1*visual.txt* For Vim version 8.1. Last change: 2019 May 05 2 3 4 VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar 5 6 7Visual mode *Visual* *Visual-mode* *visual-mode* 8 9Visual mode is a flexible and easy way to select a piece of text for an 10operator. It is the only way to select a block of text. 11 12This is introduced in section |04.4| of the user manual. 13 141. Using Visual mode |visual-use| 152. Starting and stopping Visual mode |visual-start| 163. Changing the Visual area |visual-change| 174. Operating on the Visual area |visual-operators| 185. Blockwise operators |blockwise-operators| 196. Repeating |visual-repeat| 207. Examples |visual-examples| 218. Select mode |Select-mode| 22 23{Since Vim 7.4.200 the |+visual| feature is always included} 24 25============================================================================== 261. Using Visual mode *visual-use* 27 28Using Visual mode consists of three parts: 291. Mark the start of the text with "v", "V" or CTRL-V. 30 The character under the cursor will be used as the start. 312. Move to the end of the text. 32 The text from the start of the Visual mode up to and including the 33 character under the cursor is highlighted. 343. Type an operator command. 35 The highlighted characters will be operated upon. 36 37The 'highlight' option can be used to set the display mode to use for 38highlighting in Visual mode. 39The 'virtualedit' option can be used to allow positioning the cursor to 40positions where there is no actual character. 41 42The highlighted text normally includes the character under the cursor. 43However, when the 'selection' option is set to "exclusive" and the cursor is 44after the Visual area, the character under the cursor is not included. 45 46With "v" the text before the start position and after the end position will 47not be highlighted. However, all uppercase and non-alpha operators, except 48"~" and "U", will work on whole lines anyway. See the list of operators 49below. 50 51 *visual-block* 52With CTRL-V (blockwise Visual mode) the highlighted text will be a rectangle 53between start position and the cursor. However, some operators work on whole 54lines anyway (see the list below). The change and substitute operators will 55delete the highlighted text and then start insertion at the top left 56position. 57 58============================================================================== 592. Starting and stopping Visual mode *visual-start* 60 61 *v* *characterwise-visual* 62[count]v Start Visual mode per character. 63 With [count] select the same number of characters or 64 lines as used for the last Visual operation, but at 65 the current cursor position, multiplied by [count]. 66 When the previous Visual operation was on a block both 67 the width and height of the block are multiplied by 68 [count]. 69 When there was no previous Visual operation [count] 70 characters are selected. This is like moving the 71 cursor right N * [count] characters. One less when 72 'selection' is not "exclusive". 73 74 *V* *linewise-visual* 75[count]V Start Visual mode linewise. 76 With [count] select the same number of lines as used 77 for the last Visual operation, but at the current 78 cursor position, multiplied by [count]. When there 79 was no previous Visual operation [count] lines are 80 selected. 81 82 *CTRL-V* *blockwise-visual* 83[count]CTRL-V Start Visual mode blockwise. Note: Under Windows 84 CTRL-V could be mapped to paste text, it doesn't work 85 to start Visual mode then, see |CTRL-V-alternative|. 86 [count] is used as with `v` above. 87 88If you use <Esc>, click the left mouse button or use any command that 89does a jump to another buffer while in Visual mode, the highlighting stops 90and no text is affected. Also when you hit "v" in characterwise Visual mode, 91"CTRL-V" in blockwise Visual mode or "V" in linewise Visual mode. If you hit 92CTRL-Z the highlighting stops and the editor is suspended or a new shell is 93started |CTRL-Z|. 94 95 new mode after typing: *v_v* *v_CTRL-V* *v_V* 96old mode "v" "CTRL-V" "V" ~ 97 98Normal Visual blockwise Visual linewise Visual 99Visual Normal blockwise Visual linewise Visual 100blockwise Visual Visual Normal linewise Visual 101linewise Visual Visual blockwise Visual Normal 102 103 *gv* *v_gv* *reselect-Visual* 104gv Start Visual mode with the same area as the previous 105 area and the same mode. 106 In Visual mode the current and the previous Visual 107 area are exchanged. 108 After using "p" or "P" in Visual mode the text that 109 was put will be selected. 110 111 *gn* *v_gn* 112gn Search forward for the last used search pattern, like 113 with `n`, and start Visual mode to select the match. 114 If the cursor is on the match, visually selects it. 115 If an operator is pending, operates on the match. 116 E.g., "dgn" deletes the text of the next match. 117 If Visual mode is active, extends the selection 118 until the end of the next match. 119 Note: Unlike `n` the search direction does not depend 120 on the previous search command. 121 122 *gN* *v_gN* 123gN Like |gn| but searches backward, like with `N`. 124 125 *<LeftMouse>* 126<LeftMouse> Set the current cursor position. If Visual mode is 127 active it is stopped. Only when 'mouse' option is 128 contains 'n' or 'a'. If the position is within 'so' 129 lines from the last line on the screen the text is 130 scrolled up. If the position is within 'so' lines from 131 the first line on the screen the text is scrolled 132 down. 133 134 *<RightMouse>* 135<RightMouse> Start Visual mode if it is not active. The text from 136 the cursor position to the position of the click is 137 highlighted. If Visual mode was already active move 138 the start or end of the highlighted text, which ever 139 is closest, to the position of the click. Only when 140 'mouse' option contains 'n' or 'a'. 141 142 Note: when 'mousemodel' is set to "popup", 143 <S-LeftMouse> has to be used instead of <RightMouse>. 144 145 *<LeftRelease>* 146<LeftRelease> This works like a <LeftMouse>, if it is not at 147 the same position as <LeftMouse>. In an older version 148 of xterm you won't see the selected area until the 149 button is released, unless there is access to the 150 display where the xterm is running (via the DISPLAY 151 environment variable or the -display argument). Only 152 when 'mouse' option contains 'n' or 'a'. 153 154If Visual mode is not active and the "v", "V" or CTRL-V is preceded with a 155count, the size of the previously highlighted area is used for a start. You 156can then move the end of the highlighted area and give an operator. The type 157of the old area is used (character, line or blockwise). 158- Linewise Visual mode: The number of lines is multiplied with the count. 159- Blockwise Visual mode: The number of lines and columns is multiplied with 160 the count. 161- Normal Visual mode within one line: The number of characters is multiplied 162 with the count. 163- Normal Visual mode with several lines: The number of lines is multiplied 164 with the count, in the last line the same number of characters is used as 165 in the last line in the previously highlighted area. 166The start of the text is the Cursor position. If the "$" command was used as 167one of the last commands to extend the highlighted text, the area will be 168extended to the rightmost column of the longest line. 169 170If you want to highlight exactly the same area as the last time, you can use 171"gv" |gv| |v_gv|. 172 173 *v_<Esc>* 174<Esc> In Visual mode: Stop Visual mode. 175 176 *v_CTRL-C* 177CTRL-C In Visual mode: Stop Visual mode. When insert mode is 178 pending (the mode message shows 179 "-- (insert) VISUAL --"), it is also stopped. 180 181============================================================================== 1823. Changing the Visual area *visual-change* 183 184 *v_o* 185o Go to Other end of highlighted text: The current 186 cursor position becomes the start of the highlighted 187 text and the cursor is moved to the other end of the 188 highlighted text. The highlighted area remains the 189 same. 190 191 *v_O* 192O Go to Other end of highlighted text. This is like 193 "o", but in Visual block mode the cursor moves to the 194 other corner in the same line. When the corner is at 195 a character that occupies more than one position on 196 the screen (e.g., a <Tab>), the highlighted text may 197 change. 198 199 *v_$* 200When the "$" command is used with blockwise Visual mode, the right end of the 201highlighted text will be determined by the longest highlighted line. This 202stops when a motion command is used that does not move straight up or down. 203 204For moving the end of the block many commands can be used, but you cannot 205use Ex commands, commands that make changes or abandon the file. Commands 206(starting with) ".", "&", CTRL-^, "Z", CTRL-], CTRL-T, CTRL-R, CTRL-I 207and CTRL-O cause a beep and Visual mode continues. 208 209When switching to another window on the same buffer, the cursor position in 210that window is adjusted, so that the same Visual area is still selected. This 211is especially useful to view the start of the Visual area in one window, and 212the end in another. You can then use <RightMouse> (or <S-LeftMouse> when 213'mousemodel' is "popup") to drag either end of the Visual area. 214 215============================================================================== 2164. Operating on the Visual area *visual-operators* 217 218The operators that can be used are: 219 ~ switch case |v_~| 220 d delete |v_d| 221 c change (4) |v_c| 222 y yank |v_y| 223 > shift right (4) |v_>| 224 < shift left (4) |v_<| 225 ! filter through external command (1) |v_!| 226 = filter through 'equalprg' option command (1) |v_=| 227 gq format lines to 'textwidth' length (1) |v_gq| 228 229The objects that can be used are: 230 aw a word (with white space) |v_aw| 231 iw inner word |v_iw| 232 aW a WORD (with white space) |v_aW| 233 iW inner WORD |v_iW| 234 as a sentence (with white space) |v_as| 235 is inner sentence |v_is| 236 ap a paragraph (with white space) |v_ap| 237 ip inner paragraph |v_ip| 238 ab a () block (with parenthesis) |v_ab| 239 ib inner () block |v_ib| 240 aB a {} block (with braces) |v_aB| 241 iB inner {} block |v_iB| 242 at a <tag> </tag> block (with tags) |v_at| 243 it inner <tag> </tag> block |v_it| 244 a< a <> block (with <>) |v_a<| 245 i< inner <> block |v_i<| 246 a[ a [] block (with []) |v_a[| 247 i[ inner [] block |v_i[| 248 a" a double quoted string (with quotes) |v_aquote| 249 i" inner double quoted string |v_iquote| 250 a' a single quoted string (with quotes) |v_a'| 251 i' inner simple quoted string |v_i'| 252 a` a string in backticks (with backticks) |v_a`| 253 i` inner string in backticks |v_i`| 254 255Additionally the following commands can be used: 256 : start Ex command for highlighted lines (1) |v_:| 257 r change (4) |v_r| 258 s change |v_s| 259 C change (2)(4) |v_C| 260 S change (2) |v_S| 261 R change (2) |v_R| 262 x delete |v_x| 263 D delete (3) |v_D| 264 X delete (2) |v_X| 265 Y yank (2) |v_Y| 266 p put |v_p| 267 J join (1) |v_J| 268 U make uppercase |v_U| 269 u make lowercase |v_u| 270 ^] find tag |v_CTRL-]| 271 I block insert |v_b_I| 272 A block append |v_b_A| 273 274(1): Always whole lines, see |:visual_example|. 275(2): Whole lines when not using CTRL-V. 276(3): Whole lines when not using CTRL-V, delete until the end of the line when 277 using CTRL-V. 278(4): When using CTRL-V operates on the block only. 279 280Note that the ":vmap" command can be used to specifically map keys in Visual 281mode. For example, if you would like the "/" command not to extend the Visual 282area, but instead take the highlighted text and search for that: > 283 :vmap / y/<C-R>"<CR> 284(In the <> notation |<>|, when typing it you should type it literally; you 285need to remove the 'B' and '<' flags from 'cpoptions'.) 286 287If you want to give a register name using the """ command, do this just before 288typing the operator character: "v{move-around}"xd". 289 290If you want to give a count to the command, do this just before typing the 291operator character: "v{move-around}3>" (move lines 3 indents to the right). 292 293 *{move-around}* 294The {move-around} is any sequence of movement commands. Note the difference 295with {motion}, which is only ONE movement command. 296 297Another way to operate on the Visual area is using the |/\%V| item in a 298pattern. For example, to replace all '(' in the Visual area with '#': > 299 300 :'<,'>s/\%V(/#/g 301 302Note that the "'<,'>" will appear automatically when you press ":" in Visual 303mode. 304 305============================================================================== 3065. Blockwise operators *blockwise-operators* 307 308Reminder: Use 'virtualedit' to be able to select blocks that start or end 309after the end of a line or halfway a tab. 310 311Visual-block Insert *v_b_I* 312With a blockwise selection, I{string}<ESC> will insert {string} at the start 313of block on every line of the block, provided that the line extends into the 314block. Thus lines that are short will remain unmodified. TABs are split to 315retain visual columns. Works only for adding text to a line, not for 316deletions. See |v_b_I_example|. 317 318Visual-block Append *v_b_A* 319With a blockwise selection, A{string}<ESC> will append {string} to the end of 320block on every line of the block. There is some differing behavior where the 321block RHS is not straight, due to different line lengths: 322 3231. Block was created with <C-v>$ 324 In this case the string is appended to the end of each line. 3252. Block was created with <C-v>{move-around} 326 In this case the string is appended to the end of the block on each line, 327 and whitespace is inserted to pad to the end-of-block column. 328See |v_b_A_example|. 329Note: "I" and "A" behave differently for lines that don't extend into the 330selected block. This was done intentionally, so that you can do it the way 331you want. 332Works only for adding text to a line, not for deletions. 333 334Visual-block change *v_b_c* 335All selected text in the block will be replaced by the same text string. When 336using "c" the selected text is deleted and Insert mode started. You can then 337enter text (without a line break). When you hit <Esc>, the same string is 338inserted in all previously selected lines. 339 340Visual-block Change *v_b_C* 341Like using "c", but the selection is extended until the end of the line for 342all lines. 343 344 *v_b_<* 345Visual-block Shift *v_b_>* 346The block is shifted by 'shiftwidth'. The RHS of the block is irrelevant. The 347LHS of the block determines the point from which to apply a right shift, and 348padding includes TABs optimally according to 'ts' and 'et'. The LHS of the 349block determines the point upto which to shift left. 350See |v_b_>_example|. 351See |v_b_<_example|. 352 353Visual-block Replace *v_b_r* 354Every screen char in the highlighted region is replaced with the same char, ie 355TABs are split and the virtual whitespace is replaced, maintaining screen 356layout. 357See |v_b_r_example|. 358 359 360============================================================================== 3616. Repeating *visual-repeat* 362 363When repeating a Visual mode operator, the operator will be applied to the 364same amount of text as the last time: 365- Linewise Visual mode: The same number of lines. 366- Blockwise Visual mode: The same number of lines and columns. 367- Normal Visual mode within one line: The same number of characters. 368- Normal Visual mode with several lines: The same number of lines, in the 369 last line the same number of characters as in the last line the last time. 370The start of the text is the Cursor position. If the "$" command was used as 371one of the last commands to extend the highlighted text, the repeating will 372be applied up to the rightmost column of the longest line. 373 374 375============================================================================== 3767. Examples *visual-examples* 377 378 *:visual_example* 379Currently the ":" command works on whole lines only. When you select part of 380a line, doing something like ":!date" will replace the whole line. If you 381want only part of the line to be replaced you will have to make a mapping for 382it. In a future release ":" may work on partial lines. 383 384Here is an example, to replace the selected text with the output of "date": > 385 :vmap _a <Esc>`>a<CR><Esc>`<i<CR><Esc>!!date<CR>kJJ 386 387(In the <> notation |<>|, when typing it you should type it literally; you 388need to remove the 'B' and '<' flags from 'cpoptions') 389 390What this does is: 391<Esc> stop Visual mode 392`> go to the end of the Visual area 393a<CR><Esc> break the line after the Visual area 394`< jump to the start of the Visual area 395i<CR><Esc> break the line before the Visual area 396!!date<CR> filter the Visual text through date 397kJJ Join the lines back together 398 399 *visual-search* 400Here is an idea for a mapping that makes it possible to do a search for the 401selected text: > 402 :vmap X y/<C-R>"<CR> 403 404(In the <> notation |<>|, when typing it you should type it literally; you 405need to remove the 'B' and '<' flags from 'cpoptions') 406 407Note that special characters (like '.' and '*') will cause problems. 408 409Visual-block Examples *blockwise-examples* 410With the following text, I will indicate the commands to produce the block and 411the results below. In all cases, the cursor begins on the 'a' in the first 412line of the test text. 413The following modeline settings are assumed ":ts=8:sw=4:". 414 415It will be helpful to 416:set hls 417/<TAB> 418where <TAB> is a real TAB. This helps visualise the operations. 419 420The test text is: 421 422abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 423abc defghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 424abcdef ghi jklmnopqrstuvwxyz 425abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 426 4271. fo<C-v>3jISTRING<ESC> *v_b_I_example* 428 429abcdefghijklmnSTRINGopqrstuvwxyz 430abc STRING defghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 431abcdef ghi STRING jklmnopqrstuvwxyz 432abcdefghijklmnSTRINGopqrstuvwxyz 433 4342. fo<C-v>3j$ASTRING<ESC> *v_b_A_example* 435 436abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzSTRING 437abc defghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzSTRING 438abcdef ghi jklmnopqrstuvwxyzSTRING 439abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzSTRING 440 4413. fo<C-v>3j3l<.. *v_b_<_example* 442 443abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 444abc defghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 445abcdef ghi jklmnopqrstuvwxyz 446abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 447 4484. fo<C-v>3j>.. *v_b_>_example* 449 450abcdefghijklmn opqrstuvwxyz 451abc defghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 452abcdef ghi jklmnopqrstuvwxyz 453abcdefghijklmn opqrstuvwxyz 454 4555. fo<C-v>5l3jrX *v_b_r_example* 456 457abcdefghijklmnXXXXXXuvwxyz 458abc XXXXXXhijklmnopqrstuvwxyz 459abcdef ghi XXXXXX jklmnopqrstuvwxyz 460abcdefghijklmnXXXXXXuvwxyz 461 462============================================================================== 4638. Select mode *Select* *Select-mode* 464 465Select mode looks like Visual mode, but the commands accepted are quite 466different. This resembles the selection mode in Microsoft Windows. 467When the 'showmode' option is set, "-- SELECT --" is shown in the last line. 468 469Entering Select mode: 470- Using the mouse to select an area, and 'selectmode' contains "mouse". 471 'mouse' must also contain a flag for the current mode. 472- Using a non-printable movement command, with the Shift key pressed, and 473 'selectmode' contains "key". For example: <S-Left> and <S-End>. 'keymodel' 474 must also contain "startsel". 475- Using "v", "V" or CTRL-V command, and 'selectmode' contains "cmd". 476- Using "gh", "gH" or "g_CTRL-H" command in Normal mode. 477- From Visual mode, press CTRL-G. *v_CTRL-G* 478 479Commands in Select mode: 480- Printable characters, <NL> and <CR> cause the selection to be deleted, and 481 Vim enters Insert mode. The typed character is inserted. 482- Non-printable movement commands, with the Shift key pressed, extend the 483 selection. 'keymodel' must include "startsel". 484- Non-printable movement commands, with the Shift key NOT pressed, stop Select 485 mode. 'keymodel' must include "stopsel". 486- ESC stops Select mode. 487- CTRL-O switches to Visual mode for the duration of one command. *v_CTRL-O* 488- CTRL-G switches to Visual mode. 489 490Otherwise, typed characters are handled as in Visual mode. 491 492When using an operator in Select mode, and the selection is linewise, the 493selected lines are operated upon, but like in characterwise selection. For 494example, when a whole line is deleted, it can later be pasted halfway a line. 495 496 497Mappings and menus in Select mode. *Select-mode-mapping* 498 499When mappings and menus are defined with the |:vmap| or |:vmenu| command they 500work both in Visual mode and in Select mode. When these are used in Select 501mode Vim automatically switches to Visual mode, so that the same behavior as 502in Visual mode is effective. If you don't want this use |:xmap| or |:smap|. 503 504Users will expect printable characters to replace the selected area. 505Therefore avoid mapping printable characters in Select mode. Or use 506|:sunmap| after |:map| and |:vmap| to remove it for Select mode. 507 508After the mapping or menu finishes, the selection is enabled again and Select 509mode entered, unless the selected area was deleted, another buffer became 510the current one or the window layout was changed. 511 512When a character was typed that causes the selection to be deleted and Insert 513mode started, Insert mode mappings are applied to this character. This may 514cause some confusion, because it means Insert mode mappings apply to a 515character typed in Select mode. Language mappings apply as well. 516 517 *gV* *v_gV* 518gV Avoid the automatic reselection of the Visual area 519 after a Select mode mapping or menu has finished. 520 Put this just before the end of the mapping or menu. 521 At least it should be after any operations on the 522 selection. 523 524 *gh* 525gh Start Select mode, characterwise. This is like "v", 526 but starts Select mode instead of Visual mode. 527 Mnemonic: "get highlighted". 528 529 *gH* 530gH Start Select mode, linewise. This is like "V", 531 but starts Select mode instead of Visual mode. 532 Mnemonic: "get Highlighted". 533 534 *g_CTRL-H* 535g CTRL-H Start Select mode, blockwise. This is like CTRL-V, 536 but starts Select mode instead of Visual mode. 537 Mnemonic: "get Highlighted". 538 539 vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl: 540