status* 366 367Clicking the left or right mouse button on the status line below a Vim 368window makes that window the current window. This actually happens on button 369release (to be able to distinguish a click from a drag action). 370 371With the left mouse button a status line can be dragged up and down, thus 372resizing the windows above and below it. This does not change window focus. 373 374The same can be used on the vertical separator: click to give the window left 375of it focus, drag left and right to make windows wider and narrower. 376 377 3783.5 Various Mouse Clicks *gui-mouse-various* 379 380 <S-LeftMouse> Search forward for the word under the mouse click. 381 When 'mousemodel' is "popup" this starts or extends a 382 selection. 383 <S-RightMouse> Search backward for the word under the mouse click. 384 <C-LeftMouse> Jump to the tag name under the mouse click. 385 <C-RightMouse> Jump back to position before the previous tag jump 386 (same as "CTRL-T") 387 388 3893.6 Mouse Mappings *gui-mouse-mapping* 390 391The mouse events, complete with modifiers, may be mapped. Eg: > 392 :map <S-LeftMouse> <RightMouse> 393 :map <S-LeftDrag> <RightDrag> 394 :map <S-LeftRelease> <RightRelease> 395 :map <2-S-LeftMouse> <2-RightMouse> 396 :map <2-S-LeftDrag> <2-RightDrag> 397 :map <2-S-LeftRelease> <2-RightRelease> 398 :map <3-S-LeftMouse> <3-RightMouse> 399 :map <3-S-LeftDrag> <3-RightDrag> 400 :map <3-S-LeftRelease> <3-RightRelease> 401 :map <4-S-LeftMouse> <4-RightMouse> 402 :map <4-S-LeftDrag> <4-RightDrag> 403 :map <4-S-LeftRelease> <4-RightRelease> 404These mappings make selection work the way it probably should in a Motif 405application, with shift-left mouse allowing for extending the visual area 406rather than the right mouse button. 407 408Mouse mapping with modifiers does not work for modeless selection. 409 410 4113.7 Drag and drop *drag-n-drop* 412 413You can drag and drop one or more files into the Vim window, where they will 414be opened as if a |:drop| command was used. 415 416If you hold down Shift while doing this, Vim changes to the first dropped 417file's directory. If you hold Ctrl Vim will always split a new window for the 418file. Otherwise it's only done if the current buffer has been changed. 419 420You can also drop a directory on Vim. This starts the explorer plugin for 421that directory (assuming it was enabled, otherwise you'll get an error 422message). Keep Shift pressed to change to the directory instead. 423 424If Vim happens to be editing a command line, the names of the dropped files 425and directories will be inserted at the cursor. This allows you to use these 426names with any Ex command. Special characters (space, tab, double quote and 427'|'; backslash on non-MS-Windows systems) will be escaped. 428 429============================================================================== 4304. Making GUI Selections *gui-selections* 431 432 *quotestar* 433You may make selections with the mouse (see |gui-mouse-select|), or by using 434Vim's Visual mode (see |v|). If 'a' is present in 'guioptions', then 435whenever a selection is started (Visual or Select mode), or when the selection 436is changed, Vim becomes the owner of the windowing system's primary selection 437(on MS-Windows the |gui-clipboard| is used; under X11, the |x11-selection| is 438used - you should read whichever of these is appropriate now). 439 440 *clipboard* 441There is a special register for storing this selection, it is the "* 442register. Nothing is put in here unless the information about what text is 443selected is about to change (e.g. with a left mouse click somewhere), or when 444another application wants to paste the selected text. Then the text is put 445in the "* register. For example, to cut a line and make it the current 446selection/put it on the clipboard: > 447 448 "*dd 449 450Similarly, when you want to paste a selection from another application, e.g., 451by clicking the middle mouse button, the selection is put in the "* register 452first, and then 'put' like any other register. For example, to put the 453selection (contents of the clipboard): > 454 455 "*p 456 457When using this register under X11, also see |x11-selection|. This also 458explains the related "+ register. 459 460Note that when pasting text from one Vim into another separate Vim, the type 461of selection (character, line, or block) will also be copied. For other 462applications the type is always character. However, if the text gets 463transferred via the |x11-cut-buffer|, the selection type is ALWAYS lost. 464 465When the "unnamed" string is included in the 'clipboard' option, the unnamed 466register is the same as the "* register. Thus you can yank to and paste the 467selection without prepending "* to commands. 468 469============================================================================== 4705. Menus *menus* 471 472For an introduction see |usr_42.txt| in the user manual. 473 474 4755.1 Using Menus *using-menus* 476 477Basically, menus can be used just like mappings. You can define your own 478menus, as many as you like. 479Long-time Vim users won't use menus much. But the power is in adding your own 480menus and menu items. They are most useful for things that you can't remember 481what the key sequence was. 482 483For creating menus in a different language, see |:menutrans|. 484 485 *menu.vim* 486The default menus are read from the file "$VIMRUNTIME/menu.vim". See 487|$VIMRUNTIME| for where the path comes from. You can set up your own menus. 488Starting off with the default set is a good idea. You can add more items, or, 489if you don't like the defaults at all, start with removing all menus 490|:unmenu-all|. You can also avoid the default menus being loaded by adding 491this line to your .vimrc file (NOT your .gvimrc file!): > 492 :let did_install_default_menus = 1 493If you also want to avoid the Syntax menu: > 494 :let did_install_syntax_menu = 1 495The first item in the Syntax menu can be used to show all available filetypes 496in the menu (which can take a bit of time to load). If you want to have all 497filetypes already present at startup, add: > 498 :let do_syntax_sel_menu = 1 499 500< 501 *console-menus* 502Although this documentation is in the GUI section, you can actually use menus 503in console mode too. You will have to load |menu.vim| explicitly then, it is 504not done by default. You can use the |:emenu| command and command-line 505completion with 'wildmenu' to access the menu entries almost like a real menu 506system. To do this, put these commands in your .vimrc file: > 507 :source $VIMRUNTIME/menu.vim 508 :set wildmenu 509 :set cpo-=< 510 :set wcm=<C-Z> 511 :map <F4> :emenu <C-Z> 512Pressing <F4> will start the menu. You can now use the cursor keys to select 513a menu entry. Hit <Enter> to execute it. Hit <Esc> if you want to cancel. 514This does require the |+menu| feature enabled at compile time. 515 516 *tear-off-menus* 517GTK+ and Motif support Tear-off menus. These are sort of sticky menus or 518pop-up menus that are present all the time. If the resizing does not work 519correctly, this may be caused by using something like "Vim*geometry" in the 520defaults. Use "Vim.geometry" instead. 521 522The Win32 GUI version emulates Motif's tear-off menus. Actually, a Motif user 523will spot the differences easily, but hopefully they're just as useful. You 524can also use the |:tearoff| command together with |hidden-menus| to create 525floating menus that do not appear on the main menu bar. 526 527 5285.2 Creating New Menus *creating-menus* 529 530 *:me* *:menu* *:noreme* *:noremenu* 531 *:am* *:amenu* *:an* *:anoremenu* 532 *:nme* *:nmenu* *:nnoreme* *:nnoremenu* 533 *:ome* *:omenu* *:onoreme* *:onoremenu* 534 *:vme* *:vmenu* *:vnoreme* *:vnoremenu* 535 *:xme* *:xmenu* *:xnoreme* *:xnoremenu* 536 *:sme* *:smenu* *:snoreme* *:snoremenu* 537 *:ime* *:imenu* *:inoreme* *:inoremenu* 538 *:cme* *:cmenu* *:cnoreme* *:cnoremenu* 539 *E330* *E327* *E331* *E336* *E333* 540 *E328* *E329* *E337* *E792* 541To create a new menu item, use the ":menu" commands. They are mostly like 542the ":map" set of commands but the first argument is a menu item name, given 543as a path of menus and submenus with a '.' between them, e.g.: > 544 545 :menu File.Save :w<CR> 546 :inoremenu File.Save <C-O>:w<CR> 547 :menu Edit.Big\ Changes.Delete\ All\ Spaces :%s/[ ^I]//g<CR> 548 549This last one will create a new item in the menu bar called "Edit", holding 550the mouse button down on this will pop up a menu containing the item 551"Big Changes", which is a sub-menu containing the item "Delete All Spaces", 552which when selected, performs the operation. 553 554Special characters in a menu name: 555 556 & The next character is the shortcut key. Make sure each 557 shortcut key is only used once in a (sub)menu. If you want to 558 insert a literal "&" in the menu name use "&&". 559 <Tab> Separates the menu name from right-aligned text. This can be 560 used to show the equivalent typed command. The text "<Tab>" 561 can be used here for convenience. If you are using a real 562 tab, don't forget to put a backslash before it! 563Example: > 564 565 :amenu &File.&Open<Tab>:e :browse e<CR> 566 567[typed literally] 568With the shortcut "F" (while keeping the <Alt> key pressed), and then "O", 569this menu can be used. The second part is shown as "Open :e". The ":e" 570is right aligned, and the "O" is underlined, to indicate it is the shortcut. 571 572The ":amenu" command can be used to define menu entries for all modes at once. 573To make the command work correctly, a character is automatically inserted for 574some modes: 575 mode inserted appended ~ 576 Normal nothing nothing 577 Visual <C-C> <C-\><C-G> 578 Insert <C-\><C-O> 579 Cmdline <C-C> <C-\><C-G> 580 Op-pending <C-C> <C-\><C-G> 581 582Appending CTRL-\ CTRL-G is for going back to insert mode when 'insertmode' is 583set. |CTRL-\_CTRL-G| 584 585Example: > 586 587 :amenu File.Next :next^M 588 589is equal to: > 590 591 :nmenu File.Next :next^M 592 :vmenu File.Next ^C:next^M^\^G 593 :imenu File.Next ^\^O:next^M 594 :cmenu File.Next ^C:next^M^\^G 595 :omenu File.Next ^C:next^M^\^G 596 597Careful: In Insert mode this only works for a SINGLE Normal mode command, 598because of the CTRL-O. If you have two or more commands, you will need to use 599the ":imenu" command. For inserting text in any mode, you can use the 600expression register: > 601 602 :amenu Insert.foobar "='foobar'<CR>P 603 604Note that the '<' and 'k' flags in 'cpoptions' also apply here (when 605included they make the <> form and raw key codes not being recognized). 606 607Note that <Esc> in Cmdline mode executes the command, like in a mapping. This 608is Vi compatible. Use CTRL-C to quit Cmdline mode. 609 610 *:menu-<silent>* *:menu-silent* 611To define a menu which will not be echoed on the command line, add 612"<silent>" as the first argument. Example: > 613 :menu <silent> Settings.Ignore\ case :set ic<CR> 614The ":set ic" will not be echoed when using this menu. Messages from the 615executed command are still given though. To shut them up too, add a ":silent" 616in the executed command: > 617 :menu <silent> Search.Header :exe ":silent normal /Header\r"<CR> 618"<silent>" may also appear just after "<special>" or "<script>". 619 620 *:menu-<special>* *:menu-special* 621Define a menu with <> notation for special keys, even though the "<" flag 622may appear in 'cpoptions'. This is useful if the side effect of setting 623'cpoptions' is not desired. Example: > 624 :menu <special> Search.Header /Header<CR> 625"<special>" must appear as the very first argument to the ":menu" command or 626just after "<silent>" or "<script>". 627 628 *:menu-<script>* *:menu-script* 629The "to" part of the menu will be inspected for mappings. If you don't want 630this, use the ":noremenu" command (or the similar one for a specific mode). 631If you do want to use script-local mappings, add "<script>" as the very first 632argument to the ":menu" command or just after "<silent>" or "<special>". 633 634 *menu-priority* 635You can give a priority to a menu. Menus with a higher priority go more to 636the right. The priority is given as a number before the ":menu" command. 637Example: > 638 :80menu Buffer.next :bn<CR> 639 640The default menus have these priorities: 641 File 10 642 Edit 20 643 Tools 40 644 Syntax 50 645 Buffers 60 646 Window 70 647 Help 9999 648 649When no or zero priority is given, 500 is used. 650The priority for the PopUp menu is not used. 651 652The Help menu will be placed on the far right side of the menu bar on systems 653which support this (Motif and GTK+). For GTK+ 2, this is not done anymore 654because right-aligning the Help menu is now discouraged UI design. 655 656You can use a priority higher than 9999, to make it go after the Help menu, 657but that is non-standard and is discouraged. The highest possible priority is 658about 32000. The lowest is 1. 659 660 *sub-menu-priority* 661The same mechanism can be used to position a sub-menu. The priority is then 662given as a dot-separated list of priorities, before the menu name: > 663 :menu 80.500 Buffer.next :bn<CR> 664Giving the sub-menu priority is only needed when the item is not to be put 665in a normal position. For example, to put a sub-menu before the other items: > 666 :menu 80.100 Buffer.first :brew<CR> 667Or to put a sub-menu after the other items, and further items with default 668priority will be put before it: > 669 :menu 80.900 Buffer.last :blast<CR> 670When a number is missing, the default value 500 will be used: > 671 :menu .900 myMenu.test :echo "text"<CR> 672The menu priority is only used when creating a new menu. When it already 673existed, e.g., in another mode, the priority will not change. Thus, the 674priority only needs to be given the first time a menu is used. 675An exception is the PopUp menu. There is a separate menu for each mode 676(Normal, Op-pending, Visual, Insert, Cmdline). The order in each of these 677menus can be different. This is different from menu-bar menus, which have 678the same order for all modes. 679NOTE: sub-menu priorities currently don't work for all versions of the GUI. 680 681 *menu-separator* *E332* 682Menu items can be separated by a special item that inserts some space between 683items. Depending on the system this is displayed as a line or a dotted line. 684These items must start with a '-' and end in a '-'. The part in between is 685used to give it a unique name. Priorities can be used as with normal items. 686Example: > 687 :menu Example.item1 :do something 688 :menu Example.-Sep- : 689 :menu Example.item2 :do something different 690Note that the separator also requires a rhs. It doesn't matter what it is, 691because the item will never be selected. Use a single colon to keep it 692simple. 693 694 *gui-toolbar* 695The toolbar is currently available in the Win32, Athena, Motif, GTK+ (X11), 696and Photon GUI. It should turn up in other GUIs in due course. The 697default toolbar is setup in menu.vim. 698The display of the toolbar is controlled by the 'guioptions' letter 'T'. You 699can thus have menu & toolbar together, or either on its own, or neither. 700The appearance is controlled by the 'toolbar' option. You can choose between 701an image, text or both. 702 703 *toolbar-icon* 704The toolbar is defined as a special menu called ToolBar, which only has one 705level. Vim interprets the items in this menu as follows: 7061) If an "icon=" argument was specified, the file with this name is used. 707 The file can either be specified with the full path or with the base name. 708 In the last case it is searched for in the "bitmaps" directory in 709 'runtimepath', like in point 3. Examples: > 710 :amenu icon=/usr/local/pixmaps/foo_icon.xpm ToolBar.Foo :echo "Foo"<CR> 711 :amenu icon=FooIcon ToolBar.Foo :echo "Foo"<CR> 712< Note that in the first case the extension is included, while in the second 713 case it is omitted. 714 If the file cannot be opened the next points are tried. 715 A space in the file name must be escaped with a backslash. 716 A menu priority must come _after_ the icon argument: > 717 :amenu icon=foo 1.42 ToolBar.Foo :echo "42!"<CR> 7182) An item called 'BuiltIn##', where ## is a number, is taken as number ## of 719 the built-in bitmaps available in Vim. Currently there are 31 numbered 720 from 0 to 30 which cover most common editing operations |builtin-tools|. > 721 :amenu ToolBar.BuiltIn22 :call SearchNext("back")<CR> 7223) An item with another name is first searched for in the directory 723 "bitmaps" in 'runtimepath'. If found, the bitmap file is used as the 724 toolbar button image. Note that the exact filename is OS-specific: For 725 example, under Win32 the command > 726 :amenu ToolBar.Hello :echo "hello"<CR> 727< would find the file 'hello.bmp'. Under GTK+/X11 it is 'Hello.xpm'. With 728 GTK+ 2 the files 'Hello.png', 'Hello.xpm' and 'Hello.bmp' are checked for 729 existence, and the first one found would be used. 730 For MS-Windows and GTK+ 2 the bitmap is scaled to fit the button. For 731 MS-Windows a size of 18 by 18 pixels works best. 732 For MS-Windows the bitmap should have 16 colors with the standard palette. 733 The light grey pixels will be changed to the Window frame color and the 734 dark grey pixels to the window shadow color. More colors might also work, 735 depending on your system. 7364) If the bitmap is still not found, Vim checks for a match against its list 737 of built-in names. Each built-in button image has a name. 738 So the command > 739 :amenu ToolBar.Open :e 740< will show the built-in "open a file" button image if no open.bmp exists. 741 All the built-in names can be seen used in menu.vim. 7425) If all else fails, a blank, but functioning, button is displayed. 743 744 *builtin-tools* 745nr Name Normal action ~ 74600 New open new window 74701 Open browse for file to open in current window 74802 Save write buffer to file 74903 Undo undo last change 75004 Redo redo last undone change 75105 Cut delete selected text to clipboard 75206 Copy copy selected text to clipboard 75307 Paste paste text from clipboard 75408 Print print current buffer 75509 Help open a buffer on Vim's builtin help 75610 Find start a search command 75711 SaveAll write all modified buffers to file 75812 SaveSesn write session file for current situation 75913 NewSesn write new session file 76014 LoadSesn load session file 76115 RunScript browse for file to run as a Vim script 76216 Replace prompt for substitute command 76317 WinClose close current window 76418 WinMax make current window use many lines 76519 WinMin make current window use few lines 76620 WinSplit split current window 76721 Shell start a shell 76822 FindPrev search again, backward 76923 FindNext search again, forward 77024 FindHelp prompt for word to search help for 77125 Make run make and jump to first error 77226 TagJump jump to tag under the cursor 77327 RunCtags build tags for files in current directory 77428 WinVSplit split current window vertically 77529 WinMaxWidth make current window use many columns 77630 WinMinWidth make current window use few columns 777 778 *hidden-menus* *win32-hidden-menus* 779In the Win32 and GTK+ GUI, starting a menu name with ']' excludes that menu 780from the main menu bar. You must then use the |:popup| or |:tearoff| command 781to display it. 782 783 *popup-menu* 784In the Win32, GTK+, Motif, Athena and Photon GUI, you can define the 785special menu "PopUp". This is the menu that is displayed when the right mouse 786button is pressed, if 'mousemodel' is set to popup or popup_setpos. 787 788 7895.3 Showing What Menus Are Mapped To *showing-menus* 790 791To see what an existing menu is mapped to, use just one argument after the 792menu commands (just like you would with the ":map" commands). If the menu 793specified is a submenu, then all menus under that hierarchy will be shown. 794If no argument is given after :menu at all, then ALL menu items are shown 795for the appropriate mode (e.g., Command-line mode for :cmenu). 796 797Special characters in the list, just before the rhs: 798* The menu was defined with "nore" to disallow remapping. 799& The menu was defined with "<script>" to allow remapping script-local 800 mappings only. 801- The menu was disabled. 802 803Note that hitting <Tab> while entering a menu name after a menu command may 804be used to complete the name of the menu item. 805 806 8075.4 Executing Menus *execute-menus* 808 809 *:em* *:emenu* *E334* *E335* 810:[range]em[enu] {menu} Execute {menu} from the command line. 811 The default is to execute the Normal mode 812 menu. If a range is specified, it executes 813 the Visual mode menu. 814 If used from <c-o>, it executes the 815 insert-mode menu Eg: > 816 :emenu File.Exit 817 818If the console-mode vim has been compiled with WANT_MENU defined, you can 819use :emenu to access useful menu items you may have got used to from GUI 820mode. See 'wildmenu' for an option that works well with this. See 821|console-menus| for an example. 822 823When using a range, if the lines match with '<,'>, then the menu is executed 824using the last visual selection. 825 826 8275.5 Deleting Menus *delete-menus* 828 829 *:unme* *:unmenu* 830 *:aun* *:aunmenu* 831 *:nunme* *:nunmenu* 832 *:ounme* *:ounmenu* 833 *:vunme* *:vunmenu* 834 *:xunme* *:xunmenu* 835 *:sunme* *:sunmenu* 836 *:iunme* *:iunmenu* 837 *:cunme* *:cunmenu* 838To delete a menu item or a whole submenu, use the unmenu commands, which are 839analogous to the unmap commands. Eg: > 840 :unmenu! Edit.Paste 841 842This will remove the Paste item from the Edit menu for Insert and 843Command-line modes. 844 845Note that hitting <Tab> while entering a menu name after an umenu command 846may be used to complete the name of the menu item for the appropriate mode. 847 848To remove all menus use: *:unmenu-all* > 849 :unmenu * " remove all menus in Normal and visual mode 850 :unmenu! * " remove all menus in Insert and Command-line mode 851 :aunmenu * " remove all menus in all modes 852 853If you want to get rid of the menu bar: > 854 :set guioptions-=m 855 856 8575.6 Disabling Menus *disable-menus* 858 859 *:menu-disable* *:menu-enable* 860If you do not want to remove a menu, but disable it for a moment, this can be 861done by adding the "enable" or "disable" keyword to a ":menu" command. 862Examples: > 863 :menu disable &File.&Open\.\.\. 864 :amenu enable * 865 :amenu disable &Tools.* 866 867The command applies to the modes as used with all menu commands. Note that 868characters like "&" need to be included for translated names to be found. 869When the argument is "*", all menus are affected. Otherwise the given menu 870name and all existing submenus below it are affected. 871 872 8735.7 Examples for Menus *menu-examples* 874 875Here is an example on how to add menu items with menu's! You can add a menu 876item for the keyword under the cursor. The register "z" is used. > 877 878 :nmenu Words.Add\ Var wb"zye:menu! Words.<C-R>z <C-R>z<CR> 879 :nmenu Words.Remove\ Var wb"zye:unmenu! Words.<C-R>z<CR> 880 :vmenu Words.Add\ Var "zy:menu! Words.<C-R>z <C-R>z <CR> 881 :vmenu Words.Remove\ Var "zy:unmenu! Words.<C-R>z<CR> 882 :imenu Words.Add\ Var <Esc>wb"zye:menu! Words.<C-R>z <C-R>z<CR>a 883 :imenu Words.Remove\ Var <Esc>wb"zye:unmenu! Words.<C-R>z<CR>a 884 885(the rhs is in <> notation, you can copy/paste this text to try out the 886mappings, or put these lines in your gvimrc; "<C-R>" is CTRL-R, "<CR>" is 887the <CR> key. |<>|) 888 889 8905.8 Tooltips & Menu tips 891 892See section |42.4| in the user manual. 893 894 *:tmenu* *:tm* 895:tm[enu] {menupath} {rhs} Define a tip for a menu or tool. {only in 896 X11 and Win32 GUI} 897 898:tm[enu] [menupath] List menu tips. {only in X11 and Win32 GUI} 899 900 *:tunmenu* *:tu* 901:tu[nmenu] {menupath} Remove a tip for a menu or tool. 902 {only in X11 and Win32 GUI} 903 904When a tip is defined for a menu item, it appears in the command-line area 905when the mouse is over that item, much like a standard Windows menu hint in 906the status bar. (Except when Vim is in Command-line mode, when of course 907nothing is displayed.) 908When a tip is defined for a ToolBar item, it appears as a tooltip when the 909mouse pauses over that button, in the usual fashion. Use the |hl-Tooltip| 910highlight group to change its colors. 911 912A "tip" can be defined for each menu item. For example, when defining a menu 913item like this: > 914 :amenu MyMenu.Hello :echo "Hello"<CR> 915The tip is defined like this: > 916 :tmenu MyMenu.Hello Displays a greeting. 917And delete it with: > 918 :tunmenu MyMenu.Hello 919 920Tooltips are currently only supported for the X11 and Win32 GUI. However, they 921should appear for the other gui platforms in the not too distant future. 922 923The ":tmenu" command works just like other menu commands, it uses the same 924arguments. ":tunmenu" deletes an existing menu tip, in the same way as the 925other unmenu commands. 926 927If a menu item becomes invalid (i.e. its actions in all modes are deleted) Vim 928deletes the menu tip (and the item) for you. This means that :aunmenu deletes 929a menu item - you don't need to do a :tunmenu as well. 930 931 9325.9 Popup Menus 933 934In the Win32 and GTK+ GUI, you can cause a menu to popup at the cursor. 935This behaves similarly to the PopUp menus except that any menu tree can 936be popped up. 937 938This command is for backwards compatibility, using it is discouraged, because 939it behaves in a strange way. 940 941 *:popup* *:popu* 942:popu[p] {name} Popup the menu {name}. The menu named must 943 have at least one subentry, but need not 944 appear on the menu-bar (see |hidden-menus|). 945 {only available for Win32 and GTK GUI} 946 947:popu[p]! {name} Like above, but use the position of the mouse 948 pointer instead of the cursor. 949 950Example: > 951 :popup File 952will make the "File" menu (if there is one) appear at the text cursor (mouse 953pointer if ! was used). > 954 955 :amenu ]Toolbar.Make :make<CR> 956 :popup ]Toolbar 957This creates a popup menu that doesn't exist on the main menu-bar. 958 959Note that a menu that starts with ']' will not be displayed. 960 961============================================================================== 9626. Extras *gui-extras* 963 964This section describes other features which are related to the GUI. 965 966- With the GUI, there is no wait for one second after hitting escape, because 967 the key codes don't start with <Esc>. 968 969- Typing ^V followed by a special key in the GUI will insert "<Key>", since 970 the internal string used is meaningless. Modifiers may also be held down to 971 get "<Modifiers-Key>". 972 973- In the GUI, the modifiers SHIFT, CTRL, and ALT (or META) may be used within 974 mappings of special keys and mouse events. E.g.: :map <M-LeftDrag> <LeftDrag> 975 976- In the GUI, several normal keys may have modifiers in mappings etc, these 977 are <Space>, <Tab>, <NL>, <CR>, <Esc>. 978 979- To check in a Vim script if the GUI is being used, you can use something 980 like this: > 981 982 if has("gui_running") 983 echo "yes, we have a GUI" 984 else 985 echo "Boring old console" 986 endif 987< *setting-guifont* 988- When you use the same vimrc file on various systems, you can use something 989 like this to set options specifically for each type of GUI: > 990 991 if has("gui_running") 992 if has("gui_gtk2") 993 :set guifont=Luxi\ Mono\ 12 994 elseif has("x11") 995 " Also for GTK 1 996 :set guifont=*-lucidatypewriter-medium-r-normal-*-*-180-*-*-m-*-* 997 elseif has("gui_win32") 998 :set guifont=Luxi_Mono:h12:cANSI 999 endif 1000 endif 1001 1002A recommended Japanese font is MS Mincho. You can find info here: 1003http://www.lexikan.com/mincho.htm 1004 1005============================================================================== 10067. Shell Commands *gui-shell* 1007 1008For the X11 GUI the external commands are executed inside the gvim window. 1009See |gui-pty|. 1010 1011WARNING: Executing an external command from the X11 GUI will not always 1012work. "normal" commands like "ls", "grep" and "make" mostly work fine. 1013Commands that require an intelligent terminal like "less" and "ispell" won't 1014work. Some may even hang and need to be killed from another terminal. So be 1015careful! 1016 1017For the Win32 GUI the external commands are executed in a separate window. 1018See |gui-shell-win32|. 1019 1020 vim:tw=78:sw=4:ts=8:ft=help:norl: 1021