1*tips.txt* For Vim version 8.2. Last change: 2021 Nov 06 2 3 4 VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar 5 6 7Tips and ideas for using Vim *tips* 8 9These are just a few that we thought would be helpful for many users. 10You can find many more tips on the wiki. The URL can be found on 11http://www.vim.org 12 13Don't forget to browse the user manual, it also contains lots of useful tips 14|usr_toc.txt|. 15 16Editing C programs |C-editing| 17Finding where identifiers are used |ident-search| 18Switching screens in an xterm |xterm-screens| 19Scrolling in Insert mode |scroll-insert| 20Smooth scrolling |scroll-smooth| 21Correcting common typing mistakes |type-mistakes| 22Counting words, lines, etc. |count-items| 23Restoring the cursor position |restore-position| 24Renaming files |rename-files| 25Change a name in multiple files |change-name| 26Speeding up external commands |speed-up| 27Useful mappings |useful-mappings| 28Compressing the help files |gzip-helpfile| 29Executing shell commands in a window |shell-window| 30Hex editing |hex-editing| 31Using <> notation in autocommands |autocmd-<>| 32Highlighting matching parens |match-parens| 33Opening help in the current window |help-curwin| 34 35============================================================================== 36Editing C programs *C-editing* 37 38There are quite a few features in Vim to help you edit C program files. Here 39is an overview with tags to jump to: 40 41|usr_29.txt| Moving through programs chapter in the user manual. 42|usr_30.txt| Editing programs chapter in the user manual. 43|C-indenting| Automatically set the indent of a line while typing 44 text. 45|=| Re-indent a few lines. 46|format-comments| Format comments. 47 48|:checkpath| Show all recursively included files. 49|[i| Search for identifier under cursor in current and 50 included files. 51|[_CTRL-I| Jump to match for "[i" 52|[I| List all lines in current and included files where 53 identifier under the cursor matches. 54|[d| Search for define under cursor in current and included 55 files. 56 57|CTRL-]| Jump to tag under cursor (e.g., definition of a 58 function). 59|CTRL-T| Jump back to before a CTRL-] command. 60|:tselect| Select one tag out of a list of matching tags. 61 62|gd| Go to Declaration of local variable under cursor. 63|gD| Go to Declaration of global variable under cursor. 64 65|gf| Go to file name under the cursor. 66 67|%| Go to matching (), {}, [], /* */, #if, #else, #endif. 68|[/| Go to previous start of comment. 69|]/| Go to next end of comment. 70|[#| Go back to unclosed #if, #ifdef, or #else. 71|]#| Go forward to unclosed #else or #endif. 72|[(| Go back to unclosed '(' 73|])| Go forward to unclosed ')' 74|[{| Go back to unclosed '{' 75|]}| Go forward to unclosed '}' 76 77|v_ab| Select "a block" from "[(" to "])", including braces 78|v_ib| Select "inner block" from "[(" to "])" 79|v_aB| Select "a block" from "[{" to "]}", including brackets 80|v_iB| Select "inner block" from "[{" to "]}" 81 82============================================================================== 83Finding where identifiers are used *ident-search* 84 85You probably already know that |tags| can be used to jump to the place where a 86function or variable is defined. But sometimes you wish you could jump to all 87the places where a function or variable is being used. This is possible in 88two ways: 891. Using the |:grep| command. This should work on most Unix systems, 90 but can be slow (it reads all files) and only searches in one directory. 912. Using ID utils. This is fast and works in multiple directories. It uses a 92 database to store locations. You will need some additional programs for 93 this to work. And you need to keep the database up to date. 94 95Using the GNU id-tools: 96 97What you need: 98- The GNU id-tools installed (mkid is needed to create ID and lid is needed to 99 use the macros). 100- An identifier database file called "ID" in the current directory. You can 101 create it with the shell command "mkid file1 file2 ..". 102 103Put this in your .vimrc: > 104 map _u :call ID_search()<Bar>execute "/\\<" . g:word . "\\>"<CR> 105 map _n :n<Bar>execute "/\\<" . g:word . "\\>"<CR> 106 107 function! ID_search() 108 let g:word = expand("<cword>") 109 let x = system("lid --key=none ". g:word) 110 let x = substitute(x, "\n", " ", "g") 111 execute "next " . x 112 endfun 113 114To use it, place the cursor on a word, type "_u" and vim will load the file 115that contains the word. Search for the next occurrence of the word in the 116same file with "n". Go to the next file with "_n". 117 118This has been tested with id-utils-3.2 (which is the name of the id-tools 119archive file on your closest gnu-ftp-mirror). 120 121[the idea for this comes from Andreas Kutschera] 122 123============================================================================== 124Switching screens in an xterm *xterm-screens* *xterm-save-screen* 125 126(From comp.editors, by Juergen Weigert, in reply to a question) 127 128:> Another question is that after exiting vim, the screen is left as it 129:> was, i.e. the contents of the file I was viewing (editing) was left on 130:> the screen. The output from my previous like "ls" were lost, 131:> ie. no longer in the scrolling buffer. I know that there is a way to 132:> restore the screen after exiting vim or other vi like editors, 133:> I just don't know how. Helps are appreciated. Thanks. 134: 135:I imagine someone else can answer this. I assume though that vim and vi do 136:the same thing as each other for a given xterm setup. 137 138They not necessarily do the same thing, as this may be a termcap vs. 139terminfo problem. You should be aware that there are two databases for 140describing attributes of a particular type of terminal: termcap and 141terminfo. This can cause differences when the entries differ AND when of 142the programs in question one uses terminfo and the other uses termcap 143(also see |+terminfo|). 144 145In your particular problem, you are looking for the control sequences 146^[[?47h and ^[[?47l. These switch between xterms alternate and main screen 147buffer. As a quick workaround a command sequence like > 148 echo -n "^[[?47h"; vim ... ; echo -n "^[[?47l" 149may do what you want. (My notation ^[ means the ESC character, further down 150you'll see that the databases use \E instead). 151 152On startup, vim echoes the value of the termcap variable ti (terminfo: 153smcup) to the terminal. When exiting, it echoes te (terminfo: rmcup). Thus 154these two variables are the correct place where the above mentioned control 155sequences should go. 156 157Compare your xterm termcap entry (found in /etc/termcap) with your xterm 158terminfo entry (retrieved with "infocmp -C xterm"). Both should contain 159entries similar to: > 160 :te=\E[2J\E[?47l\E8:ti=\E7\E[?47h: 161 162PS: If you find any difference, someone (your sysadmin?) should better check 163 the complete termcap and terminfo database for consistency. 164 165NOTE 1: If you recompile Vim with FEAT_XTERM_SAVE defined in feature.h, the 166builtin xterm will include the mentioned "te" and "ti" entries. 167 168NOTE 2: If you want to disable the screen switching, and you don't want to 169change your termcap, you can add these lines to your .vimrc: > 170 :set t_ti= t_te= 171 172============================================================================== 173Scrolling in Insert mode *scroll-insert* 174 175If you are in insert mode and you want to see something that is just off the 176screen, you can use CTRL-X CTRL-E and CTRL-X CTRL-Y to scroll the screen. 177 |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-E| 178 179To make this easier, you could use these mappings: > 180 :inoremap <C-E> <C-X><C-E> 181 :inoremap <C-Y> <C-X><C-Y> 182(Type this literally, make sure the '<' flag is not in 'cpoptions'). 183You then lose the ability to copy text from the line above/below the cursor 184|i_CTRL-E|. 185 186Also consider setting 'scrolloff' to a larger value, so that you can always see 187some context around the cursor. If 'scrolloff' is bigger than half the window 188height, the cursor will always be in the middle and the text is scrolled when 189the cursor is moved up/down. 190 191============================================================================== 192Smooth scrolling *scroll-smooth* 193 194If you like the scrolling to go a bit smoother, you can use these mappings: > 195 :map <C-U> <C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y> 196 :map <C-D> <C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E> 197 198(Type this literally, make sure the '<' flag is not in 'cpoptions'). 199 200============================================================================== 201Correcting common typing mistakes *type-mistakes* 202 203When there are a few words that you keep on typing in the wrong way, make 204abbreviations that correct them. For example: > 205 :ab teh the 206 :ab fro for 207 208============================================================================== 209Counting words, lines, etc. *count-items* 210 211To count how often any pattern occurs in the current buffer use the substitute 212command and add the 'n' flag to avoid the substitution. The reported number 213of substitutions is the number of items. Examples: > 214 215 :%s/./&/gn characters 216 :%s/\i\+/&/gn words 217 :%s/^//n lines 218 :%s/the/&/gn "the" anywhere 219 :%s/\<the\>/&/gn "the" as a word 220 221You might want to reset 'hlsearch' or do ":nohlsearch". 222Add the 'e' flag if you don't want an error when there are no matches. 223 224An alternative is using |v_g_CTRL-G| in Visual mode. 225 226If you want to find matches in multiple files use |:vimgrep|. 227 228 *count-bytes* 229If you want to count bytes, you can use this: 230 231 Visually select the characters (block is also possible) 232 Use "y" to yank the characters 233 Use the strlen() function: > 234 :echo strlen(@") 235A line break is counted for one byte. 236 237============================================================================== 238Restoring the cursor position *restore-position* 239 240Sometimes you want to write a mapping that makes a change somewhere in the 241file and restores the cursor position, without scrolling the text. For 242example, to change the date mark in a file: > 243 :map <F2> msHmtgg/Last [cC]hange:\s*/e+1<CR>"_D"=strftime("%Y %b %d")<CR>p'tzt`s 244 245Breaking up saving the position: 246 ms store cursor position in the 's' mark 247 H go to the first line in the window 248 mt store this position in the 't' mark 249 250Breaking up restoring the position: 251 't go to the line previously at the top of the window 252 zt scroll to move this line to the top of the window 253 `s jump to the original position of the cursor 254 255For something more advanced see |winsaveview()| and |winrestview()|. 256 257============================================================================== 258Renaming files *rename-files* 259 260Say I have a directory with the following files in them (directory picked at 261random :-): 262 263buffer.c 264charset.c 265digraph.c 266... 267 268and I want to rename *.c *.bla. I'd do it like this: > 269 270 $ vim 271 :r !ls *.c 272 :%s/\(.*\).c/mv & \1.bla 273 :w !sh 274 :q! 275 276============================================================================== 277Change a name in multiple files *change-name* 278 279Example for using a script file to change a name in several files: 280 281 Create a file "subs.vim" containing substitute commands and a :update 282 command: > 283 :%s/Jones/Smith/g 284 :%s/Allen/Peter/g 285 :update 286< 287 Execute Vim on all files you want to change, and source the script for 288 each argument: > 289 290 vim *.let 291 argdo source subs.vim 292 293See |:argdo|. 294 295============================================================================== 296Speeding up external commands *speed-up* 297 298In some situations, execution of an external command can be very slow. This 299can also slow down wildcard expansion on Unix. Here are a few suggestions to 300increase the speed. 301 302If your .cshrc (or other file, depending on the shell used) is very long, you 303should separate it into a section for interactive use and a section for 304non-interactive use (often called secondary shells). When you execute a 305command from Vim like ":!ls", you do not need the interactive things (for 306example, setting the prompt). Put the stuff that is not needed after these 307lines: > 308 309 if ($?prompt == 0) then 310 exit 0 311 endif 312 313Another way is to include the "-f" flag in the 'shell' option, e.g.: > 314 315 :set shell=csh\ -f 316 317(the backslash is needed to include the space in the option). 318This will make csh completely skip the use of the .cshrc file. This may cause 319some things to stop working though. 320 321============================================================================== 322Useful mappings *useful-mappings* 323 324Here are a few mappings that some people like to use. 325 326 *map-backtick* > 327 :map ' ` 328Make the single quote work like a backtick. Puts the cursor on the column of 329a mark, instead of going to the first non-blank character in the line. 330 331 *emacs-keys* 332For Emacs-style editing on the command-line: > 333 " start of line 334 :cnoremap <C-A> <Home> 335 " back one character 336 :cnoremap <C-B> <Left> 337 " delete character under cursor 338 :cnoremap <C-D> <Del> 339 " end of line 340 :cnoremap <C-E> <End> 341 " forward one character 342 :cnoremap <C-F> <Right> 343 " recall newer command-line 344 :cnoremap <C-N> <Down> 345 " recall previous (older) command-line 346 :cnoremap <C-P> <Up> 347 " back one word 348 :cnoremap <Esc><C-B> <S-Left> 349 " forward one word 350 :cnoremap <Esc><C-F> <S-Right> 351 352NOTE: This requires that the '<' flag is excluded from 'cpoptions'. |<>| 353 354 *format-bullet-list* 355This mapping will format any bullet list. It requires that there is an empty 356line above and below each list entry. The expression commands are used to 357be able to give comments to the parts of the mapping. > 358 359 :let m = ":map _f :set ai<CR>" " need 'autoindent' set 360 :let m = m . "{O<Esc>" " add empty line above item 361 :let m = m . "}{)^W" " move to text after bullet 362 :let m = m . "i <CR> <Esc>" " add space for indent 363 :let m = m . "gq}" " format text after the bullet 364 :let m = m . "{dd" " remove the empty line 365 :let m = m . "5lDJ" " put text after bullet 366 :execute m |" define the mapping 367 368(<> notation |<>|. Note that this is all typed literally. ^W is "^" "W", not 369CTRL-W. You can copy/paste this into Vim if '<' is not included in 370'cpoptions'.) 371 372Note that the last comment starts with |", because the ":execute" command 373doesn't accept a comment directly. 374 375You also need to set 'textwidth' to a non-zero value, e.g., > 376 :set tw=70 377 378A mapping that does about the same, but takes the indent for the list from the 379first line (Note: this mapping is a single long line with a lot of spaces): > 380 :map _f :set ai<CR>}{a <Esc>WWmmkD`mi<CR><Esc>kkddpJgq}'mJO<Esc>j 381< 382 *collapse* 383These two mappings reduce a sequence of empty (;b) or blank (;n) lines into a 384single line > 385 :map ;b GoZ<Esc>:g/^$/.,/./-j<CR>Gdd 386 :map ;n GoZ<Esc>:g/^[ <Tab>]*$/.,/[^ <Tab>]/-j<CR>Gdd 387 388============================================================================== 389Compressing the help files *gzip-helpfile* 390 391For those of you who are really short on disk space, you can compress the help 392files and still be able to view them with Vim. This makes accessing the help 393files a bit slower and requires the "gzip" program. 394 395(1) Compress all the help files: "gzip doc/*.txt". 396 397(2) Edit "doc/tags" and change the ".txt" to ".txt.gz": > 398 :%s=\(\t.*\.txt\)\t=\1.gz\t= 399 400(3) Add this line to your vimrc: > 401 set helpfile={dirname}/help.txt.gz 402 403Where {dirname} is the directory where the help files are. The |gzip| plugin 404will take care of decompressing the files. 405You must make sure that $VIMRUNTIME is set to where the other Vim files are, 406when they are not in the same location as the compressed "doc" directory. See 407|$VIMRUNTIME|. 408 409============================================================================== 410Executing shell commands in a window *shell-window* 411 412See |terminal|. 413 414Another solution is splitting your terminal screen or display window with the 415"splitvt" program. You can probably find it on some ftp server. The person 416that knows more about this is Sam Lantinga <[email protected]>. 417 418Another alternative is the "window" command, found on BSD Unix systems, which 419supports multiple overlapped windows. Or the "screen" program, found at 420www.uni-erlangen.de, which supports a stack of windows. 421 422============================================================================== 423Hex editing *hex-editing* *using-xxd* 424 425See section |23.4| of the user manual. 426 427If one has a particular extension that one uses for binary files (such as exe, 428bin, etc), you may find it helpful to automate the process with the following 429bit of autocmds for your <.vimrc>. Change that "*.bin" to whatever 430comma-separated list of extension(s) you find yourself wanting to edit: > 431 432 " vim -b : edit binary using xxd-format! 433 augroup Binary 434 au! 435 au BufReadPre *.bin let &bin=1 436 au BufReadPost *.bin if &bin | %!xxd 437 au BufReadPost *.bin set ft=xxd | endif 438 au BufWritePre *.bin if &bin | %!xxd -r 439 au BufWritePre *.bin endif 440 au BufWritePost *.bin if &bin | %!xxd 441 au BufWritePost *.bin set nomod | endif 442 augroup END 443 444============================================================================== 445Using <> notation in autocommands *autocmd-<>* 446 447The <> notation is not recognized in the argument of an :autocmd. To avoid 448having to use special characters, you could use a self-destroying mapping to 449get the <> notation and then call the mapping from the autocmd. Example: 450 451 *map-self-destroy* > 452 " This is for automatically adding the name of the file to the menu list. 453 " It uses a self-destroying mapping! 454 " 1. use a line in the buffer to convert the 'dots' in the file name to \. 455 " 2. store that in register '"' 456 " 3. add that name to the Buffers menu list 457 " WARNING: this does have some side effects, like overwriting the 458 " current register contents and removing any mapping for the "i" command. 459 " 460 autocmd BufNewFile,BufReadPre * nmap i :nunmap i<CR>O<C-R>%<Esc>:.g/\./s/\./\\./g<CR>0"9y$u:menu Buffers.<C-R>9 :buffer <C-R>%<C-V><CR><CR> 461 autocmd BufNewFile,BufReadPre * normal i 462 463Another method, perhaps better, is to use the ":execute" command. In the 464string you can use the <> notation by preceding it with a backslash. Don't 465forget to double the number of existing backslashes and put a backslash before 466'"'. 467> 468 autocmd BufNewFile,BufReadPre * exe "normal O\<C-R>%\<Esc>:.g/\\./s/\\./\\\\./g\<CR>0\"9y$u:menu Buffers.\<C-R>9 :buffer \<C-R>%\<C-V>\<CR>\<CR>" 469 470For a real buffer menu, user functions should be used (see |:function|), but 471then the <> notation isn't used, which defeats using it as an example here. 472 473============================================================================== 474Highlighting matching parens *match-parens* 475 476This example shows the use of a few advanced tricks: 477- using the |CursorMoved| autocommand event 478- using |searchpairpos()| to find a matching paren 479- using |synID()| to detect whether the cursor is in a string or comment 480- using |:match| to highlight something 481- using a |pattern| to match a specific position in the file. 482 483This should be put in a Vim script file, since it uses script-local variables. 484It skips matches in strings or comments, unless the cursor started in string 485or comment. This requires syntax highlighting. 486 487A slightly more advanced version is used in the |matchparen| plugin. 488> 489 let s:paren_hl_on = 0 490 function s:Highlight_Matching_Paren() 491 if s:paren_hl_on 492 match none 493 let s:paren_hl_on = 0 494 endif 495 496 let c_lnum = line('.') 497 let c_col = col('.') 498 499 let c = getline(c_lnum)[c_col - 1] 500 let plist = split(&matchpairs, ':\|,') 501 let i = index(plist, c) 502 if i < 0 503 return 504 endif 505 if i % 2 == 0 506 let s_flags = 'nW' 507 let c2 = plist[i + 1] 508 else 509 let s_flags = 'nbW' 510 let c2 = c 511 let c = plist[i - 1] 512 endif 513 if c == '[' 514 let c = '\[' 515 let c2 = '\]' 516 endif 517 let s_skip ='synIDattr(synID(line("."), col("."), 0), "name") ' . 518 \ '=~? "string\\|comment"' 519 execute 'if' s_skip '| let s_skip = 0 | endif' 520 521 let [m_lnum, m_col] = searchpairpos(c, '', c2, s_flags, s_skip) 522 523 if m_lnum > 0 && m_lnum >= line('w0') && m_lnum <= line('w$') 524 exe 'match Search /\(\%' . c_lnum . 'l\%' . c_col . 525 \ 'c\)\|\(\%' . m_lnum . 'l\%' . m_col . 'c\)/' 526 let s:paren_hl_on = 1 527 endif 528 endfunction 529 530 autocmd CursorMoved,CursorMovedI * call s:Highlight_Matching_Paren() 531 autocmd InsertEnter * match none 532< 533 534============================================================================== 535Opening help in the current window *help-curwin* 536 537By default, help is displayed in a split window. If you prefer it opens in 538the current window, try this custom `:HelpCurwin` command: 539> 540 command -bar -nargs=? -complete=help HelpCurwin execute s:HelpCurwin(<q-args>) 541 let s:did_open_help = v:false 542 543 function s:HelpCurwin(subject) abort 544 let mods = 'silent noautocmd keepalt' 545 if !s:did_open_help 546 execute mods .. ' help' 547 execute mods .. ' helpclose' 548 let s:did_open_help = v:true 549 endif 550 if !getcompletion(a:subject, 'help')->empty() 551 execute mods .. ' edit ' .. &helpfile 552 set buftype=help 553 endif 554 return 'help ' .. a:subject 555 endfunction 556< 557 558 559 vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl: 560