| *usr_41.txt* For Vim version 8.2. Last change: 2022 Feb 11 |
| |
| VIM USER MANUAL - by Bram Moolenaar |
| |
| Write a Vim script |
| |
| |
| The Vim script language is used for the startup vimrc file, syntax files, and |
| many other things. This chapter explains the items that can be used in a Vim |
| script. There are a lot of them, thus this is a long chapter. |
| |
| |41.1| Introduction |
| |41.2| Variables |
| |41.3| Expressions |
| |41.4| Conditionals |
| |41.5| Executing an expression |
| |41.6| Using functions |
| |41.7| Defining a function |
| |41.8| Lists and Dictionaries |
| |41.9| Exceptions |
| |41.10| Various remarks |
| |41.11| Writing a plugin |
| |41.12| Writing a filetype plugin |
| |41.13| Writing a compiler plugin |
| |41.14| Writing a plugin that loads quickly |
| |41.15| Writing library scripts |
| |41.16| Distributing Vim scripts |
| |
| Next chapter: |usr_42.txt| Add new menus |
| Previous chapter: |usr_40.txt| Make new commands |
| Table of contents: |usr_toc.txt| |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| *41.1* Introduction *vim-script-intro* *script* |
| |
| Your first experience with Vim scripts is the vimrc file. Vim reads it when |
| it starts up and executes the commands. You can set options to values you |
| prefer. And you can use any colon command in it (commands that start with a |
| ":"; these are sometimes referred to as Ex commands or command-line commands). |
| |
| Syntax files are also Vim scripts. As are files that set options for a |
| specific file type. A complicated macro can be defined by a separate Vim |
| script file. You can think of other uses yourself. |
| |
| If you are familiar with Python, you can find a comparison between |
| Python and Vim script here, with pointers to other documents: |
| https://gist.github.com/yegappan/16d964a37ead0979b05e655aa036cad0 |
| And if you are familiar with JavaScript: |
| https://w0rp.com/blog/post/vim-script-for-the-javascripter/ |
| |
| Vim script comes in two flavors: legacy and |Vim9|. Since this help file is |
| for new users, we'll teach you the newer and more convenient |Vim9| syntax. |
| |
| To try out Vim script the best way is to edit a script file and source it. |
| Basically: > |
| :edit test.vim |
| [insert the script lines you want] |
| :w |
| :source % |
| |
| Let's start with a simple example: > |
| |
| vim9script |
| var i = 1 |
| while i < 5 |
| echo "count is" i |
| i += 1 |
| endwhile |
| < |
| The output of the example code is: |
| |
| count is 1 ~ |
| count is 2 ~ |
| count is 3 ~ |
| count is 4 ~ |
| |
| In the first line the `vim9script` command makes clear this is a new, |Vim9| |
| script file. That matters for how the rest of the file is used. |
| |
| The `var i = 1` command declares the "i" variable and initializes it. The |
| generic form is: > |
| |
| var {name} = {expression} |
| |
| In this case the variable name is "i" and the expression is a simple value, |
| the number one. |
| |
| The `while` command starts a loop. The generic form is: > |
| |
| while {condition} |
| {statements} |
| endwhile |
| |
| The statements until the matching `endwhile` are executed for as long as the |
| condition is true. The condition used here is the expression "i < 5". This |
| is true when the variable i is smaller than five. |
| Note: |
| If you happen to write a while loop that keeps on running, you can |
| interrupt it by pressing CTRL-C (CTRL-Break on MS-Windows). |
| |
| The `echo` command prints its arguments. In this case the string "count is" |
| and the value of the variable i. Since i is one, this will print: |
| |
| count is 1 ~ |
| |
| Then there is the `i += 1` command. This does the same thing as "i = i + 1", |
| it adds one to the variable i and assigns the new value to the same variable. |
| |
| The example was given to explain the commands, but would you really want to |
| make such a loop, it can be written much more compact: > |
| |
| for i in range(1, 4) |
| echo "count is" i |
| endfor |
| |
| We won't explain how `for` and `range()` work until later. Follow the links |
| if you are impatient. |
| |
| |
| FOUR KINDS OF NUMBERS |
| |
| Numbers can be decimal, hexadecimal, octal or binary. |
| |
| A hexadecimal number starts with "0x" or "0X". For example "0x1f" is decimal |
| 31. |
| |
| An octal number starts with "0o", "0O". "0o17" is decimal 15. |
| |
| A binary number starts with "0b" or "0B". For example "0b101" is decimal 5. |
| |
| A decimal number is just digits. Careful: In legacy script don't put a zero |
| before a decimal number, it will be interpreted as an octal number! |
| |
| The `echo` command evaluates its argument and always prints decimal numbers. |
| Example: > |
| |
| echo 0x7f 0o36 |
| < 127 30 ~ |
| |
| A number is made negative with a minus sign. This also works for hexadecimal, |
| octal and binary numbers: > |
| |
| echo -0x7f |
| < -127 ~ |
| |
| A minus sign is also used for subtraction. This can sometimes lead to |
| confusion. If we put a minus sign before both numbers we get an error: > |
| |
| echo -0x7f -0o36 |
| < E1004: White space required before and after '-' at "-0o36" ~ |
| |
| Note: if you are not using a |Vim9| script to try out these commands but type |
| them directly, they will be executed as legacy script. Then the echo command |
| sees the second minus sign as subtraction. To get the error, prefix the |
| command with `vim9cmd`: > |
| |
| vim9cmd echo -0x7f -0o36 |
| < E1004: White space required before and after '-' at "-0o36" ~ |
| |
| White space in an expression is often required to make sure it is easy to read |
| and avoid errors. Such as thinking that the "-0o36" above makes the number |
| negative, while it is actually seen as a subtraction. |
| |
| To actually have the minus sign be used for negation, you can put the second |
| expression in parentheses: > |
| |
| echo -0x7f (-0o36) |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| *41.2* Variables |
| |
| A variable name consists of ASCII letters, digits and the underscore. It |
| cannot start with a digit. Valid variable names are: |
| |
| counter |
| _aap3 |
| very_long_variable_name_with_underscores |
| FuncLength |
| LENGTH |
| |
| Invalid names are "foo+bar" and "6var". |
| |
| Some variables are global. To see a list of currently defined global |
| variables type this command: > |
| |
| :let |
| |
| You can use global variables everywhere. However, it is easy to use the same |
| name in two unrelated scripts. Therefore variables declared in a script are |
| local to that script. For example, if you have this in "script1.vim": > |
| |
| vim9script |
| var counter = 5 |
| echo counter |
| < 5 ~ |
| |
| And you try to use the variable in "script2.vim": > |
| |
| vim9script |
| echo counter |
| < E121: Undefined variable: counter ~ |
| |
| Using a script-local variable means you can be sure that it is only changed in |
| that script and not elsewhere. |
| |
| If you do want to share variables between scripts, use the "g:" prefix and |
| assign the value directly, do not use `var`. Thus in "script1.vim": > |
| |
| vim9script |
| g:counter = 5 |
| echo g:counter |
| < 5 ~ |
| |
| And then in "script2.vim": > |
| |
| vim9script |
| echo g:counter |
| < 5 ~ |
| |
| More about script-local variables here: |script-variable|. |
| |
| There are more kinds of variables, see |internal-variables|. The most often |
| used ones are: |
| |
| b:name variable local to a buffer |
| w:name variable local to a window |
| g:name global variable (also in a function) |
| v:name variable predefined by Vim |
| |
| |
| DELETING VARIABLES |
| |
| Variables take up memory and show up in the output of the `let` command. To |
| delete a global variable use the `unlet` command. Example: > |
| |
| unlet g:counter |
| |
| This deletes the global variable "g:counter" to free up the memory it uses. |
| If you are not sure if the variable exists, and don't want an error message |
| when it doesn't, append !: > |
| |
| unlet! g:counter |
| |
| You cannot `unlet` script-local variables in |Vim9| script. You can in legacy |
| script. |
| |
| When a script finishes, the local variables declared there will not be |
| deleted. Functions defined in the script can use them. Example: |
| > |
| vim9script |
| var counter = 0 |
| def g:GetCount(): number |
| s:counter += 1 |
| return s:counter |
| enddef |
| |
| Every time you call the function it will return the next count: > |
| :echo g:GetCount() |
| < 1 ~ |
| > |
| :echo g:GetCount() |
| < 2 ~ |
| |
| If you are worried a script-local variable is consuming too much |
| memory, set it to an empty value after you no longer need it. |
| |
| Note: below we'll leave out the `vim9script` line, so we can concentrate on |
| the relevant commands, but you'll still need to put it at the top of your |
| script file. |
| |
| |
| STRING VARIABLES AND CONSTANTS |
| |
| So far only numbers were used for the variable value. Strings can be used as |
| well. Numbers and strings are the basic types of variables that Vim supports. |
| Example: > |
| |
| var name = "Peter" |
| echo name |
| < Peter ~ |
| |
| Every variable has a type. Very often, as in this example, the type is |
| defined by assigning a value. This is called type inference. If you do not |
| want to give the variable a value yet, you need to specify the type: > |
| |
| var name: string |
| var age: number |
| ... |
| name = "Peter" |
| age = 42 |
| |
| If you make a mistake and try to assign the wrong type of value you'll get an |
| error: > |
| |
| age = "Peter" |
| < E1012: Type mismatch; expected number but got string ~ |
| |
| More about types in |41.8|. |
| |
| To assign a string value to a variable, you need to use a string constant. |
| There are two types of these. First the string in double quotes, as we used |
| already. If you want to include a double quote inside the string, put a |
| backslash in front of it: > |
| |
| var name = "he is \"Peter\"" |
| echo name |
| < he is "Peter" ~ |
| |
| To avoid the need for a backslash, you can use a string in single quotes: > |
| |
| var name = 'he is "Peter"' |
| echo name |
| < he is "Peter" ~ |
| |
| Inside a single-quote string all the characters are as they are. Only the |
| single quote itself is special: you need to use two to get one. A backslash |
| is taken literally, thus you can't use it to change the meaning of the |
| character after it: > |
| |
| var name = 'P\e''ter''' |
| echo name |
| < P\e'ter' ~ |
| |
| In double-quote strings it is possible to use special characters. Here are a |
| few useful ones: |
| |
| \t <Tab> |
| \n <NL>, line break |
| \r <CR>, <Enter> |
| \e <Esc> |
| \b <BS>, backspace |
| \" " |
| \\ \, backslash |
| \<Esc> <Esc> |
| \<C-W> CTRL-W |
| |
| The last two are just examples. The "\<name>" form can be used to include |
| the special key "name". |
| |
| See |expr-quote| for the full list of special items in a string. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| *41.3* Expressions |
| |
| Vim has a fairly standard way to handle expressions. You can read the |
| definition here: |expression-syntax|. Here we will show the most common |
| items. |
| |
| The numbers, strings and variables mentioned above are expressions by |
| themselves. Thus everywhere an expression is expected, you can use a number, |
| string or variable. Other basic items in an expression are: |
| |
| $NAME environment variable |
| &name option |
| @r register |
| |
| Examples: > |
| |
| echo "The value of 'tabstop' is" &ts |
| echo "Your home directory is" $HOME |
| if @a == 'text' |
| |
| The &name form can also be used to set an option value, do something and |
| restore the old value. Example: > |
| |
| var save_ic = &ic |
| set noic |
| s/The Start/The Beginning/ |
| &ic = save_ic |
| |
| This makes sure the "The Start" pattern is used with the 'ignorecase' option |
| off. Still, it keeps the value that the user had set. (Another way to do |
| this would be to add "\C" to the pattern, see |/\C|.) |
| |
| |
| MATHEMATICS |
| |
| It becomes more interesting if we combine these basic items. Let's start with |
| mathematics on numbers: |
| |
| a + b add |
| a - b subtract |
| a * b multiply |
| a / b divide |
| a % b modulo |
| |
| The usual precedence is used. Example: > |
| |
| echo 10 + 5 * 2 |
| < 20 ~ |
| |
| Grouping is done with parentheses. No surprises here. Example: > |
| |
| echo (10 + 5) * 2 |
| < 30 ~ |
| |
| Strings can be concatenated with ".." (see |expr6|). Example: > |
| |
| echo "foo" .. "bar" |
| < foobar ~ |
| |
| When the "echo" command gets multiple arguments, it separates them with a |
| space. In the example the argument is a single expression, thus no space is |
| inserted. |
| |
| Borrowed from the C language is the conditional expression: > |
| |
| a ? b : c |
| |
| If "a" evaluates to true "b" is used, otherwise "c" is used. Example: > |
| |
| var nr = 4 |
| echo nr > 5 ? "nr is big" : "nr is small" |
| < nr is small ~ |
| |
| The three parts of the constructs are always evaluated first, thus you could |
| see it works as: > |
| |
| (a) ? (b) : (c) |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| *41.4* Conditionals |
| |
| The `if` commands executes the following statements, until the matching |
| `endif`, only when a condition is met. The generic form is: |
| |
| if {condition} |
| {statements} |
| endif |
| |
| Only when the expression {condition} evaluates to true or one will the |
| {statements} be executed. If they are not executed they must still be valid |
| commands. If they contain garbage, Vim won't be able to find the matching |
| `endif`. |
| |
| You can also use `else`. The generic form for this is: |
| |
| if {condition} |
| {statements} |
| else |
| {statements} |
| endif |
| |
| The second {statements} block is only executed if the first one isn't. |
| |
| Finally, there is `elseif` |
| |
| if {condition} |
| {statements} |
| elseif {condition} |
| {statements} |
| endif |
| |
| This works just like using `else` and then `if`, but without the need for an |
| extra `endif`. |
| |
| A useful example for your vimrc file is checking the 'term' option and doing |
| something depending upon its value: > |
| |
| if &term == "xterm" |
| # Do stuff for xterm |
| elseif &term == "vt100" |
| # Do stuff for a vt100 terminal |
| else |
| # Do something for other terminals |
| endif |
| |
| This uses "#" to start a comment, more about that later. |
| |
| |
| LOGIC OPERATIONS |
| |
| We already used some of them in the examples. These are the most often used |
| ones: |
| |
| a == b equal to |
| a != b not equal to |
| a > b greater than |
| a >= b greater than or equal to |
| a < b less than |
| a <= b less than or equal to |
| |
| The result is true if the condition is met and false otherwise. An example: > |
| |
| if v:version >= 700 |
| echo "congratulations" |
| else |
| echo "you are using an old version, upgrade!" |
| endif |
| |
| Here "v:version" is a variable defined by Vim, which has the value of the Vim |
| version. 600 is for version 6.0, version 6.1 has the value 601. This is |
| very useful to write a script that works with multiple versions of Vim. |
| |v:version| |
| |
| The logic operators work both for numbers and strings. When comparing two |
| strings, the mathematical difference is used. This compares byte values, |
| which may not be right for some languages. |
| |
| If you try to compare a string with a number you will get an error. |
| |
| For strings there are two more useful items: |
| |
| str =~ pat matches with |
| str !~ pat does not match with |
| |
| The left item "str" is used as a string. The right item "pat" is used as a |
| pattern, like what's used for searching. Example: > |
| |
| if str =~ " " |
| echo "str contains a space" |
| endif |
| if str !~ '\.$' |
| echo "str does not end in a full stop" |
| endif |
| |
| Notice the use of a single-quote string for the pattern. This is useful, |
| because backslashes would need to be doubled in a double-quote string and |
| patterns tend to contain many backslashes. |
| |
| The match is not anchored, if you want to match the whole string start with |
| "^" and end with "$". |
| |
| The 'ignorecase' option is not used when comparing strings. When you do want |
| to ignore case append "?". Thus "==?" compares two strings to be equal while |
| ignoring case. For the full table see |expr-==|. |
| |
| |
| MORE LOOPING |
| |
| The `while` command was already mentioned. Two more statements can be used in |
| between the `while` and the `endwhile`: |
| |
| continue Jump back to the start of the while loop; the |
| loop continues. |
| break Jump forward to the `endwhile`; the loop is |
| discontinued. |
| |
| Example: > |
| |
| var counter = 1 |
| while counter < 40 |
| if skip_number(counter) |
| continue |
| endif |
| if last_number(counter) |
| break |
| endif |
| sleep 50m |
| ++counter |
| endwhile |
| |
| The `sleep` command makes Vim take a nap. The "50m" specifies fifty |
| milliseconds. Another example is `sleep 4`, which sleeps for four seconds. |
| |
| Even more looping can be done with the `for` command, see below in |41.8|. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| *41.5* Executing an expression |
| |
| So far the commands in the script were executed by Vim directly. The |
| `execute` command allows executing the result of an expression. This is a |
| very powerful way to build commands and execute them. |
| |
| An example is to jump to a tag, which is contained in a variable: > |
| |
| execute "tag " .. tag_name |
| |
| The ".." is used to concatenate the string "tag " with the value of variable |
| "tag_name". Suppose "tag_name" has the value "get_cmd", then the command that |
| will be executed is: > |
| |
| tag get_cmd |
| |
| The `execute` command can only execute Ex commands. The `normal` command |
| executes Normal mode commands. However, its argument is not an expression but |
| the literal command characters. Example: > |
| |
| normal gg=G |
| |
| This jumps to the first line with "gg" and formats all lines with the "=" |
| operator and the "G" movement. |
| |
| To make `normal` work with an expression, combine `execute` with it. |
| Example: > |
| |
| execute "normal " .. count .. "j" |
| |
| This will move the cursor "count" lines down. |
| |
| Make sure that the argument for `normal` is a complete command. Otherwise |
| Vim will run into the end of the argument and abort the command. For example, |
| if you start the delete operator, you must give the movement command also. |
| This works: > |
| |
| normal d$ |
| |
| This does nothing: > |
| |
| normal d |
| |
| If you start Insert mode and do not end it with Esc, it will end anyway. This |
| works to insert "new text": > |
| |
| execute "normal inew text" |
| |
| If you want to do something after inserting text you do need to end Insert |
| mode: > |
| |
| execute "normal inew text\<Esc>b" |
| |
| This inserts "new text" and puts the cursor on the first letter of "text". |
| Notice the use of the special key "\<Esc>". This avoids having to enter a |
| real <Esc> character in your script. That is where `execute` with a |
| double-quote string comes in handy. |
| |
| If you don't want to execute a string but evaluate it to get its expression |
| value, you can use the eval() function: > |
| |
| var optname = "path" |
| var optvalue = eval('&' .. optname) |
| |
| A "&" character is prepended to "path", thus the argument to eval() is |
| "&path". The result will then be the value of the 'path' option. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| *41.6* Using functions |
| |
| Vim defines many functions and provides a large amount of functionality that |
| way. A few examples will be given in this section. You can find the whole |
| list below: |function-list|. |
| |
| A function is called with the `call` command. The parameters are passed in |
| between parentheses separated by commas. Example: > |
| |
| call search("Date: ", "W") |
| |
| This calls the search() function, with arguments "Date: " and "W". The |
| search() function uses its first argument as a search pattern and the second |
| one as flags. The "W" flag means the search doesn't wrap around the end of |
| the file. |
| |
| Using `call` is optional in |Vim9| script, this works the same way: > |
| |
| search("Date: ", "W") |
| |
| A function can be called in an expression. Example: > |
| |
| var line = getline(".") |
| var repl = substitute(line, '\a', "*", "g") |
| setline(".", repl) |
| |
| The getline() function obtains a line from the current buffer. Its argument |
| is a specification of the line number. In this case "." is used, which means |
| the line where the cursor is. |
| |
| The substitute() function does something similar to the `substitute` command. |
| The first argument is the string on which to perform the substitution. The |
| second argument is the pattern, the third the replacement string. Finally, |
| the last arguments are the flags. |
| |
| The setline() function sets the line, specified by the first argument, to a |
| new string, the second argument. In this example the line under the cursor is |
| replaced with the result of the substitute(). Thus the effect of the three |
| statements is equal to: > |
| |
| :substitute/\a/*/g |
| |
| Using the functions becomes more interesting when you do more work before and |
| after the substitute() call. |
| |
| |
| FUNCTIONS *function-list* |
| |
| There are many functions. We will mention them here, grouped by what they are |
| used for. You can find an alphabetical list here: |builtin-function-list|. |
| Use CTRL-] on the function name to jump to detailed help on it. |
| |
| String manipulation: *string-functions* |
| nr2char() get a character by its number value |
| list2str() get a character string from a list of numbers |
| char2nr() get number value of a character |
| str2list() get list of numbers from a string |
| str2nr() convert a string to a Number |
| str2float() convert a string to a Float |
| printf() format a string according to % items |
| escape() escape characters in a string with a '\' |
| shellescape() escape a string for use with a shell command |
| fnameescape() escape a file name for use with a Vim command |
| tr() translate characters from one set to another |
| strtrans() translate a string to make it printable |
| tolower() turn a string to lowercase |
| toupper() turn a string to uppercase |
| charclass() class of a character |
| match() position where a pattern matches in a string |
| matchend() position where a pattern match ends in a string |
| matchfuzzy() fuzzy matches a string in a list of strings |
| matchfuzzypos() fuzzy matches a string in a list of strings |
| matchstr() match of a pattern in a string |
| matchstrpos() match and positions of a pattern in a string |
| matchlist() like matchstr() and also return submatches |
| stridx() first index of a short string in a long string |
| strridx() last index of a short string in a long string |
| strlen() length of a string in bytes |
| strcharlen() length of a string in characters |
| strchars() number of characters in a string |
| strwidth() size of string when displayed |
| strdisplaywidth() size of string when displayed, deals with tabs |
| setcellwidths() set character cell width overrides |
| substitute() substitute a pattern match with a string |
| submatch() get a specific match in ":s" and substitute() |
| strpart() get part of a string using byte index |
| strcharpart() get part of a string using char index |
| slice() take a slice of a string, using char index in |
| Vim9 script |
| strgetchar() get character from a string using char index |
| expand() expand special keywords |
| expandcmd() expand a command like done for `:edit` |
| iconv() convert text from one encoding to another |
| byteidx() byte index of a character in a string |
| byteidxcomp() like byteidx() but count composing characters |
| charidx() character index of a byte in a string |
| repeat() repeat a string multiple times |
| eval() evaluate a string expression |
| execute() execute an Ex command and get the output |
| win_execute() like execute() but in a specified window |
| trim() trim characters from a string |
| gettext() lookup message translation |
| |
| List manipulation: *list-functions* |
| get() get an item without error for wrong index |
| len() number of items in a List |
| empty() check if List is empty |
| insert() insert an item somewhere in a List |
| add() append an item to a List |
| extend() append a List to a List |
| extendnew() make a new List and append items |
| remove() remove one or more items from a List |
| copy() make a shallow copy of a List |
| deepcopy() make a full copy of a List |
| filter() remove selected items from a List |
| map() change each List item |
| mapnew() make a new List with changed items |
| reduce() reduce a List to a value |
| slice() take a slice of a List |
| sort() sort a List |
| reverse() reverse the order of a List |
| uniq() remove copies of repeated adjacent items |
| split() split a String into a List |
| join() join List items into a String |
| range() return a List with a sequence of numbers |
| string() String representation of a List |
| call() call a function with List as arguments |
| index() index of a value in a List |
| max() maximum value in a List |
| min() minimum value in a List |
| count() count number of times a value appears in a List |
| repeat() repeat a List multiple times |
| flatten() flatten a List |
| flattennew() flatten a copy of a List |
| |
| Dictionary manipulation: *dict-functions* |
| get() get an entry without an error for a wrong key |
| len() number of entries in a Dictionary |
| has_key() check whether a key appears in a Dictionary |
| empty() check if Dictionary is empty |
| remove() remove an entry from a Dictionary |
| extend() add entries from one Dictionary to another |
| extendnew() make a new Dictionary and append items |
| filter() remove selected entries from a Dictionary |
| map() change each Dictionary entry |
| mapnew() make a new Dictionary with changed items |
| keys() get List of Dictionary keys |
| values() get List of Dictionary values |
| items() get List of Dictionary key-value pairs |
| copy() make a shallow copy of a Dictionary |
| deepcopy() make a full copy of a Dictionary |
| string() String representation of a Dictionary |
| max() maximum value in a Dictionary |
| min() minimum value in a Dictionary |
| count() count number of times a value appears |
| |
| Floating point computation: *float-functions* |
| float2nr() convert Float to Number |
| abs() absolute value (also works for Number) |
| round() round off |
| ceil() round up |
| floor() round down |
| trunc() remove value after decimal point |
| fmod() remainder of division |
| exp() exponential |
| log() natural logarithm (logarithm to base e) |
| log10() logarithm to base 10 |
| pow() value of x to the exponent y |
| sqrt() square root |
| sin() sine |
| cos() cosine |
| tan() tangent |
| asin() arc sine |
| acos() arc cosine |
| atan() arc tangent |
| atan2() arc tangent |
| sinh() hyperbolic sine |
| cosh() hyperbolic cosine |
| tanh() hyperbolic tangent |
| isinf() check for infinity |
| isnan() check for not a number |
| |
| Blob manipulation: *blob-functions* |
| blob2list() get a list of numbers from a blob |
| list2blob() get a blob from a list of numbers |
| |
| Other computation: *bitwise-function* |
| and() bitwise AND |
| invert() bitwise invert |
| or() bitwise OR |
| xor() bitwise XOR |
| sha256() SHA-256 hash |
| rand() get a pseudo-random number |
| srand() initialize seed used by rand() |
| |
| Variables: *var-functions* |
| type() type of a variable as a number |
| typename() type of a variable as text |
| islocked() check if a variable is locked |
| funcref() get a Funcref for a function reference |
| function() get a Funcref for a function name |
| getbufvar() get a variable value from a specific buffer |
| setbufvar() set a variable in a specific buffer |
| getwinvar() get a variable from specific window |
| gettabvar() get a variable from specific tab page |
| gettabwinvar() get a variable from specific window & tab page |
| setwinvar() set a variable in a specific window |
| settabvar() set a variable in a specific tab page |
| settabwinvar() set a variable in a specific window & tab page |
| garbagecollect() possibly free memory |
| |
| Cursor and mark position: *cursor-functions* *mark-functions* |
| col() column number of the cursor or a mark |
| virtcol() screen column of the cursor or a mark |
| line() line number of the cursor or mark |
| wincol() window column number of the cursor |
| winline() window line number of the cursor |
| cursor() position the cursor at a line/column |
| screencol() get screen column of the cursor |
| screenrow() get screen row of the cursor |
| screenpos() screen row and col of a text character |
| getcurpos() get position of the cursor |
| getpos() get position of cursor, mark, etc. |
| setpos() set position of cursor, mark, etc. |
| getmarklist() list of global/local marks |
| byte2line() get line number at a specific byte count |
| line2byte() byte count at a specific line |
| diff_filler() get the number of filler lines above a line |
| screenattr() get attribute at a screen line/row |
| screenchar() get character code at a screen line/row |
| screenchars() get character codes at a screen line/row |
| screenstring() get string of characters at a screen line/row |
| charcol() character number of the cursor or a mark |
| getcharpos() get character position of cursor, mark, etc. |
| setcharpos() set character position of cursor, mark, etc. |
| getcursorcharpos() get character position of the cursor |
| setcursorcharpos() set character position of the cursor |
| |
| Working with text in the current buffer: *text-functions* |
| getline() get a line or list of lines from the buffer |
| setline() replace a line in the buffer |
| append() append line or list of lines in the buffer |
| indent() indent of a specific line |
| cindent() indent according to C indenting |
| lispindent() indent according to Lisp indenting |
| nextnonblank() find next non-blank line |
| prevnonblank() find previous non-blank line |
| search() find a match for a pattern |
| searchpos() find a match for a pattern |
| searchcount() get number of matches before/after the cursor |
| searchpair() find the other end of a start/skip/end |
| searchpairpos() find the other end of a start/skip/end |
| searchdecl() search for the declaration of a name |
| getcharsearch() return character search information |
| setcharsearch() set character search information |
| |
| Working with text in another buffer: |
| getbufline() get a list of lines from the specified buffer |
| setbufline() replace a line in the specified buffer |
| appendbufline() append a list of lines in the specified buffer |
| deletebufline() delete lines from a specified buffer |
| |
| *system-functions* *file-functions* |
| System functions and manipulation of files: |
| glob() expand wildcards |
| globpath() expand wildcards in a number of directories |
| glob2regpat() convert a glob pattern into a search pattern |
| findfile() find a file in a list of directories |
| finddir() find a directory in a list of directories |
| resolve() find out where a shortcut points to |
| fnamemodify() modify a file name |
| pathshorten() shorten directory names in a path |
| simplify() simplify a path without changing its meaning |
| executable() check if an executable program exists |
| exepath() full path of an executable program |
| filereadable() check if a file can be read |
| filewritable() check if a file can be written to |
| getfperm() get the permissions of a file |
| setfperm() set the permissions of a file |
| getftype() get the kind of a file |
| isdirectory() check if a directory exists |
| getfsize() get the size of a file |
| getcwd() get the current working directory |
| haslocaldir() check if current window used |:lcd| or |:tcd| |
| tempname() get the name of a temporary file |
| mkdir() create a new directory |
| chdir() change current working directory |
| delete() delete a file |
| rename() rename a file |
| system() get the result of a shell command as a string |
| systemlist() get the result of a shell command as a list |
| environ() get all environment variables |
| getenv() get one environment variable |
| setenv() set an environment variable |
| hostname() name of the system |
| readfile() read a file into a List of lines |
| readblob() read a file into a Blob |
| readdir() get a List of file names in a directory |
| readdirex() get a List of file information in a directory |
| writefile() write a List of lines or Blob into a file |
| |
| Date and Time: *date-functions* *time-functions* |
| getftime() get last modification time of a file |
| localtime() get current time in seconds |
| strftime() convert time to a string |
| strptime() convert a date/time string to time |
| reltime() get the current or elapsed time accurately |
| reltimestr() convert reltime() result to a string |
| reltimefloat() convert reltime() result to a Float |
| |
| *buffer-functions* *window-functions* *arg-functions* |
| Buffers, windows and the argument list: |
| argc() number of entries in the argument list |
| argidx() current position in the argument list |
| arglistid() get id of the argument list |
| argv() get one entry from the argument list |
| bufadd() add a file to the list of buffers |
| bufexists() check if a buffer exists |
| buflisted() check if a buffer exists and is listed |
| bufload() ensure a buffer is loaded |
| bufloaded() check if a buffer exists and is loaded |
| bufname() get the name of a specific buffer |
| bufnr() get the buffer number of a specific buffer |
| tabpagebuflist() return List of buffers in a tab page |
| tabpagenr() get the number of a tab page |
| tabpagewinnr() like winnr() for a specified tab page |
| winnr() get the window number for the current window |
| bufwinid() get the window ID of a specific buffer |
| bufwinnr() get the window number of a specific buffer |
| winbufnr() get the buffer number of a specific window |
| listener_add() add a callback to listen to changes |
| listener_flush() invoke listener callbacks |
| listener_remove() remove a listener callback |
| win_findbuf() find windows containing a buffer |
| win_getid() get window ID of a window |
| win_gettype() get type of window |
| win_gotoid() go to window with ID |
| win_id2tabwin() get tab and window nr from window ID |
| win_id2win() get window nr from window ID |
| win_move_separator() move window vertical separator |
| win_move_statusline() move window status line |
| win_splitmove() move window to a split of another window |
| getbufinfo() get a list with buffer information |
| gettabinfo() get a list with tab page information |
| getwininfo() get a list with window information |
| getchangelist() get a list of change list entries |
| getjumplist() get a list of jump list entries |
| swapinfo() information about a swap file |
| swapname() get the swap file path of a buffer |
| |
| Command line: *command-line-functions* |
| getcmdline() get the current command line |
| getcmdpos() get position of the cursor in the command line |
| setcmdpos() set position of the cursor in the command line |
| getcmdtype() return the current command-line type |
| getcmdwintype() return the current command-line window type |
| getcompletion() list of command-line completion matches |
| fullcommand() get full command name |
| |
| Quickfix and location lists: *quickfix-functions* |
| getqflist() list of quickfix errors |
| setqflist() modify a quickfix list |
| getloclist() list of location list items |
| setloclist() modify a location list |
| |
| Insert mode completion: *completion-functions* |
| complete() set found matches |
| complete_add() add to found matches |
| complete_check() check if completion should be aborted |
| complete_info() get current completion information |
| pumvisible() check if the popup menu is displayed |
| pum_getpos() position and size of popup menu if visible |
| |
| Folding: *folding-functions* |
| foldclosed() check for a closed fold at a specific line |
| foldclosedend() like foldclosed() but return the last line |
| foldlevel() check for the fold level at a specific line |
| foldtext() generate the line displayed for a closed fold |
| foldtextresult() get the text displayed for a closed fold |
| |
| Syntax and highlighting: *syntax-functions* *highlighting-functions* |
| clearmatches() clear all matches defined by |matchadd()| and |
| the |:match| commands |
| getmatches() get all matches defined by |matchadd()| and |
| the |:match| commands |
| hlexists() check if a highlight group exists |
| hlget() get highlight group attributes |
| hlset() set highlight group attributes |
| hlID() get ID of a highlight group |
| synID() get syntax ID at a specific position |
| synIDattr() get a specific attribute of a syntax ID |
| synIDtrans() get translated syntax ID |
| synstack() get list of syntax IDs at a specific position |
| synconcealed() get info about concealing |
| diff_hlID() get highlight ID for diff mode at a position |
| matchadd() define a pattern to highlight (a "match") |
| matchaddpos() define a list of positions to highlight |
| matcharg() get info about |:match| arguments |
| matchdelete() delete a match defined by |matchadd()| or a |
| |:match| command |
| setmatches() restore a list of matches saved by |
| |getmatches()| |
| |
| Spelling: *spell-functions* |
| spellbadword() locate badly spelled word at or after cursor |
| spellsuggest() return suggested spelling corrections |
| soundfold() return the sound-a-like equivalent of a word |
| |
| History: *history-functions* |
| histadd() add an item to a history |
| histdel() delete an item from a history |
| histget() get an item from a history |
| histnr() get highest index of a history list |
| |
| Interactive: *interactive-functions* |
| browse() put up a file requester |
| browsedir() put up a directory requester |
| confirm() let the user make a choice |
| getchar() get a character from the user |
| getcharstr() get a character from the user as a string |
| getcharmod() get modifiers for the last typed character |
| getmousepos() get last known mouse position |
| echoraw() output characters as-is |
| feedkeys() put characters in the typeahead queue |
| input() get a line from the user |
| inputlist() let the user pick an entry from a list |
| inputsecret() get a line from the user without showing it |
| inputdialog() get a line from the user in a dialog |
| inputsave() save and clear typeahead |
| inputrestore() restore typeahead |
| |
| GUI: *gui-functions* |
| getfontname() get name of current font being used |
| getwinpos() position of the Vim window |
| getwinposx() X position of the Vim window |
| getwinposy() Y position of the Vim window |
| balloon_show() set the balloon content |
| balloon_split() split a message for a balloon |
| balloon_gettext() get the text in the balloon |
| |
| Vim server: *server-functions* |
| serverlist() return the list of server names |
| remote_startserver() run a server |
| remote_send() send command characters to a Vim server |
| remote_expr() evaluate an expression in a Vim server |
| server2client() send a reply to a client of a Vim server |
| remote_peek() check if there is a reply from a Vim server |
| remote_read() read a reply from a Vim server |
| foreground() move the Vim window to the foreground |
| remote_foreground() move the Vim server window to the foreground |
| |
| Window size and position: *window-size-functions* |
| winheight() get height of a specific window |
| winwidth() get width of a specific window |
| win_screenpos() get screen position of a window |
| winlayout() get layout of windows in a tab page |
| winrestcmd() return command to restore window sizes |
| winsaveview() get view of current window |
| winrestview() restore saved view of current window |
| |
| Mappings and Menus: *mapping-functions* |
| digraph_get() get |digraph| |
| digraph_getlist() get all |digraph|s |
| digraph_set() register |digraph| |
| digraph_setlist() register multiple |digraph|s |
| hasmapto() check if a mapping exists |
| mapcheck() check if a matching mapping exists |
| maparg() get rhs of a mapping |
| mapset() restore a mapping |
| menu_info() get information about a menu item |
| wildmenumode() check if the wildmode is active |
| |
| Testing: *test-functions* |
| assert_equal() assert that two expressions values are equal |
| assert_equalfile() assert that two file contents are equal |
| assert_notequal() assert that two expressions values are not equal |
| assert_inrange() assert that an expression is inside a range |
| assert_match() assert that a pattern matches the value |
| assert_notmatch() assert that a pattern does not match the value |
| assert_false() assert that an expression is false |
| assert_true() assert that an expression is true |
| assert_exception() assert that a command throws an exception |
| assert_beeps() assert that a command beeps |
| assert_nobeep() assert that a command does not cause a beep |
| assert_fails() assert that a command fails |
| assert_report() report a test failure |
| test_alloc_fail() make memory allocation fail |
| test_autochdir() enable 'autochdir' during startup |
| test_override() test with Vim internal overrides |
| test_garbagecollect_now() free memory right now |
| test_garbagecollect_soon() set a flag to free memory soon |
| test_getvalue() get value of an internal variable |
| test_gui_event() generate a GUI event for testing |
| test_ignore_error() ignore a specific error message |
| test_null_blob() return a null Blob |
| test_null_channel() return a null Channel |
| test_null_dict() return a null Dict |
| test_null_function() return a null Funcref |
| test_null_job() return a null Job |
| test_null_list() return a null List |
| test_null_partial() return a null Partial function |
| test_null_string() return a null String |
| test_settime() set the time Vim uses internally |
| test_setmouse() set the mouse position |
| test_feedinput() add key sequence to input buffer |
| test_option_not_set() reset flag indicating option was set |
| test_refcount() return an expression's reference count |
| test_srand_seed() set the seed value for srand() |
| test_unknown() return a value with unknown type |
| test_void() return a value with void type |
| |
| Inter-process communication: *channel-functions* |
| ch_canread() check if there is something to read |
| ch_open() open a channel |
| ch_close() close a channel |
| ch_close_in() close the in part of a channel |
| ch_read() read a message from a channel |
| ch_readblob() read a Blob from a channel |
| ch_readraw() read a raw message from a channel |
| ch_sendexpr() send a JSON message over a channel |
| ch_sendraw() send a raw message over a channel |
| ch_evalexpr() evaluate an expression over channel |
| ch_evalraw() evaluate a raw string over channel |
| ch_status() get status of a channel |
| ch_getbufnr() get the buffer number of a channel |
| ch_getjob() get the job associated with a channel |
| ch_info() get channel information |
| ch_log() write a message in the channel log file |
| ch_logfile() set the channel log file |
| ch_setoptions() set the options for a channel |
| json_encode() encode an expression to a JSON string |
| json_decode() decode a JSON string to Vim types |
| js_encode() encode an expression to a JSON string |
| js_decode() decode a JSON string to Vim types |
| |
| Jobs: *job-functions* |
| job_start() start a job |
| job_stop() stop a job |
| job_status() get the status of a job |
| job_getchannel() get the channel used by a job |
| job_info() get information about a job |
| job_setoptions() set options for a job |
| |
| Signs: *sign-functions* |
| sign_define() define or update a sign |
| sign_getdefined() get a list of defined signs |
| sign_getplaced() get a list of placed signs |
| sign_jump() jump to a sign |
| sign_place() place a sign |
| sign_placelist() place a list of signs |
| sign_undefine() undefine a sign |
| sign_unplace() unplace a sign |
| sign_unplacelist() unplace a list of signs |
| |
| Terminal window: *terminal-functions* |
| term_start() open a terminal window and run a job |
| term_list() get the list of terminal buffers |
| term_sendkeys() send keystrokes to a terminal |
| term_wait() wait for screen to be updated |
| term_getjob() get the job associated with a terminal |
| term_scrape() get row of a terminal screen |
| term_getline() get a line of text from a terminal |
| term_getattr() get the value of attribute {what} |
| term_getcursor() get the cursor position of a terminal |
| term_getscrolled() get the scroll count of a terminal |
| term_getaltscreen() get the alternate screen flag |
| term_getsize() get the size of a terminal |
| term_getstatus() get the status of a terminal |
| term_gettitle() get the title of a terminal |
| term_gettty() get the tty name of a terminal |
| term_setansicolors() set 16 ANSI colors, used for GUI |
| term_getansicolors() get 16 ANSI colors, used for GUI |
| term_dumpdiff() display difference between two screen dumps |
| term_dumpload() load a terminal screen dump in a window |
| term_dumpwrite() dump contents of a terminal screen to a file |
| term_setkill() set signal to stop job in a terminal |
| term_setrestore() set command to restore a terminal |
| term_setsize() set the size of a terminal |
| term_setapi() set terminal JSON API function name prefix |
| |
| Popup window: *popup-window-functions* |
| popup_create() create popup centered in the screen |
| popup_atcursor() create popup just above the cursor position, |
| closes when the cursor moves away |
| popup_beval() at the position indicated by v:beval_ |
| variables, closes when the mouse moves away |
| popup_notification() show a notification for three seconds |
| popup_dialog() create popup centered with padding and border |
| popup_menu() prompt for selecting an item from a list |
| popup_hide() hide a popup temporarily |
| popup_show() show a previously hidden popup |
| popup_move() change the position and size of a popup |
| popup_setoptions() override options of a popup |
| popup_settext() replace the popup buffer contents |
| popup_close() close one popup |
| popup_clear() close all popups |
| popup_filter_menu() select from a list of items |
| popup_filter_yesno() block until 'y' or 'n' is pressed |
| popup_getoptions() get current options for a popup |
| popup_getpos() get actual position and size of a popup |
| popup_findinfo() get window ID for popup info window |
| popup_findpreview() get window ID for popup preview window |
| popup_list() get list of all popup window IDs |
| popup_locate() get popup window ID from its screen position |
| |
| Timers: *timer-functions* |
| timer_start() create a timer |
| timer_pause() pause or unpause a timer |
| timer_stop() stop a timer |
| timer_stopall() stop all timers |
| timer_info() get information about timers |
| |
| Tags: *tag-functions* |
| taglist() get list of matching tags |
| tagfiles() get a list of tags files |
| gettagstack() get the tag stack of a window |
| settagstack() modify the tag stack of a window |
| |
| Prompt Buffer: *promptbuffer-functions* |
| prompt_getprompt() get the effective prompt text for a buffer |
| prompt_setcallback() set prompt callback for a buffer |
| prompt_setinterrupt() set interrupt callback for a buffer |
| prompt_setprompt() set the prompt text for a buffer |
| |
| Text Properties: *text-property-functions* |
| prop_add() attach a property at a position |
| prop_add_list() attach a property at multiple positions |
| prop_clear() remove all properties from a line or lines |
| prop_find() search for a property |
| prop_list() return a list of all properties in a line |
| prop_remove() remove a property from a line |
| prop_type_add() add/define a property type |
| prop_type_change() change properties of a type |
| prop_type_delete() remove a text property type |
| prop_type_get() return the properties of a type |
| prop_type_list() return a list of all property types |
| |
| Sound: *sound-functions* |
| sound_clear() stop playing all sounds |
| sound_playevent() play an event's sound |
| sound_playfile() play a sound file |
| sound_stop() stop playing a sound |
| |
| Various: *various-functions* |
| mode() get current editing mode |
| state() get current busy state |
| visualmode() last visual mode used |
| exists() check if a variable, function, etc. exists |
| exists_compiled() like exists() but check at compile time |
| has() check if a feature is supported in Vim |
| changenr() return number of most recent change |
| cscope_connection() check if a cscope connection exists |
| did_filetype() check if a FileType autocommand was used |
| eventhandler() check if invoked by an event handler |
| getpid() get process ID of Vim |
| getimstatus() check if IME status is active |
| interrupt() interrupt script execution |
| windowsversion() get MS-Windows version |
| terminalprops() properties of the terminal |
| |
| libcall() call a function in an external library |
| libcallnr() idem, returning a number |
| |
| undofile() get the name of the undo file |
| undotree() return the state of the undo tree |
| |
| getreg() get contents of a register |
| getreginfo() get information about a register |
| getregtype() get type of a register |
| setreg() set contents and type of a register |
| reg_executing() return the name of the register being executed |
| reg_recording() return the name of the register being recorded |
| |
| shiftwidth() effective value of 'shiftwidth' |
| |
| wordcount() get byte/word/char count of buffer |
| |
| luaeval() evaluate |Lua| expression |
| mzeval() evaluate |MzScheme| expression |
| perleval() evaluate Perl expression (|+perl|) |
| py3eval() evaluate Python expression (|+python3|) |
| pyeval() evaluate Python expression (|+python|) |
| pyxeval() evaluate |python_x| expression |
| rubyeval() evaluate |Ruby| expression |
| |
| debugbreak() interrupt a program being debugged |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| *41.7* Defining a function |
| |
| Vim enables you to define your own functions. The basic function declaration |
| begins as follows: > |
| |
| def {name}({var1}, {var2}, ...): return-type |
| {body} |
| enddef |
| < |
| Note: |
| Function names must begin with a capital letter. |
| |
| Let's define a short function to return the smaller of two numbers. It starts |
| with this line: > |
| |
| def Min(num1: number, num2: number): number |
| |
| This tells Vim that the function is named "Min", it takes two arguments that |
| are numbers: "num1" and "num2" and returns a number. |
| |
| The first thing you need to do is to check to see which number is smaller: |
| > |
| if num1 < num2 |
| |
| Let's assign the variable "smaller" the value of the smallest number: > |
| |
| var smaller: number |
| if num1 < num2 |
| smaller = num1 |
| else |
| smaller = num2 |
| endif |
| |
| The variable "smaller" is a local variable. Variables used inside a function |
| are local unless prefixed by something like "g:", "w:", or "s:". |
| |
| Note: |
| To access a global variable from inside a function you must prepend |
| "g:" to it. Thus "g:today" inside a function is used for the global |
| variable "today", and "today" is another variable, local to the |
| function or the script. |
| |
| You now use the `return` statement to return the smallest number to the user. |
| Finally, you end the function: > |
| |
| return smaller |
| enddef |
| |
| The complete function definition is as follows: > |
| |
| def Min(num1: number, num2: number): number |
| var smaller: number |
| if num1 < num2 |
| smaller = num1 |
| else |
| smaller = num2 |
| endif |
| return smaller |
| enddef |
| |
| Obviously this is a verbose example. You can make it shorter by using two |
| return commands: > |
| |
| def Min(num1: number, num2: number): number |
| if num1 < num2 |
| return num1 |
| endif |
| return num2 |
| enddef |
| |
| And if you remember the conditional expression, you need only one line: > |
| |
| def Min(num1: number, num2: number): number |
| return num1 < num2 ? num1 : num2 |
| enddef |
| |
| A user defined function is called in exactly the same way as a built-in |
| function. Only the name is different. The Min function can be used like |
| this: > |
| |
| echo Min(5, 8) |
| |
| Only now will the function be executed and the lines be parsed by Vim. |
| If there are mistakes, like using an undefined variable or function, you will |
| now get an error message. When defining the function these errors are not |
| detected. To get the errors sooner you can tell Vim to compile all the |
| functions in the script: > |
| |
| defcompile |
| |
| For a function that does not return anything leave out the return type: > |
| |
| def SayIt(text: string) |
| echo text |
| enddef |
| |
| It is also possible to define a legacy function with `function` and |
| `endfunction`. These do not have types and are not compiled. They execute |
| much slower. |
| |
| |
| USING A RANGE |
| |
| A line range can be used with a function call. The function will be called |
| once for every line in the range, with the cursor in that line. Example: > |
| |
| def Number() |
| echo "line " .. line(".") .. " contains: " .. getline(".") |
| enddef |
| |
| If you call this function with: > |
| |
| :10,15call Number() |
| |
| The function will be called six times, starting on line 10 and ending on line |
| 15. |
| |
| |
| VARIABLE NUMBER OF ARGUMENTS |
| |
| Vim enables you to define functions that have a variable number of arguments. |
| The following command, for instance, defines a function that must have 1 |
| argument (start) and can have up to 20 additional arguments: > |
| |
| def Show(start: string, ...items: list<string>) |
| |
| The variable "items" will be a list containing the extra arguments. You can |
| use it like any list, for example: > |
| |
| def Show(start: string, ...items: list<string>) |
| echohl Title |
| echo "start is " .. start |
| echohl None |
| for index in range(len(items)) |
| echon " Arg " .. index .. " is " .. items[index] |
| endfor |
| echo |
| enddef |
| |
| You can call it like this: > |
| |
| Show('Title', 'one', 'two', 'three') |
| < start is Title Arg 0 is one Arg 1 is two Arg 2 is three ~ |
| |
| This uses the `echohl` command to specify the highlighting used for the |
| following `echo` command. `echohl None` stops it again. The `echon` command |
| works like `echo`, but doesn't output a line break. |
| |
| If you call it with one argument the "items" list will be empty. |
| `range(len(items))` returns a list with the indexes, what `for` loops over, |
| we'll explain that further down. |
| |
| |
| LISTING FUNCTIONS |
| |
| The `function` command lists the names and arguments of all user-defined |
| functions: > |
| |
| :function |
| < def <SNR>86_Show(start: string, ...items: list<string>) ~ |
| function GetVimIndent() ~ |
| function SetSyn(name) ~ |
| |
| The "<SNR>" prefix means that a function is script-local. |Vim9| functions |
| wil start with "def" and include argument and return types. Legacy functions |
| are listed with "function". |
| |
| To see what a function does, use its name as an argument for `function`: > |
| |
| :function SetSyn |
| < 1 if &syntax == '' ~ |
| 2 let &syntax = a:name ~ |
| 3 endif ~ |
| endfunction ~ |
| |
| To see the "Show" function you need to include the script prefix, since a |
| "Show" function can be defined multiple times in different scripts. To find |
| the exact name you can use `function`, but the result may be a very long list. |
| To only get the functions matching a pattern you can use the `filter` prefix: |
| > |
| |
| :filter Show function |
| < def <SNR>86_Show(start: string, ...items: list<string>) ~ |
| > |
| :function <SNR>86_Show |
| < 1 echohl Title ~ |
| 2 echo "start is " .. start ~ |
| etc. |
| |
| |
| DEBUGGING |
| |
| The line number is useful for when you get an error message or when debugging. |
| See |debug-scripts| about debugging mode. |
| |
| You can also set the 'verbose' option to 12 or higher to see all function |
| calls. Set it to 15 or higher to see every executed line. |
| |
| |
| DELETING A FUNCTION |
| |
| To delete the SetSyn() function: > |
| |
| :delfunction SetSyn |
| |
| Deleting only works for global functions and functions in legacy script, not |
| for functions defined in a |Vim9| script. |
| |
| You get an error when the function doesn't exist or cannot be deleted. |
| |
| |
| FUNCTION REFERENCES |
| |
| Sometimes it can be useful to have a variable point to one function or |
| another. You can do it with function reference variable. Often shortened to |
| "funcref". Example: > |
| |
| def Right() |
| return 'Right!' |
| enddef |
| def Wrong() |
| return 'Wrong!' |
| enddef |
| |
| var Afunc = g:result == 1 ? Right : Wrong |
| Afunc() |
| < Wrong! ~ |
| |
| This assumes "g:result" is not one. |
| |
| Note that the name of a variable that holds a function reference must start |
| with a capital. Otherwise it could be confused with the name of a builtin |
| function. |
| |
| More information about defining your own functions here: |user-functions|. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| *41.8* Lists and Dictionaries |
| |
| So far we have used the basic types String and Number. Vim also supports two |
| composite types: List and Dictionary. |
| |
| A List is an ordered sequence of items. The items can be any kind of value, |
| thus you can make a List of numbers, a List of Lists and even a List of mixed |
| items. To create a List with three strings: > |
| |
| var alist = ['aap', 'mies', 'noot'] |
| |
| The List items are enclosed in square brackets and separated by commas. To |
| create an empty List: > |
| |
| var alist = [] |
| |
| You can add items to a List with the add() function: > |
| |
| var alist = [] |
| add(alist, 'foo') |
| add(alist, 'bar') |
| echo alist |
| < ['foo', 'bar'] ~ |
| |
| List concatenation is done with +: > |
| |
| var alist = ['foo', 'bar'] |
| alist = alist + ['and', 'more'] |
| echo alist |
| < ['foo', 'bar', 'and', 'more'] ~ |
| |
| Or, if you want to extend a List with a function: > |
| |
| var alist = ['one'] |
| extend(alist, ['two', 'three']) |
| echo alist |
| < ['one', 'two', 'three'] ~ |
| |
| Notice that using `add()` will have a different effect: > |
| |
| var alist = ['one'] |
| add(alist, ['two', 'three']) |
| echo alist |
| < ['one', ['two', 'three']] ~ |
| |
| The second argument of add() is added as an item, now you have a nested list. |
| |
| |
| FOR LOOP |
| |
| One of the nice things you can do with a List is iterate over it: > |
| |
| var alist = ['one', 'two', 'three'] |
| for n in alist |
| echo n |
| endfor |
| < one ~ |
| two ~ |
| three ~ |
| |
| This will loop over each element in List "alist", assigning each value to |
| variable "n". The generic form of a for loop is: > |
| |
| for {varname} in {listexpression} |
| {commands} |
| endfor |
| |
| To loop a certain number of times you need a List of a specific length. The |
| range() function creates one for you: > |
| |
| for a in range(3) |
| echo a |
| endfor |
| < 0 ~ |
| 1 ~ |
| 2 ~ |
| |
| Notice that the first item of the List that range() produces is zero, thus the |
| last item is one less than the length of the list. |
| |
| You can also specify the maximum value, the stride and even go backwards: > |
| |
| for a in range(8, 4, -2) |
| echo a |
| endfor |
| < 8 ~ |
| 6 ~ |
| 4 ~ |
| |
| A more useful example, looping over lines in the buffer: > |
| |
| for line in getline(1, 20) |
| if line =~ "Date: " |
| echo line |
| endif |
| endfor |
| |
| This looks into lines 1 to 20 (inclusive) and echoes any date found in there. |
| |
| |
| DICTIONARIES |
| |
| A Dictionary stores key-value pairs. You can quickly lookup a value if you |
| know the key. A Dictionary is created with curly braces: > |
| |
| var uk2nl = {one: 'een', two: 'twee', three: 'drie'} |
| |
| Now you can lookup words by putting the key in square brackets: > |
| |
| echo uk2nl['two'] |
| < twee ~ |
| |
| If the key does not have special characters, you can use the dot notation: > |
| |
| echo uk2nl.two |
| < twee ~ |
| |
| The generic form for defining a Dictionary is: > |
| |
| {<key> : <value>, ...} |
| |
| An empty Dictionary is one without any keys: > |
| |
| {} |
| |
| The possibilities with Dictionaries are numerous. There are various functions |
| for them as well. For example, you can obtain a list of the keys and loop |
| over them: > |
| |
| for key in keys(uk2nl) |
| echo key |
| endfor |
| < three ~ |
| one ~ |
| two ~ |
| |
| You will notice the keys are not ordered. You can sort the list to get a |
| specific order: > |
| |
| for key in sort(keys(uk2nl)) |
| echo key |
| endfor |
| < one ~ |
| three ~ |
| two ~ |
| |
| But you can never get back the order in which items are defined. For that you |
| need to use a List, it stores items in an ordered sequence. |
| |
| |
| For further reading see |Lists| and |Dictionaries|. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| *41.9* Exceptions |
| |
| Let's start with an example: > |
| |
| try |
| read ~/templates/pascal.tmpl |
| catch /E484:/ |
| echo "Sorry, the Pascal template file cannot be found." |
| endtry |
| |
| The `read` command will fail if the file does not exist. Instead of |
| generating an error message, this code catches the error and gives the user a |
| nice message. |
| |
| For the commands in between `try` and `endtry` errors are turned into |
| exceptions. An exception is a string. In the case of an error the string |
| contains the error message. And every error message has a number. In this |
| case, the error we catch contains "E484:". This number is guaranteed to stay |
| the same (the text may change, e.g., it may be translated). |
| |
| Besides being able to give a nice error message, Vim will also continue |
| executing commands. Otherwise, once an uncaught error is encountered, |
| execution will be aborted. |
| |
| When the `read` command causes another error, the pattern "E484:" will not |
| match in it. Thus this exception will not be caught and result in the usual |
| error message. |
| |
| You might be tempted to do this: > |
| |
| try |
| read ~/templates/pascal.tmpl |
| catch |
| echo "Sorry, the Pascal template file cannot be found." |
| endtry |
| |
| This means all errors are caught. But then you will not see an error that |
| would indicate a completely different problem, such as "E21: Cannot make |
| changes, 'modifiable' is off". |
| |
| Another useful mechanism is the `finally` command: > |
| |
| var tmp = tempname() |
| try |
| exe ":.,$write " .. tmp |
| exe "!filter " .. tmp |
| :.,$delete |
| exe ":$read " .. tmp |
| finally |
| call delete(tmp) |
| endtry |
| |
| This filters the lines from the cursor until the end of the file through the |
| "filter" command, which takes a file name argument. No matter if the |
| filtering works, something goes wrong in between `try` and `finally` or the |
| user cancels the filtering by pressing CTRL-C, the `call delete(tmp)` is |
| always executed. This makes sure you don't leave the temporary file behind. |
| |
| More information about exception handling can be found in the reference |
| manual: |exception-handling|. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| *41.10* Various remarks |
| |
| Here is a summary of items that are useful to know when writing Vim scripts. |
| |
| The end-of-line character depends on the system. For Vim scripts it is |
| recommended to always use the Unix fileformat, this also works on any other |
| system. That way you can copy your Vim scripts from MS-Windows to Unix and |
| they still work. See |:source_crnl|. To be sure it is set right, do this |
| before writing the file: > |
| |
| :setlocal fileformat=unix |
| |
| |
| WHITE SPACE |
| |
| Blank lines are allowed and ignored. |
| |
| Leading whitespace characters (blanks and TABs) are always ignored. |
| |
| Trailing whitespace is often ignored, but not always. One command that |
| includes it is `map`. |
| |
| To include a whitespace character in the value of an option, it must be |
| escaped by a "\" (backslash) as in the following example: > |
| |
| :set tags=my\ nice\ file |
| |
| The same example written as: > |
| |
| :set tags=my nice file |
| |
| will issue an error, because it is interpreted as: > |
| |
| :set tags=my |
| :set nice |
| :set file |
| |
| |Vim9| script is very picky when it comes to white space. This was done |
| intentionally to make sure scripts are easy to read and to avoid mistakes. |
| |
| |
| COMMENTS |
| |
| In |Vim9| script the character # starts a comment. Everything after |
| and including this character until the end-of-line is considered a comment and |
| is ignored, except for commands that don't consider comments, as shown in |
| examples below. A comment can start on any character position on the line, |
| but not when it is part of the command, e.g. in a string. |
| |
| The character " (the double quote mark) starts a comment in legacy script. |
| |
| There is a little "catch" with comments for some commands. Examples: > |
| |
| abbrev dev development # shorthand |
| map <F3> o#include # insert include |
| execute cmd # do it |
| !ls *.c # list C files |
| |
| The abbreviation 'dev' will be expanded to 'development # shorthand'. The |
| mapping of <F3> will actually be the whole line after the 'o# ....' including |
| the '# insert include'. The `execute` command will give an error. The `!` |
| command will send everything after it to the shell, most likely causing an |
| error. |
| |
| There can be no comment after `map`, `abbreviate`, `execute` and `!` commands |
| (there are a few more commands with this restriction). For the `map`, |
| `abbreviate` and `execute` commands there is a trick: > |
| |
| abbrev dev development|# shorthand |
| map <F3> o#include|# insert include |
| execute '!ls *.c' |# do it |
| |
| With the '|' character the command is separated from the next one. And that |
| next command is only a comment. The last command, using `execute` is a |
| general solution, it works for all commands that do not accept a comment or a |
| '|' to separate the next command. |
| |
| Notice that there is no white space before the '|' in the abbreviation and |
| mapping. For these commands, any character until the end-of-line or '|' is |
| included. As a consequence of this behavior, you don't always see that |
| trailing whitespace is included: > |
| |
| map <F4> o#include |
| |
| To spot these problems, you can highlight trailing spaces: > |
| match Search /\s\+$/ |
| |
| For Unix there is one special way to comment a line, that allows making a Vim |
| script executable, and it also works in legacy script: > |
| #!/usr/bin/env vim -S |
| echo "this is a Vim script" |
| quit |
| |
| |
| PITFALLS |
| |
| An even bigger problem arises in the following example: > |
| |
| map ,ab o#include |
| unmap ,ab |
| |
| Here the unmap command will not work, because it tries to unmap ",ab ". This |
| does not exist as a mapped sequence. An error will be issued, which is very |
| hard to identify, because the ending whitespace character in `unmap ,ab ` is |
| not visible. |
| |
| And this is the same as what happens when one uses a comment after an 'unmap' |
| command: > |
| |
| unmap ,ab # comment |
| |
| Here the comment part will be ignored. However, Vim will try to unmap |
| ',ab ', which does not exist. Rewrite it as: > |
| |
| unmap ,ab| # comment |
| |
| |
| RESTORING THE VIEW |
| |
| Sometimes you want to make a change and go back to where the cursor was. |
| Restoring the relative position would also be nice, so that the same line |
| appears at the top of the window. |
| |
| This example yanks the current line, puts it above the first line in the file |
| and then restores the view: > |
| |
| map ,p ma"aYHmbgg"aP`bzt`a |
| |
| What this does: > |
| ma"aYHmbgg"aP`bzt`a |
| < ma set mark a at cursor position |
| "aY yank current line into register a |
| Hmb go to top line in window and set mark b there |
| gg go to first line in file |
| "aP put the yanked line above it |
| `b go back to top line in display |
| zt position the text in the window as before |
| `a go back to saved cursor position |
| |
| |
| PACKAGING |
| |
| Sometimes you will want to use global variables or functions, so that they can |
| be used anywhere. A good example is a global variable that passes a |
| preference to a plugin. To avoid other scripts using the same name, use a |
| prefix that is very unlikely to be used elsewhere. For example, if you have a |
| "mytags" plugin, you could use: > |
| |
| g:mytags_location = '$HOME/project' |
| g:mytags_style = 'fast' |
| |
| To minimize interference between plugins keep as much as possible local to the |
| script. |Vim9| script helps you with that, by default functions and variables |
| are script-local. |
| |
| If you split your plugin into parts, you can use `import` and `export` to |
| share items between those parts. See `:export` for the details. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| *41.11* Writing a plugin *write-plugin* |
| |
| You can write a Vim script in such a way that many people can use it. This is |
| called a plugin. Vim users can drop your script in their plugin directory and |
| use its features right away |add-plugin|. |
| |
| There are actually two types of plugins: |
| |
| global plugins: For all types of files. |
| filetype plugins: Only for files of a specific type. |
| |
| In this section the first type is explained. Most items are also relevant for |
| writing filetype plugins. The specifics for filetype plugins are in the next |
| section |write-filetype-plugin|. |
| |
| |
| NAME |
| |
| First of all you must choose a name for your plugin. The features provided |
| by the plugin should be clear from its name. And it should be unlikely that |
| someone else writes a plugin with the same name but which does something |
| different. |
| |
| A script that corrects typing mistakes could be called "typecorrect.vim". We |
| will use it here as an example. |
| |
| For the plugin to work for everybody, it should follow a few guidelines. This |
| will be explained step-by-step. The complete example plugin is at the end. |
| |
| |
| BODY |
| |
| Let's start with the body of the plugin, the lines that do the actual work: > |
| |
| 14 iabbrev teh the |
| 15 iabbrev otehr other |
| 16 iabbrev wnat want |
| 17 iabbrev synchronisation |
| 18 \ synchronization |
| |
| The actual list should be much longer, of course. |
| |
| The line numbers have only been added to explain a few things, don't put them |
| in your plugin file! |
| |
| |
| FIRST LINE |
| > |
| 1 vim9script noclear |
| |
| You need to use `vimscript` as the very first command. Best is to put it in |
| the very first line. |
| |
| The script we are writing will have a `finish` command to bail out when it is |
| loaded a second time. To avoid the items defined in the script are lost the |
| "noclear" argument is used. More info about this at |vim9-reload|. |
| |
| |
| HEADER |
| |
| You will probably add new corrections to the plugin and soon have several |
| versions lying around. And when distributing this file, people will want to |
| know who wrote this wonderful plugin and where they can send remarks. |
| Therefore, put a header at the top of your plugin: > |
| |
| 2 # Vim global plugin for correcting typing mistakes |
| 3 # Last Change: 2021 Dec 30 |
| 4 # Maintainer: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org> |
| |
| About copyright and licensing: Since plugins are very useful and it's hardly |
| worth restricting their distribution, please consider making your plugin |
| either public domain or use the Vim |license|. A short note about this near |
| the top of the plugin should be sufficient. Example: > |
| |
| 5 # License: This file is placed in the public domain. |
| |
| |
| LINE CONTINUATION AND AVOIDING SIDE EFFECTS *use-cpo-save* |
| |
| In line 18 above, the line-continuation mechanism is used |line-continuation|. |
| Users with 'compatible' set will run into trouble here, they will get an error |
| message. We can't just reset 'compatible', because that has a lot of side |
| effects. Instead, we will set the 'cpoptions' option to its Vim default |
| value and restore it later. That will allow the use of line-continuation and |
| make the script work for most people. It is done like this: > |
| |
| 11 var save_cpo = &cpo |
| 12 set cpo&vim |
| .. |
| 42 &cpo = save_cpo |
| |
| We first store the old value of 'cpoptions' in the "save_cpo" variable. At |
| the end of the plugin this value is restored. |
| |
| Notice that "save_cpo" is a script-local variable. A global variable could |
| already be in use for something else. Always use script-local variables for |
| things that are only used in the script. |
| |
| |
| NOT LOADING |
| |
| It is possible that a user doesn't always want to load this plugin. Or the |
| system administrator has dropped it in the system-wide plugin directory, but a |
| user has his own plugin he wants to use. Then the user must have a chance to |
| disable loading this specific plugin. These lines will make it possible: > |
| |
| 7 if exists("g:loaded_typecorrect") |
| 8 finish |
| 9 endif |
| 10 g:loaded_typecorrect = 1 |
| |
| This also avoids that when the script is loaded twice it would pointlessly |
| redefine functions and cause trouble for autocommands that are added twice. |
| |
| The name is recommended to start with "g:loaded_" and then the file name of |
| the plugin, literally. The "g:" is prepended to make the variable global, so |
| that other places can check whether its functionality is available. Without |
| "g:" it would be local to the script. |
| |
| Using `finish` stops Vim from reading the rest of the file, it's much quicker |
| than using if-endif around the whole file, since Vim would still need to parse |
| the commands to find the `endif`. |
| |
| |
| MAPPING |
| |
| Now let's make the plugin more interesting: We will add a mapping that adds a |
| correction for the word under the cursor. We could just pick a key sequence |
| for this mapping, but the user might already use it for something else. To |
| allow the user to define which keys a mapping in a plugin uses, the <Leader> |
| item can be used: > |
| |
| 22 map <unique> <Leader>a <Plug>TypecorrAdd; |
| |
| The "<Plug>TypecorrAdd;" thing will do the work, more about that further on. |
| |
| The user can set the "g:mapleader" variable to the key sequence that he wants |
| plugin mappings to start with. Thus if the user has done: > |
| |
| g:mapleader = "_" |
| |
| the mapping will define "_a". If the user didn't do this, the default value |
| will be used, which is a backslash. Then a map for "\a" will be defined. |
| |
| Note that <unique> is used, this will cause an error message if the mapping |
| already happened to exist. |:map-<unique>| |
| |
| But what if the user wants to define his own key sequence? We can allow that |
| with this mechanism: > |
| |
| 21 if !hasmapto('<Plug>TypecorrAdd;') |
| 22 map <unique> <Leader>a <Plug>TypecorrAdd; |
| 23 endif |
| |
| This checks if a mapping to "<Plug>TypecorrAdd;" already exists, and only |
| defines the mapping from "<Leader>a" if it doesn't. The user then has a |
| chance of putting this in his vimrc file: > |
| |
| map ,c <Plug>TypecorrAdd; |
| |
| Then the mapped key sequence will be ",c" instead of "_a" or "\a". |
| |
| |
| PIECES |
| |
| If a script gets longer, you often want to break up the work in pieces. You |
| can use functions or mappings for this. But you don't want these functions |
| and mappings to interfere with the ones from other scripts. For example, you |
| could define a function Add(), but another script could try to define the same |
| function. To avoid this, we define the function local to the script. |
| Fortunately, in |Vim9| script this is the default. In a legacy script you |
| would need to prefix the name with "s:". |
| |
| We will define a function that adds a new typing correction: > |
| |
| 30 def Add(from: string, correct: bool) |
| 31 var to = input("type the correction for " .. from .. ": ") |
| 32 exe ":iabbrev " .. from .. " " .. to |
| .. |
| 36 enddef |
| |
| Now we can call the function Add() from within this script. If another |
| script also defines Add(), it will be local to that script and can only |
| be called from that script. There can also be a global g:Add() function, |
| which is again another function. |
| |
| <SID> can be used with mappings. It generates a script ID, which identifies |
| the current script. In our typing correction plugin we use it like this: > |
| |
| 24 noremap <unique> <script> <Plug>TypecorrAdd; <SID>Add |
| .. |
| 28 noremap <SID>Add :call <SID>Add(expand("<cword>"), true)<CR> |
| |
| Thus when a user types "\a", this sequence is invoked: > |
| |
| \a -> <Plug>TypecorrAdd; -> <SID>Add -> :call <SID>Add(...) |
| |
| If another script also maps <SID>Add, it will get another script ID and |
| thus define another mapping. |
| |
| Note that instead of Add() we use <SID>Add() here. That is because the |
| mapping is typed by the user, thus outside of the script context. The <SID> |
| is translated to the script ID, so that Vim knows in which script to look for |
| the Add() function. |
| |
| This is a bit complicated, but it's required for the plugin to work together |
| with other plugins. The basic rule is that you use <SID>Add() in mappings and |
| Add() in other places (the script itself, autocommands, user commands). |
| |
| We can also add a menu entry to do the same as the mapping: > |
| |
| 26 noremenu <script> Plugin.Add\ Correction <SID>Add |
| |
| The "Plugin" menu is recommended for adding menu items for plugins. In this |
| case only one item is used. When adding more items, creating a submenu is |
| recommended. For example, "Plugin.CVS" could be used for a plugin that offers |
| CVS operations "Plugin.CVS.checkin", "Plugin.CVS.checkout", etc. |
| |
| Note that in line 28 ":noremap" is used to avoid that any other mappings cause |
| trouble. Someone may have remapped ":call", for example. In line 24 we also |
| use ":noremap", but we do want "<SID>Add" to be remapped. This is why |
| "<script>" is used here. This only allows mappings which are local to the |
| script. |:map-<script>| The same is done in line 26 for ":noremenu". |
| |:menu-<script>| |
| |
| |
| <SID> AND <Plug> *using-<Plug>* |
| |
| Both <SID> and <Plug> are used to avoid that mappings of typed keys interfere |
| with mappings that are only to be used from other mappings. Note the |
| difference between using <SID> and <Plug>: |
| |
| <Plug> is visible outside of the script. It is used for mappings which the |
| user might want to map a key sequence to. <Plug> is a special code |
| that a typed key will never produce. |
| To make it very unlikely that other plugins use the same sequence of |
| characters, use this structure: <Plug> scriptname mapname |
| In our example the scriptname is "Typecorr" and the mapname is "Add". |
| We add a semicolon as the terminator. This results in |
| "<Plug>TypecorrAdd;". Only the first character of scriptname and |
| mapname is uppercase, so that we can see where mapname starts. |
| |
| <SID> is the script ID, a unique identifier for a script. |
| Internally Vim translates <SID> to "<SNR>123_", where "123" can be any |
| number. Thus a function "<SID>Add()" will have a name "<SNR>11_Add()" |
| in one script, and "<SNR>22_Add()" in another. You can see this if |
| you use the ":function" command to get a list of functions. The |
| translation of <SID> in mappings is exactly the same, that's how you |
| can call a script-local function from a mapping. |
| |
| |
| USER COMMAND |
| |
| Now let's add a user command to add a correction: > |
| |
| 38 if !exists(":Correct") |
| 39 command -nargs=1 Correct :call Add(<q-args>, false) |
| 40 endif |
| |
| The user command is defined only if no command with the same name already |
| exists. Otherwise we would get an error here. Overriding the existing user |
| command with ":command!" is not a good idea, this would probably make the user |
| wonder why the command he defined himself doesn't work. |:command| |
| If it did happen you can find out who to blame with: > |
| |
| verbose command Correct |
| |
| |
| SCRIPT VARIABLES |
| |
| When a variable starts with "s:" it is a script variable. It can only be used |
| inside a script. Outside the script it's not visible. This avoids trouble |
| with using the same variable name in different scripts. The variables will be |
| kept as long as Vim is running. And the same variables are used when sourcing |
| the same script again. |s:var| |
| |
| The nice thing about |Vim9| script is that variables are local to the script |
| by default. You can prepend "s:" if you like, but you do not need to. And |
| functions in the script can also use the script variables without a prefix. |
| |
| Script-local variables can also be used in functions, autocommands and user |
| commands that are defined in the script. Thus they are the perfect way to |
| share information between parts of your plugin, without it leaking out. In |
| our example we can add a few lines to count the number of corrections: > |
| |
| 19 var count = 4 |
| .. |
| 30 def Add(from: string, correct: bool) |
| .. |
| 34 count += 1 |
| 35 echo "you now have " .. count .. " corrections" |
| 36 enddef |
| |
| "count" is declared and initialized to 4 in the script itself. When later |
| the Add() function is called, it increments "count". It doesn't matter from |
| where the function was called, since it has been defined in the script, it |
| will use the local variables from this script. |
| |
| |
| THE RESULT |
| |
| Here is the resulting complete example: > |
| |
| 1 vim9script noclear |
| 2 # Vim global plugin for correcting typing mistakes |
| 3 # Last Change: 2021 Dec 30 |
| 4 # Maintainer: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org> |
| 5 # License: This file is placed in the public domain. |
| 6 |
| 7 if exists("g:loaded_typecorrect") |
| 8 finish |
| 9 endif |
| 10 g:loaded_typecorrect = 1 |
| 11 var save_cpo = &cpo |
| 12 set cpo&vim |
| 13 |
| 14 iabbrev teh the |
| 15 iabbrev otehr other |
| 16 iabbrev wnat want |
| 17 iabbrev synchronisation |
| 18 \ synchronization |
| 19 var count = 4 |
| 20 |
| 21 if !hasmapto('<Plug>TypecorrAdd;') |
| 22 map <unique> <Leader>a <Plug>TypecorrAdd; |
| 23 endif |
| 24 noremap <unique> <script> <Plug>TypecorrAdd; <SID>Add |
| 25 |
| 26 noremenu <script> Plugin.Add\ Correction <SID>Add |
| 27 |
| 28 noremap <SID>Add :call <SID>Add(expand("<cword>"), true)<CR> |
| 29 |
| 30 def Add(from: string, correct: bool) |
| 31 var to = input("type the correction for " .. from .. ": ") |
| 32 exe ":iabbrev " .. from .. " " .. to |
| 33 if correct | exe "normal viws\<C-R>\" \b\e" | endif |
| 34 count += 1 |
| 35 echo "you now have " .. count .. " corrections" |
| 36 enddef |
| 37 |
| 38 if !exists(":Correct") |
| 39 command -nargs=1 Correct call Add(<q-args>, false) |
| 40 endif |
| 41 |
| 42 &cpo = save_cpo |
| |
| Line 33 wasn't explained yet. It applies the new correction to the word under |
| the cursor. The |:normal| command is used to use the new abbreviation. Note |
| that mappings and abbreviations are expanded here, even though the function |
| was called from a mapping defined with ":noremap". |
| |
| |
| DOCUMENTATION *write-local-help* |
| |
| It's a good idea to also write some documentation for your plugin. Especially |
| when its behavior can be changed by the user. See |add-local-help| for how |
| they are installed. |
| |
| Here is a simple example for a plugin help file, called "typecorrect.txt": > |
| |
| 1 *typecorrect.txt* Plugin for correcting typing mistakes |
| 2 |
| 3 If you make typing mistakes, this plugin will have them corrected |
| 4 automatically. |
| 5 |
| 6 There are currently only a few corrections. Add your own if you like. |
| 7 |
| 8 Mappings: |
| 9 <Leader>a or <Plug>TypecorrAdd; |
| 10 Add a correction for the word under the cursor. |
| 11 |
| 12 Commands: |
| 13 :Correct {word} |
| 14 Add a correction for {word}. |
| 15 |
| 16 *typecorrect-settings* |
| 17 This plugin doesn't have any settings. |
| |
| The first line is actually the only one for which the format matters. It will |
| be extracted from the help file to be put in the "LOCAL ADDITIONS:" section of |
| help.txt |local-additions|. The first "*" must be in the first column of the |
| first line. After adding your help file do ":help" and check that the entries |
| line up nicely. |
| |
| You can add more tags inside ** in your help file. But be careful not to use |
| existing help tags. You would probably use the name of your plugin in most of |
| them, like "typecorrect-settings" in the example. |
| |
| Using references to other parts of the help in || is recommended. This makes |
| it easy for the user to find associated help. |
| |
| |
| FILETYPE DETECTION *plugin-filetype* |
| |
| If your filetype is not already detected by Vim, you should create a filetype |
| detection snippet in a separate file. It is usually in the form of an |
| autocommand that sets the filetype when the file name matches a pattern. |
| Example: > |
| |
| au BufNewFile,BufRead *.foo setlocal filetype=foofoo |
| |
| Write this single-line file as "ftdetect/foofoo.vim" in the first directory |
| that appears in 'runtimepath'. For Unix that would be |
| "~/.vim/ftdetect/foofoo.vim". The convention is to use the name of the |
| filetype for the script name. |
| |
| You can make more complicated checks if you like, for example to inspect the |
| contents of the file to recognize the language. Also see |new-filetype|. |
| |
| |
| SUMMARY *plugin-special* |
| |
| Summary of special things to use in a plugin: |
| |
| var name Variable local to the script. |
| |
| <SID> Script-ID, used for mappings and functions local to |
| the script. |
| |
| hasmapto() Function to test if the user already defined a mapping |
| for functionality the script offers. |
| |
| <Leader> Value of "mapleader", which the user defines as the |
| keys that plugin mappings start with. |
| |
| map <unique> Give a warning if a mapping already exists. |
| |
| noremap <script> Use only mappings local to the script, not global |
| mappings. |
| |
| exists(":Cmd") Check if a user command already exists. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| *41.12* Writing a filetype plugin *write-filetype-plugin* *ftplugin* |
| |
| A filetype plugin is like a global plugin, except that it sets options and |
| defines mappings for the current buffer only. See |add-filetype-plugin| for |
| how this type of plugin is used. |
| |
| First read the section on global plugins above |41.11|. All that is said there |
| also applies to filetype plugins. There are a few extras, which are explained |
| here. The essential thing is that a filetype plugin should only have an |
| effect on the current buffer. |
| |
| |
| DISABLING |
| |
| If you are writing a filetype plugin to be used by many people, they need a |
| chance to disable loading it. Put this at the top of the plugin: > |
| |
| # Only do this when not done yet for this buffer |
| if exists("b:did_ftplugin") |
| finish |
| endif |
| b:did_ftplugin = 1 |
| |
| This also needs to be used to avoid that the same plugin is executed twice for |
| the same buffer (happens when using an ":edit" command without arguments). |
| |
| Now users can disable loading the default plugin completely by making a |
| filetype plugin with only these lines: > |
| |
| vim9script |
| b:did_ftplugin = 1 |
| |
| This does require that the filetype plugin directory comes before $VIMRUNTIME |
| in 'runtimepath'! |
| |
| If you do want to use the default plugin, but overrule one of the settings, |
| you can write the different setting in a script: > |
| |
| setlocal textwidth=70 |
| |
| Now write this in the "after" directory, so that it gets sourced after the |
| distributed "vim.vim" ftplugin |after-directory|. For Unix this would be |
| "~/.vim/after/ftplugin/vim.vim". Note that the default plugin will have set |
| "b:did_ftplugin", but it is ignored here. |
| |
| |
| OPTIONS |
| |
| To make sure the filetype plugin only affects the current buffer use the > |
| |
| setlocal |
| |
| command to set options. And only set options which are local to a buffer (see |
| the help for the option to check that). When using `:setlocal` for global |
| options or options local to a window, the value will change for many buffers, |
| and that is not what a filetype plugin should do. |
| |
| When an option has a value that is a list of flags or items, consider using |
| "+=" and "-=" to keep the existing value. Be aware that the user may have |
| changed an option value already. First resetting to the default value and |
| then changing it is often a good idea. Example: > |
| |
| setlocal formatoptions& formatoptions+=ro |
| |
| |
| MAPPINGS |
| |
| To make sure mappings will only work in the current buffer use the > |
| |
| map <buffer> |
| |
| command. This needs to be combined with the two-step mapping explained above. |
| An example of how to define functionality in a filetype plugin: > |
| |
| if !hasmapto('<Plug>JavaImport;') |
| map <buffer> <unique> <LocalLeader>i <Plug>JavaImport; |
| endif |
| noremap <buffer> <unique> <Plug>JavaImport; oimport ""<Left><Esc> |
| |
| |hasmapto()| is used to check if the user has already defined a map to |
| <Plug>JavaImport;. If not, then the filetype plugin defines the default |
| mapping. This starts with |<LocalLeader>|, which allows the user to select |
| the key(s) he wants filetype plugin mappings to start with. The default is a |
| backslash. |
| "<unique>" is used to give an error message if the mapping already exists or |
| overlaps with an existing mapping. |
| |:noremap| is used to avoid that any other mappings that the user has defined |
| interferes. You might want to use ":noremap <script>" to allow remapping |
| mappings defined in this script that start with <SID>. |
| |
| The user must have a chance to disable the mappings in a filetype plugin, |
| without disabling everything. Here is an example of how this is done for a |
| plugin for the mail filetype: > |
| |
| # Add mappings, unless the user didn't want this. |
| if !exists("g:no_plugin_maps") && !exists("g:no_mail_maps") |
| # Quote text by inserting "> " |
| if !hasmapto('<Plug>MailQuote;') |
| vmap <buffer> <LocalLeader>q <Plug>MailQuote; |
| nmap <buffer> <LocalLeader>q <Plug>MailQuote; |
| endif |
| vnoremap <buffer> <Plug>MailQuote; :s/^/> /<CR> |
| nnoremap <buffer> <Plug>MailQuote; :.,$s/^/> /<CR> |
| endif |
| |
| Two global variables are used: |
| |g:no_plugin_maps| disables mappings for all filetype plugins |
| |g:no_mail_maps| disables mappings for the "mail" filetype |
| |
| |
| USER COMMANDS |
| |
| To add a user command for a specific file type, so that it can only be used in |
| one buffer, use the "-buffer" argument to |:command|. Example: > |
| |
| command -buffer Make make %:r.s |
| |
| |
| VARIABLES |
| |
| A filetype plugin will be sourced for each buffer of the type it's for. Local |
| script variables will be shared between all invocations. Use local buffer |
| variables |b:var| if you want a variable specifically for one buffer. |
| |
| |
| FUNCTIONS |
| |
| When defining a function, this only needs to be done once. But the filetype |
| plugin will be sourced every time a file with this filetype will be opened. |
| This construct makes sure the function is only defined once: > |
| |
| if !exists("*Func") |
| def Func(arg) |
| ... |
| enddef |
| endif |
| < |
| |
| UNDO *undo_indent* *undo_ftplugin* |
| |
| When the user does ":setfiletype xyz" the effect of the previous filetype |
| should be undone. Set the b:undo_ftplugin variable to the commands that will |
| undo the settings in your filetype plugin. Example: > |
| |
| let b:undo_ftplugin = "setlocal fo< com< tw< commentstring<" |
| \ .. "| unlet b:match_ignorecase b:match_words b:match_skip" |
| |
| Using ":setlocal" with "<" after the option name resets the option to its |
| global value. That is mostly the best way to reset the option value. |
| |
| This does require removing the "C" flag from 'cpoptions' to allow line |
| continuation, as mentioned above |use-cpo-save|. |
| |
| For undoing the effect of an indent script, the b:undo_indent variable should |
| be set accordingly. |
| |
| Both these variables use legacy script syntax, not |Vim9| syntax. |
| |
| |
| FILE NAME |
| |
| The filetype must be included in the file name |ftplugin-name|. Use one of |
| these three forms: |
| |
| .../ftplugin/stuff.vim |
| .../ftplugin/stuff_foo.vim |
| .../ftplugin/stuff/bar.vim |
| |
| "stuff" is the filetype, "foo" and "bar" are arbitrary names. |
| |
| |
| SUMMARY *ftplugin-special* |
| |
| Summary of special things to use in a filetype plugin: |
| |
| <LocalLeader> Value of "maplocalleader", which the user defines as |
| the keys that filetype plugin mappings start with. |
| |
| map <buffer> Define a mapping local to the buffer. |
| |
| noremap <script> Only remap mappings defined in this script that start |
| with <SID>. |
| |
| setlocal Set an option for the current buffer only. |
| |
| command -buffer Define a user command local to the buffer. |
| |
| exists("*s:Func") Check if a function was already defined. |
| |
| Also see |plugin-special|, the special things used for all plugins. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| *41.13* Writing a compiler plugin *write-compiler-plugin* |
| |
| A compiler plugin sets options for use with a specific compiler. The user can |
| load it with the |:compiler| command. The main use is to set the |
| 'errorformat' and 'makeprg' options. |
| |
| Easiest is to have a look at examples. This command will edit all the default |
| compiler plugins: > |
| |
| next $VIMRUNTIME/compiler/*.vim |
| |
| Type `:next` to go to the next plugin file. |
| |
| There are two special items about these files. First is a mechanism to allow |
| a user to overrule or add to the default file. The default files start with: > |
| |
| if exists("g:current_compiler") |
| finish |
| endif |
| g:current_compiler = "mine" |
| |
| When you write a compiler file and put it in your personal runtime directory |
| (e.g., ~/.vim/compiler for Unix), you set the "current_compiler" variable to |
| make the default file skip the settings. |
| *:CompilerSet* |
| The second mechanism is to use ":set" for ":compiler!" and ":setlocal" for |
| ":compiler". Vim defines the ":CompilerSet" user command for this. However, |
| older Vim versions don't, thus your plugin should define it then. This is an |
| example: > |
| |
| if exists(":CompilerSet") != 2 |
| command -nargs=* CompilerSet setlocal <args> |
| endif |
| CompilerSet errorformat& " use the default 'errorformat' |
| CompilerSet makeprg=nmake |
| |
| When you write a compiler plugin for the Vim distribution or for a system-wide |
| runtime directory, use the mechanism mentioned above. When |
| "current_compiler" was already set by a user plugin nothing will be done. |
| |
| When you write a compiler plugin to overrule settings from a default plugin, |
| don't check "current_compiler". This plugin is supposed to be loaded |
| last, thus it should be in a directory at the end of 'runtimepath'. For Unix |
| that could be ~/.vim/after/compiler. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| *41.14* Writing a plugin that loads quickly *write-plugin-quickload* |
| |
| A plugin may grow and become quite long. The startup delay may become |
| noticeable, while you hardly ever use the plugin. Then it's time for a |
| quickload plugin. |
| |
| The basic idea is that the plugin is loaded twice. The first time user |
| commands and mappings are defined that offer the functionality. The second |
| time the functions that implement the functionality are defined. |
| |
| It may sound surprising that quickload means loading a script twice. What we |
| mean is that it loads quickly the first time, postponing the bulk of the |
| script to the second time, which only happens when you actually use it. When |
| you always use the functionality it actually gets slower! |
| |
| This uses a FuncUndefined autocommand. Since Vim 7 there is an alternative: |
| use the |autoload| functionality |41.15|. That will also use |Vim9| script |
| instead of legacy script that is used here. |
| |
| The following example shows how it's done: > |
| |
| " Vim global plugin for demonstrating quick loading |
| " Last Change: 2005 Feb 25 |
| " Maintainer: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org> |
| " License: This file is placed in the public domain. |
| |
| if !exists("s:did_load") |
| command -nargs=* BNRead call BufNetRead(<f-args>) |
| map <F19> :call BufNetWrite('something')<CR> |
| |
| let s:did_load = 1 |
| exe 'au FuncUndefined BufNet* source ' .. expand('<sfile>') |
| finish |
| endif |
| |
| function BufNetRead(...) |
| echo 'BufNetRead(' .. string(a:000) .. ')' |
| " read functionality here |
| endfunction |
| |
| function BufNetWrite(...) |
| echo 'BufNetWrite(' .. string(a:000) .. ')' |
| " write functionality here |
| endfunction |
| |
| When the script is first loaded "s:did_load" is not set. The commands between |
| the "if" and "endif" will be executed. This ends in a |:finish| command, thus |
| the rest of the script is not executed. |
| |
| The second time the script is loaded "s:did_load" exists and the commands |
| after the "endif" are executed. This defines the (possible long) |
| BufNetRead() and BufNetWrite() functions. |
| |
| If you drop this script in your plugin directory Vim will execute it on |
| startup. This is the sequence of events that happens: |
| |
| 1. The "BNRead" command is defined and the <F19> key is mapped when the script |
| is sourced at startup. A |FuncUndefined| autocommand is defined. The |
| ":finish" command causes the script to terminate early. |
| |
| 2. The user types the BNRead command or presses the <F19> key. The |
| BufNetRead() or BufNetWrite() function will be called. |
| |
| 3. Vim can't find the function and triggers the |FuncUndefined| autocommand |
| event. Since the pattern "BufNet*" matches the invoked function, the |
| command "source fname" will be executed. "fname" will be equal to the name |
| of the script, no matter where it is located, because it comes from |
| expanding "<sfile>" (see |expand()|). |
| |
| 4. The script is sourced again, the "s:did_load" variable exists and the |
| functions are defined. |
| |
| Notice that the functions that are loaded afterwards match the pattern in the |
| |FuncUndefined| autocommand. You must make sure that no other plugin defines |
| functions that match this pattern. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| *41.15* Writing library scripts *write-library-script* |
| |
| Some functionality will be required in several places. When this becomes more |
| than a few lines you will want to put it in one script and use it from many |
| scripts. We will call that one script a library script. |
| |
| Manually loading a library script is possible, so long as you avoid loading it |
| when it's already done. You can do this with the |exists()| function. |
| Example: > |
| |
| if !exists('*MyLibFunction') |
| runtime library/mylibscript.vim |
| endif |
| MyLibFunction(arg) |
| |
| Here you need to know that MyLibFunction() is defined in a script |
| "library/mylibscript.vim" in one of the directories in 'runtimepath'. |
| |
| To make this a bit simpler Vim offers the autoload mechanism. Then the |
| example looks like this: > |
| |
| mylib#myfunction(arg) |
| |
| That's a lot simpler, isn't it? Vim will recognize the function name by the |
| embedded "#" character and when it's not defined search for the script |
| "autoload/mylib.vim" in 'runtimepath'. That script must define the |
| "mylib#myfunction()" function. |
| |
| You can put many other functions in the mylib.vim script, you are free to |
| organize your functions in library scripts. But you must use function names |
| where the part before the '#' matches the script name. Otherwise Vim would |
| not know what script to load. |
| |
| If you get really enthusiastic and write lots of library scripts, you may |
| want to use subdirectories. Example: > |
| |
| netlib#ftp#read('somefile') |
| |
| For Unix the library script used for this could be: |
| |
| ~/.vim/autoload/netlib/ftp.vim |
| |
| Where the function is defined like this: > |
| |
| def netlib#ftp#read(fname: string) |
| # Read the file fname through ftp |
| enddef |
| |
| Notice that the name the function is defined with is exactly the same as the |
| name used for calling the function. And the part before the last '#' |
| exactly matches the subdirectory and script name. |
| |
| You can use the same mechanism for variables: > |
| |
| var weekdays = dutch#weekdays |
| |
| This will load the script "autoload/dutch.vim", which should contain something |
| like: > |
| |
| var dutch#weekdays = ['zondag', 'maandag', 'dinsdag', 'woensdag', |
| \ 'donderdag', 'vrijdag', 'zaterdag'] |
| |
| Further reading: |autoload|. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| *41.16* Distributing Vim scripts *distribute-script* |
| |
| Vim users will look for scripts on the Vim website: http://www.vim.org. |
| If you made something that is useful for others, share it! |
| |
| Another place is github. But there you need to know where to find it! The |
| advantage is that most plugin managers fetch plugins from github. You'll have |
| to use your favorite search engine to find them. |
| |
| Vim scripts can be used on any system. However, there might not be a tar or |
| gzip command. If you want to pack files together and/or compress them the |
| "zip" utility is recommended. |
| |
| For utmost portability use Vim itself to pack scripts together. This can be |
| done with the Vimball utility. See |vimball|. |
| |
| It's good if you add a line to allow automatic updating. See |glvs-plugins|. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| |
| Next chapter: |usr_42.txt| Add new menus |
| |
| Copyright: see |manual-copyright| vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl: |