xref: /vim-8.2.3635/runtime/doc/if_lua.txt (revision 965d2edb)
1*if_lua.txt*    For Vim version 8.2.  Last change: 2021 Aug 06
2
3
4		  VIM REFERENCE MANUAL    by Luis Carvalho
5
6
7The Lua Interface to Vim				*lua* *Lua*
8
91. Commands			|lua-commands|
102. The vim module		|lua-vim|
113. List userdata		|lua-list|
124. Dict userdata		|lua-dict|
135. Blob userdata		|lua-blob|
146. Funcref userdata		|lua-funcref|
157. Buffer userdata		|lua-buffer|
168. Window userdata		|lua-window|
179. luaeval() Vim function	|lua-luaeval|
1810. Dynamic loading		|lua-dynamic|
19
20{only available when Vim was compiled with the |+lua| feature}
21
22==============================================================================
231. Commands						*lua-commands*
24
25							*:lua*
26:[range]lua {chunk}
27			Execute Lua chunk {chunk}.
28
29Examples:
30>
31	:lua print("Hello, Vim!")
32	:lua local curbuf = vim.buffer() curbuf[7] = "line #7"
33<
34
35:[range]lua << [trim] [{endmarker}]
36{script}
37{endmarker}
38			Execute Lua script {script}.
39			Note: This command doesn't work when the Lua
40			feature wasn't compiled in.  To avoid errors, see
41			|script-here|.
42
43If [endmarker] is omitted from after the "<<", a dot '.' must be used after
44{script}, like for the |:append| and |:insert| commands.  Refer to
45|:let-heredoc| for more information.
46
47This form of the |:lua| command is mainly useful for including Lua code
48in Vim scripts.
49
50Example:
51>
52	function! CurrentLineInfo()
53	lua << EOF
54	local linenr = vim.window().line
55	local curline = vim.buffer()[linenr]
56	print(string.format("Current line [%d] has %d chars",
57		linenr, #curline))
58	EOF
59	endfunction
60<
61To see what version of Lua you have: >
62	:lua print(_VERSION)
63
64If you use LuaJIT you can also use this: >
65	:lua print(jit.version)
66<
67
68							*:luado*
69:[range]luado {body}	Execute Lua function "function (line, linenr) {body}
70			end" for each line in the [range], with the function
71			argument being set to the text of each line in turn,
72			without a trailing <EOL>, and the current line number.
73			If the value returned by the function is a string it
74			becomes the text of the line in the current turn. The
75			default for [range] is the whole file: "1,$".
76
77Examples:
78>
79	:luado return string.format("%s\t%d", line:reverse(), #line)
80
81	:lua require"lpeg"
82	:lua -- balanced parenthesis grammar:
83	:lua bp = lpeg.P{ "(" * ((1 - lpeg.S"()") + lpeg.V(1))^0 * ")" }
84	:luado if bp:match(line) then return "-->\t" .. line end
85<
86
87							*:luafile*
88:[range]luafile {file}
89			Execute Lua script in {file}.
90			The whole argument is used as a single file name.
91
92Examples:
93>
94	:luafile script.lua
95	:luafile %
96<
97
98All these commands execute a Lua chunk from either the command line (:lua and
99:luado) or a file (:luafile) with the given line [range]. Similarly to the Lua
100interpreter, each chunk has its own scope and so only global variables are
101shared between command calls. All Lua default libraries are available. In
102addition, Lua "print" function has its output redirected to the Vim message
103area, with arguments separated by a white space instead of a tab.
104
105Lua uses the "vim" module (see |lua-vim|) to issue commands to Vim
106and manage buffers (|lua-buffer|) and windows (|lua-window|). However,
107procedures that alter buffer content, open new buffers, and change cursor
108position are restricted when the command is executed in the |sandbox|.
109
110
111==============================================================================
1122. The vim module					*lua-vim*
113
114Lua interfaces Vim through the "vim" module. The first and last line of the
115input range are stored in "vim.firstline" and "vim.lastline" respectively. The
116module also includes routines for buffer, window, and current line queries,
117Vim evaluation and command execution, and others.
118
119	vim.list([arg])		Returns an empty list or, if "arg" is a Lua
120				table with numeric keys 1, ..., n (a
121				"sequence"), returns a list l such that l[i] =
122				arg[i] for i = 1, ..., n (see |List|).
123				Non-numeric keys are not used to initialize
124				the list. See also |lua-eval| for conversion
125				rules. Example: >
126				    :lua t = {math.pi, false, say = 'hi'}
127				    :echo luaeval('vim.list(t)')
128				    :" [3.141593, v:false], 'say' is ignored
129<
130	vim.dict([arg])		Returns an empty dictionary or, if "arg" is a
131				Lua table, returns a dict d such that d[k] =
132				arg[k] for all string keys k in "arg" (see
133				|Dictionary|). Number keys are converted to
134				strings. Keys that are not strings are not
135				used to initialize the dictionary. See also
136				|lua-eval| for conversion rules. Example: >
137				    :lua t = {math.pi, false, say = 'hi'}
138				    :echo luaeval('vim.dict(t)')
139				    :" {'1': 3.141593, '2': v:false,
140				    :" 'say': 'hi'}
141<
142	vim.blob([arg])		Returns an empty blob or, if "arg" is a Lua
143				string, returns a blob b such that b is
144				equivalent to "arg" as a byte string.
145				Examples: >
146				    :lua s = "12ab\x00\x80\xfe\xff"
147				    :echo luaeval('vim.blob(s)')
148				    :" 0z31326162.0080FEFF
149<
150	vim.funcref({name})	Returns a Funcref to function {name} (see
151				|Funcref|). It is equivalent to Vim's
152				function().
153
154	vim.buffer([arg])	If "arg" is a number, returns buffer with
155				number "arg" in the buffer list or, if "arg"
156				is a string, returns buffer whose full or short
157				name is "arg". In both cases, returns 'nil'
158				(nil value, not string) if the buffer is not
159				found. Otherwise, if "toboolean(arg)" is
160				'true' returns the first buffer in the buffer
161				list or else the current buffer.
162
163	vim.window([arg])	If "arg" is a number, returns window with
164				number "arg" or 'nil' (nil value, not string)
165				if not found. Otherwise, if "toboolean(arg)"
166				is 'true' returns the first window or else the
167				current window.
168
169	vim.type({arg})		Returns the type of {arg}. It is equivalent to
170				Lua's "type" function, but returns "list",
171				"dict", "funcref", "buffer", or "window" if
172				{arg} is a list, dictionary, funcref, buffer,
173				or window, respectively. Examples: >
174					:lua l = vim.list()
175					:lua print(type(l), vim.type(l))
176					:" list
177<
178	vim.command({cmds})	Executes one or more lines of Ex-mode commands
179				in {cmds}.
180				Examples: >
181					:lua vim.command"set tw=60"
182					:lua vim.command"normal ddp"
183					lua << trim END
184					  vim.command([[
185					      new Myfile.js
186					      call search('start')
187					  ]])
188					END
189<
190	vim.eval({expr})	Evaluates expression {expr} (see |expression|),
191				converts the result to Lua, and returns it.
192				Vim strings and numbers are directly converted
193				to Lua strings and numbers respectively. Vim
194				lists and dictionaries are converted to Lua
195				userdata (see |lua-list| and |lua-dict|).
196				Examples: >
197					:lua tw = vim.eval"&tw"
198					:lua print(vim.eval"{'a': 'one'}".a)
199<
200	vim.line()		Returns the current line (without the trailing
201				<EOL>), a Lua string.
202
203	vim.beep()		Beeps.
204
205	vim.open({fname})	Opens a new buffer for file {fname} and
206				returns it. Note that the buffer is not set as
207				current.
208
209	vim.call({name} [, {args}])
210				Proxy to call Vim function named {name} with
211				arguments {args}.  Example: >
212					:lua print(vim.call('has', 'timers'))
213<
214	vim.fn			Proxy to call Vim functions. Proxy methods are
215				created on demand.  Example: >
216					:lua print(vim.fn.has('timers'))
217<
218	vim.lua_version		The Lua version Vim was compiled with, in the
219				form {major}.{minor}.{patch}, e.g. "5.1.4".
220
221	vim.version()		Returns a Lua table with the Vim version.
222				The table will have the following keys:
223					major - major Vim version.
224					minor - minor Vim version.
225					patch - latest patch included.
226
227                                                        *lua-vim-variables*
228The Vim editor global dictionaries |g:| |w:| |b:| |t:| |v:| can be accessed
229from Lua conveniently and idiomatically by referencing the `vim.*` Lua tables
230described below. In this way you can easily read and modify global Vim script
231variables from Lua.
232
233Example: >
234
235    vim.g.foo = 5     -- Set the g:foo Vim script variable.
236    print(vim.g.foo)  -- Get and print the g:foo Vim script variable.
237    vim.g.foo = nil   -- Delete (:unlet) the Vim script variable.
238
239vim.g                                                   *vim.g*
240        Global (|g:|) editor variables.
241        Key with no value returns `nil`.
242
243vim.b                                                   *vim.b*
244        Buffer-scoped (|b:|) variables for the current buffer.
245        Invalid or unset key returns `nil`.
246
247vim.w                                                   *vim.w*
248        Window-scoped (|w:|) variables for the current window.
249        Invalid or unset key returns `nil`.
250
251vim.t                                                   *vim.t*
252        Tabpage-scoped (|t:|) variables for the current tabpage.
253        Invalid or unset key returns `nil`.
254
255vim.v                                                   *vim.v*
256        |v:| variables.
257        Invalid or unset key returns `nil`.
258
259==============================================================================
2603. List userdata					*lua-list*
261
262List userdata represent vim lists, and the interface tries to follow closely
263Vim's syntax for lists. Since lists are objects, changes in list references in
264Lua are reflected in Vim and vice-versa. A list "l" has the following
265properties and methods:
266
267NOTE: In patch 8.2.1066 array indexes were changed from zero-based to
268one-based.  You can check with: >
269	    if has("patch-8.2.1066")
270
271Properties
272----------
273	o "#l" is the number of items in list "l", equivalent to "len(l)"
274	    in Vim.
275	o "l[k]" returns the k-th item in "l"; "l" is one-indexed, as in Lua.
276	    To modify the k-th item, simply do "l[k] = newitem"; in
277	    particular, "l[k] = nil" removes the k-th item from "l". Item can
278	    be added to the end of the list by "l[#l + 1] = newitem"
279	o "l()" returns an iterator for "l".
280	o "table.insert(l, newitem)" inserts an item at the end of the list.
281	    (only Lua 5.3 and later)
282	o "table.insert(l, position, newitem)" inserts an item at the
283	    specified position. "position" is one-indexed.  (only Lua 5.3 and
284	    later)
285	o "table.remove(l, position)" removes an item at the specified
286	    position. "position" is one-indexed.
287
288
289Methods
290-------
291	o "l:add(item)" appends "item" to the end of "l".
292	o "l:insert(item[, pos])" inserts "item" at (optional)
293	    position "pos" in the list. The default value for "pos" is 0.
294
295Examples:
296>
297	:let l = [1, 'item']
298	:lua l = vim.eval('l') -- same 'l'
299	:lua l:add(vim.list())
300	:lua l[1] = math.pi
301	:echo l[0] " 3.141593
302	:lua l[1] = nil -- remove first item
303	:lua l:insert(true, 1)
304	:lua print(l, #l, l[1], l[2])
305	:lua l[#l + 1] = 'value'
306	:lua table.insert(l, 100)
307	:lua table.insert(l, 2, 200)
308	:lua table.remove(l, 1)
309	:lua for item in l() do print(item) end
310
311==============================================================================
3124. Dict userdata					*lua-dict*
313
314Similarly to list userdata, dict userdata represent vim dictionaries; since
315dictionaries are also objects, references are kept between Lua and Vim. A dict
316"d" has the following properties:
317
318Properties
319----------
320	o "#d" is the number of items in dict "d", equivalent to "len(d)"
321	    in Vim.
322	o "d.key" or "d['key']" returns the value at entry "key" in "d".
323	    To modify the entry at this key, simply do "d.key = newvalue"; in
324	    particular, "d.key = nil" removes the entry from "d".
325	o "d()" returns an iterator for "d" and is equivalent to "items(d)" in
326	    Vim.
327
328Examples:
329>
330	:let d = {'n':10}
331	:lua d = vim.eval('d') -- same 'd'
332	:lua print(d, d.n, #d)
333	:let d.self = d
334	:lua for k, v in d() do print(d, k, v) end
335	:lua d.x = math.pi
336	:lua d.self = nil -- remove entry
337	:echo d
338<
339
340==============================================================================
3415. Blob userdata					*lua-blob*
342
343Blob userdata represent vim blobs. A blob "b" has the following properties:
344
345Properties
346----------
347	o "#b" is the length of blob "b", equivalent to "len(b)" in Vim.
348	o "b[k]" returns the k-th item in "b"; "b" is zero-indexed, as in Vim.
349	    To modify the k-th item, simply do "b[k] = number"; in particular,
350	    "b[#b] = number" can append a byte to tail.
351
352Methods
353-------
354	o "b:add(bytes)" appends "bytes" to the end of "b".
355
356Examples:
357>
358	:let b = 0z001122
359	:lua b = vim.eval('b') -- same 'b'
360	:lua print(b, b[0], #b)
361	:lua b[1] = 32
362	:lua b[#b] = 0x33 -- append a byte to tail
363	:lua b:add("\x80\x81\xfe\xff")
364	:echo b
365<
366
367==============================================================================
3686. Funcref userdata					*lua-funcref*
369
370Funcref userdata represent funcref variables in Vim. Funcrefs that were
371defined with a "dict" attribute need to be obtained as a dictionary key
372in order to have "self" properly assigned to the dictionary (see examples
373below.) A funcref "f" has the following properties:
374
375Properties
376----------
377	o "#f" is the name of the function referenced by "f"
378	o "f(...)" calls the function referenced by "f" (with arguments)
379
380Examples:
381>
382	:function I(x)
383	:  return a:x
384	:  endfunction
385	:let R = function('I')
386	:lua i1 = vim.funcref('I')
387	:lua i2 = vim.eval('R')
388	:lua print(#i1, #i2) -- both 'I'
389	:lua print(i1, i2, #i2(i1) == #i1(i2))
390	:function Mylen() dict
391	:  return len(self.data)
392	:  endfunction
393	:let mydict = {'data': [0, 1, 2, 3]}
394	:lua d = vim.eval('mydict'); d.len = vim.funcref('Mylen')
395	:echo mydict.len()
396	:lua l = d.len -- assign d as 'self'
397	:lua print(l())
398<
399Lua functions and closures are automatically converted to a Vim |Funcref| and
400can be accessed in Vim scripts.  Example:
401>
402	lua <<EOF
403	vim.fn.timer_start(1000, function(timer)
404	    print('timer callback')
405	end)
406	EOF
407
408==============================================================================
4097. Buffer userdata					*lua-buffer*
410
411Buffer userdata represent vim buffers. A buffer userdata "b" has the following
412properties and methods:
413
414Properties
415----------
416	o "b()" sets "b" as the current buffer.
417	o "#b" is the number of lines in buffer "b".
418	o "b[k]" represents line number k: "b[k] = newline" replaces line k
419	    with string "newline" and "b[k] = nil" deletes line k.
420	o "b.name" contains the short name of buffer "b" (read-only).
421	o "b.fname" contains the full name of buffer "b" (read-only).
422	o "b.number" contains the position of buffer "b" in the buffer list
423	    (read-only).
424
425Methods
426-------
427	o "b:insert(newline[, pos])" inserts string "newline" at (optional)
428	    position "pos" in the buffer. The default value for "pos" is
429	    "#b + 1". If "pos == 0" then "newline" becomes the first line in
430	    the buffer.
431	o "b:next()" returns the buffer next to "b" in the buffer list.
432	o "b:previous()" returns the buffer previous to "b" in the buffer
433	    list.
434	o "b:isvalid()" returns 'true' (boolean) if buffer "b" corresponds to
435	    a "real" (not freed from memory) Vim buffer.
436
437Examples:
438>
439	:lua b = vim.buffer() -- current buffer
440	:lua print(b.name, b.number)
441	:lua b[1] = "first line"
442	:lua b:insert("FIRST!", 0)
443	:lua b[1] = nil -- delete top line
444	:lua for i=1,3 do b:insert(math.random()) end
445	:3,4lua for i=vim.lastline,vim.firstline,-1 do b[i] = nil end
446	:lua vim.open"myfile"() -- open buffer and set it as current
447
448	function! ListBuffers()
449	lua << EOF
450	local b = vim.buffer(true) -- first buffer in list
451	while b ~= nil do
452		print(b.number, b.name, #b)
453		b = b:next()
454	end
455	vim.beep()
456	EOF
457	endfunction
458<
459
460==============================================================================
4618. Window userdata					*lua-window*
462
463Window objects represent vim windows. A window userdata "w" has the following
464properties and methods:
465
466Properties
467----------
468	o "w()" sets "w" as the current window.
469	o "w.buffer" contains the buffer of window "w" (read-only).
470	o "w.line" represents the cursor line position in window "w".
471	o "w.col" represents the cursor column position in window "w".
472	o "w.width" represents the width of window "w".
473	o "w.height" represents the height of window "w".
474
475Methods
476-------
477	o "w:next()" returns the window next to "w".
478	o "w:previous()" returns the window previous to "w".
479	o "w:isvalid()" returns 'true' (boolean) if window "w" corresponds to
480	    a "real" (not freed from memory) Vim window.
481
482Examples:
483>
484	:lua w = vim.window() -- current window
485	:lua print(w.buffer.name, w.line, w.col)
486	:lua w.width = w.width + math.random(10)
487	:lua w.height = 2 * math.random() * w.height
488	:lua n,w = 0,vim.window(true) while w~=nil do n,w = n + 1,w:next() end
489	:lua print("There are " .. n .. " windows")
490<
491
492==============================================================================
4939. luaeval() Vim function				*lua-luaeval* *lua-eval*
494
495The (dual) equivalent of "vim.eval" for passing Lua values to Vim is
496"luaeval". "luaeval" takes an expression string and an optional argument and
497returns the result of the expression. It is semantically equivalent in Lua to:
498>
499	local chunkheader = "local _A = select(1, ...) return "
500	function luaeval (expstr, arg)
501	    local chunk = assert(loadstring(chunkheader .. expstr, "luaeval"))
502	    return chunk(arg) -- return typval
503	end
504<
505Note that "_A" receives the argument to "luaeval". Lua numbers, strings, and
506list, dict, blob, and funcref userdata are converted to their Vim respective
507types, while Lua booleans are converted to numbers. An error is thrown if
508conversion of any of the remaining Lua types, including userdata other than
509lists, dicts, blobs, and funcrefs, is attempted.
510
511Examples: >
512
513	:echo luaeval('math.pi')
514	:lua a = vim.list():add('newlist')
515	:let a = luaeval('a')
516	:echo a[0] " 'newlist'
517	:function Rand(x,y) " random uniform between x and y
518	:  return luaeval('(_A.y-_A.x)*math.random()+_A.x', {'x':a:x,'y':a:y})
519	:  endfunction
520	:echo Rand(1,10)
521
522
523==============================================================================
52410. Dynamic loading				    *lua-dynamic*
525
526On MS-Windows and Unix the Lua library can be loaded dynamically.  The
527|:version| output then includes |+lua/dyn|.
528
529This means that Vim will search for the Lua DLL or shared library file only
530when needed.  When you don't use the Lua interface you don't need it, thus
531you can use Vim without this file.
532
533
534MS-Windows ~
535
536To use the Lua interface the Lua DLL must be in your search path.  In a
537console window type "path" to see what directories are used.  The 'luadll'
538option can be also used to specify the Lua DLL.  The version of the DLL must
539match the Lua version Vim was compiled with.
540
541
542Unix ~
543
544The 'luadll' option can be used to specify the Lua shared library file instead
545of DYNAMIC_LUA_DLL file what was specified at compile time.  The version of
546the shared library must match the Lua version Vim was compiled with.
547
548
549==============================================================================
550 vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl:
551