1*message.txt* For Vim version 7.4. Last change: 2013 Feb 23 2 3 4 VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar 5 6 7This file contains an alphabetical list of messages and error messages that 8Vim produces. You can use this if you don't understand what the message 9means. It is not complete though. 10 111. Old messages |:messages| 122. Error messages |error-messages| 133. Messages |messages| 14 15============================================================================== 161. Old messages *:messages* *:mes* *message-history* 17 18The ":messages" command can be used to view previously given messages. This 19is especially useful when messages have been overwritten or truncated. This 20depends on the 'shortmess' option. 21 22The number of remembered messages is fixed at 20 for the tiny version and 200 23for other versions. 24 25 *g<* 26The "g<" command can be used to see the last page of previous command output. 27This is especially useful if you accidentally typed <Space> at the hit-enter 28prompt. You are then back at the hit-enter prompt and can then scroll further 29back. 30Note: If the output has been stopped with "q" at the more prompt, it will only 31be displayed up to this point. 32The previous command output is cleared when another command produces output. 33 34If you are using translated messages, the first printed line tells who 35maintains the messages or the translations. You can use this to contact the 36maintainer when you spot a mistake. 37 38If you want to find help on a specific (error) message, use the ID at the 39start of the message. For example, to get help on the message: > 40 41 E72: Close error on swap file 42 43or (translated): > 44 45 E72: Errore durante chiusura swap file 46 47Use: > 48 49 :help E72 50 51If you are lazy, it also works without the shift key: > 52 53 :help e72 54 55============================================================================== 562. Error messages *error-messages* *errors* 57 58When an error message is displayed, but it is removed before you could read 59it, you can see it again with: > 60 :echo errmsg 61or view a list of recent messages with: > 62 :messages 63 64 65LIST OF MESSAGES 66 *E222* *E228* *E232* *E256* *E293* *E298* *E304* *E317* 67 *E318* *E356* *E438* *E439* *E440* *E316* *E320* *E322* 68 *E323* *E341* *E473* *E570* *E685* > 69 Add to read buffer 70 makemap: Illegal mode 71 Cannot create BalloonEval with both message and callback 72 Hangul automata ERROR 73 block was not locked 74 Didn't get block nr {N}? 75 ml_upd_block0(): Didn't get block 0?? 76 pointer block id wrong {N} 77 Updated too many blocks? 78 get_varp ERROR 79 u_undo: line numbers wrong 80 undo list corrupt 81 undo line missing 82 ml_get: cannot find line {N} 83 cannot find line {N} 84 line number out of range: {N} past the end 85 line count wrong in block {N} 86 Internal error 87 Internal error: {function} 88 fatal error in cs_manage_matches 89 90This is an internal error. If you can reproduce it, please send in a bug 91report. |bugs| 92 93> 94 ATTENTION 95 Found a swap file by the name ... 96 97See |ATTENTION|. 98 99 *E92* > 100 Buffer {N} not found 101 102The buffer you requested does not exist. This can also happen when you have 103wiped out a buffer which contains a mark or is referenced in another way. 104|:bwipeout| 105 106 *E95* > 107 Buffer with this name already exists 108 109You cannot have two buffers with the same name. 110 111 *E72* > 112 Close error on swap file 113 114The |swap-file|, that is used to keep a copy of the edited text, could not be 115closed properly. Mostly harmless. 116 117 *E169* > 118 Command too recursive 119 120This happens when an Ex command executes an Ex command that executes an Ex 121command, etc. This is only allowed 200 times. When it's more there probably 122is an endless loop. Probably a |:execute| or |:source| command is involved. 123 124 *E254* > 125 Cannot allocate color {name} 126 127The color name {name} is unknown. See |gui-colors| for a list of colors that 128are available on most systems. 129 130 *E458* > 131 Cannot allocate colormap entry, some colors may be incorrect 132 133This means that there are not enough colors available for Vim. It will still 134run, but some of the colors will not appear in the specified color. Try 135stopping other applications that use many colors, or start them after starting 136gvim. 137Browsers are known to consume a lot of colors. You can avoid this with 138netscape by telling it to use its own colormap: > 139 netscape -install 140Or tell it to limit to a certain number of colors (64 should work well): > 141 netscape -ncols 64 142This can also be done with a line in your Xdefaults file: > 143 Netscape*installColormap: Yes 144or > 145 Netscape*maxImageColors: 64 146< 147 *E79* > 148 Cannot expand wildcards 149 150A filename contains a strange combination of characters, which causes Vim to 151attempt expanding wildcards but this fails. This does NOT mean that no 152matching file names could be found, but that the pattern was illegal. 153 154 *E459* > 155 Cannot go back to previous directory 156 157While expanding a file name, Vim failed to go back to the previously used 158directory. All file names being used may be invalid now! You need to have 159execute permission on the current directory. 160 161 *E190* *E212* > 162 Cannot open "{filename}" for writing 163 Can't open file for writing 164 165For some reason the file you are writing to cannot be created or overwritten. 166The reason could be that you do not have permission to write in the directory 167or the file name is not valid. 168 169 *E166* > 170 Can't open linked file for writing 171 172You are trying to write to a file which can't be overwritten, and the file is 173a link (either a hard link or a symbolic link). Writing might still be 174possible if the directory that contains the link or the file is writable, but 175Vim now doesn't know if you want to delete the link and write the file in its 176place, or if you want to delete the file itself and write the new file in its 177place. If you really want to write the file under this name, you have to 178manually delete the link or the file, or change the permissions so that Vim 179can overwrite. 180 181 *E46* > 182 Cannot change read-only variable "{name}" 183 184You are trying to assign a value to an argument of a function |a:var| or a Vim 185internal variable |v:var| which is read-only. 186 187 *E90* > 188 Cannot unload last buffer 189 190Vim always requires one buffer to be loaded, otherwise there would be nothing 191to display in the window. 192 193 *E40* > 194 Can't open errorfile <filename> 195 196When using the ":make" or ":grep" commands: The file used to save the error 197messages or grep output cannot be opened. This can have several causes: 198- 'shellredir' has a wrong value. 199- The shell changes directory, causing the error file to be written in another 200 directory. This could be fixed by changing 'makeef', but then the make 201 command is still executed in the wrong directory. 202- 'makeef' has a wrong value. 203- The 'grepprg' or 'makeprg' could not be executed. This cannot always be 204 detected (especially on MS-Windows). Check your $PATH. 205 206 > 207 Can't open file C:\TEMP\VIoD243.TMP 208 209On MS-Windows, this message appears when the output of an external command was 210to be read, but the command didn't run successfully. This can be caused by 211many things. Check the 'shell', 'shellquote', 'shellxquote', 'shellslash' and 212related options. It might also be that the external command was not found, 213there is no different error message for that. 214 215 *E12* > 216 Command not allowed from exrc/vimrc in current dir or tag search 217 218Some commands are not allowed for security reasons. These commands mostly 219come from a .exrc or .vimrc file in the current directory, or from a tags 220file. Also see 'secure'. 221 222 *E74* > 223 Command too complex 224 225A mapping resulted in a very long command string. Could be caused by a 226mapping that indirectly calls itself. 227 228> 229 CONVERSION ERROR 230 231When writing a file and the text "CONVERSION ERROR" appears, this means that 232some bits were lost when converting text from the internally used UTF-8 to the 233format of the file. The file will not be marked unmodified. If you care 234about the loss of information, set the 'fileencoding' option to another value 235that can handle the characters in the buffer and write again. If you don't 236care, you can abandon the buffer or reset the 'modified' option. 237 238 *E302* > 239 Could not rename swap file 240 241When the file name changes, Vim tries to rename the |swap-file| as well. 242This failed and the old swap file is now still used. Mostly harmless. 243 244 *E43* *E44* > 245 Damaged match string 246 Corrupted regexp program 247 248Something inside Vim went wrong and resulted in a corrupted regexp. If you 249know how to reproduce this problem, please report it. |bugs| 250 251 *E208* *E209* *E210* > 252 Error writing to "{filename}" 253 Error closing "{filename}" 254 Error reading "{filename}" 255 256This occurs when Vim is trying to rename a file, but a simple change of file 257name doesn't work. Then the file will be copied, but somehow this failed. 258The result may be that both the original file and the destination file exist 259and the destination file may be incomplete. 260 261> 262 Vim: Error reading input, exiting... 263 264This occurs when Vim cannot read typed characters while input is required. 265Vim got stuck, the only thing it can do is exit. This can happen when both 266stdin and stderr are redirected and executing a script that doesn't exit Vim. 267 268 *E47* > 269 Error while reading errorfile 270 271Reading the error file was not possible. This is NOT caused by an error 272message that was not recognized. 273 274 *E80* > 275 Error while writing 276 277Writing a file was not completed successfully. The file is probably 278incomplete. 279 280 *E13* *E189* > 281 File exists (add ! to override) 282 "{filename}" exists (add ! to override) 283 284You are protected from accidentally overwriting a file. When you want to 285write anyway, use the same command, but add a "!" just after the command. 286Example: > 287 :w /tmp/test 288changes to: > 289 :w! /tmp/test 290< 291 *E768* > 292 Swap file exists: {filename} (:silent! overrides) 293 294You are protected from overwriting a file that is being edited by Vim. This 295happens when you use ":w! filename" and a swapfile is found. 296- If the swapfile was left over from an old crashed edit session you may want 297 to delete the swapfile. Edit {filename} to find out information about the 298 swapfile. 299- If you want to write anyway prepend ":silent!" to the command. For example: > 300 :silent! w! /tmp/test 301< The special command is needed, since you already added the ! for overwriting 302 an existing file. 303 304 *E139* > 305 File is loaded in another buffer 306 307You are trying to write a file under a name which is also used in another 308buffer. This would result in two versions of the same file. 309 310 *E142* > 311 File not written: Writing is disabled by 'write' option 312 313The 'write' option is off. This makes all commands that try to write a file 314generate this message. This could be caused by a |-m| commandline argument. 315You can switch the 'write' option on with ":set write". 316 317 *E25* > 318 GUI cannot be used: Not enabled at compile time 319 320You are running a version of Vim that doesn't include the GUI code. Therefore 321"gvim" and ":gui" don't work. 322 323 *E49* > 324 Invalid scroll size 325 326This is caused by setting an invalid value for the 'scroll', 'scrolljump' or 327'scrolloff' options. 328 329 *E17* > 330 "{filename}" is a directory 331 332You tried to write a file with the name of a directory. This is not possible. 333You probably need to append a file name. 334 335 *E19* > 336 Mark has invalid line number 337 338You are using a mark that has a line number that doesn't exist. This can 339happen when you have a mark in another file, and some other program has 340deleted lines from it. 341 342 *E219* *E220* > 343 Missing {. 344 Missing }. 345 346Using a {} construct in a file name, but there is a { without a matching } or 347the other way around. It should be used like this: {foo,bar}. This matches 348"foo" and "bar". 349 350 *E315* > 351 ml_get: invalid lnum: {number} 352 353This is an internal Vim error. Please try to find out how it can be 354reproduced, and submit a bug report |bugreport.vim|. 355 356 *E173* > 357 {number} more files to edit 358 359You are trying to exit, while the last item in the argument list has not been 360edited. This protects you from accidentally exiting when you still have more 361files to work on. See |argument-list|. If you do want to exit, just do it 362again and it will work. 363 364 *E23* *E194* > 365 No alternate file 366 No alternate file name to substitute for '#' 367 368The alternate file is not defined yet. See |alternate-file|. 369 370 *E32* > 371 No file name 372 373The current buffer has no name. To write it, use ":w fname". Or give the 374buffer a name with ":file fname". 375 376 *E141* > 377 No file name for buffer {number} 378 379One of the buffers that was changed does not have a file name. Therefore it 380cannot be written. You need to give the buffer a file name: > 381 :buffer {number} 382 :file {filename} 383< 384 *E33* > 385 No previous substitute regular expression 386 387When using the '~' character in a pattern, it is replaced with the previously 388used pattern in a ":substitute" command. This fails when no such command has 389been used yet. See |/~|. This also happens when using ":s/pat/%/", where the 390"%" stands for the previous substitute string. 391 392 *E35* > 393 No previous regular expression 394 395When using an empty search pattern, the previous search pattern is used. But 396that is not possible if there was no previous search. 397 398 *E24* > 399 No such abbreviation 400 401You have used an ":unabbreviate" command with an argument which is not an 402existing abbreviation. All variations of this command give the same message: 403":cunabbrev", ":iunabbrev", etc. Check for trailing white space. 404 405> 406 /dev/dsp: No such file or directory 407 408Only given for GTK GUI with Gnome support. Gnome tries to use the audio 409device and it isn't present. You can ignore this error. 410 411 *E31* > 412 No such mapping 413 414You have used an ":unmap" command with an argument which is not an existing 415mapping. All variations of this command give the same message: ":cunmap", 416":unmap!", etc. A few hints: 417- Check for trailing white space. 418- If the mapping is buffer-local you need to use ":unmap <buffer>". 419 |:map-<buffer>| 420 421 *E37* *E89* > 422 No write since last change (add ! to override) 423 No write since last change for buffer {N} (add ! to override) 424 425You are trying to |abandon| a file that has changes. Vim protects you from 426losing your work. You can either write the changed file with ":w", or, if you 427are sure, |abandon| it anyway, and lose all the changes. This can be done by 428adding a '!' character just after the command you used. Example: > 429 :e other_file 430changes to: > 431 :e! other_file 432< 433 *E162* > 434 No write since last change for buffer "{name}" 435 436This appears when you try to exit Vim while some buffers are changed. You 437will either have to write the changed buffer (with |:w|), or use a command to 438abandon the buffer forcefully, e.g., with ":qa!". Careful, make sure you 439don't throw away changes you really want to keep. You might have forgotten 440about a buffer, especially when 'hidden' is set. 441 442> 443 [No write since last change] 444 445This appears when executing a shell command while at least one buffer was 446changed. To avoid the message reset the 'warn' option. 447 448 *E38* > 449 Null argument 450 451Something inside Vim went wrong and resulted in a NULL pointer. If you know 452how to reproduce this problem, please report it. |bugs| 453 454 *E172* > 455 Only one file name allowed 456 457The ":edit" command only accepts one file name. When you want to specify 458several files for editing use ":next" |:next|. 459 460 *E41* *E82* *E83* *E342* > 461 Out of memory! 462 Out of memory! (allocating {number} bytes) 463 Cannot allocate any buffer, exiting... 464 Cannot allocate buffer, using other one... 465 466Oh, oh. You must have been doing something complicated, or some other program 467is consuming your memory. Be careful! Vim is not completely prepared for an 468out-of-memory situation. First make sure that any changes are saved. Then 469try to solve the memory shortage. To stay on the safe side, exit Vim and 470start again. 471 472Buffers are only partly kept in memory, thus editing a very large file is 473unlikely to cause an out-of-memory situation. Undo information is completely 474in memory, you can reduce that with these options: 475- 'undolevels' Set to a low value, or to -1 to disable undo completely. This 476 helps for a change that affects all lines. 477- 'undoreload' Set to zero to disable. 478 479Also see |msdos-limitations|. 480 481 *E339* > 482 Pattern too long 483 484This happens on systems with 16 bit ints: The compiled regexp pattern is 485longer than about 65000 characters. Try using a shorter pattern. 486It also happens when the offset of a rule doesn't fit in the space available. 487Try simplifying the pattern. 488 489 *E45* > 490 'readonly' option is set (add ! to override) 491 492You are trying to write a file that was marked as read-only. To write the 493file anyway, either reset the 'readonly' option, or add a '!' character just 494after the command you used. Example: > 495 :w 496changes to: > 497 :w! 498< 499 *E294* *E295* *E301* > 500 Read error in swap file 501 Seek error in swap file read 502 Oops, lost the swap file!!! 503 504Vim tried to read text from the |swap-file|, but something went wrong. The 505text in the related buffer may now be corrupted! Check carefully before you 506write a buffer. You may want to write it in another file and check for 507differences. 508 509 *E192* > 510 Recursive use of :normal too deep 511 512You are using a ":normal" command, whose argument again uses a ":normal" 513command in a recursive way. This is restricted to 'maxmapdepth' levels. This 514example illustrates how to get this message: > 515 :map gq :normal gq<CR> 516If you type "gq", it will execute this mapping, which will call "gq" again. 517 518 *E22* > 519 Scripts nested too deep 520 521Scripts can be read with the "-s" command-line argument and with the ":source" 522command. The script can then again read another script. This can continue 523for about 14 levels. When more nesting is done, Vim assumes that there is a 524recursive loop somewhere and stops with this error message. 525 526 *E319* > 527 Sorry, the command is not available in this version 528 529You have used a command that is not present in the version of Vim you are 530using. When compiling Vim, many different features can be enabled or 531disabled. This depends on how big Vim has chosen to be and the operating 532system. See |+feature-list| for when which feature is available. The 533|:version| command shows which feature Vim was compiled with. 534 535 *E300* > 536 Swap file already exists (symlink attack?) 537 538This message appears when Vim is trying to open a swap file and finds it 539already exists or finds a symbolic link in its place. This shouldn't happen, 540because Vim already checked that the file doesn't exist. Either someone else 541opened the same file at exactly the same moment (very unlikely) or someone is 542attempting a symlink attack (could happen when editing a file in /tmp or when 543'directory' starts with "/tmp", which is a bad choice). 544 545 *E432* > 546 Tags file not sorted: {file name} 547 548Vim (and Vi) expect tags files to be sorted in ASCII order. Binary searching 549can then be used, which is a lot faster than a linear search. If your tags 550files are not properly sorted, reset the |'tagbsearch'| option. 551This message is only given when Vim detects a problem when searching for a 552tag. Sometimes this message is not given, even though the tags file is not 553properly sorted. 554 555 *E460* > 556 The resource fork would be lost (add ! to override) 557 558On the Macintosh (classic), when writing a file, Vim attempts to preserve all 559info about a file, including its resource fork. If this is not possible you 560get this error message. Append "!" to the command name to write anyway (and 561lose the info). 562 563 *E424* > 564 Too many different highlighting attributes in use 565 566Vim can only handle about 223 different kinds of highlighting. If you run 567into this limit, you have used too many |:highlight| commands with different 568arguments. A ":highlight link" is not counted. 569 570 *E77* > 571 Too many file names 572 573When expanding file names, more than one match was found. Only one match is 574allowed for the command that was used. 575 576 *E303* > 577 Unable to open swap file for "{filename}", recovery impossible 578 579Vim was not able to create a swap file. You can still edit the file, but if 580Vim unexpectedly exits the changes will be lost. And Vim may consume a lot of 581memory when editing a big file. You may want to change the 'directory' option 582to avoid this error. See |swap-file|. 583 584 *E140* > 585 Use ! to write partial buffer 586 587When using a range to write part of a buffer, it is unusual to overwrite the 588original file. It is probably a mistake (e.g., when Visual mode was active 589when using ":w"), therefore Vim requires using a ! after the command, e.g.: 590":3,10w!". 591> 592 593 Warning: Cannot convert string "<Key>Escape,_Key_Cancel" to type 594 VirtualBinding 595 596Messages like this appear when starting up. This is not a Vim problem, your 597X11 configuration is wrong. You can find a hint on how to solve this here: 598http://groups.yahoo.com/group/solarisonintel/message/12179. 599[this URL is no longer valid] 600 601 *W10* > 602 Warning: Changing a readonly file 603 604The file is read-only and you are making a change to it anyway. You can use 605the |FileChangedRO| autocommand event to avoid this message (the autocommand 606must reset the 'readonly' option). See 'modifiable' to completely disallow 607making changes to a file. 608This message is only given for the first change after 'readonly' has been set. 609 610 *W13* > 611 Warning: File "{filename}" has been created after editing started 612 613You are editing a file in Vim when it didn't exist, but it does exist now. 614You will have to decide if you want to keep the version in Vim or the newly 615created file. This message is not given when 'buftype' is not empty. 616 617 *W11* > 618 Warning: File "{filename}" has changed since editing started 619 620The file which you have started editing has got another timestamp and the 621contents changed (more precisely: When reading the file again with the current 622option settings and autocommands you would end up with different text). This 623probably means that some other program changed the file. You will have to 624find out what happened, and decide which version of the file you want to keep. 625Set the 'autoread' option if you want to do this automatically. 626This message is not given when 'buftype' is not empty. 627 628There is one situation where you get this message even though there is nothing 629wrong: If you save a file in Windows on the day the daylight saving time 630starts. It can be fixed in one of these ways: 631- Add this line in your autoexec.bat: > 632 SET TZ=-1 633< Adjust the "-1" for your time zone. 634- Disable "automatically adjust clock for daylight saving changes". 635- Just write the file again the next day. Or set your clock to the next day, 636 write the file twice and set the clock back. 637 638 *W12* > 639 Warning: File "{filename}" has changed and the buffer was changed in Vim as well 640 641Like the above, and the buffer for the file was changed in this Vim as well. 642You will have to decide if you want to keep the version in this Vim or the one 643on disk. This message is not given when 'buftype' is not empty. 644 645 *W16* > 646 Warning: Mode of file "{filename}" has changed since editing started 647 648When the timestamp for a buffer was changed and the contents are still the 649same but the mode (permissions) have changed. This usually occurs when 650checking out a file from a version control system, which causes the read-only 651bit to be reset. It should be safe to reload the file. Set 'autoread' to 652automatically reload the file. 653 654 *E211* > 655 File "{filename}" no longer available 656 657The file which you have started editing has disappeared, or is no longer 658accessible. Make sure you write the buffer somewhere to avoid losing 659changes. This message is not given when 'buftype' is not empty. 660 661 *W14* > 662 Warning: List of file names overflow 663 664You must be using an awful lot of buffers. It's now possible that two buffers 665have the same number, which causes various problems. You might want to exit 666Vim and restart it. 667 668 *E296* *E297* > 669 Seek error in swap file write 670 Write error in swap file 671 672This mostly happens when the disk is full. Vim could not write text into the 673|swap-file|. It's not directly harmful, but when Vim unexpectedly exits some 674text may be lost without recovery being possible. Vim might run out of memory 675when this problem persists. 676 677 *connection-refused* > 678 Xlib: connection to "<machine-name:0.0" refused by server 679 680This happens when Vim tries to connect to the X server, but the X server does 681not allow a connection. The connection to the X server is needed to be able 682to restore the title and for the xterm clipboard support. Unfortunately this 683error message cannot be avoided, except by disabling the |+xterm_clipboard| 684and |+X11| features. 685 686 *E10* > 687 \\ should be followed by /, ? or & 688 689A command line started with a backslash or the range of a command contained a 690backslash in a wrong place. This is often caused by command-line continuation 691being disabled. Remove the 'C' flag from the 'cpoptions' option to enable it. 692Or use ":set nocp". 693 694 *E471* > 695 Argument required 696 697This happens when an Ex command with mandatory argument(s) was executed, but 698no argument has been specified. 699 700 *E474* *E475* > 701 Invalid argument 702 Invalid argument: {arg} 703 704An Ex command has been executed, but an invalid argument has been specified. 705 706 *E488* > 707 Trailing characters 708 709An argument has been added to an Ex command that does not permit one. 710 711 *E477* *E478* > 712 No ! allowed 713 Don't panic! 714 715You have added a "!" after an Ex command that doesn't permit one. 716 717 *E481* > 718 No range allowed 719 720A range was specified for an Ex command that doesn't permit one. See 721|cmdline-ranges|. 722 723 *E482* *E483* > 724 Can't create file {filename} 725 Can't get temp file name 726 727Vim cannot create a temporary file. 728 729 *E484* *E485* > 730 Can't open file {filename} 731 Can't read file {filename} 732 733Vim cannot read a temporary file. Especially on Windows, this can be caused 734by wrong escaping of special characters for cmd.exe; the approach was 735changed with patch 7.3.443. Try using |shellescape()| for all shell arguments 736given to |system()|, or explicitly add escaping with ^. Also see 737'shellxquote' and 'shellxescape'. 738 739 *E464* > 740 Ambiguous use of user-defined command 741 742There are two user-defined commands with a common name prefix, and you used 743Command-line completion to execute one of them. |user-cmd-ambiguous| 744Example: > 745 :command MyCommand1 echo "one" 746 :command MyCommand2 echo "two" 747 :MyCommand 748< 749 *E492* > 750 Not an editor command 751 752You tried to execute a command that is neither an Ex command nor 753a user-defined command. 754 755============================================================================== 7563. Messages *messages* 757 758This is an (incomplete) overview of various messages that Vim gives: 759 760 *hit-enter* *press-enter* *hit-return* 761 *press-return* *hit-enter-prompt* 762 763 Press ENTER or type command to continue 764 765This message is given when there is something on the screen for you to read, 766and the screen is about to be redrawn: 767- After executing an external command (e.g., ":!ls" and "="). 768- Something is displayed on the status line that is longer than the width of 769 the window, or runs into the 'showcmd' or 'ruler' output. 770 771-> Press <Enter> or <Space> to redraw the screen and continue, without that 772 key being used otherwise. 773-> Press ':' or any other Normal mode command character to start that command. 774-> Press 'k', <Up>, 'u', 'b' or 'g' to scroll back in the messages. This 775 works the same way as at the |more-prompt|. Only works when 'compatible' 776 is off and 'more' is on. 777-> Pressing 'j', 'f', 'd' or <Down> is ignored when messages scrolled off the 778 top of the screen, 'compatible' is off and 'more' is on, to avoid that 779 typing one 'j' or 'f' too many causes the messages to disappear. 780-> Press <C-Y> to copy (yank) a modeless selection to the clipboard register. 781-> Use a menu. The characters defined for Cmdline-mode are used. 782-> When 'mouse' contains the 'r' flag, clicking the left mouse button works 783 like pressing <Space>. This makes it impossible to select text though. 784-> For the GUI clicking the left mouse button in the last line works like 785 pressing <Space>. 786{Vi: only ":" commands are interpreted} 787 788If you accidentally hit <Enter> or <Space> and you want to see the displayed 789text then use |g<|. This only works when 'more' is set. 790 791To reduce the number of hit-enter prompts: 792- Set 'cmdheight' to 2 or higher. 793- Add flags to 'shortmess'. 794- Reset 'showcmd' and/or 'ruler'. 795 796If your script causes the hit-enter prompt and you don't know why, you may 797find the |v:scrollstart| variable useful. 798 799Also see 'mouse'. The hit-enter message is highlighted with the |hl-Question| 800group. 801 802 803 *more-prompt* *pager* > 804 -- More -- 805 -- More -- SPACE/d/j: screen/page/line down, b/u/k: up, q: quit 806 807This message is given when the screen is filled with messages. It is only 808given when the 'more' option is on. It is highlighted with the |hl-MoreMsg| 809group. 810 811Type effect ~ 812 <CR> or <NL> or j or <Down> one more line 813 d down a page (half a screen) 814 <Space> or f or <PageDown> down a screen 815 G down all the way, until the hit-enter 816 prompt 817 818 <BS> or k or <Up> one line back (*) 819 u up a page (half a screen) (*) 820 b or <PageUp> back a screen (*) 821 g back to the start (*) 822 823 q, <Esc> or CTRL-C stop the listing 824 : stop the listing and enter a 825 command-line 826 <C-Y> yank (copy) a modeless selection to 827 the clipboard ("* and "+ registers) 828 {menu-entry} what the menu is defined to in 829 Cmdline-mode. 830 <LeftMouse> (**) next page 831 832Any other key causes the meaning of the keys to be displayed. 833 834(*) backwards scrolling is {not in Vi}. Only scrolls back to where messages 835 started to scroll. 836(**) Clicking the left mouse button only works: 837 - For the GUI: in the last line of the screen. 838 - When 'r' is included in 'mouse' (but then selecting text won't work). 839 840 841Note: The typed key is directly obtained from the terminal, it is not mapped 842and typeahead is ignored. 843 844The |g<| command can be used to see the last page of previous command output. 845This is especially useful if you accidentally typed <Space> at the hit-enter 846prompt. 847 848 vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl: 849