1*map.txt* For Vim version 7.4. Last change: 2014 Dec 08 2 3 4 VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar 5 6 7Key mapping, abbreviations and user-defined commands. 8 9This subject is introduced in sections |05.3|, |24.7| and |40.1| of the user 10manual. 11 121. Key mapping |key-mapping| 13 1.1 MAP COMMANDS |:map-commands| 14 1.2 Special arguments |:map-arguments| 15 1.3 Mapping and modes |:map-modes| 16 1.4 Listing mappings |map-listing| 17 1.5 Mapping special keys |:map-special-keys| 18 1.6 Special characters |:map-special-chars| 19 1.7 What keys to map |map-which-keys| 20 1.8 Examples |map-examples| 21 1.9 Using mappings |map-typing| 22 1.10 Mapping alt-keys |:map-alt-keys| 23 1.11 Mapping an operator |:map-operator| 242. Abbreviations |abbreviations| 253. Local mappings and functions |script-local| 264. User-defined commands |user-commands| 27 28============================================================================== 291. Key mapping *key-mapping* *mapping* *macro* 30 31Key mapping is used to change the meaning of typed keys. The most common use 32is to define a sequence commands for a function key. Example: > 33 34 :map <F2> a<C-R>=strftime("%c")<CR><Esc> 35 36This appends the current date and time after the cursor (in <> notation |<>|). 37 38 391.1 MAP COMMANDS *:map-commands* 40 41There are commands to enter new mappings, remove mappings and list mappings. 42See |map-overview| for the various forms of "map" and their relationships with 43modes. 44 45{lhs} means left-hand-side *{lhs}* 46{rhs} means right-hand-side *{rhs}* 47 48:map {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-nvo| *:map* 49:nm[ap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-n| *:nm* *:nmap* 50:vm[ap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-v| *:vm* *:vmap* 51:xm[ap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-x| *:xm* *:xmap* 52:smap {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-s| *:smap* 53:om[ap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-o| *:om* *:omap* 54:map! {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-ic| *:map!* 55:im[ap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-i| *:im* *:imap* 56:lm[ap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-l| *:lm* *:lmap* 57:cm[ap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-c| *:cm* *:cmap* 58 Map the key sequence {lhs} to {rhs} for the modes 59 where the map command applies. The result, including 60 {rhs}, is then further scanned for mappings. This 61 allows for nested and recursive use of mappings. 62 63 *:nore* *:norem* 64:no[remap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-nvo| *:no* *:noremap* *:nor* 65:nn[oremap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-n| *:nn* *:nnoremap* 66:vn[oremap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-v| *:vn* *:vnoremap* 67:xn[oremap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-x| *:xn* *:xnoremap* 68:snor[emap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-s| *:snor* *:snoremap* 69:ono[remap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-o| *:ono* *:onoremap* 70:no[remap]! {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-ic| *:no!* *:noremap!* 71:ino[remap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-i| *:ino* *:inoremap* 72:ln[oremap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-l| *:ln* *:lnoremap* 73:cno[remap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-c| *:cno* *:cnoremap* 74 Map the key sequence {lhs} to {rhs} for the modes 75 where the map command applies. Disallow mapping of 76 {rhs}, to avoid nested and recursive mappings. Often 77 used to redefine a command. {not in Vi} 78 79 80:unm[ap] {lhs} |mapmode-nvo| *:unm* *:unmap* 81:nun[map] {lhs} |mapmode-n| *:nun* *:nunmap* 82:vu[nmap] {lhs} |mapmode-v| *:vu* *:vunmap* 83:xu[nmap] {lhs} |mapmode-x| *:xu* *:xunmap* 84:sunm[ap] {lhs} |mapmode-s| *:sunm* *:sunmap* 85:ou[nmap] {lhs} |mapmode-o| *:ou* *:ounmap* 86:unm[ap]! {lhs} |mapmode-ic| *:unm!* *:unmap!* 87:iu[nmap] {lhs} |mapmode-i| *:iu* *:iunmap* 88:lu[nmap] {lhs} |mapmode-l| *:lu* *:lunmap* 89:cu[nmap] {lhs} |mapmode-c| *:cu* *:cunmap* 90 Remove the mapping of {lhs} for the modes where the 91 map command applies. The mapping may remain defined 92 for other modes where it applies. 93 Note: Trailing spaces are included in the {lhs}. This 94 unmap does NOT work: > 95 :map @@ foo 96 :unmap @@ | print 97 98:mapc[lear] |mapmode-nvo| *:mapc* *:mapclear* 99:nmapc[lear] |mapmode-n| *:nmapc* *:nmapclear* 100:vmapc[lear] |mapmode-v| *:vmapc* *:vmapclear* 101:xmapc[lear] |mapmode-x| *:xmapc* *:xmapclear* 102:smapc[lear] |mapmode-s| *:smapc* *:smapclear* 103:omapc[lear] |mapmode-o| *:omapc* *:omapclear* 104:mapc[lear]! |mapmode-ic| *:mapc!* *:mapclear!* 105:imapc[lear] |mapmode-i| *:imapc* *:imapclear* 106:lmapc[lear] |mapmode-l| *:lmapc* *:lmapclear* 107:cmapc[lear] |mapmode-c| *:cmapc* *:cmapclear* 108 Remove ALL mappings for the modes where the map 109 command applies. {not in Vi} 110 Use the <buffer> argument to remove buffer-local 111 mappings |:map-<buffer>| 112 Warning: This also removes the default mappings. 113 114:map |mapmode-nvo| 115:nm[ap] |mapmode-n| 116:vm[ap] |mapmode-v| 117:xm[ap] |mapmode-x| 118:sm[ap] |mapmode-s| 119:om[ap] |mapmode-o| 120:map! |mapmode-ic| 121:im[ap] |mapmode-i| 122:lm[ap] |mapmode-l| 123:cm[ap] |mapmode-c| 124 List all key mappings for the modes where the map 125 command applies. Note that ":map" and ":map!" are 126 used most often, because they include the other modes. 127 128:map {lhs} |mapmode-nvo| *:map_l* 129:nm[ap] {lhs} |mapmode-n| *:nmap_l* 130:vm[ap] {lhs} |mapmode-v| *:vmap_l* 131:xm[ap] {lhs} |mapmode-x| *:xmap_l* 132:sm[ap] {lhs} |mapmode-s| *:smap_l* 133:om[ap] {lhs} |mapmode-o| *:omap_l* 134:map! {lhs} |mapmode-ic| *:map_l!* 135:im[ap] {lhs} |mapmode-i| *:imap_l* 136:lm[ap] {lhs} |mapmode-l| *:lmap_l* 137:cm[ap] {lhs} |mapmode-c| *:cmap_l* 138 List the key mappings for the key sequences starting 139 with {lhs} in the modes where the map command applies. 140 {not in Vi} 141 142These commands are used to map a key or key sequence to a string of 143characters. You can use this to put command sequences under function keys, 144translate one key into another, etc. See |:mkexrc| for how to save and 145restore the current mappings. 146 147 *map-ambiguous* 148When two mappings start with the same sequence of characters, they are 149ambiguous. Example: > 150 :imap aa foo 151 :imap aaa bar 152When Vim has read "aa", it will need to get another character to be able to 153decide if "aa" or "aaa" should be mapped. This means that after typing "aa" 154that mapping won't get expanded yet, Vim is waiting for another character. 155If you type a space, then "foo" will get inserted, plus the space. If you 156type "a", then "bar" will get inserted. 157{Vi does not allow ambiguous mappings} 158 159 1601.2 SPECIAL ARGUMENTS *:map-arguments* 161 162"<buffer>", "<nowait>", "<silent>", "<special>", "<script>", "<expr>" and 163"<unique>" can be used in any order. They must appear right after the 164command, before any other arguments. 165 166 *:map-local* *:map-<buffer>* *E224* *E225* 167If the first argument to one of these commands is "<buffer>" the mapping will 168be effective in the current buffer only. Example: > 169 :map <buffer> ,w /[.,;]<CR> 170Then you can map ",w" to something else in another buffer: > 171 :map <buffer> ,w /[#&!]<CR> 172The local buffer mappings are used before the global ones. See <nowait> below 173to make a short local mapping not taking effect when a longer global one 174exists. 175The "<buffer>" argument can also be used to clear mappings: > 176 :unmap <buffer> ,w 177 :mapclear <buffer> 178Local mappings are also cleared when a buffer is deleted, but not when it is 179unloaded. Just like local option values. 180Also see |map-precedence|. 181 182 *:map-<nowait>* *:map-nowait* 183When defining a buffer-local mapping for "," there may be a global mapping 184that starts with ",". Then you need to type another character for Vim to know 185whether to use the "," mapping or the longer one. To avoid this add the 186<nowait> argument. Then the mapping will be used when it matches, Vim does 187not wait for more characters to be typed. However, if the characters were 188already type they are used. 189 190 *:map-<silent>* *:map-silent* 191To define a mapping which will not be echoed on the command line, add 192"<silent>" as the first argument. Example: > 193 :map <silent> ,h /Header<CR> 194The search string will not be echoed when using this mapping. Messages from 195the executed command are still given though. To shut them up too, add a 196":silent" in the executed command: > 197 :map <silent> ,h :exe ":silent normal /Header\r"<CR> 198Prompts will still be given, e.g., for inputdialog(). 199Using "<silent>" for an abbreviation is possible, but will cause redrawing of 200the command line to fail. 201 202 *:map-<special>* *:map-special* 203Define a mapping with <> notation for special keys, even though the "<" flag 204may appear in 'cpoptions'. This is useful if the side effect of setting 205'cpoptions' is not desired. Example: > 206 :map <special> <F12> /Header<CR> 207< 208 *:map-<script>* *:map-script* 209If the first argument to one of these commands is "<script>" and it is used to 210define a new mapping or abbreviation, the mapping will only remap characters 211in the {rhs} using mappings that were defined local to a script, starting with 212"<SID>". This can be used to avoid that mappings from outside a script 213interfere (e.g., when CTRL-V is remapped in mswin.vim), but do use other 214mappings defined in the script. 215Note: ":map <script>" and ":noremap <script>" do the same thing. The 216"<script>" overrules the command name. Using ":noremap <script>" is 217preferred, because it's clearer that remapping is (mostly) disabled. 218 219 *:map-<unique>* *E226* *E227* 220If the first argument to one of these commands is "<unique>" and it is used to 221define a new mapping or abbreviation, the command will fail if the mapping or 222abbreviation already exists. Example: > 223 :map <unique> ,w /[#&!]<CR> 224When defining a local mapping, there will also be a check if a global map 225already exists which is equal. 226Example of what will fail: > 227 :map ,w /[#&!]<CR> 228 :map <buffer> <unique> ,w /[.,;]<CR> 229If you want to map a key and then have it do what it was originally mapped to, 230have a look at |maparg()|. 231 232 *:map-<expr>* *:map-expression* 233If the first argument to one of these commands is "<expr>" and it is used to 234define a new mapping or abbreviation, the argument is an expression. The 235expression is evaluated to obtain the {rhs} that is used. Example: > 236 :inoremap <expr> . InsertDot() 237The result of the InsertDot() function will be inserted. It could check the 238text before the cursor and start omni completion when some condition is met. 239 240For abbreviations |v:char| is set to the character that was typed to trigger 241the abbreviation. You can use this to decide how to expand the {lhs}. You 242should not either insert or change the v:char. 243 244Be very careful about side effects! The expression is evaluated while 245obtaining characters, you may very well make the command dysfunctional. 246For this reason the following is blocked: 247- Changing the buffer text |textlock|. 248- Editing another buffer. 249- The |:normal| command. 250- Moving the cursor is allowed, but it is restored afterwards. 251If you want the mapping to do any of these let the returned characters do 252that. 253 254You can use getchar(), it consumes typeahead if there is any. E.g., if you 255have these mappings: > 256 inoremap <expr> <C-L> nr2char(getchar()) 257 inoremap <expr> <C-L>x "foo" 258If you now type CTRL-L nothing happens yet, Vim needs the next character to 259decide what mapping to use. If you type 'x' the second mapping is used and 260"foo" is inserted. If you type any other key the first mapping is used, 261getchar() gets the typed key and returns it. 262 263Here is an example that inserts a list number that increases: > 264 let counter = 0 265 inoremap <expr> <C-L> ListItem() 266 inoremap <expr> <C-R> ListReset() 267 268 func ListItem() 269 let g:counter += 1 270 return g:counter . '. ' 271 endfunc 272 273 func ListReset() 274 let g:counter = 0 275 return '' 276 endfunc 277 278CTRL-L inserts the next number, CTRL-R resets the count. CTRL-R returns an 279empty string, so that nothing is inserted. 280 281Note that there are some tricks to make special keys work and escape CSI bytes 282in the text. The |:map| command also does this, thus you must avoid that it 283is done twice. This does not work: > 284 :imap <expr> <F3> "<Char-0x611B>" 285Because the <Char- sequence is escaped for being a |:imap| argument and then 286again for using <expr>. This does work: > 287 :imap <expr> <F3> "\u611B" 288Using 0x80 as a single byte before other text does not work, it will be seen 289as a special key. 290 291 2921.3 MAPPING AND MODES *:map-modes* 293 *mapmode-nvo* *mapmode-n* *mapmode-v* *mapmode-o* 294 295There are six sets of mappings 296- For Normal mode: When typing commands. 297- For Visual mode: When typing commands while the Visual area is highlighted. 298- For Select mode: like Visual mode but typing text replaces the selection. 299- For Operator-pending mode: When an operator is pending (after "d", "y", "c", 300 etc.). See below: |omap-info|. 301- For Insert mode. These are also used in Replace mode. 302- For Command-line mode: When entering a ":" or "/" command. 303 304Special case: While typing a count for a command in Normal mode, mapping zero 305is disabled. This makes it possible to map zero without making it impossible 306to type a count with a zero. 307 308 *map-overview* *map-modes* 309Overview of which map command works in which mode. More details below. 310 COMMANDS MODES ~ 311:map :noremap :unmap Normal, Visual, Select, Operator-pending 312:nmap :nnoremap :nunmap Normal 313:vmap :vnoremap :vunmap Visual and Select 314:smap :snoremap :sunmap Select 315:xmap :xnoremap :xunmap Visual 316:omap :onoremap :ounmap Operator-pending 317:map! :noremap! :unmap! Insert and Command-line 318:imap :inoremap :iunmap Insert 319:lmap :lnoremap :lunmap Insert, Command-line, Lang-Arg 320:cmap :cnoremap :cunmap Command-line 321 322 323 COMMANDS MODES ~ 324 Normal Visual+Select Operator-pending ~ 325:map :noremap :unmap :mapclear yes yes yes 326:nmap :nnoremap :nunmap :nmapclear yes - - 327:vmap :vnoremap :vunmap :vmapclear - yes - 328:omap :onoremap :ounmap :omapclear - - yes 329 330:nunmap can also be used outside of a monastery. 331 *mapmode-x* *mapmode-s* 332Some commands work both in Visual and Select mode, some in only one. Note 333that quite often "Visual" is mentioned where both Visual and Select mode 334apply. |Select-mode-mapping| 335NOTE: Mapping a printable character in Select mode may confuse the user. It's 336better to explicitly use :xmap and :smap for printable characters. Or use 337:sunmap after defining the mapping. 338 339 COMMANDS MODES ~ 340 Visual Select ~ 341:vmap :vnoremap :vunmap :vmapclear yes yes 342:xmap :xnoremap :xunmap :xmapclear yes - 343:smap :snoremap :sunmap :smapclear - yes 344 345 *mapmode-ic* *mapmode-i* *mapmode-c* *mapmode-l* 346Some commands work both in Insert mode and Command-line mode, some not: 347 348 COMMANDS MODES ~ 349 Insert Command-line Lang-Arg ~ 350:map! :noremap! :unmap! :mapclear! yes yes - 351:imap :inoremap :iunmap :imapclear yes - - 352:cmap :cnoremap :cunmap :cmapclear - yes - 353:lmap :lnoremap :lunmap :lmapclear yes* yes* yes* 354 355The original Vi did not have separate mappings for 356Normal/Visual/Operator-pending mode and for Insert/Command-line mode. 357Therefore the ":map" and ":map!" commands enter and display mappings for 358several modes. In Vim you can use the ":nmap", ":vmap", ":omap", ":cmap" and 359":imap" commands to enter mappings for each mode separately. 360 361 *omap-info* 362Operator-pending mappings can be used to define a movement command that can be 363used with any operator. Simple example: ":omap { w" makes "y{" work like "yw" 364and "d{" like "dw". 365 366To ignore the starting cursor position and select different text, you can have 367the omap start Visual mode to select the text to be operated upon. Example 368that operates on a function name in the current line: > 369 onoremap <silent> F :<C-U>normal! 0f(hviw<CR> 370The CTRL-U (<C-U>) is used to remove the range that Vim may insert. The 371Normal mode commands find the first '(' character and select the first word 372before it. That usually is the function name. 373 374To enter a mapping for Normal and Visual mode, but not Operator-pending mode, 375first define it for all three modes, then unmap it for Operator-pending mode: 376 :map xx something-difficult 377 :ounmap xx 378Likewise for a mapping for Visual and Operator-pending mode or Normal and 379Operator-pending mode. 380 381 *language-mapping* 382":lmap" defines a mapping that applies to: 383- Insert mode 384- Command-line mode 385- when entering a search pattern 386- the argument of the commands that accept a text character, such as "r" and 387 "f" 388- for the input() line 389Generally: Whenever a character is to be typed that is part of the text in the 390buffer, not a Vim command character. "Lang-Arg" isn't really another mode, 391it's just used here for this situation. 392 The simplest way to load a set of related language mappings is by using the 393'keymap' option. See |45.5|. 394 In Insert mode and in Command-line mode the mappings can be disabled with 395the CTRL-^ command |i_CTRL-^| |c_CTRL-^|. These commands change the value of 396the 'iminsert' option. When starting to enter a normal command line (not a 397search pattern) the mappings are disabled until a CTRL-^ is typed. The state 398last used is remembered for Insert mode and Search patterns separately. The 399state for Insert mode is also used when typing a character as an argument to 400command like "f" or "t". 401 Language mappings will never be applied to already mapped characters. They 402are only used for typed characters. This assumes that the language mapping 403was already done when typing the mapping. 404 405 4061.4 LISTING MAPPINGS *map-listing* 407 408When listing mappings the characters in the first two columns are: 409 410 CHAR MODE ~ 411 <Space> Normal, Visual, Select and Operator-pending 412 n Normal 413 v Visual and Select 414 s Select 415 x Visual 416 o Operator-pending 417 ! Insert and Command-line 418 i Insert 419 l ":lmap" mappings for Insert, Command-line and Lang-Arg 420 c Command-line 421 422Just before the {rhs} a special character can appear: 423 * indicates that it is not remappable 424 & indicates that only script-local mappings are remappable 425 @ indicates a buffer-local mapping 426 427Everything from the first non-blank after {lhs} up to the end of the line 428(or '|') is considered to be part of {rhs}. This allows the {rhs} to end 429with a space. 430 431Note: When using mappings for Visual mode, you can use the "'<" mark, which 432is the start of the last selected Visual area in the current buffer |'<|. 433 434 *:map-verbose* 435When 'verbose' is non-zero, listing a key map will also display where it was 436last defined. Example: > 437 438 :verbose map <C-W>* 439 n <C-W>* * <C-W><C-S>* 440 Last set from /home/abcd/.vimrc 441 442See |:verbose-cmd| for more information. 443 444 4451.5 MAPPING SPECIAL KEYS *:map-special-keys* 446 447There are three ways to map a special key: 4481. The Vi-compatible method: Map the key code. Often this is a sequence that 449 starts with <Esc>. To enter a mapping like this you type ":map " and then 450 you have to type CTRL-V before hitting the function key. Note that when 451 the key code for the key is in the termcap (the t_ options), it will 452 automatically be translated into the internal code and become the second 453 way of mapping (unless the 'k' flag is included in 'cpoptions'). 4542. The second method is to use the internal code for the function key. To 455 enter such a mapping type CTRL-K and then hit the function key, or use 456 the form "#1", "#2", .. "#9", "#0", "<Up>", "<S-Down>", "<S-F7>", etc. 457 (see table of keys |key-notation|, all keys from <Up> can be used). The 458 first ten function keys can be defined in two ways: Just the number, like 459 "#2", and with "<F>", like "<F2>". Both stand for function key 2. "#0" 460 refers to function key 10, defined with option 't_f10', which may be 461 function key zero on some keyboards. The <> form cannot be used when 462 'cpoptions' includes the '<' flag. 4633. Use the termcap entry, with the form <t_xx>, where "xx" is the name of the 464 termcap entry. Any string entry can be used. For example: > 465 :map <t_F3> G 466< Maps function key 13 to "G". This does not work if 'cpoptions' includes 467 the '<' flag. 468 469The advantage of the second and third method is that the mapping will work on 470different terminals without modification (the function key will be 471translated into the same internal code or the actual key code, no matter what 472terminal you are using. The termcap must be correct for this to work, and you 473must use the same mappings). 474 475DETAIL: Vim first checks if a sequence from the keyboard is mapped. If it 476isn't the terminal key codes are tried (see |terminal-options|). If a 477terminal code is found it is replaced with the internal code. Then the check 478for a mapping is done again (so you can map an internal code to something 479else). What is written into the script file depends on what is recognized. 480If the terminal key code was recognized as a mapping the key code itself is 481written to the script file. If it was recognized as a terminal code the 482internal code is written to the script file. 483 484 4851.6 SPECIAL CHARACTERS *:map-special-chars* 486 *map_backslash* 487Note that only CTRL-V is mentioned here as a special character for mappings 488and abbreviations. When 'cpoptions' does not contain 'B', a backslash can 489also be used like CTRL-V. The <> notation can be fully used then |<>|. But 490you cannot use "<C-V>" like CTRL-V to escape the special meaning of what 491follows. 492 493To map a backslash, or use a backslash literally in the {rhs}, the special 494sequence "<Bslash>" can be used. This avoids the need to double backslashes 495when using nested mappings. 496 497 *map_CTRL-C* 498Using CTRL-C in the {lhs} is possible, but it will only work when Vim is 499waiting for a key, not when Vim is busy with something. When Vim is busy 500CTRL-C interrupts/breaks the command. 501When using the GUI version on MS-Windows CTRL-C can be mapped to allow a Copy 502command to the clipboard. Use CTRL-Break to interrupt Vim. 503 504 *map_space_in_lhs* 505To include a space in {lhs} precede it with a CTRL-V (type two CTRL-Vs for 506each space). 507 *map_space_in_rhs* 508If you want a {rhs} that starts with a space, use "<Space>". To be fully Vi 509compatible (but unreadable) don't use the |<>| notation, precede {rhs} with a 510single CTRL-V (you have to type CTRL-V two times). 511 *map_empty_rhs* 512You can create an empty {rhs} by typing nothing after a single CTRL-V (you 513have to type CTRL-V two times). Unfortunately, you cannot do this in a vimrc 514file. 515 *<Nop>* 516An easier way to get a mapping that doesn't produce anything, is to use 517"<Nop>" for the {rhs}. This only works when the |<>| notation is enabled. 518For example, to make sure that function key 8 does nothing at all: > 519 :map <F8> <Nop> 520 :map! <F8> <Nop> 521< 522 *map-multibyte* 523It is possible to map multibyte characters, but only the whole character. You 524cannot map the first byte only. This was done to prevent problems in this 525scenario: > 526 :set encoding=latin1 527 :imap <M-C> foo 528 :set encoding=utf-8 529The mapping for <M-C> is defined with the latin1 encoding, resulting in a 0xc3 530byte. If you type the character � (0xe1 <M-a>) in UTF-8 encoding this is the 531two bytes 0xc3 0xa1. You don't want the 0xc3 byte to be mapped then or 532otherwise it would be impossible to type the � character. 533 534 *<Leader>* *mapleader* 535To define a mapping which uses the "mapleader" variable, the special string 536"<Leader>" can be used. It is replaced with the string value of "mapleader". 537If "mapleader" is not set or empty, a backslash is used instead. Example: > 538 :map <Leader>A oanother line<Esc> 539Works like: > 540 :map \A oanother line<Esc> 541But after: > 542 :let mapleader = "," 543It works like: > 544 :map ,A oanother line<Esc> 545 546Note that the value of "mapleader" is used at the moment the mapping is 547defined. Changing "mapleader" after that has no effect for already defined 548mappings. 549 550 *<LocalLeader>* *maplocalleader* 551<LocalLeader> is just like <Leader>, except that it uses "maplocalleader" 552instead of "mapleader". <LocalLeader> is to be used for mappings which are 553local to a buffer. Example: > 554 :map <buffer> <LocalLeader>A oanother line<Esc> 555< 556In a global plugin <Leader> should be used and in a filetype plugin 557<LocalLeader>. "mapleader" and "maplocalleader" can be equal. Although, if 558you make them different, there is a smaller chance of mappings from global 559plugins to clash with mappings for filetype plugins. For example, you could 560keep "mapleader" at the default backslash, and set "maplocalleader" to an 561underscore. 562 563 *map-<SID>* 564In a script the special key name "<SID>" can be used to define a mapping 565that's local to the script. See |<SID>| for details. 566 567 *<Plug>* 568The special key name "<Plug>" can be used for an internal mapping, which is 569not to be matched with any key sequence. This is useful in plugins 570|using-<Plug>|. 571 572 *<Char>* *<Char->* 573To map a character by its decimal, octal or hexadecimal number the <Char> 574construct can be used: 575 <Char-123> character 123 576 <Char-033> character 27 577 <Char-0x7f> character 127 578 <S-Char-114> character 114 ('r') shifted ('R') 579This is useful to specify a (multi-byte) character in a 'keymap' file. 580Upper and lowercase differences are ignored. 581 582 *map-comments* 583It is not possible to put a comment after these commands, because the '"' 584character is considered to be part of the {lhs} or {rhs}. 585 586 *map_bar* 587Since the '|' character is used to separate a map command from the next 588command, you will have to do something special to include a '|' in {rhs}. 589There are three methods: 590 use works when example ~ 591 <Bar> '<' is not in 'cpoptions' :map _l :!ls <Bar> more^M 592 \| 'b' is not in 'cpoptions' :map _l :!ls \| more^M 593 ^V| always, in Vim and Vi :map _l :!ls ^V| more^M 594 595(here ^V stands for CTRL-V; to get one CTRL-V you have to type it twice; you 596cannot use the <> notation "<C-V>" here). 597 598All three work when you use the default setting for 'cpoptions'. 599 600When 'b' is present in 'cpoptions', "\|" will be recognized as a mapping 601ending in a '\' and then another command. This is Vi compatible, but 602illogical when compared to other commands. 603 604 *map_return* 605When you have a mapping that contains an Ex command, you need to put a line 606terminator after it to have it executed. The use of <CR> is recommended for 607this (see |<>|). Example: > 608 :map _ls :!ls -l %:S<CR>:echo "the end"<CR> 609 610To avoid mapping of the characters you type in insert or Command-line mode, 611type a CTRL-V first. The mapping in Insert mode is disabled if the 'paste' 612option is on. 613 *map-error* 614Note that when an error is encountered (that causes an error message or beep) 615the rest of the mapping is not executed. This is Vi-compatible. 616 617Note that the second character (argument) of the commands @zZtTfF[]rm'`"v 618and CTRL-X is not mapped. This was done to be able to use all the named 619registers and marks, even when the command with the same name has been 620mapped. 621 622 6231.7 WHAT KEYS TO MAP *map-which-keys* 624 625If you are going to map something, you will need to choose which key(s) to use 626for the {lhs}. You will have to avoid keys that are used for Vim commands, 627otherwise you would not be able to use those commands anymore. Here are a few 628suggestions: 629- Function keys <F2>, <F3>, etc.. Also the shifted function keys <S-F1>, 630 <S-F2>, etc. Note that <F1> is already used for the help command. 631- Meta-keys (with the ALT key pressed). Depending on your keyboard accented 632 characters may be used as well. |:map-alt-keys| 633- Use the '_' or ',' character and then any other character. The "_" and "," 634 commands do exist in Vim (see |_| and |,|), but you probably never use them. 635- Use a key that is a synonym for another command. For example: CTRL-P and 636 CTRL-N. Use an extra character to allow more mappings. 637- The key defined by <Leader> and one or more other keys. This is especially 638 useful in scripts. |mapleader| 639 640See the file "index" for keys that are not used and thus can be mapped without 641losing any builtin function. You can also use ":help {key}^D" to find out if 642a key is used for some command. ({key} is the specific key you want to find 643out about, ^D is CTRL-D). 644 645 6461.8 EXAMPLES *map-examples* 647 648A few examples (given as you type them, for "<CR>" you type four characters; 649the '<' flag must not be present in 'cpoptions' for this to work). > 650 651 :map <F3> o#include 652 :map <M-g> /foo<CR>cwbar<Esc> 653 :map _x d/END/e<CR> 654 :map! qq quadrillion questions 655 656 657Multiplying a count 658 659When you type a count before triggering a mapping, it's like the count was 660typed before the {lhs}. For example, with this mapping: > 661 :map <F4> 3w 662Typing 2<F4> will result in "23w". Thus not moving 2 * 3 words but 23 words. 663If you want to multiply counts use the expression register: > 664 :map <F4> @='3w'<CR> 665The part between quotes is the expression being executed. |@=| 666 667 6681.9 USING MAPPINGS *map-typing* 669 670Vim will compare what you type with the start of a mapped sequence. If there 671is an incomplete match, it will get more characters until there either is a 672complete match or until there is no match at all. Example: If you map! "qq", 673the first 'q' will not appear on the screen until you type another 674character. This is because Vim cannot know if the next character will be a 675'q' or not. If the 'timeout' option is on (which is the default) Vim will 676only wait for one second (or as long as specified with the 'timeoutlen' 677option). After that it assumes that the 'q' is to be interpreted as such. If 678you type slowly, or your system is slow, reset the 'timeout' option. Then you 679might want to set the 'ttimeout' option. 680 681 *map-precedence* 682Buffer-local mappings (defined using |:map-<buffer>|) take precedence over 683global mappings. When a buffer-local mapping is the same as a global mapping, 684Vim will use the buffer-local mapping. In addition, Vim will use a complete 685mapping immediately if it was defined with <nowait>, even if a longer mapping 686has the same prefix. For example, given the following two mappings: > 687 :map <buffer> <nowait> \a :echo "Local \a"<CR> 688 :map \abc :echo "Global \abc"<CR> 689When typing \a the buffer-local mapping will be used immediately. Vim will 690not wait for more characters to see if the user might be typing \abc. 691 692 *map-keys-fails* 693There are situations where key codes might not be recognized: 694- Vim can only read part of the key code. Mostly this is only the first 695 character. This happens on some Unix versions in an xterm. 696- The key code is after character(s) that are mapped. E.g., "<F1><F1>" or 697 "g<F1>". 698 699The result is that the key code is not recognized in this situation, and the 700mapping fails. There are two actions needed to avoid this problem: 701 702- Remove the 'K' flag from 'cpoptions'. This will make Vim wait for the rest 703 of the characters of the function key. 704- When using <F1> to <F4> the actual key code generated may correspond to 705 <xF1> to <xF4>. There are mappings from <xF1> to <F1>, <xF2> to <F2>, etc., 706 but these are not recognized after another half a mapping. Make sure the 707 key codes for <F1> to <F4> are correct: > 708 :set <F1>=<type CTRL-V><type F1> 709< Type the <F1> as four characters. The part after the "=" must be done with 710 the actual keys, not the literal text. 711Another solution is to use the actual key code in the mapping for the second 712special key: > 713 :map <F1><Esc>OP :echo "yes"<CR> 714Don't type a real <Esc>, Vim will recognize the key code and replace it with 715<F1> anyway. 716 717Another problem may be that when keeping ALT or Meta pressed the terminal 718prepends ESC instead of setting the 8th bit. See |:map-alt-keys|. 719 720 *recursive_mapping* 721If you include the {lhs} in the {rhs} you have a recursive mapping. When 722{lhs} is typed, it will be replaced with {rhs}. When the {lhs} which is 723included in {rhs} is encountered it will be replaced with {rhs}, and so on. 724This makes it possible to repeat a command an infinite number of times. The 725only problem is that the only way to stop this is by causing an error. The 726macros to solve a maze uses this, look there for an example. There is one 727exception: If the {rhs} starts with {lhs}, the first character is not mapped 728again (this is Vi compatible). 729For example: > 730 :map ab abcd 731will execute the "a" command and insert "bcd" in the text. The "ab" in the 732{rhs} will not be mapped again. 733 734If you want to exchange the meaning of two keys you should use the :noremap 735command. For example: > 736 :noremap k j 737 :noremap j k 738This will exchange the cursor up and down commands. 739 740With the normal :map command, when the 'remap' option is on, mapping takes 741place until the text is found not to be a part of a {lhs}. For example, if 742you use: > 743 :map x y 744 :map y x 745Vim will replace x with y, and then y with x, etc. When this has happened 746'maxmapdepth' times (default 1000), Vim will give the error message 747"recursive mapping". 748 749 *:map-undo* 750If you include an undo command inside a mapped sequence, this will bring the 751text back in the state before executing the macro. This is compatible with 752the original Vi, as long as there is only one undo command in the mapped 753sequence (having two undo commands in a mapped sequence did not make sense 754in the original Vi, you would get back the text before the first undo). 755 756 7571.10 MAPPING ALT-KEYS *:map-alt-keys* 758 759In the GUI Vim handles the Alt key itself, thus mapping keys with ALT should 760always work. But in a terminal Vim gets a sequence of bytes and has to figure 761out whether ALT was pressed or not. 762 763By default Vim assumes that pressing the ALT key sets the 8th bit of a typed 764character. Most decent terminals can work that way, such as xterm, aterm and 765rxvt. If your <A-k> mappings don't work it might be that the terminal is 766prefixing the character with an ESC character. But you can just as well type 767ESC before a character, thus Vim doesn't know what happened (except for 768checking the delay between characters, which is not reliable). 769 770As of this writing, some mainstream terminals like gnome-terminal and konsole 771use the ESC prefix. There doesn't appear a way to have them use the 8th bit 772instead. Xterm should work well by default. Aterm and rxvt should work well 773when started with the "--meta8" argument. You can also tweak resources like 774"metaSendsEscape", "eightBitInput" and "eightBitOutput". 775 776On the Linux console, this behavior can be toggled with the "setmetamode" 777command. Bear in mind that not using an ESC prefix could get you in trouble 778with other programs. You should make sure that bash has the "convert-meta" 779option set to "on" in order for your Meta keybindings to still work on it 780(it's the default readline behavior, unless changed by specific system 781configuration). For that, you can add the line: > 782 783 set convert-meta on 784 785to your ~/.inputrc file. If you're creating the file, you might want to use: > 786 787 $include /etc/inputrc 788 789as the first line, if that file exists on your system, to keep global options. 790This may cause a problem for entering special characters, such as the umlaut. 791Then you should use CTRL-V before that character. 792 793Bear in mind that convert-meta has been reported to have troubles when used in 794UTF-8 locales. On terminals like xterm, the "metaSendsEscape" resource can be 795toggled on the fly through the "Main Options" menu, by pressing Ctrl-LeftClick 796on the terminal; that's a good last resource in case you want to send ESC when 797using other applications but not when inside VIM. 798 799 8001.11 MAPPING AN OPERATOR *:map-operator* 801 802An operator is used before a {motion} command. To define your own operator 803you must create mapping that first sets the 'operatorfunc' option and then 804invoke the |g@| operator. After the user types the {motion} command the 805specified function will be called. 806 807 *g@* *E774* *E775* 808g@{motion} Call the function set by the 'operatorfunc' option. 809 The '[ mark is positioned at the start of the text 810 moved over by {motion}, the '] mark on the last 811 character of the text. 812 The function is called with one String argument: 813 "line" {motion} was |linewise| 814 "char" {motion} was |characterwise| 815 "block" {motion} was |blockwise-visual| 816 Although "block" would rarely appear, since it can 817 only result from Visual mode where "g@" is not useful. 818 {not available when compiled without the |+eval| 819 feature} 820 821Here is an example that counts the number of spaces with <F4>: > 822 823 nmap <silent> <F4> :set opfunc=CountSpaces<CR>g@ 824 vmap <silent> <F4> :<C-U>call CountSpaces(visualmode(), 1)<CR> 825 826 function! CountSpaces(type, ...) 827 let sel_save = &selection 828 let &selection = "inclusive" 829 let reg_save = @@ 830 831 if a:0 " Invoked from Visual mode, use gv command. 832 silent exe "normal! gvy" 833 elseif a:type == 'line' 834 silent exe "normal! '[V']y" 835 else 836 silent exe "normal! `[v`]y" 837 endif 838 839 echomsg strlen(substitute(@@, '[^ ]', '', 'g')) 840 841 let &selection = sel_save 842 let @@ = reg_save 843 endfunction 844 845Note that the 'selection' option is temporarily set to "inclusive" to be able 846to yank exactly the right text by using Visual mode from the '[ to the '] 847mark. 848 849Also note that there is a separate mapping for Visual mode. It removes the 850"'<,'>" range that ":" inserts in Visual mode and invokes the function with 851visualmode() and an extra argument. 852 853============================================================================== 8542. Abbreviations *abbreviations* *Abbreviations* 855 856Abbreviations are used in Insert mode, Replace mode and Command-line mode. 857If you enter a word that is an abbreviation, it is replaced with the word it 858stands for. This can be used to save typing for often used long words. And 859you can use it to automatically correct obvious spelling errors. 860Examples: 861 862 :iab ms Microsoft 863 :iab tihs this 864 865There are three types of abbreviations: 866 867full-id The "full-id" type consists entirely of keyword characters (letters 868 and characters from 'iskeyword' option). This is the most common 869 abbreviation. 870 871 Examples: "foo", "g3", "-1" 872 873end-id The "end-id" type ends in a keyword character, but all the other 874 characters are not keyword characters. 875 876 Examples: "#i", "..f", "$/7" 877 878non-id The "non-id" type ends in a non-keyword character, the other 879 characters may be of any type, excluding space and tab. {this type 880 is not supported by Vi} 881 882 Examples: "def#", "4/7$" 883 884Examples of strings that cannot be abbreviations: "a.b", "#def", "a b", "_$r" 885 886An abbreviation is only recognized when you type a non-keyword character. 887This can also be the <Esc> that ends insert mode or the <CR> that ends a 888command. The non-keyword character which ends the abbreviation is inserted 889after the expanded abbreviation. An exception to this is the character <C-]>, 890which is used to expand an abbreviation without inserting any extra 891characters. 892 893Example: > 894 :ab hh hello 895< "hh<Space>" is expanded to "hello<Space>" 896 "hh<C-]>" is expanded to "hello" 897 898The characters before the cursor must match the abbreviation. Each type has 899an additional rule: 900 901full-id In front of the match is a non-keyword character, or this is where 902 the line or insertion starts. Exception: When the abbreviation is 903 only one character, it is not recognized if there is a non-keyword 904 character in front of it, other than a space or a tab. 905 906end-id In front of the match is a keyword character, or a space or a tab, 907 or this is where the line or insertion starts. 908 909non-id In front of the match is a space, tab or the start of the line or 910 the insertion. 911 912Examples: ({CURSOR} is where you type a non-keyword character) > 913 :ab foo four old otters 914< " foo{CURSOR}" is expanded to " four old otters" 915 " foobar{CURSOR}" is not expanded 916 "barfoo{CURSOR}" is not expanded 917> 918 :ab #i #include 919< "#i{CURSOR}" is expanded to "#include" 920 ">#i{CURSOR}" is not expanded 921> 922 :ab ;; <endofline> 923< "test;;" is not expanded 924 "test ;;" is expanded to "test <endofline>" 925 926To avoid the abbreviation in Insert mode: Type CTRL-V before the character 927that would trigger the abbreviation. E.g. CTRL-V <Space>. Or type part of 928the abbreviation, exit insert mode with <Esc>, re-enter insert mode with "a" 929and type the rest. 930 931To avoid the abbreviation in Command-line mode: Type CTRL-V twice somewhere in 932the abbreviation to avoid it to be replaced. A CTRL-V in front of a normal 933character is mostly ignored otherwise. 934 935It is possible to move the cursor after an abbreviation: > 936 :iab if if ()<Left> 937This does not work if 'cpoptions' includes the '<' flag. |<>| 938 939You can even do more complicated things. For example, to consume the space 940typed after an abbreviation: > 941 func Eatchar(pat) 942 let c = nr2char(getchar(0)) 943 return (c =~ a:pat) ? '' : c 944 endfunc 945 iabbr <silent> if if ()<Left><C-R>=Eatchar('\s')<CR> 946 947There are no default abbreviations. 948 949Abbreviations are never recursive. You can use ":ab f f-o-o" without any 950problem. But abbreviations can be mapped. {some versions of Vi support 951recursive abbreviations, for no apparent reason} 952 953Abbreviations are disabled if the 'paste' option is on. 954 955 *:abbreviate-local* *:abbreviate-<buffer>* 956Just like mappings, abbreviations can be local to a buffer. This is mostly 957used in a |filetype-plugin| file. Example for a C plugin file: > 958 :abb <buffer> FF for (i = 0; i < ; ++i) 959< 960 *:ab* *:abbreviate* 961:ab[breviate] list all abbreviations. The character in the first 962 column indicates the mode where the abbreviation is 963 used: 'i' for insert mode, 'c' for Command-line 964 mode, '!' for both. These are the same as for 965 mappings, see |map-listing|. 966 967 *:abbreviate-verbose* 968When 'verbose' is non-zero, listing an abbreviation will also display where it 969was last defined. Example: > 970 971 :verbose abbreviate 972 ! teh the 973 Last set from /home/abcd/vim/abbr.vim 974 975See |:verbose-cmd| for more information. 976 977:ab[breviate] {lhs} list the abbreviations that start with {lhs} 978 You may need to insert a CTRL-V (type it twice) to 979 avoid that a typed {lhs} is expanded, since 980 command-line abbreviations apply here. 981 982:ab[breviate] [<expr>] [<buffer>] {lhs} {rhs} 983 add abbreviation for {lhs} to {rhs}. If {lhs} already 984 existed it is replaced with the new {rhs}. {rhs} may 985 contain spaces. 986 See |:map-<expr>| for the optional <expr> argument. 987 See |:map-<buffer>| for the optional <buffer> argument. 988 989 *:una* *:unabbreviate* 990:una[bbreviate] {lhs} Remove abbreviation for {lhs} from the list. If none 991 is found, remove abbreviations in which {lhs} matches 992 with the {rhs}. This is done so that you can even 993 remove abbreviations after expansion. To avoid 994 expansion insert a CTRL-V (type it twice). 995 996 *:norea* *:noreabbrev* 997:norea[bbrev] [<expr>] [<buffer>] [lhs] [rhs] 998 same as ":ab", but no remapping for this {rhs} {not 999 in Vi} 1000 1001 *:ca* *:cabbrev* 1002:ca[bbrev] [<expr>] [<buffer>] [lhs] [rhs] 1003 same as ":ab", but for Command-line mode only. {not 1004 in Vi} 1005 1006 *:cuna* *:cunabbrev* 1007:cuna[bbrev] {lhs} same as ":una", but for Command-line mode only. {not 1008 in Vi} 1009 1010 *:cnorea* *:cnoreabbrev* 1011:cnorea[bbrev] [<expr>] [<buffer>] [lhs] [rhs] 1012 same as ":ab", but for Command-line mode only and no 1013 remapping for this {rhs} {not in Vi} 1014 1015 *:ia* *:iabbrev* 1016:ia[bbrev] [<expr>] [<buffer>] [lhs] [rhs] 1017 same as ":ab", but for Insert mode only. {not in Vi} 1018 1019 *:iuna* *:iunabbrev* 1020:iuna[bbrev] {lhs} same as ":una", but for insert mode only. {not in 1021 Vi} 1022 1023 *:inorea* *:inoreabbrev* 1024:inorea[bbrev] [<expr>] [<buffer>] [lhs] [rhs] 1025 same as ":ab", but for Insert mode only and no 1026 remapping for this {rhs} {not in Vi} 1027 1028 *:abc* *:abclear* 1029:abc[lear] [<buffer>] Remove all abbreviations. {not in Vi} 1030 1031 *:iabc* *:iabclear* 1032:iabc[lear] [<buffer>] Remove all abbreviations for Insert mode. {not in Vi} 1033 1034 *:cabc* *:cabclear* 1035:cabc[lear] [<buffer>] Remove all abbreviations for Command-line mode. {not 1036 in Vi} 1037 1038 *using_CTRL-V* 1039It is possible to use special characters in the rhs of an abbreviation. 1040CTRL-V has to be used to avoid the special meaning of most non printable 1041characters. How many CTRL-Vs need to be typed depends on how you enter the 1042abbreviation. This also applies to mappings. Let's use an example here. 1043 1044Suppose you want to abbreviate "esc" to enter an <Esc> character. When you 1045type the ":ab" command in Vim, you have to enter this: (here ^V is a CTRL-V 1046and ^[ is <Esc>) 1047 1048You type: ab esc ^V^V^V^V^V^[ 1049 1050 All keyboard input is subjected to ^V quote interpretation, so 1051 the first, third, and fifth ^V characters simply allow the second, 1052 and fourth ^Vs, and the ^[, to be entered into the command-line. 1053 1054You see: ab esc ^V^V^[ 1055 1056 The command-line contains two actual ^Vs before the ^[. This is 1057 how it should appear in your .exrc file, if you choose to go that 1058 route. The first ^V is there to quote the second ^V; the :ab 1059 command uses ^V as its own quote character, so you can include quoted 1060 whitespace or the | character in the abbreviation. The :ab command 1061 doesn't do anything special with the ^[ character, so it doesn't need 1062 to be quoted. (Although quoting isn't harmful; that's why typing 7 1063 [but not 8!] ^Vs works.) 1064 1065Stored as: esc ^V^[ 1066 1067 After parsing, the abbreviation's short form ("esc") and long form 1068 (the two characters "^V^[") are stored in the abbreviation table. 1069 If you give the :ab command with no arguments, this is how the 1070 abbreviation will be displayed. 1071 1072 Later, when the abbreviation is expanded because the user typed in 1073 the word "esc", the long form is subjected to the same type of 1074 ^V interpretation as keyboard input. So the ^V protects the ^[ 1075 character from being interpreted as the "exit Insert mode" character. 1076 Instead, the ^[ is inserted into the text. 1077 1078Expands to: ^[ 1079 1080[example given by Steve Kirkendall] 1081 1082============================================================================== 10833. Local mappings and functions *script-local* 1084 1085When using several Vim script files, there is the danger that mappings and 1086functions used in one script use the same name as in other scripts. To avoid 1087this, they can be made local to the script. 1088 1089 *<SID>* *<SNR>* *E81* 1090The string "<SID>" can be used in a mapping or menu. This requires that the 1091'<' flag is not present in 'cpoptions'. 1092 When executing the map command, Vim will replace "<SID>" with the special 1093key code <SNR>, followed by a number that's unique for the script, and an 1094underscore. Example: > 1095 :map <SID>Add 1096could define a mapping "<SNR>23_Add". 1097 1098When defining a function in a script, "s:" can be prepended to the name to 1099make it local to the script. But when a mapping is executed from outside of 1100the script, it doesn't know in which script the function was defined. To 1101avoid this problem, use "<SID>" instead of "s:". The same translation is done 1102as for mappings. This makes it possible to define a call to the function in 1103a mapping. 1104 1105When a local function is executed, it runs in the context of the script it was 1106defined in. This means that new functions and mappings it defines can also 1107use "s:" or "<SID>" and it will use the same unique number as when the 1108function itself was defined. Also, the "s:var" local script variables can be 1109used. 1110 1111When executing an autocommand or a user command, it will run in the context of 1112the script it was defined in. This makes it possible that the command calls a 1113local function or uses a local mapping. 1114 1115Otherwise, using "<SID>" outside of a script context is an error. 1116 1117If you need to get the script number to use in a complicated script, you can 1118use this function: > 1119 function s:SID() 1120 return matchstr(expand('<sfile>'), '<SNR>\zs\d\+\ze_SID$') 1121 endfun 1122 1123The "<SNR>" will be shown when listing functions and mappings. This is useful 1124to find out what they are defined to. 1125 1126The |:scriptnames| command can be used to see which scripts have been sourced 1127and what their <SNR> number is. 1128 1129This is all {not in Vi} and {not available when compiled without the |+eval| 1130feature}. 1131 1132============================================================================== 11334. User-defined commands *user-commands* 1134 1135It is possible to define your own Ex commands. A user-defined command can act 1136just like a built-in command (it can have a range or arguments, arguments can 1137be completed as filenames or buffer names, etc), except that when the command 1138is executed, it is transformed into a normal Ex command and then executed. 1139 1140For starters: See section |40.2| in the user manual. 1141 1142 *E183* *E841* *user-cmd-ambiguous* 1143All user defined commands must start with an uppercase letter, to avoid 1144confusion with builtin commands. Exceptions are these builtin commands: 1145 :Next 1146 :X 1147They cannot be used for a user defined command. ":Print" is also an existing 1148command, but it is deprecated and can be overruled. 1149 1150The other characters of the user command can be uppercase letters, lowercase 1151letters or digits. When using digits, note that other commands that take a 1152numeric argument may become ambiguous. For example, the command ":Cc2" could 1153be the user command ":Cc2" without an argument, or the command ":Cc" with 1154argument "2". It is advised to put a space between the command name and the 1155argument to avoid these problems. 1156 1157When using a user-defined command, the command can be abbreviated. However, if 1158an abbreviation is not unique, an error will be issued. Furthermore, a 1159built-in command will always take precedence. 1160 1161Example: > 1162 :command Rename ... 1163 :command Renumber ... 1164 :Rena " Means "Rename" 1165 :Renu " Means "Renumber" 1166 :Ren " Error - ambiguous 1167 :command Paste ... 1168 :P " The built-in :Print 1169 1170It is recommended that full names for user-defined commands are used in 1171scripts. 1172 1173:com[mand] *:com* *:command* 1174 List all user-defined commands. When listing commands, 1175 the characters in the first two columns are 1176 ! Command has the -bang attribute 1177 " Command has the -register attribute 1178 b Command is local to current buffer 1179 (see below for details on attributes) 1180 1181:com[mand] {cmd} List the user-defined commands that start with {cmd} 1182 1183 *:command-verbose* 1184When 'verbose' is non-zero, listing a command will also display where it was 1185last defined. Example: > 1186 1187 :verbose command TOhtml 1188< Name Args Range Complete Definition ~ 1189 TOhtml 0 % :call Convert2HTML(<line1>, <line2>) ~ 1190 Last set from /usr/share/vim/vim-7.0/plugin/tohtml.vim ~ 1191 1192See |:verbose-cmd| for more information. 1193 1194 *E174* *E182* 1195:com[mand][!] [{attr}...] {cmd} {rep} 1196 Define a user command. The name of the command is 1197 {cmd} and its replacement text is {rep}. The command's 1198 attributes (see below) are {attr}. If the command 1199 already exists, an error is reported, unless a ! is 1200 specified, in which case the command is redefined. 1201 1202:delc[ommand] {cmd} *:delc* *:delcommand* *E184* 1203 Delete the user-defined command {cmd}. 1204 1205:comc[lear] *:comc* *:comclear* 1206 Delete all user-defined commands. 1207 1208Command attributes 1209 1210User-defined commands are treated by Vim just like any other Ex commands. They 1211can have arguments, or have a range specified. Arguments are subject to 1212completion as filenames, buffers, etc. Exactly how this works depends upon the 1213command's attributes, which are specified when the command is defined. 1214 1215There are a number of attributes, split into four categories: argument 1216handling, completion behavior, range handling, and special cases. The 1217attributes are described below, by category. 1218 1219Argument handling *E175* *E176* *:command-nargs* 1220 1221By default, a user defined command will take no arguments (and an error is 1222reported if any are supplied). However, it is possible to specify that the 1223command can take arguments, using the -nargs attribute. Valid cases are: 1224 1225 -nargs=0 No arguments are allowed (the default) 1226 -nargs=1 Exactly one argument is required, it includes spaces 1227 -nargs=* Any number of arguments are allowed (0, 1, or many), 1228 separated by white space 1229 -nargs=? 0 or 1 arguments are allowed 1230 -nargs=+ Arguments must be supplied, but any number are allowed 1231 1232Arguments are considered to be separated by (unescaped) spaces or tabs in this 1233context, except when there is one argument, then the white space is part of 1234the argument. 1235 1236Note that arguments are used as text, not as expressions. Specifically, 1237"s:var" will use the script-local variable in the script where the command was 1238defined, not where it is invoked! Example: 1239 script1.vim: > 1240 :let s:error = "None" 1241 :command -nargs=1 Error echoerr <args> 1242< script2.vim: > 1243 :source script1.vim 1244 :let s:error = "Wrong!" 1245 :Error s:error 1246Executing script2.vim will result in "None" being echoed. Not what you 1247intended! Calling a function may be an alternative. 1248 1249Completion behavior *:command-completion* *E179* 1250 *E180* *E181* *:command-complete* 1251By default, the arguments of user defined commands do not undergo completion. 1252However, by specifying one or the other of the following attributes, argument 1253completion can be enabled: 1254 1255 -complete=augroup autocmd groups 1256 -complete=buffer buffer names 1257 -complete=behave :behave suboptions 1258 -complete=color color schemes 1259 -complete=command Ex command (and arguments) 1260 -complete=compiler compilers 1261 -complete=cscope |:cscope| suboptions 1262 -complete=dir directory names 1263 -complete=environment environment variable names 1264 -complete=event autocommand events 1265 -complete=expression Vim expression 1266 -complete=file file and directory names 1267 -complete=file_in_path file and directory names in |'path'| 1268 -complete=filetype filetype names |'filetype'| 1269 -complete=function function name 1270 -complete=help help subjects 1271 -complete=highlight highlight groups 1272 -complete=history :history suboptions 1273 -complete=locale locale names (as output of locale -a) 1274 -complete=mapping mapping name 1275 -complete=menu menus 1276 -complete=option options 1277 -complete=shellcmd Shell command 1278 -complete=sign |:sign| suboptions 1279 -complete=syntax syntax file names |'syntax'| 1280 -complete=syntime |:syntime| suboptions 1281 -complete=tag tags 1282 -complete=tag_listfiles tags, file names are shown when CTRL-D is hit 1283 -complete=user user names 1284 -complete=var user variables 1285 -complete=custom,{func} custom completion, defined via {func} 1286 -complete=customlist,{func} custom completion, defined via {func} 1287 1288Note: That some completion methods might expand environment variables. 1289 1290 1291Custom completion *:command-completion-custom* 1292 *:command-completion-customlist* 1293 *E467* *E468* 1294It is possible to define customized completion schemes via the "custom,{func}" 1295or the "customlist,{func}" completion argument. The {func} part should be a 1296function with the following signature: > 1297 1298 :function {func}(ArgLead, CmdLine, CursorPos) 1299 1300The function need not use all these arguments. The function should provide the 1301completion candidates as the return value. 1302 1303For the "custom" argument, the function should return the completion 1304candidates one per line in a newline separated string. 1305 1306For the "customlist" argument, the function should return the completion 1307candidates as a Vim List. Non-string items in the list are ignored. 1308 1309The function arguments are: 1310 ArgLead the leading portion of the argument currently being 1311 completed on 1312 CmdLine the entire command line 1313 CursorPos the cursor position in it (byte index) 1314The function may use these for determining context. For the "custom" 1315argument, it is not necessary to filter candidates against the (implicit 1316pattern in) ArgLead. Vim will filter the candidates with its regexp engine 1317after function return, and this is probably more efficient in most cases. For 1318the "customlist" argument, Vim will not filter the returned completion 1319candidates and the user supplied function should filter the candidates. 1320 1321The following example lists user names to a Finger command > 1322 :com -complete=custom,ListUsers -nargs=1 Finger !finger <args> 1323 :fun ListUsers(A,L,P) 1324 : return system("cut -d: -f1 /etc/passwd") 1325 :endfun 1326 1327The following example completes filenames from the directories specified in 1328the 'path' option: > 1329 :com -nargs=1 -bang -complete=customlist,EditFileComplete 1330 \ EditFile edit<bang> <args> 1331 :fun EditFileComplete(A,L,P) 1332 : return split(globpath(&path, a:A), "\n") 1333 :endfun 1334< 1335This example does not work for file names with spaces! 1336 1337 1338Range handling *E177* *E178* *:command-range* 1339 *:command-count* 1340By default, user-defined commands do not accept a line number range. However, 1341it is possible to specify that the command does take a range (the -range 1342attribute), or that it takes an arbitrary count value, either in the line 1343number position (-range=N, like the |:split| command) or as a "count" 1344argument (-count=N, like the |:Next| command). The count will then be 1345available in the argument with |<count>|. 1346 1347Possible attributes are: 1348 1349 -range Range allowed, default is current line 1350 -range=% Range allowed, default is whole file (1,$) 1351 -range=N A count (default N) which is specified in the line 1352 number position (like |:split|); allows for zero line 1353 number. 1354 -count=N A count (default N) which is specified either in the line 1355 number position, or as an initial argument (like |:Next|). 1356 Specifying -count (without a default) acts like -count=0 1357 1358Note that -range=N and -count=N are mutually exclusive - only one should be 1359specified. 1360 1361 *E889* *:command-addr* 1362It is possible that the special characters in the range like ., $ or % which 1363by default correspond to the current line, last line and the whole buffer, 1364relate to arguments, (loaded) buffers, windows or tab pages. 1365 1366Possible values are: 1367 -addr=lines Range of lines (this is the default) 1368 -addr=arguments Range for arguments 1369 -addr=buffers Range for buffers (also not loaded buffers) 1370 -addr=loaded_buffers Range for loaded buffers 1371 -addr=windows Range for windows 1372 -addr=tabs Range for tab pages 1373 1374Special cases *:command-bang* *:command-bar* 1375 *:command-register* *:command-buffer* 1376There are some special cases as well: 1377 1378 -bang The command can take a ! modifier (like :q or :w) 1379 -bar The command can be followed by a "|" and another command. 1380 A "|" inside the command argument is not allowed then. 1381 Also checks for a " to start a comment. 1382 -register The first argument to the command can be an optional 1383 register name (like :del, :put, :yank). 1384 -buffer The command will only be available in the current buffer. 1385 1386In the cases of the -count and -register attributes, if the optional argument 1387is supplied, it is removed from the argument list and is available to the 1388replacement text separately. 1389Note that these arguments can be abbreviated, but that is a deprecated 1390feature. Use the full name for new scripts. 1391 1392Replacement text 1393 1394The replacement text for a user defined command is scanned for special escape 1395sequences, using <...> notation. Escape sequences are replaced with values 1396from the entered command line, and all other text is copied unchanged. The 1397resulting string is executed as an Ex command. To avoid the replacement use 1398<lt> in place of the initial <. Thus to include "<bang>" literally use 1399"<lt>bang>". 1400 1401The valid escape sequences are 1402 1403 *<line1>* 1404 <line1> The starting line of the command range. 1405 *<line2>* 1406 <line2> The final line of the command range. 1407 *<count>* 1408 <count> Any count supplied (as described for the '-range' 1409 and '-count' attributes). 1410 *<bang>* 1411 <bang> (See the '-bang' attribute) Expands to a ! if the 1412 command was executed with a ! modifier, otherwise 1413 expands to nothing. 1414 *<reg>* *<register>* 1415 <reg> (See the '-register' attribute) The optional register, 1416 if specified. Otherwise, expands to nothing. <register> 1417 is a synonym for this. 1418 *<args>* 1419 <args> The command arguments, exactly as supplied (but as 1420 noted above, any count or register can consume some 1421 of the arguments, which are then not part of <args>). 1422 <lt> A single '<' (Less-Than) character. This is needed if you 1423 want to get a literal copy of one of these escape sequences 1424 into the expansion - for example, to get <bang>, use 1425 <lt>bang>. 1426 1427 *<q-args>* 1428If the first two characters of an escape sequence are "q-" (for example, 1429<q-args>) then the value is quoted in such a way as to make it a valid value 1430for use in an expression. This uses the argument as one single value. 1431When there is no argument <q-args> is an empty string. 1432 *<f-args>* 1433To allow commands to pass their arguments on to a user-defined function, there 1434is a special form <f-args> ("function args"). This splits the command 1435arguments at spaces and tabs, quotes each argument individually, and the 1436<f-args> sequence is replaced by the comma-separated list of quoted arguments. 1437See the Mycmd example below. If no arguments are given <f-args> is removed. 1438 To embed whitespace into an argument of <f-args>, prepend a backslash. 1439<f-args> replaces every pair of backslashes (\\) with one backslash. A 1440backslash followed by a character other than white space or a backslash 1441remains unmodified. Overview: 1442 1443 command <f-args> ~ 1444 XX ab 'ab' 1445 XX a\b 'a\b' 1446 XX a\ b 'a b' 1447 XX a\ b 'a ', 'b' 1448 XX a\\b 'a\b' 1449 XX a\\ b 'a\', 'b' 1450 XX a\\\b 'a\\b' 1451 XX a\\\ b 'a\ b' 1452 XX a\\\\b 'a\\b' 1453 XX a\\\\ b 'a\\', 'b' 1454 1455Examples > 1456 1457 " Delete everything after here to the end 1458 :com Ddel +,$d 1459 1460 " Rename the current buffer 1461 :com -nargs=1 -bang -complete=file Ren f <args>|w<bang> 1462 1463 " Replace a range with the contents of a file 1464 " (Enter this all as one line) 1465 :com -range -nargs=1 -complete=file 1466 Replace <line1>-pu_|<line1>,<line2>d|r <args>|<line1>d 1467 1468 " Count the number of lines in the range 1469 :com! -range -nargs=0 Lines echo <line2> - <line1> + 1 "lines" 1470 1471 " Call a user function (example of <f-args>) 1472 :com -nargs=* Mycmd call Myfunc(<f-args>) 1473 1474When executed as: > 1475 :Mycmd arg1 arg2 1476This will invoke: > 1477 :call Myfunc("arg1","arg2") 1478 1479 :" A more substantial example 1480 :function Allargs(command) 1481 : let i = 0 1482 : while i < argc() 1483 : if filereadable(argv(i)) 1484 : execute "e " . argv(i) 1485 : execute a:command 1486 : endif 1487 : let i = i + 1 1488 : endwhile 1489 :endfunction 1490 :command -nargs=+ -complete=command Allargs call Allargs(<q-args>) 1491 1492The command Allargs takes any Vim command(s) as argument and executes it on all 1493files in the argument list. Usage example (note use of the "e" flag to ignore 1494errors and the "update" command to write modified buffers): > 1495 :Allargs %s/foo/bar/ge|update 1496This will invoke: > 1497 :call Allargs("%s/foo/bar/ge|update") 1498< 1499When defining a user command in a script, it will be able to call functions 1500local to the script and use mappings local to the script. When the user 1501invokes the user command, it will run in the context of the script it was 1502defined in. This matters if |<SID>| is used in a command. 1503 1504 vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl: 1505