1*starting.txt* For Vim version 8.2. Last change: 2021 May 08 2 3 4 VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar 5 6 7Starting Vim *starting* 8 91. Vim arguments |vim-arguments| 102. Vim on the Amiga |starting-amiga| 113. Running eVim |evim-keys| 124. Initialization |initialization| 135. $VIM and $VIMRUNTIME |$VIM| 146. Suspending |suspend| 157. Exiting |exiting| 168. Saving settings |save-settings| 179. Views and Sessions |views-sessions| 1810. The viminfo file |viminfo-file| 19 20============================================================================== 211. Vim arguments *vim-arguments* 22 23Most often, Vim is started to edit a single file with the command 24 25 vim filename *-vim* 26 27More generally, Vim is started with: 28 29 vim [option | filename] .. 30 31Option arguments and file name arguments can be mixed, and any number of them 32can be given. However, watch out for options that take an argument. 33 34For compatibility with various Vi versions, see |cmdline-arguments|. 35 36Exactly one out of the following five items may be used to choose how to 37start editing: 38 39 *-file* *---* 40filename One or more file names. The first one will be the current 41 file and read into the buffer. The cursor will be positioned 42 on the first line of the buffer. 43 To avoid a file name starting with a '-' being interpreted as 44 an option, precede the arglist with "--", e.g.: > 45 vim -- -filename 46< All arguments after the "--" will be interpreted as file names, 47 no other options or "+command" argument can follow. 48 For behavior of quotes on MS-Windows, see |win32-quotes|. 49 50 *--* 51- This argument can mean two things, depending on whether Ex 52 mode is to be used. 53 54 Starting in Normal mode: > 55 vim - 56 ex -v - 57< Start editing a new buffer, which is filled with text 58 that is read from stdin. The commands that would normally be 59 read from stdin will now be read from stderr. Example: > 60 find . -name "*.c" -print | vim - 61 62< The buffer will be marked as modified, so that you are 63 reminded to save the text when trying to exit. If you don't 64 like that, put this these lines in your vimrc: > 65 " Don't set 'modified' when reading from stdin 66 au StdinReadPost * set nomodified 67< 68 Starting in Ex mode: > 69 ex - 70 vim -e - 71 exim - 72 vim -E 73< Start editing in silent mode. See |-s-ex|. 74 75 *-t* *-tag* 76-t {tag} A tag. "tag" is looked up in the tags file, the associated 77 file becomes the current file, and the associated command is 78 executed. Mostly this is used for C programs, in which case 79 "tag" often is a function name. The effect is that the file 80 containing that function becomes the current file and the 81 cursor is positioned on the start of the function (see 82 |tags|). 83 84 *-q* *-qf* 85-q [errorfile] QuickFix mode. The file with the name [errorfile] is read 86 and the first error is displayed. See |quickfix|. 87 If [errorfile] is not given, the 'errorfile' option is used 88 for the file name. See 'errorfile' for the default value. 89 90(nothing) Without one of the four items above, Vim will start editing a 91 new buffer. It's empty and doesn't have a file name. 92 93 94The startup mode can be changed by using another name instead of "vim", which 95is equal to giving options: 96ex vim -e Start in Ex mode (see |Ex-mode|). *ex* 97exim vim -E Start in improved Ex mode (see |Ex-mode|). *exim* 98 (normally not installed) 99view vim -R Start in read-only mode (see |-R|). *view* 100gvim vim -g Start the GUI (see |gui|). *gvim* 101gex vim -eg Start the GUI in Ex mode. *gex* 102gview vim -Rg Start the GUI in read-only mode. *gview* 103rvim vim -Z Like "vim", but in restricted mode (see |-Z|) *rvim* 104rview vim -RZ Like "view", but in restricted mode. *rview* 105rgvim vim -gZ Like "gvim", but in restricted mode. *rgvim* 106rgview vim -RgZ Like "gview", but in restricted mode. *rgview* 107evim vim -y Easy Vim: set 'insertmode' (see |-y|) *evim* 108eview vim -yR Like "evim" in read-only mode *eview* 109vimdiff vim -d Start in diff mode |diff-mode| 110gvimdiff vim -gd Start in diff mode |diff-mode| 111 112Additional characters may follow, they are ignored. For example, you can have 113"gvim-8" to start the GUI. You must have an executable by that name then, of 114course. 115 116On Unix, you would normally have one executable called Vim, and links from the 117different startup-names to that executable. If your system does not support 118links and you do not want to have several copies of the executable, you could 119use an alias instead. For example: > 120 alias view vim -R 121 alias gvim vim -g 122< 123 *startup-options* 124The option arguments may be given in any order. Single-letter options can be 125combined after one dash. There can be no option arguments after the "--" 126argument. 127 128On VMS all option arguments are assumed to be lowercase, unless preceded with 129a slash. Thus "-R" means recovery and "-/R" readonly. 130 131--help *-h* *--help* *-?* 132-? 133-h Give usage (help) message and exit. 134 See |info-message| about capturing the text. 135 136 *--version* 137--version Print version information and exit. Same output as for 138 |:version| command. 139 See |info-message| about capturing the text. 140 141 *--noplugin* 142--noplugin Skip loading plugins. Resets the 'loadplugins' option. 143 144 Note that the |-u| argument may also disable loading plugins: 145 argument load: vimrc files plugins defaults.vim ~ 146 (nothing) yes yes yes 147 -u NONE no no no 148 -u DEFAULTS no no yes 149 -u NORC no yes no 150 --noplugin yes no yes 151 152--startuptime {fname} *--startuptime* 153 During startup write timing messages to the file {fname}. 154 This can be used to find out where time is spent while loading 155 your .vimrc, plugins and opening the first file. 156 When {fname} already exists new messages are appended. 157 {only available when compiled with the |+startuptime| 158 feature} 159 160 *--literal* 161--literal Take file names literally, don't expand wildcards. Not needed 162 for Unix, because Vim always takes file names literally (the 163 shell expands wildcards). 164 Applies to all the names, also the ones that come before this 165 argument. 166 167 *-+* 168+[num] The cursor will be positioned on line "num" for the first 169 file being edited. If "num" is missing, the cursor will be 170 positioned on the last line. 171 172 *-+/* 173+/{pat} The cursor will be positioned on the first line containing 174 "pat" in the first file being edited (see |pattern| for the 175 available search patterns). The search starts at the cursor 176 position, which can be the first line or the cursor position 177 last used from |viminfo|. To force a search from the first 178 line use "+1 +/pat". 179 180+{command} *-+c* *-c* 181-c {command} {command} will be executed after the first file has been 182 read (and after autocommands and modelines for that file have 183 been processed). "command" is interpreted as an Ex command. 184 If the "command" contains spaces, it must be enclosed in 185 double quotes (this depends on the shell that is used). 186 Example: > 187 vim "+set si" main.c 188 vim "+find stdio.h" 189 vim -c "set ff=dos" -c wq mine.mak 190< 191 Note: You can use up to 10 "+" or "-c" arguments in a Vim 192 command. They are executed in the order given. A "-S" 193 argument counts as a "-c" argument as well. 194 195--cmd {command} *--cmd* 196 {command} will be executed before processing any vimrc file. 197 Otherwise it acts like -c {command}. You can use up to 10 of 198 these commands, independently from "-c" commands. 199 200 *-S* 201-S {file} The {file} will be sourced after the first file has been read. 202 This is an easy way to do the equivalent of: > 203 -c "source {file}" 204< It can be mixed with "-c" arguments and repeated like "-c". 205 The limit of 10 "-c" arguments applies here as well. 206 {file} cannot start with a "-". 207 208 Do not use this for running a script to do some work and exit 209 Vim, you won't see error messages. Use |-u| instead. 210 211-S Works like "-S Session.vim". Only when used as the last 212 argument or when another "-" option follows. 213 214 *-r* 215-r Recovery mode. Without a file name argument, a list of 216 existing swap files is given. With a file name, a swap file 217 is read to recover a crashed editing session. See 218 |crash-recovery|. 219 220 *-L* 221-L Same as -r. 222 223 *-R* 224-R Readonly mode. The 'readonly' option will be set for all the 225 files being edited. You can still edit the buffer, but will 226 be prevented from accidentally overwriting a file. If you 227 forgot that you are in View mode and did make some changes, 228 you can overwrite a file by adding an exclamation mark to 229 the Ex command, as in ":w!". The 'readonly' option can be 230 reset with ":set noro" (see the options chapter, |options|). 231 Subsequent edits will not be done in readonly mode. Calling 232 the executable "view" has the same effect as the -R argument. 233 The 'updatecount' option will be set to 10000, meaning that 234 the swap file will not be updated automatically very often. 235 See |-M| for disallowing modifications. 236 237 *-m* 238-m Modifications not allowed to be written. The 'write' option 239 will be reset, so that writing files is disabled. However, 240 the 'write' option can be set to enable writing again. 241 242 *-M* 243-M Modifications not allowed. The 'modifiable' option will be 244 reset, so that changes are not allowed. The 'write' option 245 will be reset, so that writing files is disabled. However, 246 the 'modifiable' and 'write' options can be set to enable 247 changes and writing. 248 249 *-Z* *restricted-mode* *E145* *E981* 250-Z Restricted mode. All commands that make use of an external 251 shell are disabled. This includes suspending with CTRL-Z, 252 ":sh", filtering, the system() function, backtick expansion 253 and libcall(). 254 Also disallowed are delete(), rename(), mkdir(), job_start(), 255 etc. 256 Interfaces, such as Python, Ruby and Lua, are also disabled, 257 since they could be used to execute shell commands. Perl uses 258 the Safe module. 259 Note that the user may still find a loophole to execute a 260 shell command, it has only been made difficult. 261 262 *-g* 263-g Start Vim in GUI mode. See |gui|. For the opposite see |-v|. 264 265 *-v* 266-v Start Ex in Vi mode. Only makes a difference when the 267 executable is called "ex" or "gvim". For gvim the GUI is not 268 started if possible. 269 270 *-e* 271-e Start Vim in Ex mode |Q|. Only makes a difference when the 272 executable is not called "ex". 273 274 *-E* 275-E Start Vim in improved Ex mode |gQ|. Only makes a difference 276 when the executable is not called "exim". 277 278 *-s-ex* 279-s Silent or batch mode. Only when Vim was started as "ex" or 280 when preceded with the "-e" argument. Otherwise see |-s|, 281 which does take an argument while this use of "-s" doesn't. 282 To be used when Vim is used to execute Ex commands from a file 283 instead of a terminal. Switches off most prompts and 284 informative messages. Also warnings and error messages. 285 The output of these commands is displayed (to stdout): 286 :print 287 :list 288 :number 289 :set to display option values. 290 When 'verbose' is non-zero messages are printed (for 291 debugging, to stderr). 292 'term' and $TERM are not used. 293 If Vim appears to be stuck try typing "qa!<Enter>". You don't 294 get a prompt thus you can't see Vim is waiting for you to type 295 something. 296 Initializations are skipped (except the ones given with the 297 "-u" argument). 298 Example: > 299 vim -e -s < thefilter thefile 300< For the opposite, to see errors from the script, execute the 301 file with the |-u| flag: > 302 vim -u thefilter thefile 303< 304 *-b* 305-b Binary mode. File I/O will only recognize <NL> to separate 306 lines. The 'expandtab' option will be reset. The 'textwidth' 307 option is set to 0. 'modeline' is reset. The 'binary' option 308 is set. This is done after reading the vimrc/exrc files but 309 before reading any file in the arglist. See also 310 |edit-binary|. 311 312 *-l* 313-l Lisp mode. Sets the 'lisp' and 'showmatch' options on. 314 315 *-A* 316-A Arabic mode. Sets the 'arabic' option on. {only when 317 compiled with the |+arabic| features (which include 318 |+rightleft|), otherwise Vim gives an error message 319 and exits} 320 321 *-F* 322-F This was used for Farsi mode, which has been removed. 323 See |farsi.txt|. 324 325 *-H* 326-H Hebrew mode. Sets the 'hkmap' and 'rightleft' options on. 327 {only when compiled with the |+rightleft| feature, otherwise 328 Vim gives an error message and exits} 329 330 *-V* *verbose* 331-V[N] Verbose. Sets the 'verbose' option to [N] (default: 10). 332 Messages will be given for each file that is ":source"d and 333 for reading or writing a viminfo file. Can be used to find 334 out what is happening upon startup and exit. 335 Example: > 336 vim -V8 foobar 337 338-V[N]{filename} 339 Like -V and set 'verbosefile' to {filename}. The result is 340 that messages are not displayed but written to the file 341 {filename}. {filename} must not start with a digit. 342 Example: > 343 vim -V20vimlog foobar 344< 345 *-D* 346-D Debugging. Go to debugging mode when executing the first 347 command from a script. |debug-mode| 348 {not available when compiled without the |+eval| feature} 349 350 *-C* 351-C Compatible mode. Sets the 'compatible' option. You can use 352 this to get 'compatible', even though a .vimrc file exists. 353 Keep in mind that the command ":set nocompatible" in some 354 plugin or startup script overrules this, so you may end up 355 with 'nocompatible' anyway. To find out, use: > 356 :verbose set compatible? 357< Several plugins won't work with 'compatible' set. You may 358 want to set it after startup this way: > 359 vim "+set cp" filename 360< Also see |compatible-default|. 361 362 *-N* 363-N Not compatible mode. Resets the 'compatible' option. You can 364 use this to get 'nocompatible', when there is no .vimrc file 365 or when using "-u NONE". 366 Also see |compatible-default|. 367 368 *-y* *easy* 369-y Easy mode. Implied for |evim| and |eview|. Starts with 370 'insertmode' set and behaves like a click-and-type editor. 371 This sources the script $VIMRUNTIME/evim.vim. Mappings are 372 set up to work like most click-and-type editors, see 373 |evim-keys|. The GUI is started when available. 374 375 *-n* 376-n No swap file will be used. Recovery after a crash will be 377 impossible. Handy if you want to view or edit a file on a 378 very slow medium (e.g., a floppy). 379 Can also be done with ":set updatecount=0". You can switch it 380 on again by setting the 'updatecount' option to some value, 381 e.g., ":set uc=100". 382 NOTE: Don't combine -n with -b, making -nb, because that has a 383 different meaning: |-nb|. 384 'updatecount' is set to 0 AFTER executing commands from a 385 vimrc file, but before the GUI initializations. Thus it 386 overrides a setting for 'updatecount' in a vimrc file, but not 387 in a gvimrc file. See |startup|. 388 When you want to reduce accesses to the disk (e.g., for a 389 laptop), don't use "-n", but set 'updatetime' and 390 'updatecount' to very big numbers, and type ":preserve" when 391 you want to save your work. This way you keep the possibility 392 for crash recovery. 393 394 *-o* 395-o[N] Open N windows, split horizontally. If [N] is not given, 396 one window is opened for every file given as argument. If 397 there is not enough room, only the first few files get a 398 window. If there are more windows than arguments, the last 399 few windows will be editing an empty file. 400 401 *-O* 402-O[N] Open N windows, split vertically. Otherwise it's like -o. 403 If both the -o and the -O option are given, the last one on 404 the command line determines how the windows will be split. 405 406 *-p* 407-p[N] Open N tab pages. If [N] is not given, one tab page is opened 408 for every file given as argument. The maximum is set with 409 'tabpagemax' pages (default 10). If there are more tab pages 410 than arguments, the last few tab pages will be editing an 411 empty file. Also see |tabpage|. 412 413 *-T* 414-T {terminal} Set the terminal type to "terminal". This influences the 415 codes that Vim will send to your terminal. This is normally 416 not needed, because Vim will be able to find out what type 417 of terminal you are using. (See |terminal-info|.) 418 419 *--not-a-term* 420--not-a-term Tells Vim that the user knows that the input and/or output is 421 not connected to a terminal. This will avoid the warning and 422 the two second delay that would happen. 423 Also avoids the "Reading from stdin..." message. 424 Also avoids the "N files to edit" message. 425 426 *--ttyfail* 427--ttyfail When the stdin or stdout is not a terminal (tty) then exit 428 right away. 429 430 *-d* 431-d Start in diff mode, like |vimdiff|. 432 {not available when compiled without the |+diff| feature} 433 434-d {device} Only on the Amiga and when not compiled with the |+diff| 435 feature. Works like "-dev". 436 *-dev* 437-dev {device} Only on the Amiga: The {device} is opened to be used for 438 editing. 439 Normally you would use this to set the window position and 440 size: "-d con:x/y/width/height", e.g., 441 "-d con:30/10/600/150". But you can also use it to start 442 editing on another device, e.g., AUX:. 443 *-f* 444-f GUI: Do not disconnect from the program that started Vim. 445 'f' stands for "foreground". If omitted, the GUI forks a new 446 process and exits the current one. "-f" should be used when 447 gvim is started by a program that will wait for the edit 448 session to finish (e.g., mail or readnews). If you want gvim 449 never to fork, include 'f' in 'guioptions' in your |gvimrc|. 450 Careful: You can use "-gf" to start the GUI in the foreground, 451 but "-fg" is used to specify the foreground color. |gui-fork| 452 453 Amiga: Do not restart Vim to open a new window. This 454 option should be used when Vim is started by a program that 455 will wait for the edit session to finish (e.g., mail or 456 readnews). See |amiga-window|. 457 458 MS-Windows: This option is not supported. However, when 459 running Vim with an installed vim.bat or gvim.bat file it 460 works. 461 462 463 *--nofork* 464--nofork GUI: Do not fork. Same as |-f|. 465 *-u* *E282* 466-u {vimrc} The file {vimrc} is read for initializations. Most other 467 initializations are skipped; see |initialization|. 468 469 This can be used to start Vim in a special mode, with special 470 mappings and settings. A shell alias can be used to make 471 this easy to use. For example: > 472 alias vimc vim -u ~/.c_vimrc !* 473< Also consider using autocommands; see |autocommand|. 474 475 When {vimrc} is equal to "NONE" (all uppercase), all 476 initializations from files and environment variables are 477 skipped, including reading the |gvimrc| file when the GUI 478 starts. Loading plugins is also skipped. 479 480 When {vimrc} is equal to "NORC" (all uppercase), this has the 481 same effect as "NONE", but loading plugins is not skipped. 482 483 When {vimrc} is equal to "DEFAULTS" (all uppercase), this has 484 the same effect as "NONE", but the |defaults.vim| script is 485 loaded, which will also set 'nocompatible'. Also see 486 |--clean|. 487 488 Using the "-u" argument with another argument than DEFAULTS 489 has the side effect that the 'compatible' option will be on by 490 default. This can have unexpected effects. See 491 |'compatible'|. 492 493 *-U* *E230* 494-U {gvimrc} The file {gvimrc} is read for initializations when the GUI 495 starts. Other GUI initializations are skipped. When {gvimrc} 496 is equal to "NONE", no file is read for GUI initializations at 497 all. |gui-init| 498 Exception: Reading the system-wide menu file is always done. 499 500 *-i* 501-i {viminfo} The file "viminfo" is used instead of the default viminfo 502 file. If the name "NONE" is used (all uppercase), no viminfo 503 file is read or written, even if 'viminfo' is set or when 504 ":rv" or ":wv" are used. See also |viminfo-file|. 505 506 *--clean* 507--clean Similar to "-u DEFAULTS -U NONE -i NONE": 508 - initializations from files and environment variables is 509 skipped 510 - 'runtimepath' and 'packpath' are set to exclude home 511 directory entries (does not happen with -u DEFAULTS). 512 - the |defaults.vim| script is loaded, which implies 513 'nocompatible': use Vim defaults 514 - no |gvimrc| script is loaded 515 - no viminfo file is read or written 516 Note that a following "-u" argument overrules the effect of 517 "-u DEFAULTS". 518 519 *-x* 520-x Use encryption to read/write files. Will prompt for a key, 521 which is then stored in the 'key' option. All writes will 522 then use this key to encrypt the text. The '-x' argument is 523 not needed when reading a file, because there is a check if 524 the file that is being read has been encrypted, and Vim asks 525 for a key automatically. |encryption| 526 527 *-X* 528-X Do not try connecting to the X server to get the current 529 window title and copy/paste using the X clipboard. This 530 avoids a long startup time when running Vim in a terminal 531 emulator and the connection to the X server is slow. 532 See |--startuptime| to find out if affects you. 533 Only makes a difference on Unix or VMS, when compiled with the 534 |+X11| feature. Otherwise it's ignored. 535 To disable the connection only for specific terminals, see the 536 'clipboard' option. 537 When the X11 Session Management Protocol (XSMP) handler has 538 been built in, the -X option also disables that connection as 539 it, too, may have undesirable delays. 540 When the connection is desired later anyway (e.g., for 541 client-server messages), call the |serverlist()| function. 542 This does not enable the XSMP handler though. 543 544 *-s* 545-s {scriptin} The script file "scriptin" is read. The characters in the 546 file are interpreted as if you had typed them. The same can 547 be done with the command ":source! {scriptin}". If the end 548 of the file is reached before the editor exits, further 549 characters are read from the keyboard. Only works when not 550 started in Ex mode, see |-s-ex|. See also |complex-repeat|. 551 552 *-w_nr* 553-w {number} 554-w{number} Set the 'window' option to {number}. 555 556 *-w* 557-w {scriptout} All the characters that you type are recorded in the file 558 "scriptout", until you exit Vim. This is useful if you want 559 to create a script file to be used with "vim -s" or 560 ":source!". When the "scriptout" file already exists, new 561 characters are appended. See also |complex-repeat|. 562 {scriptout} cannot start with a digit. 563 564 *-W* 565-W {scriptout} Like -w, but do not append, overwrite an existing file. 566 567--remote [+{cmd}] {file} ... 568 Open the {file} in another Vim that functions as a server. 569 Any non-file arguments must come before this. 570 See |--remote|. 571 572--remote-silent [+{cmd}] {file} ... 573 Like --remote, but don't complain if there is no server. 574 See |--remote-silent|. 575 576--remote-wait [+{cmd}] {file} ... 577 Like --remote, but wait for the server to finish editing the 578 file(s). 579 See |--remote-wait|. 580 581--remote-wait-silent [+{cmd}] {file} ... 582 Like --remote-wait, but don't complain if there is no server. 583 See |--remote-wait-silent|. 584 585--servername {name} 586 Specify the name of the Vim server to send to or to become. 587 See |--servername|. 588 589--remote-send {keys} 590 Send {keys} to a Vim server and exit. 591 See |--remote-send|. 592 593--remote-expr {expr} 594 Evaluate {expr} in another Vim that functions as a server. 595 The result is printed on stdout. 596 See |--remote-expr|. 597 598--serverlist Output a list of Vim server names and exit. See 599 |--serverlist|. 600 601--socketid {id} *--socketid* 602 GTK+ GUI Vim only. Make gvim try to use GtkPlug mechanism, so 603 that it runs inside another window. See |gui-gtk-socketid| 604 for details. 605 606--windowid {id} *--windowid* 607 Win32 GUI Vim only. Make gvim try to use the window {id} as a 608 parent, so that it runs inside that window. See 609 |gui-w32-windowid| for details. 610 611--echo-wid *--echo-wid* 612 GTK+ GUI Vim only. Make gvim echo the Window ID on stdout, 613 which can be used to run gvim in a kpart widget. The format 614 of the output is: > 615 WID: 12345\n 616 617--role {role} *--role* 618 GTK+ 2 GUI only. Set the role of the main window to {role}. 619 The window role can be used by a window manager to uniquely 620 identify a window, in order to restore window placement and 621 such. The --role argument is passed automatically when 622 restoring the session on login. See |gui-gnome-session| 623 624-P {parent-title} *-P* *MDI* *E671* *E672* 625 Win32 only: Specify the title of the parent application. When 626 possible, Vim will run in an MDI window inside the 627 application. 628 {parent-title} must appear in the window title of the parent 629 application. Make sure that it is specific enough. 630 Note that the implementation is still primitive. It won't 631 work with all applications and the menu doesn't work. 632 633-nb *-nb* 634-nb={fname} 635-nb:{hostname}:{addr}:{password} 636 Attempt connecting to Netbeans and become an editor server for 637 it. The second form specifies a file to read connection info 638 from. The third form specifies the hostname, address and 639 password for connecting to Netbeans. |netbeans-run| 640 {only available when compiled with the |+netbeans_intg| 641 feature; if not then -nb will make Vim exit} 642 643If the executable is called "view", Vim will start in Readonly mode. This is 644useful if you can make a hard or symbolic link from "view" to "vim". 645Starting in Readonly mode can also be done with "vim -R". 646 647If the executable is called "ex", Vim will start in "Ex" mode. This means it 648will accept only ":" commands. But when the "-v" argument is given, Vim will 649start in Normal mode anyway. 650 651Additional arguments are available on unix like systems when compiled with 652X11 GUI support. See |gui-resources|. 653 654============================================================================== 6552. Vim on the Amiga *starting-amiga* 656 657Starting Vim from the Workbench *workbench* 658------------------------------- 659 660Vim can be started from the Workbench by clicking on its icon twice. It will 661then start with an empty buffer. 662 663Vim can be started to edit one or more files by using a "Project" icon. The 664"Default Tool" of the icon must be the full pathname of the Vim executable. 665The name of the ".info" file must be the same as the name of the text file. 666By clicking on this icon twice, Vim will be started with the file name as 667current file name, which will be read into the buffer (if it exists). You can 668edit multiple files by pressing the shift key while clicking on icons, and 669clicking twice on the last one. The "Default Tool" for all these icons must 670be the same. 671 672It is not possible to give arguments to Vim, other than file names, from the 673workbench. 674 675Vim window *amiga-window* 676---------- 677 678Vim will run in the CLI window where it was started. If Vim was started with 679the "run" or "runback" command, or if Vim was started from the workbench, it 680will open a window of its own. 681 682Technical detail: 683 To open the new window a little trick is used. As soon as Vim 684 recognizes that it does not run in a normal CLI window, it will 685 create a script file in "t:". This script file contains the same 686 command as the one Vim was started with, and an "endcli" command. 687 This script file is then executed with a "newcli" command (the "c:run" 688 and "c:newcli" commands are required for this to work). The script 689 file will hang around until reboot, or until you delete it. This 690 method is required to get the ":sh" and ":!" commands to work 691 correctly. But when Vim was started with the -f option (foreground 692 mode), this method is not used. The reason for this is that 693 when a program starts Vim with the -f option it will wait for Vim to 694 exit. With the script trick, the calling program does not know when 695 Vim exits. The -f option can be used when Vim is started by a mail 696 program which also waits for the edit session to finish. As a 697 consequence, the ":sh" and ":!" commands are not available when the 698 -f option is used. 699 700Vim will automatically recognize the window size and react to window 701resizing. Under Amiga DOS 1.3, it is advised to use the fastfonts program, 702"FF", to speed up display redrawing. 703 704============================================================================== 7053. Running eVim *evim-keys* 706 707EVim runs Vim as click-and-type editor. This is very unlike the original Vi 708idea. But it helps for people that don't use Vim often enough to learn the 709commands. Hopefully they will find out that learning to use Normal mode 710commands will make their editing much more effective. 711 712In Evim these options are changed from their default value: 713 714 :set nocompatible Use Vim improvements 715 :set insertmode Remain in Insert mode most of the time 716 :set hidden Keep invisible buffers loaded 717 :set backup Keep backup files (not for VMS) 718 :set backspace=2 Backspace over everything 719 :set autoindent auto-indent new lines 720 :set history=50 keep 50 lines of Ex commands 721 :set ruler show the cursor position 722 :set incsearch show matches halfway typing a pattern 723 :set mouse=a use the mouse in all modes 724 :set hlsearch highlight all matches for a search pattern 725 :set whichwrap+=<,>,[,] <Left> and <Right> wrap around line breaks 726 :set guioptions-=a non-Unix only: don't do auto-select 727 728Key mappings: 729 <Down> moves by screen lines rather than file lines 730 <Up> idem 731 Q does "gq", formatting, instead of Ex mode 732 <BS> in Visual mode: deletes the selection 733 CTRL-X in Visual mode: Cut to clipboard 734 <S-Del> idem 735 CTRL-C in Visual mode: Copy to clipboard 736 <C-Insert> idem 737 CTRL-V Pastes from the clipboard (in any mode) 738 <S-Insert> idem 739 CTRL-Q do what CTRL-V used to do 740 CTRL-Z undo 741 CTRL-Y redo 742 <M-Space> system menu 743 CTRL-A select all 744 <C-Tab> next window, CTRL-W w 745 <C-F4> close window, CTRL-W c 746 747Additionally: 748- ":behave mswin" is used |:behave| 749- syntax highlighting is enabled 750- filetype detection is enabled, filetype plugins and indenting is enabled 751- in a text file 'textwidth' is set to 78 752 753One hint: If you want to go to Normal mode to be able to type a sequence of 754commands, use CTRL-L. |i_CTRL-L| 755 756============================================================================== 7574. Initialization *initialization* *startup* 758 759This section is about the non-GUI version of Vim. See |gui-fork| for 760additional initialization when starting the GUI. 761 762At startup, Vim checks environment variables and files and sets values 763accordingly. Vim proceeds in this order: 764 7651. Set the 'shell' and 'term' option *SHELL* *COMSPEC* *TERM* 766 The environment variable SHELL, if it exists, is used to set the 767 'shell' option. On Win32, the COMSPEC variable is used 768 if SHELL is not set. 769 The environment variable TERM, if it exists, is used to set the 'term' 770 option. However, 'term' will change later when starting the GUI (step 771 8 below). 772 7732. Process the arguments 774 The options and file names from the command that start Vim are 775 inspected. Buffers are created for all files (but not loaded yet). 776 The |-V| argument can be used to display or log what happens next, 777 useful for debugging the initializations. 778 7793. Execute Ex commands, from environment variables and/or files 780 An environment variable is read as one Ex command line, where multiple 781 commands must be separated with '|' or "<NL>". 782 *vimrc* *exrc* 783 A file that contains initialization commands is called a "vimrc" file. 784 Each line in a vimrc file is executed as an Ex command line. It is 785 sometimes also referred to as "exrc" file. They are the same type of 786 file, but "exrc" is what Vi always used, "vimrc" is a Vim specific 787 name. Also see |vimrc-intro|. 788 789 Places for your personal initializations: 790 Unix $HOME/.vimrc or $HOME/.vim/vimrc 791 MS-Windows $HOME/_vimrc, $HOME/vimfiles/vimrc 792 or $VIM/_vimrc 793 Amiga s:.vimrc, home:.vimrc, home:vimfiles:vimrc 794 or $VIM/.vimrc 795 Haiku $HOME/config/settings/vim/vimrc 796 797 The files are searched in the order specified above and only the first 798 one that is found is read. 799 800 RECOMMENDATION: Put all your Vim configuration stuff in the 801 $HOME/.vim/ directory ($HOME/vimfiles/ for MS-Windows). That makes it 802 easy to copy it to another system. 803 804 If Vim was started with "-u filename", the file "filename" is used. 805 All following initializations until 4. are skipped. $MYVIMRC is not 806 set. 807 "vim -u NORC" can be used to skip these initializations without 808 reading a file. "vim -u NONE" also skips loading plugins. |-u| 809 810 If Vim was started in Ex mode with the "-s" argument, all following 811 initializations until 4. are skipped. Only the "-u" option is 812 interpreted. 813 *evim.vim* 814 a. If vim was started as |evim| or |eview| or with the |-y| argument, the 815 script $VIMRUNTIME/evim.vim will be loaded. 816 *system-vimrc* 817 b. For Unix, MS-Windows, VMS, Macintosh and Amiga the system vimrc file 818 is read for initializations. The path of this file is shown with the 819 ":version" command. Mostly it's "$VIM/vimrc". Note that this file is 820 ALWAYS read in 'compatible' mode, since the automatic resetting of 821 'compatible' is only done later. Add a ":set nocp" command if you 822 like. For the Macintosh the $VIMRUNTIME/macmap.vim is read. 823 824 *VIMINIT* *.vimrc* *_vimrc* *EXINIT* *.exrc* *_exrc* *$MYVIMRC* 825 c. Five places are searched for initializations. The first that exists 826 is used, the others are ignored. The $MYVIMRC environment variable is 827 set to the file that was first found, unless $MYVIMRC was already set 828 and when using VIMINIT. 829 I The environment variable VIMINIT (see also |compatible-default|) (*) 830 The value of $VIMINIT is used as an Ex command line. 831 II The user vimrc file(s): 832 "$HOME/.vimrc" (for Unix) (*) 833 "$HOME/.vim/vimrc" (for Unix) (*) 834 "s:.vimrc" (for Amiga) (*) 835 "home:.vimrc" (for Amiga) (*) 836 "home:vimfiles:vimrc" (for Amiga) (*) 837 "$VIM/.vimrc" (for Amiga) (*) 838 "$HOME/_vimrc" (for Win32) (*) 839 "$HOME/vimfiles/vimrc" (for Win32) (*) 840 "$VIM/_vimrc" (for Win32) (*) 841 "$HOME/config/settings/vim/vimrc" (for Haiku) (*) 842 843 Note: For Unix and Amiga, when ".vimrc" does not exist, 844 "_vimrc" is also tried, in case an MS-DOS compatible file 845 system is used. For MS-Windows ".vimrc" is checked after 846 "_vimrc", in case long file names are used. 847 Note: For Win32, "$HOME" is checked first. If no "_vimrc" or 848 ".vimrc" is found there, "$VIM" is tried. See |$VIM| for when 849 $VIM is not set. 850 III The environment variable EXINIT. 851 The value of $EXINIT is used as an Ex command line. 852 IV The user exrc file(s). Same as for the user vimrc file, but with 853 "vimrc" replaced by "exrc". But only one of ".exrc" and "_exrc" is 854 used, depending on the system. And without the (*)! 855 V The default vimrc file, $VIMRUNTIME/defaults.vim. This sets up 856 options values and has "syntax on" and "filetype on" commands, 857 which is what most new users will want. See |defaults.vim|. 858 859 d. If the 'exrc' option is on (which is NOT the default), the current 860 directory is searched for three files. The first that exists is used, 861 the others are ignored. 862 - The file ".vimrc" (for Unix, Amiga) (*) 863 "_vimrc" (for Win32) (*) 864 - The file "_vimrc" (for Unix, Amiga) (*) 865 ".vimrc" (for Win32) (*) 866 - The file ".exrc" (for Unix, Amiga) 867 "_exrc" (for Win32) 868 869 (*) Using this file or environment variable will cause 'compatible' to be 870 off by default. See |compatible-default|. 871 872 Note: When using the |mzscheme| interface, it is initialized after loading 873 the vimrc file. Changing 'mzschemedll' later has no effect. 874 8754. Load the plugin scripts. *load-plugins* 876 This does the same as the command: > 877 :runtime! plugin/**/*.vim 878< The result is that all directories in the 'runtimepath' option will be 879 searched for the "plugin" sub-directory and all files ending in ".vim" 880 will be sourced (in alphabetical order per directory), also in 881 subdirectories. 882 However, directories in 'runtimepath' ending in "after" are skipped 883 here and only loaded after packages, see below. 884 Loading plugins won't be done when: 885 - The 'loadplugins' option was reset in a vimrc file. 886 - The |--noplugin| command line argument is used. 887 - The |--clean| command line argument is used. 888 - The "-u NONE" command line argument is used |-u|. 889 - When Vim was compiled without the |+eval| feature. 890 Note that using "-c 'set noloadplugins'" doesn't work, because the 891 commands from the command line have not been executed yet. You can 892 use "--cmd 'set noloadplugins'" or "--cmd 'set loadplugins'" |--cmd|. 893 894 Packages are loaded. These are plugins, as above, but found in the 895 "start" directory of each entry in 'packpath'. Every plugin directory 896 found is added in 'runtimepath' and then the plugins are sourced. See 897 |packages|. 898 899 The plugins scripts are loaded, as above, but now only the directories 900 ending in "after" are used. Note that 'runtimepath' will have changed 901 if packages have been found, but that should not add a directory 902 ending in "after". 903 9045. Set 'shellpipe' and 'shellredir' 905 The 'shellpipe' and 'shellredir' options are set according to the 906 value of the 'shell' option, unless they have been set before. 907 This means that Vim will figure out the values of 'shellpipe' and 908 'shellredir' for you, unless you have set them yourself. 909 9106. Set 'updatecount' to zero, if "-n" command argument used 911 9127. Set binary options 913 If the "-b" flag was given to Vim, the options for binary editing will 914 be set now. See |-b|. 915 9168. Perform GUI initializations 917 Only when starting "gvim", the GUI initializations will be done. See 918 |gui-init|. 919 9209. Read the viminfo file 921 If the 'viminfo' option is not empty, the viminfo file is read. See 922 |viminfo-file|. 923 92410. Read the quickfix file 925 If the "-q" flag was given to Vim, the quickfix file is read. If this 926 fails, Vim exits. 927 92811. Open all windows 929 When the |-o| flag was given, windows will be opened (but not 930 displayed yet). 931 When the |-p| flag was given, tab pages will be created (but not 932 displayed yet). 933 When switching screens, it happens now. Redrawing starts. 934 If the "-q" flag was given to Vim, the first error is jumped to. 935 Buffers for all windows will be loaded, without triggering |BufAdd| 936 autocommands. 937 93812. Execute startup commands 939 If a "-t" flag was given to Vim, the tag is jumped to. 940 The commands given with the |-c| and |+cmd| arguments are executed. 941 If the 'insertmode' option is set, Insert mode is entered. 942 The starting flag is reset, has("vim_starting") will now return zero. 943 The |v:vim_did_enter| variable is set to 1. 944 The |VimEnter| autocommands are executed. 945 946The $MYVIMRC or $MYGVIMRC file will be set to the first found vimrc and/or 947gvimrc file. 948 949 950Some hints on using initializations ~ 951 952Standard setup: 953Create a vimrc file to set the default settings and mappings for all your edit 954sessions. Put it in a place so that it will be found by 3b: 955 ~/.vimrc (Unix) 956 s:.vimrc (Amiga) 957 $VIM\_vimrc (Win32) 958 ~/config/settings/vim/vimrc (Haiku) 959 960Note that creating a vimrc file will cause the 'compatible' option to be off 961by default. See |compatible-default|. 962 963Local setup: 964Put all commands that you need for editing a specific directory only into a 965vimrc file and place it in that directory under the name ".vimrc" ("_vimrc" 966for Win32). NOTE: To make Vim look for these special files you have to turn 967on the option 'exrc'. See |trojan-horse| too. 968 969System setup: 970This only applies if you are managing a Unix system with several users and 971want to set the defaults for all users. Create a vimrc file with commands 972for default settings and mappings and put it in the place that is given with 973the ":version" command. 974 975 976Saving the current state of Vim to a file ~ 977 978Whenever you have changed values of options or when you have created a 979mapping, then you may want to save them in a vimrc file for later use. See 980|save-settings| about saving the current state of settings to a file. 981 982 983Avoiding setup problems for Vi users ~ 984 985Vi uses the variable EXINIT and the file "~/.exrc". So if you do not want to 986interfere with Vi, then use the variable VIMINIT and the file "vimrc" instead. 987 988 989Amiga environment variables ~ 990 991On the Amiga, two types of environment variables exist. The ones set with the 992DOS 1.3 (or later) setenv command are recognized. See the AmigaDos 1.3 993manual. The environment variables set with the old Manx Set command (before 994version 5.0) are not recognized. 995 996 997MS-Windows line separators ~ 998 999On MS-Windows, Vim assumes that all the vimrc files have <CR><NL> pairs as 1000line separators. This will give problems if you have a file with only <NL>s 1001and have a line like ":map xx yy^M". The trailing ^M will be ignored. 1002 1003 1004Vi compatible default value ~ 1005 *compatible-default* 1006When Vim starts, the 'compatible' option is on. This will be used when Vim 1007starts its initializations. But as soon as: 1008- a user vimrc file is found, or 1009- a vimrc file in the current directory is found, or 1010- the "VIMINIT" environment variable is set, or 1011- the "-N" command line argument is given, or 1012- the "--clean" command line argument is given, or 1013- the |defaults.vim| script is loaded, or 1014- a gvimrc file was found, 1015then the option will be set to 'nocompatible'. 1016 1017Note that this does NOT happen when a system-wide vimrc file was found. 1018 1019This has the side effect of setting or resetting other options (see 1020'compatible'). But only the options that have not been set or reset will be 1021changed. This has the same effect like the value of 'compatible' had this 1022value when starting Vim. 1023 1024'compatible' is NOT reset, and |defaults.vim| is not loaded: 1025- when Vim was started with the |-u| command line argument, especially with 1026 "-u NONE", or 1027- when started with the |-C| command line argument, or 1028- when the name of the executable ends in "ex". (This has been done to make 1029 Vim behave like "ex", when it is started as "ex") 1030 1031But there is a side effect of setting or resetting 'compatible' at the moment 1032a .vimrc file is found: Mappings are interpreted the moment they are 1033encountered. This makes a difference when using things like "<CR>". If the 1034mappings depend on a certain value of 'compatible', set or reset it before 1035giving the mapping. 1036 1037 1038Defaults without a .vimrc file ~ 1039 *defaults.vim* *E1187* 1040If Vim is started normally and no user vimrc file is found, the 1041$VIMRUNTIME/defaults.vim script is loaded. This will set 'compatible' off, 1042switch on syntax highlighting and a few more things. See the script for 1043details. NOTE: this is done since Vim 8.0, not in Vim 7.4. (it was added in 1044patch 7.4.2111 to be exact). 1045 1046This should work well for new Vim users. If you create your own .vimrc, it is 1047recommended to add these lines somewhere near the top: > 1048 unlet! skip_defaults_vim 1049 source $VIMRUNTIME/defaults.vim 1050Then Vim works like before you had a .vimrc. Copying $VIMRUNTIME/vimrc_example 1051is way to do this. Alternatively, you can copy defaults.vim to your .vimrc 1052and modify it (but then you won't get updates when it changes). 1053 1054If you don't like some of the defaults, you can still source defaults.vim and 1055revert individual settings. See the defaults.vim file for hints on how to 1056revert each item. 1057 *skip_defaults_vim* 1058If you use a system-wide vimrc and don't want defaults.vim to change settings, 1059set the "skip_defaults_vim" variable. If this was set and you want to load 1060defaults.vim from your .vimrc, first unlet skip_defaults_vim, as in the 1061example above. 1062 1063 1064Avoiding trojan horses ~ 1065 *trojan-horse* 1066While reading the "vimrc" or the "exrc" file in the current directory, some 1067commands can be disabled for security reasons by setting the 'secure' option. 1068This is always done when executing the command from a tags file. Otherwise it 1069would be possible that you accidentally use a vimrc or tags file that somebody 1070else created and contains nasty commands. The disabled commands are the ones 1071that start a shell, the ones that write to a file, and ":autocmd". The ":map" 1072commands are echoed, so you can see which keys are being mapped. 1073 If you want Vim to execute all commands in a local vimrc file, you 1074can reset the 'secure' option in the EXINIT or VIMINIT environment variable or 1075in the global "exrc" or "vimrc" file. This is not possible in "vimrc" or 1076"exrc" in the current directory, for obvious reasons. 1077 On Unix systems, this only happens if you are not the owner of the 1078vimrc file. Warning: If you unpack an archive that contains a vimrc or exrc 1079file, it will be owned by you. You won't have the security protection. Check 1080the vimrc file before you start Vim in that directory, or reset the 'exrc' 1081option. Some Unix systems allow a user to do "chown" on a file. This makes 1082it possible for another user to create a nasty vimrc and make you the owner. 1083Be careful! 1084 When using tag search commands, executing the search command (the last 1085part of the line in the tags file) is always done in secure mode. This works 1086just like executing a command from a vimrc/exrc in the current directory. 1087 1088 1089If Vim startup is slow ~ 1090 *slow-start* 1091If Vim takes a long time to start up, use the |--startuptime| argument to find 1092out what happens. There are a few common causes: 1093- If the Unix version was compiled with the GUI and/or X11 (check the output 1094 of ":version" for "+GUI" and "+X11"), it may need to load shared libraries 1095 and connect to the X11 server. Try compiling a version with GUI and X11 1096 disabled. This also should make the executable smaller. 1097 Use the |-X| command line argument to avoid connecting to the X server when 1098 running in a terminal. 1099- If you have "viminfo" enabled, the loading of the viminfo file may take a 1100 while. You can find out if this is the problem by disabling viminfo for a 1101 moment (use the Vim argument "-i NONE", |-i|). Try reducing the number of 1102 lines stored in a register with ":set viminfo='20,<50,s10". |viminfo-file|. 1103 1104 1105Intro message ~ 1106 *:intro* 1107When Vim starts without a file name, an introductory message is displayed (for 1108those who don't know what Vim is). It is removed as soon as the display is 1109redrawn in any way. To see the message again, use the ":intro" command (if 1110there is not enough room, you will see only part of it). 1111 To avoid the intro message on startup, add the 'I' flag to 'shortmess'. 1112 1113 *info-message* 1114The |--help| and |--version| arguments cause Vim to print a message and then 1115exit. Normally the message is sent to stdout, thus can be redirected to a 1116file with: > 1117 1118 vim --help >file 1119 1120From inside Vim: > 1121 1122 :read !vim --help 1123 1124When using gvim, it detects that it might have been started from the desktop, 1125without a terminal to show messages on. This is detected when both stdout and 1126stderr are not a tty. This breaks the ":read" command, as used in the example 1127above. To make it work again, set 'shellredir' to ">" instead of the default 1128">&": > 1129 1130 :set shellredir=> 1131 :read !gvim --help 1132 1133This still won't work for systems where gvim does not use stdout at all 1134though. 1135 1136============================================================================== 11375. $VIM and $VIMRUNTIME 1138 *$VIM* 1139The environment variable "$VIM" is used to locate various user files for Vim, 1140such as the user startup script ".vimrc". This depends on the system, see 1141|startup|. 1142 1143To avoid the need for every user to set the $VIM environment variable, Vim 1144will try to get the value for $VIM in this order: 11451. The value defined by the $VIM environment variable. You can use this to 1146 make Vim look in a specific directory for its support files. Example: > 1147 setenv VIM /home/paul/vim 11482. The path from 'helpfile' is used, unless it contains some environment 1149 variable too (the default is "$VIMRUNTIME/doc/help.txt": chicken-egg 1150 problem). The file name ("help.txt" or any other) is removed. Then 1151 trailing directory names are removed, in this order: "doc", "runtime" and 1152 "vim{version}" (e.g., "vim82"). 11533. For Win32 Vim tries to use the directory name of the executable. If it 1154 ends in "/src", this is removed. This is useful if you unpacked the .zip 1155 file in some directory, and adjusted the search path to find the vim 1156 executable. Trailing directory names are removed, in this order: "runtime" 1157 and "vim{version}" (e.g., "vim82"). 11584. For Unix the compile-time defined installation directory is used (see the 1159 output of ":version"). 1160 1161Once Vim has done this once, it will set the $VIM environment variable. To 1162change it later, use a ":let" command like this: > 1163 :let $VIM = "/home/paul/vim/" 1164< 1165 *$VIMRUNTIME* 1166The environment variable "$VIMRUNTIME" is used to locate various support 1167files, such as the on-line documentation and files used for syntax 1168highlighting. For example, the main help file is normally 1169"$VIMRUNTIME/doc/help.txt". 1170You don't normally set $VIMRUNTIME yourself, but let Vim figure it out. This 1171is the order used to find the value of $VIMRUNTIME: 11721. If the environment variable $VIMRUNTIME is set, it is used. You can use 1173 this when the runtime files are in an unusual location. 11742. If "$VIM/vim{version}" exists, it is used. {version} is the version 1175 number of Vim, without any '-' or '.'. For example: "$VIM/vim82". This is 1176 the normal value for $VIMRUNTIME. 11773. If "$VIM/runtime" exists, it is used. 11784. The value of $VIM is used. This is for backwards compatibility with older 1179 versions. 11805. When the 'helpfile' option is set and doesn't contain a '$', its value is 1181 used, with "doc/help.txt" removed from the end. 1182 1183For Unix, when there is a compiled-in default for $VIMRUNTIME (check the 1184output of ":version"), steps 2, 3 and 4 are skipped, and the compiled-in 1185default is used after step 5. This means that the compiled-in default 1186overrules the value of $VIM. This is useful if $VIM is "/etc" and the runtime 1187files are in "/usr/share/vim/vim82". 1188 1189Once Vim has done this once, it will set the $VIMRUNTIME environment variable. 1190To change it later, use a ":let" command like this: > 1191 :let $VIMRUNTIME = "/home/piet/vim/vim82" 1192 1193In case you need the value of $VIMRUNTIME in a shell (e.g., for a script that 1194greps in the help files) you might be able to use this: > 1195 1196 VIMRUNTIME=`vim -e -T dumb --cmd 'exe "set t_cm=\<C-M>"|echo $VIMRUNTIME|quit' | tr -d '\015' ` 1197 1198Don't set $VIMRUNTIME to an empty value, some things may stop working. 1199 1200============================================================================== 12016. Suspending *suspend* 1202 1203 *iconize* *iconise* *CTRL-Z* *v_CTRL-Z* 1204CTRL-Z Suspend Vim, like ":stop". 1205 Works in Normal and in Visual mode. In Insert and 1206 Command-line mode, the CTRL-Z is inserted as a normal 1207 character. In Visual mode Vim goes back to Normal 1208 mode. 1209 Note: if CTRL-Z undoes a change see |mswin.vim|. 1210 1211 1212:sus[pend][!] or *:sus* *:suspend* *:st* *:stop* 1213:st[op][!] Suspend Vim. 1214 If the '!' is not given and 'autowrite' is set, every 1215 buffer with changes and a file name is written out. 1216 If the '!' is given or 'autowrite' is not set, changed 1217 buffers are not written, don't forget to bring Vim 1218 back to the foreground later! 1219 1220In the GUI, suspending is implemented as iconising gvim. In MS-Windows, gvim 1221is minimized. 1222 1223On many Unix systems, it is possible to suspend Vim with CTRL-Z. This is only 1224possible in Normal and Visual mode (see next chapter, |vim-modes|). Vim will 1225continue if you make it the foreground job again. On other systems, CTRL-Z 1226will start a new shell. This is the same as the ":sh" command. Vim will 1227continue if you exit from the shell. 1228 1229In X-windows the selection is disowned when Vim suspends. this means you 1230can't paste it in another application (since Vim is going to sleep an attempt 1231to get the selection would make the program hang). 1232 1233============================================================================== 12347. Exiting *exiting* 1235 1236There are several ways to exit Vim: 1237- Close the last window with `:quit`. Only when there are no changes. 1238- Close the last window with `:quit!`. Also when there are changes. 1239- Close all windows with `:qall`. Only when there are no changes. 1240- Close all windows with `:qall!`. Also when there are changes. 1241- Use `:cquit`. Also when there are changes. 1242 1243When using `:cquit` or when there was an error message Vim exits with exit 1244code 1. Errors can be avoided by using `:silent!` or with `:catch`. 1245 1246============================================================================== 12478. Saving settings *save-settings* 1248 1249Mostly you will edit your vimrc files manually. This gives you the greatest 1250flexibility. There are a few commands to generate a vimrc file automatically. 1251You can use these files as they are, or copy/paste lines to include in another 1252vimrc file. 1253 1254 *:mk* *:mkexrc* 1255:mk[exrc] [file] Write current key mappings and changed options to 1256 [file] (default ".exrc" in the current directory), 1257 unless it already exists. 1258 1259:mk[exrc]! [file] Always write current key mappings and changed 1260 options to [file] (default ".exrc" in the current 1261 directory). 1262 1263 *:mkv* *:mkvi* *:mkvimrc* 1264:mkv[imrc][!] [file] Like ":mkexrc", but the default is ".vimrc" in the 1265 current directory. The ":version" command is also 1266 written to the file. 1267 1268These commands will write ":map" and ":set" commands to a file, in such a way 1269that when these commands are executed, the current key mappings and options 1270will be set to the same values. The options 'columns', 'endofline', 1271'fileformat', 'key', 'lines', 'modified', 'scroll', 'term', 'textmode', 1272'ttyfast' and 'ttymouse' are not included, because these are terminal or file 1273dependent. Note that the options 'binary', 'paste' and 'readonly' are 1274included, this might not always be what you want. 1275 1276When special keys are used in mappings, The 'cpoptions' option will be 1277temporarily set to its Vim default, to avoid the mappings to be 1278misinterpreted. This makes the file incompatible with Vi, but makes sure it 1279can be used with different terminals. 1280 1281Only global mappings are stored, not mappings local to a buffer. 1282 1283A common method is to use a default ".vimrc" file, make some modifications 1284with ":map" and ":set" commands and write the modified file. First read the 1285default ".vimrc" in with a command like ":source ~piet/.vimrc.Cprogs", change 1286the settings and then save them in the current directory with ":mkvimrc!". If 1287you want to make this file your default .vimrc, move it to your home directory 1288(on Unix), s: (Amiga) or $VIM directory (MS-Windows). You could also use 1289autocommands |autocommand| and/or modelines |modeline|. 1290 1291 *vimrc-option-example* 1292If you only want to add a single option setting to your vimrc, you can use 1293these steps: 12941. Edit your vimrc file with Vim. 12952. Play with the option until it's right. E.g., try out different values for 1296 'guifont'. 12973. Append a line to set the value of the option, using the expression register 1298 '=' to enter the value. E.g., for the 'guifont' option: > 1299 o:set guifont=<C-R>=&guifont<CR><Esc> 1300< [<C-R> is a CTRL-R, <CR> is a return, <Esc> is the escape key] 1301 You need to escape special characters, esp. spaces. 1302 1303Note that when you create a .vimrc file, this can influence the 'compatible' 1304option, which has several side effects. See |'compatible'|. 1305":mkvimrc", ":mkexrc" and ":mksession" write the command to set or reset the 1306'compatible' option to the output file first, because of these side effects. 1307 1308============================================================================== 13099. Views and Sessions *views-sessions* 1310 1311This is introduced in sections |21.4| and |21.5| of the user manual. 1312 1313 *View* *view-file* 1314A View is a collection of settings that apply to one window. You can save a 1315View and when you restore it later, the text is displayed in the same way. 1316The options and mappings in this window will also be restored, so that you can 1317continue editing like when the View was saved. 1318 1319 *Session* *session-file* 1320A Session keeps the Views for all windows, plus the global settings. You can 1321save a Session and when you restore it later the window layout looks the same. 1322You can use a Session to quickly switch between different projects, 1323automatically loading the files you were last working on in that project. 1324 1325Views and Sessions are a nice addition to viminfo-files, which are used to 1326remember information for all Views and Sessions together |viminfo-file|. 1327 1328You can quickly start editing with a previously saved View or Session with the 1329|-S| argument: > 1330 vim -S Session.vim 1331< 1332All this is {not available when compiled without the |+mksession| feature}. 1333 1334 *:mks* *:mksession* 1335:mks[ession][!] [file] Write a Vim script that restores the current editing 1336 session. 1337 When [!] is included an existing file is overwritten. 1338 When [file] is omitted "Session.vim" is used. 1339 1340The output of ":mksession" is like ":mkvimrc", but additional commands are 1341added to the file. Which ones depends on the 'sessionoptions' option. The 1342resulting file, when executed with a ":source" command: 13431. Restores global mappings and options, if 'sessionoptions' contains 1344 "options". Script-local mappings will not be written. 13452. Restores global variables that start with an uppercase letter and contain 1346 at least one lowercase letter, if 'sessionoptions' contains "globals". 13473. Closes all windows in the current tab page, except the current one; closes 1348 all tab pages except the current one (this results in currently loaded 1349 buffers to be unloaded, some may become hidden if 'hidden' is set or 1350 otherwise specified); wipes out the current buffer, if it is empty 1351 and unnamed. 13524. Restores the current directory if 'sessionoptions' contains "curdir", or 1353 sets the current directory to where the Session file is if 'sessionoptions' 1354 contains "sesdir". 13555. Restores GUI Vim window position, if 'sessionoptions' contains "winpos". 13566. Restores screen size, if 'sessionoptions' contains "resize". 13577. Reloads the buffer list, with the last cursor positions. If 1358 'sessionoptions' contains "buffers" then all buffers are restored, 1359 including hidden and unloaded buffers. Otherwise only buffers in windows 1360 are restored. 13618. Restores all windows with the same layout. If 'sessionoptions' contains 1362 "help", help windows are restored. If 'sessionoptions' contains "blank", 1363 windows editing a buffer without a name will be restored. 1364 If 'sessionoptions' contains "winsize" and no (help/blank) windows were 1365 left out, the window sizes are restored (relative to the screen size). 1366 Otherwise, the windows are just given sensible sizes. 13679. Restores the Views for all the windows, as with |:mkview|. But 1368 'sessionoptions' is used instead of 'viewoptions'. 136910. If a file exists with the same name as the Session file, but ending in 1370 "x.vim" (for eXtra), executes that as well. You can use *x.vim files to 1371 specify additional settings and actions associated with a given Session, 1372 such as creating menu items in the GUI version. 1373 1374After restoring the Session, the full filename of your current Session is 1375available in the internal variable "v:this_session" |this_session-variable|. 1376An example mapping: > 1377 :nmap <F2> :wa<Bar>exe "mksession! " . v:this_session<CR>:so ~/sessions/ 1378This saves the current Session, and starts off the command to load another. 1379 1380A session includes all tab pages, unless "tabpages" was removed from 1381'sessionoptions'. |tab-page| 1382 1383The |SessionLoadPost| autocmd event is triggered after a session file is 1384loaded/sourced. 1385 *SessionLoad-variable* 1386While the session file is loading the SessionLoad global variable is set to 1. 1387Plugins can use this to postpone some work until the SessionLoadPost event is 1388triggered. 1389 1390 *:mkvie* *:mkview* 1391:mkvie[w][!] [file] Write a Vim script that restores the contents of the 1392 current window. 1393 When [!] is included an existing file is overwritten. 1394 When [file] is omitted or is a number from 1 to 9, a 1395 name is generated and 'viewdir' prepended. When the 1396 last path part of 'viewdir' does not exist, this 1397 directory is created. E.g., when 'viewdir' is 1398 "$VIM/vimfiles/view" then "view" is created in 1399 "$VIM/vimfiles". 1400 An existing file is always overwritten then. Use 1401 |:loadview| to load this view again. 1402 When [file] is the name of a file ('viewdir' is not 1403 used), a command to edit the file is added to the 1404 generated file. 1405 1406The output of ":mkview" contains these items: 14071. The argument list used in the window. When the global argument list is 1408 used it is reset to the global list. 1409 The index in the argument list is also restored. 14102. The file being edited in the window. If there is no file, the window is 1411 made empty. 14123. Restore mappings, abbreviations and options local to the window if 1413 'viewoptions' contains "options" or "localoptions". For the options it 1414 restores only values that are local to the current buffer and values local 1415 to the window. 1416 When storing the view as part of a session and "options" is in 1417 'sessionoptions', global values for local options will be stored too. 14184. Restore folds when using manual folding and 'viewoptions' contains 1419 "folds". Restore manually opened and closed folds. 14205. The scroll position and the cursor position in the file. Doesn't work very 1421 well when there are closed folds. 14226. The local current directory, if it is different from the global current 1423 directory and 'viewoptions' contains "curdir". 1424 1425Note that Views and Sessions are not perfect: 1426- They don't restore everything. For example, defined functions, autocommands 1427 and ":syntax on" are not included. Things like register contents and 1428 command line history are in viminfo, not in Sessions or Views. 1429- Global option values are only set when they differ from the default value. 1430 When the current value is not the default value, loading a Session will not 1431 set it back to the default value. Local options will be set back to the 1432 default value though. 1433- Existing mappings will be overwritten without warning. An existing mapping 1434 may cause an error for ambiguity. 1435- When storing manual folds and when storing manually opened/closed folds, 1436 changes in the file between saving and loading the view will mess it up. 1437- The Vim script is not very efficient. But still faster than typing the 1438 commands yourself! 1439 1440 *:lo* *:loadview* 1441:lo[adview] [nr] Load the view for the current file. When [nr] is 1442 omitted, the view stored with ":mkview" is loaded. 1443 When [nr] is specified, the view stored with ":mkview 1444 [nr]" is loaded. 1445 1446The combination of ":mkview" and ":loadview" can be used to store up to ten 1447different views of a file. These are remembered in the directory specified 1448with the 'viewdir' option. The views are stored using the file name. If a 1449file is renamed or accessed through a (symbolic) link the view will not be 1450found. 1451 1452You might want to clean up your 'viewdir' directory now and then. 1453 1454To automatically save and restore views for *.c files: > 1455 au BufWinLeave *.c mkview 1456 au BufWinEnter *.c silent loadview 1457 1458============================================================================== 145910. The viminfo file *viminfo* *viminfo-file* *E136* 1460 *E575* *E576* *E577* 1461If you exit Vim and later start it again, you would normally lose a lot of 1462information. The viminfo file can be used to remember that information, which 1463enables you to continue where you left off. 1464 1465This is introduced in section |21.3| of the user manual. 1466 1467The viminfo file is used to store: 1468- The command line history. 1469- The search string history. 1470- The input-line history. 1471- Contents of non-empty registers. 1472- Marks for several files. 1473- File marks, pointing to locations in files. 1474- Last search/substitute pattern (for 'n' and '&'). 1475- The buffer list. 1476- Global variables. 1477 1478The viminfo file is not supported when the |+viminfo| feature has been 1479disabled at compile time. 1480 1481You could also use a Session file. The difference is that the viminfo file 1482does not depend on what you are working on. There normally is only one 1483viminfo file. Session files are used to save the state of a specific editing 1484Session. You could have several Session files, one for each project you are 1485working on. Viminfo and Session files together can be used to effectively 1486enter Vim and directly start working in your desired setup. |session-file| 1487 1488 *viminfo-read* 1489When Vim is started and the 'viminfo' option is non-empty, the contents of 1490the viminfo file are read and the info can be used in the appropriate places. 1491The |v:oldfiles| variable is filled. The marks are not read in at startup 1492(but file marks are). See |initialization| for how to set the 'viminfo' 1493option upon startup. 1494 1495 *viminfo-write* 1496When Vim exits and 'viminfo' is non-empty, the info is stored in the viminfo 1497file (it's actually merged with the existing one, if one exists). The 1498'viminfo' option is a string containing information about what info should be 1499stored, and contains limits on how much should be stored (see 'viminfo'). 1500 1501Merging happens in two ways. Most items that have been changed or set in the 1502current Vim session are stored, and what was not changed is filled from what 1503is currently in the viminfo file. For example: 1504- Vim session A reads the viminfo, which contains variable START. 1505- Vim session B does the same 1506- Vim session A sets the variables AAA and BOTH and exits 1507- Vim session B sets the variables BBB and BOTH and exits 1508Now the viminfo will have: 1509 START - it was in the viminfo and wasn't changed in session A or B 1510 AAA - value from session A, session B kept it 1511 BBB - value from session B 1512 BOTH - value from session B, value from session A is lost 1513 1514 *viminfo-timestamp* 1515For some items a timestamp is used to keep the last changed version. Here it 1516doesn't matter in which sequence Vim sessions exit, the newest item(s) are 1517always kept. This is used for: 1518- The command line history. 1519- The search string history. 1520- The input-line history. 1521- Contents of non-empty registers. 1522- The jump list 1523- File marks 1524The timestamp feature was added before Vim 8.0. Older versions of Vim, 1525starting with 7.4.1131, will keep the items with timestamp, but not use them. 1526Thus when using both an older and a newer version of Vim the most recent data 1527will be kept. 1528 1529Notes for Unix: 1530- The file protection for the viminfo file will be set to prevent other users 1531 from being able to read it, because it may contain any text or commands that 1532 you have worked with. 1533- If you want to share the viminfo file with other users (e.g. when you "su" 1534 to another user), you can make the file writable for the group or everybody. 1535 Vim will preserve this when replacing the viminfo file. Be careful, don't 1536 allow just anybody to read and write your viminfo file! 1537- Vim will not overwrite a viminfo file that is not writable by the current 1538 "real" user. This helps for when you did "su" to become root, but your 1539 $HOME is still set to a normal user's home directory. Otherwise Vim would 1540 create a viminfo file owned by root that nobody else can read. 1541- The viminfo file cannot be a symbolic link. This is to avoid security 1542 issues. 1543 1544Marks are stored for each file separately. When a file is read and 'viminfo' 1545is non-empty, the marks for that file are read from the viminfo file. NOTE: 1546The marks are only written when exiting Vim, which is fine because marks are 1547remembered for all the files you have opened in the current editing session, 1548unless ":bdel" is used. If you want to save the marks for a file that you are 1549about to abandon with ":bdel", use ":wv". The '[' and ']' marks are not 1550stored, but the '"' mark is. The '"' mark is very useful for jumping to the 1551cursor position when the file was last exited. No marks are saved for files 1552that start with any string given with the "r" flag in 'viminfo'. This can be 1553used to avoid saving marks for files on removable media (for MS-Windows you 1554would use "ra:,rb:", for Amiga "rdf0:,rdf1:,rdf2:"). 1555The |v:oldfiles| variable is filled with the file names that the viminfo file 1556has marks for. 1557 1558 *viminfo-file-marks* 1559Uppercase marks ('A to 'Z) are stored when writing the viminfo file. The 1560numbered marks ('0 to '9) are a bit special. When the viminfo file is written 1561(when exiting or with the ":wviminfo" command), '0 is set to the current cursor 1562position and file. The old '0 is moved to '1, '1 to '2, etc. This 1563resembles what happens with the "1 to "9 delete registers. If the current 1564cursor position is already present in '0 to '9, it is moved to '0, to avoid 1565having the same position twice. The result is that with "'0", you can jump 1566back to the file and line where you exited Vim. To do that right away, try 1567using this command: > 1568 1569 vim -c "normal '0" 1570 1571In a csh compatible shell you could make an alias for it: > 1572 1573 alias lvim vim -c '"'normal "'"0'"' 1574 1575For a bash-like shell: > 1576 1577 alias lvim='vim -c "normal '\''0"' 1578 1579Use the "r" flag in 'viminfo' to specify for which files no marks should be 1580remembered. 1581 1582 1583VIMINFO FILE NAME *viminfo-file-name* 1584 1585- The default name of the viminfo file is "$HOME/.viminfo" for Unix, 1586 "s:.viminfo" for Amiga, "$HOME\_viminfo" for Win32. For Win32, when $HOME 1587 is not set, "$VIM\_viminfo" is used. When $VIM is also not set, 1588 "c:\_viminfo" is used. 1589- The 'n' flag in the 'viminfo' option can be used to specify another viminfo 1590 file name |'viminfo'|. 1591- The "-i" Vim argument can be used to set another file name, |-i|. When the 1592 file name given is "NONE" (all uppercase), no viminfo file is ever read or 1593 written. Also not for the commands below! 1594- The 'viminfofile' option can be used like the "-i" argument. In fact, the 1595 value from the "-i" argument is stored in the 'viminfofile' option. 1596- For the commands below, another file name can be given, overriding the 1597 default and the name given with 'viminfo' or "-i" (unless it's NONE). 1598 1599 1600CHARACTER ENCODING *viminfo-encoding* 1601 1602The text in the viminfo file is encoded as specified with the 'encoding' 1603option. Normally you will always work with the same 'encoding' value, and 1604this works just fine. However, if you read the viminfo file with another 1605value for 'encoding' than what it was written with, some of the text 1606(non-ASCII characters) may be invalid. If this is unacceptable, add the 'c' 1607flag to the 'viminfo' option: > 1608 :set viminfo+=c 1609Vim will then attempt to convert the text in the viminfo file from the 1610'encoding' value it was written with to the current 'encoding' value. This 1611requires Vim to be compiled with the |+iconv| feature. Filenames are not 1612converted. 1613 1614 1615MANUALLY READING AND WRITING *viminfo-read-write* 1616 1617Two commands can be used to read and write the viminfo file manually. This 1618can be used to exchange registers between two running Vim programs: First 1619type ":wv" in one and then ":rv" in the other. Note that if the register 1620already contained something, then ":rv!" would be required. Also note 1621however that this means everything will be overwritten with information from 1622the first Vim, including the command line history, etc. 1623 1624The viminfo file itself can be edited by hand too, although we suggest you 1625start with an existing one to get the format right. It is reasonably 1626self-explanatory once you're in there. This can be useful in order to 1627create a second file, say "~/.my_viminfo" which could contain certain 1628settings that you always want when you first start Vim. For example, you 1629can preload registers with particular data, or put certain commands in the 1630command line history. A line in your .vimrc file like > 1631 :rviminfo! ~/.my_viminfo 1632can be used to load this information. You could even have different viminfos 1633for different types of files (e.g., C code) and load them based on the file 1634name, using the ":autocmd" command (see |:autocmd|). 1635 1636 *viminfo-errors* 1637When Vim detects an error while reading a viminfo file, it will not overwrite 1638that file. If there are more than 10 errors, Vim stops reading the viminfo 1639file. This was done to avoid accidentally destroying a file when the file 1640name of the viminfo file is wrong. This could happen when accidentally typing 1641"vim -i file" when you wanted "vim -R file" (yes, somebody accidentally did 1642that!). If you want to overwrite a viminfo file with an error in it, you will 1643either have to fix the error, or delete the file (while Vim is running, so 1644most of the information will be restored). 1645 1646 *:rv* *:rviminfo* *E195* 1647:rv[iminfo][!] [file] Read from viminfo file [file] (default: see 1648 |viminfo-file-name| above). 1649 If [!] is given, then any information that is 1650 already set (registers, marks, |v:oldfiles|, etc.) 1651 will be overwritten 1652 1653 *:wv* *:wviminfo* *E137* *E138* *E574* *E886* *E929* 1654:wv[iminfo][!] [file] Write to viminfo file [file] (default: see 1655 |viminfo-file-name| above). 1656 This command has no effect when 'viminfofile' has been 1657 set to "NONE". 1658 The information in the file is first read in to make 1659 a merge between old and new info. When [!] is used, 1660 the old information is not read first, only the 1661 internal info is written. If 'viminfo' is empty, marks 1662 for up to 100 files will be written. 1663 When you get error "E929: Too many viminfo temp files" 1664 check that no old temp files were left behind (e.g. 1665 ~/.viminf*) and that you can write in the directory of 1666 the .viminfo file. 1667 1668 *:ol* *:oldfiles* 1669:ol[dfiles] List the files that have marks stored in the viminfo 1670 file. This list is read on startup and only changes 1671 afterwards with `:rviminfo!`. Also see |v:oldfiles|. 1672 The number can be used with |c_#<|. 1673 The output can be filtered with |:filter|, e.g.: > 1674 filter /\.vim/ oldfiles 1675< The filtering happens on the file name. 1676 {only when compiled with the |+eval| feature} 1677 1678:bro[wse] ol[dfiles][!] 1679 List file names as with |:oldfiles|, and then prompt 1680 for a number. When the number is valid that file from 1681 the list is edited. 1682 If you get the |press-enter| prompt you can press "q" 1683 and still get the prompt to enter a file number. 1684 Use ! to abandon a modified buffer. |abandon| 1685 {not when compiled with tiny or small features} 1686 1687 vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl: 1688