1*motion.txt* For Vim version 7.4. Last change: 2015 Jun 06 2 3 4 VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar 5 6 7Cursor motions *cursor-motions* *navigation* 8 9These commands move the cursor position. If the new position is off of the 10screen, the screen is scrolled to show the cursor (see also 'scrolljump' and 11'scrolloff' options). 12 131. Motions and operators |operator| 142. Left-right motions |left-right-motions| 153. Up-down motions |up-down-motions| 164. Word motions |word-motions| 175. Text object motions |object-motions| 186. Text object selection |object-select| 197. Marks |mark-motions| 208. Jumps |jump-motions| 219. Various motions |various-motions| 22 23General remarks: 24 25If you want to know where you are in the file use the "CTRL-G" command 26|CTRL-G| or the "g CTRL-G" command |g_CTRL-G|. If you set the 'ruler' option, 27the cursor position is continuously shown in the status line (which slows down 28Vim a little). 29 30Experienced users prefer the hjkl keys because they are always right under 31their fingers. Beginners often prefer the arrow keys, because they do not 32know what the hjkl keys do. The mnemonic value of hjkl is clear from looking 33at the keyboard. Think of j as an arrow pointing downwards. 34 35The 'virtualedit' option can be set to make it possible to move the cursor to 36positions where there is no character or halfway a character. 37 38============================================================================== 391. Motions and operators *operator* 40 41The motion commands can be used after an operator command, to have the command 42operate on the text that was moved over. That is the text between the cursor 43position before and after the motion. Operators are generally used to delete 44or change text. The following operators are available: 45 46 |c| c change 47 |d| d delete 48 |y| y yank into register (does not change the text) 49 |~| ~ swap case (only if 'tildeop' is set) 50 |g~| g~ swap case 51 |gu| gu make lowercase 52 |gU| gU make uppercase 53 |!| ! filter through an external program 54 |=| = filter through 'equalprg' or C-indenting if empty 55 |gq| gq text formatting 56 |g?| g? ROT13 encoding 57 |>| > shift right 58 |<| < shift left 59 |zf| zf define a fold 60 |g@| g@ call function set with the 'operatorfunc' option 61 62If the motion includes a count and the operator also had a count before it, 63the two counts are multiplied. For example: "2d3w" deletes six words. 64 65After applying the operator the cursor is mostly left at the start of the text 66that was operated upon. For example, "yfe" doesn't move the cursor, but "yFe" 67moves the cursor leftwards to the "e" where the yank started. 68 69 *linewise* *characterwise* 70The operator either affects whole lines, or the characters between the start 71and end position. Generally, motions that move between lines affect lines 72(are linewise), and motions that move within a line affect characters (are 73characterwise). However, there are some exceptions. 74 75 *exclusive* *inclusive* 76A character motion is either inclusive or exclusive. When inclusive, the 77start and end position of the motion are included in the operation. When 78exclusive, the last character towards the end of the buffer is not included. 79Linewise motions always include the start and end position. 80 81Which motions are linewise, inclusive or exclusive is mentioned with the 82command. There are however, two general exceptions: 831. If the motion is exclusive and the end of the motion is in column 1, the 84 end of the motion is moved to the end of the previous line and the motion 85 becomes inclusive. Example: "}" moves to the first line after a paragraph, 86 but "d}" will not include that line. 87 *exclusive-linewise* 882. If the motion is exclusive, the end of the motion is in column 1 and the 89 start of the motion was at or before the first non-blank in the line, the 90 motion becomes linewise. Example: If a paragraph begins with some blanks 91 and you do "d}" while standing on the first non-blank, all the lines of 92 the paragraph are deleted, including the blanks. If you do a put now, the 93 deleted lines will be inserted below the cursor position. 94 95Note that when the operator is pending (the operator command is typed, but the 96motion isn't yet), a special set of mappings can be used. See |:omap|. 97 98Instead of first giving the operator and then a motion you can use Visual 99mode: mark the start of the text with "v", move the cursor to the end of the 100text that is to be affected and then hit the operator. The text between the 101start and the cursor position is highlighted, so you can see what text will 102be operated upon. This allows much more freedom, but requires more key 103strokes and has limited redo functionality. See the chapter on Visual mode 104|Visual-mode|. 105 106You can use a ":" command for a motion. For example "d:call FindEnd()". 107But this can't be repeated with "." if the command is more than one line. 108This can be repeated: > 109 d:call search("f")<CR> 110This cannot be repeated: > 111 d:if 1<CR> 112 call search("f")<CR> 113 endif<CR> 114Note that when using ":" any motion becomes characterwise exclusive. 115 116 117FORCING A MOTION TO BE LINEWISE, CHARACTERWISE OR BLOCKWISE 118 119When a motion is not of the type you would like to use, you can force another 120type by using "v", "V" or CTRL-V just after the operator. 121Example: > 122 dj 123deletes two lines > 124 dvj 125deletes from the cursor position until the character below the cursor > 126 d<C-V>j 127deletes the character under the cursor and the character below the cursor. > 128 129Be careful with forcing a linewise movement to be used characterwise or 130blockwise, the column may not always be defined. 131 132 *o_v* 133v When used after an operator, before the motion command: Force 134 the operator to work characterwise, also when the motion is 135 linewise. If the motion was linewise, it will become 136 |exclusive|. 137 If the motion already was characterwise, toggle 138 inclusive/exclusive. This can be used to make an exclusive 139 motion inclusive and an inclusive motion exclusive. 140 141 *o_V* 142V When used after an operator, before the motion command: Force 143 the operator to work linewise, also when the motion is 144 characterwise. 145 146 *o_CTRL-V* 147CTRL-V When used after an operator, before the motion command: Force 148 the operator to work blockwise. This works like Visual block 149 mode selection, with the corners defined by the cursor 150 position before and after the motion. 151 152============================================================================== 1532. Left-right motions *left-right-motions* 154 155These commands move the cursor to the specified column in the current line. 156They stop at the first column and at the end of the line, except "$", which 157may move to one of the next lines. See 'whichwrap' option to make some of the 158commands move across line boundaries. 159 160h or *h* 161<Left> or *<Left>* 162CTRL-H or *CTRL-H* *<BS>* 163<BS> [count] characters to the left. |exclusive| motion. 164 Note: If you prefer <BS> to delete a character, use 165 the mapping: 166 :map CTRL-V<BS> X 167 (to enter "CTRL-V<BS>" type the CTRL-V key, followed 168 by the <BS> key) 169 See |:fixdel| if the <BS> key does not do what you 170 want. 171 172l or *l* 173<Right> or *<Right>* *<Space>* 174<Space> [count] characters to the right. |exclusive| motion. 175 See the 'whichwrap' option for adjusting the behavior 176 at end of line 177 178 *0* 1790 To the first character of the line. |exclusive| 180 motion. 181 182 *<Home>* *<kHome>* 183<Home> To the first character of the line. |exclusive| 184 motion. When moving up or down next, stay in same 185 TEXT column (if possible). Most other commands stay 186 in the same SCREEN column. <Home> works like "1|", 187 which differs from "0" when the line starts with a 188 <Tab>. {not in Vi} 189 190 *^* 191^ To the first non-blank character of the line. 192 |exclusive| motion. 193 194 *$* *<End>* *<kEnd>* 195$ or <End> To the end of the line. When a count is given also go 196 [count - 1] lines downward |inclusive|. 197 In Visual mode the cursor goes to just after the last 198 character in the line. 199 When 'virtualedit' is active, "$" may move the cursor 200 back from past the end of the line to the last 201 character in the line. 202 203 *g_* 204g_ To the last non-blank character of the line and 205 [count - 1] lines downward |inclusive|. {not in Vi} 206 207 *g0* *g<Home>* 208g0 or g<Home> When lines wrap ('wrap' on): To the first character of 209 the screen line. |exclusive| motion. Differs from 210 "0" when a line is wider than the screen. 211 When lines don't wrap ('wrap' off): To the leftmost 212 character of the current line that is on the screen. 213 Differs from "0" when the first character of the line 214 is not on the screen. {not in Vi} 215 216 *g^* 217g^ When lines wrap ('wrap' on): To the first non-blank 218 character of the screen line. |exclusive| motion. 219 Differs from "^" when a line is wider than the screen. 220 When lines don't wrap ('wrap' off): To the leftmost 221 non-blank character of the current line that is on the 222 screen. Differs from "^" when the first non-blank 223 character of the line is not on the screen. {not in 224 Vi} 225 226 *gm* 227gm Like "g0", but half a screenwidth to the right (or as 228 much as possible). {not in Vi} 229 230 *g$* *g<End>* 231g$ or g<End> When lines wrap ('wrap' on): To the last character of 232 the screen line and [count - 1] screen lines downward 233 |inclusive|. Differs from "$" when a line is wider 234 than the screen. 235 When lines don't wrap ('wrap' off): To the rightmost 236 character of the current line that is visible on the 237 screen. Differs from "$" when the last character of 238 the line is not on the screen or when a count is used. 239 Additionally, vertical movements keep the column, 240 instead of going to the end of the line. 241 When 'virtualedit' is enabled moves to the end of the 242 screen line. 243 {not in Vi} 244 245 *bar* 246| To screen column [count] in the current line. 247 |exclusive| motion. Ceci n'est pas une pipe. 248 249 *f* 250f{char} To [count]'th occurrence of {char} to the right. The 251 cursor is placed on {char} |inclusive|. 252 {char} can be entered as a digraph |digraph-arg|. 253 When 'encoding' is set to Unicode, composing 254 characters may be used, see |utf-8-char-arg|. 255 |:lmap| mappings apply to {char}. The CTRL-^ command 256 in Insert mode can be used to switch this on/off 257 |i_CTRL-^|. 258 259 *F* 260F{char} To the [count]'th occurrence of {char} to the left. 261 The cursor is placed on {char} |exclusive|. 262 {char} can be entered like with the |f| command. 263 264 *t* 265t{char} Till before [count]'th occurrence of {char} to the 266 right. The cursor is placed on the character left of 267 {char} |inclusive|. 268 {char} can be entered like with the |f| command. 269 270 *T* 271T{char} Till after [count]'th occurrence of {char} to the 272 left. The cursor is placed on the character right of 273 {char} |exclusive|. 274 {char} can be entered like with the |f| command. 275 276 *;* 277; Repeat latest f, t, F or T [count] times. See |cpo-;| 278 279 *,* 280, Repeat latest f, t, F or T in opposite direction 281 [count] times. See also |cpo-;| 282 283============================================================================== 2843. Up-down motions *up-down-motions* 285 286k or *k* 287<Up> or *<Up>* *CTRL-P* 288CTRL-P [count] lines upward |linewise|. 289 290j or *j* 291<Down> or *<Down>* 292CTRL-J or *CTRL-J* 293<NL> or *<NL>* *CTRL-N* 294CTRL-N [count] lines downward |linewise|. 295 296gk or *gk* *g<Up>* 297g<Up> [count] display lines upward. |exclusive| motion. 298 Differs from 'k' when lines wrap, and when used with 299 an operator, because it's not linewise. {not in Vi} 300 301gj or *gj* *g<Down>* 302g<Down> [count] display lines downward. |exclusive| motion. 303 Differs from 'j' when lines wrap, and when used with 304 an operator, because it's not linewise. {not in Vi} 305 306 *-* 307- <minus> [count] lines upward, on the first non-blank 308 character |linewise|. 309 310+ or *+* 311CTRL-M or *CTRL-M* *<CR>* 312<CR> [count] lines downward, on the first non-blank 313 character |linewise|. 314 315 *_* 316_ <underscore> [count] - 1 lines downward, on the first non-blank 317 character |linewise|. 318 319 *G* 320G Goto line [count], default last line, on the first 321 non-blank character |linewise|. If 'startofline' not 322 set, keep the same column. 323 G is a one of |jump-motions|. 324 325 *<C-End>* 326<C-End> Goto line [count], default last line, on the last 327 character |inclusive|. {not in Vi} 328 329<C-Home> or *gg* *<C-Home>* 330gg Goto line [count], default first line, on the first 331 non-blank character |linewise|. If 'startofline' not 332 set, keep the same column. 333 334 *:[range]* 335:[range] Set the cursor on the last line number in [range]. 336 [range] can also be just one line number, e.g., ":1" 337 or ":'m". 338 In contrast with |G| this command does not modify the 339 |jumplist|. 340 *N%* 341{count}% Go to {count} percentage in the file, on the first 342 non-blank in the line |linewise|. To compute the new 343 line number this formula is used: 344 ({count} * number-of-lines + 99) / 100 345 See also 'startofline' option. {not in Vi} 346 347:[range]go[to] [count] *:go* *:goto* *go* 348[count]go Go to [count] byte in the buffer. Default [count] is 349 one, start of the file. When giving [range], the 350 last number in it used as the byte count. End-of-line 351 characters are counted depending on the current 352 'fileformat' setting. 353 Also see the |line2byte()| function, and the 'o' 354 option in 'statusline'. 355 {not in Vi} 356 {not available when compiled without the 357 |+byte_offset| feature} 358 359These commands move to the specified line. They stop when reaching the first 360or the last line. The first two commands put the cursor in the same column 361(if possible) as it was after the last command that changed the column, 362except after the "$" command, then the cursor will be put on the last 363character of the line. 364 365If "k", "-" or CTRL-P is used with a [count] and there are less than [count] 366lines above the cursor and the 'cpo' option includes the "-" flag it is an 367error. |cpo--|. 368 369============================================================================== 3704. Word motions *word-motions* 371 372<S-Right> or *<S-Right>* *w* 373w [count] words forward. |exclusive| motion. 374 375<C-Right> or *<C-Right>* *W* 376W [count] WORDS forward. |exclusive| motion. 377 378 *e* 379e Forward to the end of word [count] |inclusive|. 380 Does not stop in an empty line. 381 382 *E* 383E Forward to the end of WORD [count] |inclusive|. 384 Does not stop in an empty line. 385 386<S-Left> or *<S-Left>* *b* 387b [count] words backward. |exclusive| motion. 388 389<C-Left> or *<C-Left>* *B* 390B [count] WORDS backward. |exclusive| motion. 391 392 *ge* 393ge Backward to the end of word [count] |inclusive|. 394 395 *gE* 396gE Backward to the end of WORD [count] |inclusive|. 397 398These commands move over words or WORDS. 399 *word* 400A word consists of a sequence of letters, digits and underscores, or a 401sequence of other non-blank characters, separated with white space (spaces, 402tabs, <EOL>). This can be changed with the 'iskeyword' option. An empty line 403is also considered to be a word. 404 *WORD* 405A WORD consists of a sequence of non-blank characters, separated with white 406space. An empty line is also considered to be a WORD. 407 408A sequence of folded lines is counted for one word of a single character. 409"w" and "W", "e" and "E" move to the start/end of the first word or WORD after 410a range of folded lines. "b" and "B" move to the start of the first word or 411WORD before the fold. 412 413Special case: "cw" and "cW" are treated like "ce" and "cE" if the cursor is 414on a non-blank. This is because "cw" is interpreted as change-word, and a 415word does not include the following white space. {Vi: "cw" when on a blank 416followed by other blanks changes only the first blank; this is probably a 417bug, because "dw" deletes all the blanks} 418 419Another special case: When using the "w" motion in combination with an 420operator and the last word moved over is at the end of a line, the end of 421that word becomes the end of the operated text, not the first word in the 422next line. 423 424The original Vi implementation of "e" is buggy. For example, the "e" command 425will stop on the first character of a line if the previous line was empty. 426But when you use "2e" this does not happen. In Vim "ee" and "2e" are the 427same, which is more logical. However, this causes a small incompatibility 428between Vi and Vim. 429 430============================================================================== 4315. Text object motions *object-motions* 432 433 *(* 434( [count] sentences backward. |exclusive| motion. 435 436 *)* 437) [count] sentences forward. |exclusive| motion. 438 439 *{* 440{ [count] paragraphs backward. |exclusive| motion. 441 442 *}* 443} [count] paragraphs forward. |exclusive| motion. 444 445 *]]* 446]] [count] sections forward or to the next '{' in the 447 first column. When used after an operator, then also 448 stops below a '}' in the first column. |exclusive| 449 Note that |exclusive-linewise| often applies. 450 451 *][* 452][ [count] sections forward or to the next '}' in the 453 first column. |exclusive| 454 Note that |exclusive-linewise| often applies. 455 456 *[[* 457[[ [count] sections backward or to the previous '{' in 458 the first column. |exclusive| 459 Note that |exclusive-linewise| often applies. 460 461 *[]* 462[] [count] sections backward or to the previous '}' in 463 the first column. |exclusive| 464 Note that |exclusive-linewise| often applies. 465 466These commands move over three kinds of text objects. 467 468 *sentence* 469A sentence is defined as ending at a '.', '!' or '?' followed by either the 470end of a line, or by a space or tab. Any number of closing ')', ']', '"' 471and ''' characters may appear after the '.', '!' or '?' before the spaces, 472tabs or end of line. A paragraph and section boundary is also a sentence 473boundary. 474If the 'J' flag is present in 'cpoptions', at least two spaces have to 475follow the punctuation mark; <Tab>s are not recognized as white space. 476The definition of a sentence cannot be changed. 477 478 *paragraph* 479A paragraph begins after each empty line, and also at each of a set of 480paragraph macros, specified by the pairs of characters in the 'paragraphs' 481option. The default is "IPLPPPQPP TPHPLIPpLpItpplpipbp", which corresponds to 482the macros ".IP", ".LP", etc. (These are nroff macros, so the dot must be in 483the first column). A section boundary is also a paragraph boundary. 484Note that a blank line (only containing white space) is NOT a paragraph 485boundary. 486Also note that this does not include a '{' or '}' in the first column. When 487the '{' flag is in 'cpoptions' then '{' in the first column is used as a 488paragraph boundary |posix|. 489 490 *section* 491A section begins after a form-feed (<C-L>) in the first column and at each of 492a set of section macros, specified by the pairs of characters in the 493'sections' option. The default is "SHNHH HUnhsh", which defines a section to 494start at the nroff macros ".SH", ".NH", ".H", ".HU", ".nh" and ".sh". 495 496The "]" and "[" commands stop at the '{' or '}' in the first column. This is 497useful to find the start or end of a function in a C program. Note that the 498first character of the command determines the search direction and the 499second character the type of brace found. 500 501If your '{' or '}' are not in the first column, and you would like to use "[[" 502and "]]" anyway, try these mappings: > 503 :map [[ ?{<CR>w99[{ 504 :map ][ /}<CR>b99]} 505 :map ]] j0[[%/{<CR> 506 :map [] k$][%?}<CR> 507[type these literally, see |<>|] 508 509============================================================================== 5106. Text object selection *object-select* *text-objects* 511 *v_a* *v_i* 512 513This is a series of commands that can only be used while in Visual mode or 514after an operator. The commands that start with "a" select "a"n object 515including white space, the commands starting with "i" select an "inner" object 516without white space, or just the white space. Thus the "inner" commands 517always select less text than the "a" commands. 518 519These commands are {not in Vi}. 520These commands are not available when the |+textobjects| feature has been 521disabled at compile time. 522Also see `gn` and `gN`, operating on the last search pattern. 523 524 *v_aw* *aw* 525aw "a word", select [count] words (see |word|). 526 Leading or trailing white space is included, but not 527 counted. 528 When used in Visual linewise mode "aw" switches to 529 Visual characterwise mode. 530 531 *v_iw* *iw* 532iw "inner word", select [count] words (see |word|). 533 White space between words is counted too. 534 When used in Visual linewise mode "iw" switches to 535 Visual characterwise mode. 536 537 *v_aW* *aW* 538aW "a WORD", select [count] WORDs (see |WORD|). 539 Leading or trailing white space is included, but not 540 counted. 541 When used in Visual linewise mode "aW" switches to 542 Visual characterwise mode. 543 544 *v_iW* *iW* 545iW "inner WORD", select [count] WORDs (see |WORD|). 546 White space between words is counted too. 547 When used in Visual linewise mode "iW" switches to 548 Visual characterwise mode. 549 550 *v_as* *as* 551as "a sentence", select [count] sentences (see 552 |sentence|). 553 When used in Visual mode it is made characterwise. 554 555 *v_is* *is* 556is "inner sentence", select [count] sentences (see 557 |sentence|). 558 When used in Visual mode it is made characterwise. 559 560 *v_ap* *ap* 561ap "a paragraph", select [count] paragraphs (see 562 |paragraph|). 563 Exception: a blank line (only containing white space) 564 is also a paragraph boundary. 565 When used in Visual mode it is made linewise. 566 567 *v_ip* *ip* 568ip "inner paragraph", select [count] paragraphs (see 569 |paragraph|). 570 Exception: a blank line (only containing white space) 571 is also a paragraph boundary. 572 When used in Visual mode it is made linewise. 573 574a] *v_a]* *v_a[* *a]* *a[* 575a[ "a [] block", select [count] '[' ']' blocks. This 576 goes backwards to the [count] unclosed '[', and finds 577 the matching ']'. The enclosed text is selected, 578 including the '[' and ']'. 579 When used in Visual mode it is made characterwise. 580 581i] *v_i]* *v_i[* *i]* *i[* 582i[ "inner [] block", select [count] '[' ']' blocks. This 583 goes backwards to the [count] unclosed '[', and finds 584 the matching ']'. The enclosed text is selected, 585 excluding the '[' and ']'. 586 When used in Visual mode it is made characterwise. 587 588a) *v_a)* *a)* *a(* 589a( *v_ab* *v_a(* *ab* 590ab "a block", select [count] blocks, from "[count] [(" to 591 the matching ')', including the '(' and ')' (see 592 |[(|). Does not include white space outside of the 593 parenthesis. 594 When used in Visual mode it is made characterwise. 595 596i) *v_i)* *i)* *i(* 597i( *v_ib* *v_i(* *ib* 598ib "inner block", select [count] blocks, from "[count] [(" 599 to the matching ')', excluding the '(' and ')' (see 600 |[(|). 601 When used in Visual mode it is made characterwise. 602 603a> *v_a>* *v_a<* *a>* *a<* 604a< "a <> block", select [count] <> blocks, from the 605 [count]'th unmatched '<' backwards to the matching 606 '>', including the '<' and '>'. 607 When used in Visual mode it is made characterwise. 608 609i> *v_i>* *v_i<* *i>* *i<* 610i< "inner <> block", select [count] <> blocks, from 611 the [count]'th unmatched '<' backwards to the matching 612 '>', excluding the '<' and '>'. 613 When used in Visual mode it is made characterwise. 614 615 *v_at* *at* 616at "a tag block", select [count] tag blocks, from the 617 [count]'th unmatched "<aaa>" backwards to the matching 618 "</aaa>", including the "<aaa>" and "</aaa>". 619 See |tag-blocks| about the details. 620 When used in Visual mode it is made characterwise. 621 622 *v_it* *it* 623it "inner tag block", select [count] tag blocks, from the 624 [count]'th unmatched "<aaa>" backwards to the matching 625 "</aaa>", excluding the "<aaa>" and "</aaa>". 626 See |tag-blocks| about the details. 627 When used in Visual mode it is made characterwise. 628 629a} *v_a}* *a}* *a{* 630a{ *v_aB* *v_a{* *aB* 631aB "a Block", select [count] Blocks, from "[count] [{" to 632 the matching '}', including the '{' and '}' (see 633 |[{|). 634 When used in Visual mode it is made characterwise. 635 636i} *v_i}* *i}* *i{* 637i{ *v_iB* *v_i{* *iB* 638iB "inner Block", select [count] Blocks, from "[count] [{" 639 to the matching '}', excluding the '{' and '}' (see 640 |[{|). 641 When used in Visual mode it is made characterwise. 642 643a" *v_aquote* *aquote* 644a' *v_a'* *a'* 645a` *v_a`* *a`* 646 "a quoted string". Selects the text from the previous 647 quote until the next quote. The 'quoteescape' option 648 is used to skip escaped quotes. 649 Only works within one line. 650 When the cursor starts on a quote, Vim will figure out 651 which quote pairs form a string by searching from the 652 start of the line. 653 Any trailing white space is included, unless there is 654 none, then leading white space is included. 655 When used in Visual mode it is made characterwise. 656 Repeating this object in Visual mode another string is 657 included. A count is currently not used. 658 659i" *v_iquote* *iquote* 660i' *v_i'* *i'* 661i` *v_i`* *i`* 662 Like a", a' and a`, but exclude the quotes and 663 repeating won't extend the Visual selection. 664 Special case: With a count of 2 the quotes are 665 included, but no extra white space as with a"/a'/a`. 666 667When used after an operator: 668For non-block objects: 669 For the "a" commands: The operator applies to the object and the white 670 space after the object. If there is no white space after the object 671 or when the cursor was in the white space before the object, the white 672 space before the object is included. 673 For the "inner" commands: If the cursor was on the object, the 674 operator applies to the object. If the cursor was on white space, the 675 operator applies to the white space. 676For a block object: 677 The operator applies to the block where the cursor is in, or the block 678 on which the cursor is on one of the braces. For the "inner" commands 679 the surrounding braces are excluded. For the "a" commands, the braces 680 are included. 681 682When used in Visual mode: 683When start and end of the Visual area are the same (just after typing "v"): 684 One object is selected, the same as for using an operator. 685When start and end of the Visual area are not the same: 686 For non-block objects the area is extended by one object or the white 687 space up to the next object, or both for the "a" objects. The 688 direction in which this happens depends on which side of the Visual 689 area the cursor is. For the block objects the block is extended one 690 level outwards. 691 692For illustration, here is a list of delete commands, grouped from small to big 693objects. Note that for a single character and a whole line the existing vi 694movement commands are used. 695 "dl" delete character (alias: "x") |dl| 696 "diw" delete inner word *diw* 697 "daw" delete a word *daw* 698 "diW" delete inner WORD (see |WORD|) *diW* 699 "daW" delete a WORD (see |WORD|) *daW* 700 "dgn" delete the next search pattern match *dgn* 701 "dd" delete one line |dd| 702 "dis" delete inner sentence *dis* 703 "das" delete a sentence *das* 704 "dib" delete inner '(' ')' block *dib* 705 "dab" delete a '(' ')' block *dab* 706 "dip" delete inner paragraph *dip* 707 "dap" delete a paragraph *dap* 708 "diB" delete inner '{' '}' block *diB* 709 "daB" delete a '{' '}' block *daB* 710 711Note the difference between using a movement command and an object. The 712movement command operates from here (cursor position) to where the movement 713takes us. When using an object the whole object is operated upon, no matter 714where on the object the cursor is. For example, compare "dw" and "daw": "dw" 715deletes from the cursor position to the start of the next word, "daw" deletes 716the word under the cursor and the space after or before it. 717 718 719Tag blocks *tag-blocks* 720 721For the "it" and "at" text objects an attempt is done to select blocks between 722matching tags for HTML and XML. But since these are not completely compatible 723there are a few restrictions. 724 725The normal method is to select a <tag> until the matching </tag>. For "at" 726the tags are included, for "it" they are excluded. But when "it" is repeated 727the tags will be included (otherwise nothing would change). Also, "it" used 728on a tag block with no contents will select the leading tag. 729 730"<aaa/>" items are skipped. Case is ignored, also for XML where case does 731matter. 732 733In HTML it is possible to have a tag like <br> or <meta ...> without a 734matching end tag. These are ignored. 735 736The text objects are tolerant about mistakes. Stray end tags are ignored. 737 738============================================================================== 7397. Marks *mark-motions* *E20* *E78* 740 741Jumping to a mark can be done in two ways: 7421. With ` (backtick): The cursor is positioned at the specified location 743 and the motion is |exclusive|. 7442. With ' (single quote): The cursor is positioned on the first non-blank 745 character in the line of the specified location and 746 the motion is linewise. 747 748 *m* *mark* *Mark* 749m{a-zA-Z} Set mark {a-zA-Z} at cursor position (does not move 750 the cursor, this is not a motion command). 751 752 *m'* *m`* 753m' or m` Set the previous context mark. This can be jumped to 754 with the "''" or "``" command (does not move the 755 cursor, this is not a motion command). 756 757 *m[* *m]* 758m[ or m] Set the |'[| or |']| mark. Useful when an operator is 759 to be simulated by multiple commands. (does not move 760 the cursor, this is not a motion command). 761 762 *m<* *m>* 763m< or m> Set the |'<| or |'>| mark. Useful to change what the 764 `gv` command selects. (does not move the cursor, this 765 is not a motion command). 766 Note that the Visual mode cannot be set, only the 767 start and end position. 768 769 *:ma* *:mark* *E191* 770:[range]ma[rk] {a-zA-Z'} 771 Set mark {a-zA-Z'} at last line number in [range], 772 column 0. Default is cursor line. 773 774 *:k* 775:[range]k{a-zA-Z'} Same as :mark, but the space before the mark name can 776 be omitted. 777 778 *'* *'a* *`* *`a* 779'{a-z} `{a-z} Jump to the mark {a-z} in the current buffer. 780 781 *'A* *'0* *`A* *`0* 782'{A-Z0-9} `{A-Z0-9} To the mark {A-Z0-9} in the file where it was set (not 783 a motion command when in another file). {not in Vi} 784 785 *g'* *g'a* *g`* *g`a* 786g'{mark} g`{mark} 787 Jump to the {mark}, but don't change the jumplist when 788 jumping within the current buffer. Example: > 789 g`" 790< jumps to the last known position in a file. See 791 $VIMRUNTIME/vimrc_example.vim. 792 Also see |:keepjumps|. 793 {not in Vi} 794 795 *:marks* 796:marks List all the current marks (not a motion command). 797 The |'(|, |')|, |'{| and |'}| marks are not listed. 798 The first column has number zero. 799 {not in Vi} 800 *E283* 801:marks {arg} List the marks that are mentioned in {arg} (not a 802 motion command). For example: > 803 :marks aB 804< to list marks 'a' and 'B'. {not in Vi} 805 806 *:delm* *:delmarks* 807:delm[arks] {marks} Delete the specified marks. Marks that can be deleted 808 include A-Z and 0-9. You cannot delete the ' mark. 809 They can be specified by giving the list of mark 810 names, or with a range, separated with a dash. Spaces 811 are ignored. Examples: > 812 :delmarks a deletes mark a 813 :delmarks a b 1 deletes marks a, b and 1 814 :delmarks Aa deletes marks A and a 815 :delmarks p-z deletes marks in the range p to z 816 :delmarks ^.[] deletes marks ^ . [ ] 817 :delmarks \" deletes mark " 818< {not in Vi} 819 820:delm[arks]! Delete all marks for the current buffer, but not marks 821 A-Z or 0-9. 822 {not in Vi} 823 824A mark is not visible in any way. It is just a position in the file that is 825remembered. Do not confuse marks with named registers, they are totally 826unrelated. 827 828'a - 'z lowercase marks, valid within one file 829'A - 'Z uppercase marks, also called file marks, valid between files 830'0 - '9 numbered marks, set from .viminfo file 831 832Lowercase marks 'a to 'z are remembered as long as the file remains in the 833buffer list. If you remove the file from the buffer list, all its marks are 834lost. If you delete a line that contains a mark, that mark is erased. 835 836Lowercase marks can be used in combination with operators. For example: "d't" 837deletes the lines from the cursor position to mark 't'. Hint: Use mark 't' for 838Top, 'b' for Bottom, etc.. Lowercase marks are restored when using undo and 839redo. 840 841Uppercase marks 'A to 'Z include the file name. {Vi: no uppercase marks} You 842can use them to jump from file to file. You can only use an uppercase mark 843with an operator if the mark is in the current file. The line number of the 844mark remains correct, even if you insert/delete lines or edit another file for 845a moment. When the 'viminfo' option is not empty, uppercase marks are kept in 846the .viminfo file. See |viminfo-file-marks|. 847 848Numbered marks '0 to '9 are quite different. They can not be set directly. 849They are only present when using a viminfo file |viminfo-file|. Basically '0 850is the location of the cursor when you last exited Vim, '1 the last but one 851time, etc. Use the "r" flag in 'viminfo' to specify files for which no 852Numbered mark should be stored. See |viminfo-file-marks|. 853 854 855 *'[* *`[* 856'[ `[ To the first character of the previously changed 857 or yanked text. {not in Vi} 858 859 *']* *`]* 860'] `] To the last character of the previously changed or 861 yanked text. {not in Vi} 862 863After executing an operator the Cursor is put at the beginning of the text 864that was operated upon. After a put command ("p" or "P") the cursor is 865sometimes placed at the first inserted line and sometimes on the last inserted 866character. The four commands above put the cursor at either end. Example: 867After yanking 10 lines you want to go to the last one of them: "10Y']". After 868inserting several lines with the "p" command you want to jump to the lowest 869inserted line: "p']". This also works for text that has been inserted. 870 871Note: After deleting text, the start and end positions are the same, except 872when using blockwise Visual mode. These commands do not work when no change 873was made yet in the current file. 874 875 *'<* *`<* 876'< `< To the first line or character of the last selected 877 Visual area in the current buffer. For block mode it 878 may also be the last character in the first line (to 879 be able to define the block). {not in Vi}. 880 881 *'>* *`>* 882'> `> To the last line or character of the last selected 883 Visual area in the current buffer. For block mode it 884 may also be the first character of the last line (to 885 be able to define the block). Note that 'selection' 886 applies, the position may be just after the Visual 887 area. {not in Vi}. 888 889 *''* *``* 890'' `` To the position before the latest jump, or where the 891 last "m'" or "m`" command was given. Not set when the 892 |:keepjumps| command modifier was used. 893 Also see |restore-position|. 894 895 *'quote* *`quote* 896'" `" To the cursor position when last exiting the current 897 buffer. Defaults to the first character of the first 898 line. See |last-position-jump| for how to use this 899 for each opened file. 900 Only one position is remembered per buffer, not one 901 for each window. As long as the buffer is visible in 902 a window the position won't be changed. 903 {not in Vi}. 904 905 *'^* *`^* 906'^ `^ To the position where the cursor was the last time 907 when Insert mode was stopped. This is used by the 908 |gi| command. Not set when the |:keepjumps| command 909 modifier was used. {not in Vi} 910 911 *'.* *`.* 912'. `. To the position where the last change was made. The 913 position is at or near where the change started. 914 Sometimes a command is executed as several changes, 915 then the position can be near the end of what the 916 command changed. For example when inserting a word, 917 the position will be on the last character. 918 {not in Vi} 919 920 *'(* *`(* 921'( `( To the start of the current sentence, like the |(| 922 command. {not in Vi} 923 924 *')* *`)* 925') `) To the end of the current sentence, like the |)| 926 command. {not in Vi} 927 928 *'{* *`{* 929'{ `{ To the start of the current paragraph, like the |{| 930 command. {not in Vi} 931 932 *'}* *`}* 933'} `} To the end of the current paragraph, like the |}| 934 command. {not in Vi} 935 936These commands are not marks themselves, but jump to a mark: 937 938 *]'* 939]' [count] times to next line with a lowercase mark below 940 the cursor, on the first non-blank character in the 941 line. {not in Vi} 942 943 *]`* 944]` [count] times to lowercase mark after the cursor. {not 945 in Vi} 946 947 *['* 948[' [count] times to previous line with a lowercase mark 949 before the cursor, on the first non-blank character in 950 the line. {not in Vi} 951 952 *[`* 953[` [count] times to lowercase mark before the cursor. 954 {not in Vi} 955 956 957:loc[kmarks] {command} *:loc* *:lockmarks* 958 Execute {command} without adjusting marks. This is 959 useful when changing text in a way that the line count 960 will be the same when the change has completed. 961 WARNING: When the line count does change, marks below 962 the change will keep their line number, thus move to 963 another text line. 964 These items will not be adjusted for deleted/inserted 965 lines: 966 - lower case letter marks 'a - 'z 967 - upper case letter marks 'A - 'Z 968 - numbered marks '0 - '9 969 - last insert position '^ 970 - last change position '. 971 - the Visual area '< and '> 972 - line numbers in placed signs 973 - line numbers in quickfix positions 974 - positions in the |jumplist| 975 - positions in the |tagstack| 976 These items will still be adjusted: 977 - previous context mark '' 978 - the cursor position 979 - the view of a window on a buffer 980 - folds 981 - diffs 982 983:kee[pmarks] {command} *:kee* *:keepmarks* 984 Currently only has effect for the filter command 985 |:range!|: 986 - When the number of lines after filtering is equal to 987 or larger than before, all marks are kept at the 988 same line number. 989 - When the number of lines decreases, the marks in the 990 lines that disappeared are deleted. 991 In any case the marks below the filtered text have 992 their line numbers adjusted, thus stick to the text, 993 as usual. 994 When the 'R' flag is missing from 'cpoptions' this has 995 the same effect as using ":keepmarks". 996 997 *:keepj* *:keepjumps* 998:keepj[umps] {command} 999 Moving around in {command} does not change the |''|, 1000 |'.| and |'^| marks, the |jumplist| or the 1001 |changelist|. 1002 Useful when making a change or inserting text 1003 automatically and the user doesn't want to go to this 1004 position. E.g., when updating a "Last change" 1005 timestamp in the first line: > 1006 1007 :let lnum = line(".") 1008 :keepjumps normal gg 1009 :call SetLastChange() 1010 :keepjumps exe "normal " . lnum . "G" 1011< 1012 Note that ":keepjumps" must be used for every command. 1013 When invoking a function the commands in that function 1014 can still change the jumplist. Also, for 1015 ":keepjumps exe 'command '" the "command" won't keep 1016 jumps. Instead use: ":exe 'keepjumps command'" 1017 1018============================================================================== 10198. Jumps *jump-motions* 1020 1021A "jump" is one of the following commands: "'", "`", "G", "/", "?", "n", 1022"N", "%", "(", ")", "[[", "]]", "{", "}", ":s", ":tag", "L", "M", "H" and 1023the commands that start editing a new file. If you make the cursor "jump" 1024with one of these commands, the position of the cursor before the jump is 1025remembered. You can return to that position with the "''" and "``" command, 1026unless the line containing that position was changed or deleted. 1027 1028 *CTRL-O* 1029CTRL-O Go to [count] Older cursor position in jump list 1030 (not a motion command). {not in Vi} 1031 {not available without the |+jumplist| feature} 1032 1033<Tab> or *CTRL-I* *<Tab>* 1034CTRL-I Go to [count] newer cursor position in jump list 1035 (not a motion command). 1036 {not in Vi} 1037 {not available without the |+jumplist| feature} 1038 1039 *:ju* *:jumps* 1040:ju[mps] Print the jump list (not a motion command). {not in 1041 Vi} {not available without the |+jumplist| feature} 1042 1043 *jumplist* 1044Jumps are remembered in a jump list. With the CTRL-O and CTRL-I command you 1045can go to cursor positions before older jumps, and back again. Thus you can 1046move up and down the list. There is a separate jump list for each window. 1047The maximum number of entries is fixed at 100. 1048{not available without the |+jumplist| feature} 1049 1050For example, after three jump commands you have this jump list: 1051 1052 jump line col file/text ~ 1053 3 1 0 some text ~ 1054 2 70 0 another line ~ 1055 1 1154 23 end. ~ 1056 > ~ 1057 1058The "file/text" column shows the file name, or the text at the jump if it is 1059in the current file (an indent is removed and a long line is truncated to fit 1060in the window). 1061 1062You are currently in line 1167. If you then use the CTRL-O command, the 1063cursor is put in line 1154. This results in: 1064 1065 jump line col file/text ~ 1066 2 1 0 some text ~ 1067 1 70 0 another line ~ 1068 > 0 1154 23 end. ~ 1069 1 1167 0 foo bar ~ 1070 1071The pointer will be set at the last used jump position. The next CTRL-O 1072command will use the entry above it, the next CTRL-I command will use the 1073entry below it. If the pointer is below the last entry, this indicates that 1074you did not use a CTRL-I or CTRL-O before. In this case the CTRL-O command 1075will cause the cursor position to be added to the jump list, so you can get 1076back to the position before the CTRL-O. In this case this is line 1167. 1077 1078With more CTRL-O commands you will go to lines 70 and 1. If you use CTRL-I 1079you can go back to 1154 and 1167 again. Note that the number in the "jump" 1080column indicates the count for the CTRL-O or CTRL-I command that takes you to 1081this position. 1082 1083If you use a jump command, the current line number is inserted at the end of 1084the jump list. If the same line was already in the jump list, it is removed. 1085The result is that when repeating CTRL-O you will get back to old positions 1086only once. 1087 1088When the |:keepjumps| command modifier is used, jumps are not stored in the 1089jumplist. Jumps are also not stored in other cases, e.g., in a |:global| 1090command. You can explicitly add a jump by setting the ' mark with "m'". Note 1091that calling setpos() does not do this. 1092 1093After the CTRL-O command that got you into line 1154 you could give another 1094jump command (e.g., "G"). The jump list would then become: 1095 1096 jump line col file/text ~ 1097 4 1 0 some text ~ 1098 3 70 0 another line ~ 1099 2 1167 0 foo bar ~ 1100 1 1154 23 end. ~ 1101 > ~ 1102 1103The line numbers will be adjusted for deleted and inserted lines. This fails 1104if you stop editing a file without writing, like with ":n!". 1105 1106When you split a window, the jumplist will be copied to the new window. 1107 1108If you have included the ' item in the 'viminfo' option the jumplist will be 1109stored in the viminfo file and restored when starting Vim. 1110 1111 1112CHANGE LIST JUMPS *changelist* *change-list-jumps* *E664* 1113 1114When making a change the cursor position is remembered. One position is 1115remembered for every change that can be undone, unless it is close to a 1116previous change. Two commands can be used to jump to positions of changes, 1117also those that have been undone: 1118 1119 *g;* *E662* 1120g; Go to [count] older position in change list. 1121 If [count] is larger than the number of older change 1122 positions go to the oldest change. 1123 If there is no older change an error message is given. 1124 (not a motion command) 1125 {not in Vi} 1126 {not available without the |+jumplist| feature} 1127 1128 *g,* *E663* 1129g, Go to [count] newer cursor position in change list. 1130 Just like |g;| but in the opposite direction. 1131 (not a motion command) 1132 {not in Vi} 1133 {not available without the |+jumplist| feature} 1134 1135When using a count you jump as far back or forward as possible. Thus you can 1136use "999g;" to go to the first change for which the position is still 1137remembered. The number of entries in the change list is fixed and is the same 1138as for the |jumplist|. 1139 1140When two undo-able changes are in the same line and at a column position less 1141than 'textwidth' apart only the last one is remembered. This avoids that a 1142sequence of small changes in a line, for example "xxxxx", adds many positions 1143to the change list. When 'textwidth' is zero 'wrapmargin' is used. When that 1144also isn't set a fixed number of 79 is used. Detail: For the computations 1145bytes are used, not characters, to avoid a speed penalty (this only matters 1146for multi-byte encodings). 1147 1148Note that when text has been inserted or deleted the cursor position might be 1149a bit different from the position of the change. Especially when lines have 1150been deleted. 1151 1152When the |:keepjumps| command modifier is used the position of a change is not 1153remembered. 1154 1155 *:changes* 1156:changes Print the change list. A ">" character indicates the 1157 current position. Just after a change it is below the 1158 newest entry, indicating that "g;" takes you to the 1159 newest entry position. The first column indicates the 1160 count needed to take you to this position. Example: 1161 1162 change line col text ~ 1163 3 9 8 bla bla bla 1164 2 11 57 foo is a bar 1165 1 14 54 the latest changed line 1166 > 1167 1168 The "3g;" command takes you to line 9. Then the 1169 output of ":changes is: 1170 1171 change line col text ~ 1172 > 0 9 8 bla bla bla 1173 1 11 57 foo is a bar 1174 2 14 54 the latest changed line 1175 1176 Now you can use "g," to go to line 11 and "2g," to go 1177 to line 14. 1178 1179============================================================================== 11809. Various motions *various-motions* 1181 1182 *%* 1183% Find the next item in this line after or under the 1184 cursor and jump to its match. |inclusive| motion. 1185 Items can be: 1186 ([{}]) parenthesis or (curly/square) brackets 1187 (this can be changed with the 1188 'matchpairs' option) 1189 /* */ start or end of C-style comment 1190 #if, #ifdef, #else, #elif, #endif 1191 C preprocessor conditionals (when the 1192 cursor is on the # or no ([{ 1193 following) 1194 For other items the matchit plugin can be used, see 1195 |matchit-install|. This plugin also helps to skip 1196 matches in comments. 1197 1198 When 'cpoptions' contains "M" |cpo-M| backslashes 1199 before parens and braces are ignored. Without "M" the 1200 number of backslashes matters: an even number doesn't 1201 match with an odd number. Thus in "( \) )" and "\( ( 1202 \)" the first and last parenthesis match. 1203 1204 When the '%' character is not present in 'cpoptions' 1205 |cpo-%|, parens and braces inside double quotes are 1206 ignored, unless the number of parens/braces in a line 1207 is uneven and this line and the previous one does not 1208 end in a backslash. '(', '{', '[', ']', '}' and ')' 1209 are also ignored (parens and braces inside single 1210 quotes). Note that this works fine for C, but not for 1211 Perl, where single quotes are used for strings. 1212 1213 Nothing special is done for matches in comments. You 1214 can either use the matchit plugin |matchit-install| or 1215 put quotes around matches. 1216 1217 No count is allowed, {count}% jumps to a line {count} 1218 percentage down the file |N%|. Using '%' on 1219 #if/#else/#endif makes the movement linewise. 1220 1221 *[(* 1222[( go to [count] previous unmatched '('. 1223 |exclusive| motion. {not in Vi} 1224 1225 *[{* 1226[{ go to [count] previous unmatched '{'. 1227 |exclusive| motion. {not in Vi} 1228 1229 *])* 1230]) go to [count] next unmatched ')'. 1231 |exclusive| motion. {not in Vi} 1232 1233 *]}* 1234]} go to [count] next unmatched '}'. 1235 |exclusive| motion. {not in Vi} 1236 1237The above four commands can be used to go to the start or end of the current 1238code block. It is like doing "%" on the '(', ')', '{' or '}' at the other 1239end of the code block, but you can do this from anywhere in the code block. 1240Very useful for C programs. Example: When standing on "case x:", "[{" will 1241bring you back to the switch statement. 1242 1243 *]m* 1244]m Go to [count] next start of a method (for Java or 1245 similar structured language). When not before the 1246 start of a method, jump to the start or end of the 1247 class. When no '{' is found after the cursor, this is 1248 an error. |exclusive| motion. {not in Vi} 1249 *]M* 1250]M Go to [count] next end of a method (for Java or 1251 similar structured language). When not before the end 1252 of a method, jump to the start or end of the class. 1253 When no '}' is found after the cursor, this is an 1254 error. |exclusive| motion. {not in Vi} 1255 *[m* 1256[m Go to [count] previous start of a method (for Java or 1257 similar structured language). When not after the 1258 start of a method, jump to the start or end of the 1259 class. When no '{' is found before the cursor this is 1260 an error. |exclusive| motion. {not in Vi} 1261 *[M* 1262[M Go to [count] previous end of a method (for Java or 1263 similar structured language). When not after the 1264 end of a method, jump to the start or end of the 1265 class. When no '}' is found before the cursor this is 1266 an error. |exclusive| motion. {not in Vi} 1267 1268The above two commands assume that the file contains a class with methods. 1269The class definition is surrounded in '{' and '}'. Each method in the class 1270is also surrounded with '{' and '}'. This applies to the Java language. The 1271file looks like this: > 1272 1273 // comment 1274 class foo { 1275 int method_one() { 1276 body_one(); 1277 } 1278 int method_two() { 1279 body_two(); 1280 } 1281 } 1282Starting with the cursor on "body_two()", using "[m" will jump to the '{' at 1283the start of "method_two()" (obviously this is much more useful when the 1284method is long!). Using "2[m" will jump to the start of "method_one()". 1285Using "3[m" will jump to the start of the class. 1286 1287 *[#* 1288[# go to [count] previous unmatched "#if" or "#else". 1289 |exclusive| motion. {not in Vi} 1290 1291 *]#* 1292]# go to [count] next unmatched "#else" or "#endif". 1293 |exclusive| motion. {not in Vi} 1294 1295These two commands work in C programs that contain #if/#else/#endif 1296constructs. It brings you to the start or end of the #if/#else/#endif where 1297the current line is included. You can then use "%" to go to the matching line. 1298 1299 *[star* *[/* 1300[* or [/ go to [count] previous start of a C comment "/*". 1301 |exclusive| motion. {not in Vi} 1302 1303 *]star* *]/* 1304]* or ]/ go to [count] next end of a C comment "*/". 1305 |exclusive| motion. {not in Vi} 1306 1307 1308 *H* 1309H To line [count] from top (Home) of window (default: 1310 first line on the window) on the first non-blank 1311 character |linewise|. See also 'startofline' option. 1312 Cursor is adjusted for 'scrolloff' option. 1313 1314 *M* 1315M To Middle line of window, on the first non-blank 1316 character |linewise|. See also 'startofline' option. 1317 1318 *L* 1319L To line [count] from bottom of window (default: Last 1320 line on the window) on the first non-blank character 1321 |linewise|. See also 'startofline' option. 1322 Cursor is adjusted for 'scrolloff' option. 1323 1324<LeftMouse> Moves to the position on the screen where the mouse 1325 click is |exclusive|. See also |<LeftMouse>|. If the 1326 position is in a status line, that window is made the 1327 active window and the cursor is not moved. {not in Vi} 1328 1329 vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl: 1330