| *builtin.txt* For Vim version 9.1. Last change: 2025 Jul 06 |
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| VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar |
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| Builtin functions *builtin-functions* |
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| Note: Expression evaluation can be disabled at compile time, the builtin |
| functions are not available then. See |+eval| and |no-eval-feature|. |
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| For functions grouped by what they are used for see |function-list|. |
| |
| 1. Overview |builtin-function-list| |
| 2. Details |builtin-function-details| |
| 3. Feature list |feature-list| |
| 4. Matching a pattern in a String |string-match| |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 1. Overview *builtin-function-list* |
| |
| Use CTRL-] on the function name to jump to the full explanation. |
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| USAGE RESULT DESCRIPTION ~ |
| |
| abs({expr}) Float or Number absolute value of {expr} |
| acos({expr}) Float arc cosine of {expr} |
| add({object}, {item}) List/Blob append {item} to {object} |
| and({expr}, {expr}) Number bitwise AND |
| append({lnum}, {text}) Number append {text} below line {lnum} |
| appendbufline({buf}, {lnum}, {text}) |
| Number append {text} below line {lnum} |
| in buffer {buf} |
| argc([{winid}]) Number number of files in the argument list |
| argidx() Number current index in the argument list |
| arglistid([{winnr} [, {tabnr}]]) Number argument list id |
| argv({nr} [, {winid}]) String {nr} entry of the argument list |
| argv([-1, {winid}]) List the argument list |
| asin({expr}) Float arc sine of {expr} |
| assert_beeps({cmd}) Number assert {cmd} causes a beep |
| assert_equal({exp}, {act} [, {msg}]) |
| Number assert {exp} is equal to {act} |
| assert_equalfile({fname-one}, {fname-two} [, {msg}]) |
| Number assert file contents are equal |
| assert_exception({error} [, {msg}]) |
| Number assert {error} is in v:exception |
| assert_fails({cmd} [, {error} [, {msg} [, {lnum} [, {context}]]]]) |
| Number assert {cmd} fails |
| assert_false({actual} [, {msg}]) |
| Number assert {actual} is false |
| assert_inrange({lower}, {upper}, {actual} [, {msg}]) |
| Number assert {actual} is inside the range |
| assert_match({pat}, {text} [, {msg}]) |
| Number assert {pat} matches {text} |
| assert_nobeep({cmd}) Number assert {cmd} does not cause a beep |
| assert_notequal({exp}, {act} [, {msg}]) |
| Number assert {exp} is not equal {act} |
| assert_notmatch({pat}, {text} [, {msg}]) |
| Number assert {pat} not matches {text} |
| assert_report({msg}) Number report a test failure |
| assert_true({actual} [, {msg}]) Number assert {actual} is true |
| atan({expr}) Float arc tangent of {expr} |
| atan2({expr1}, {expr2}) Float arc tangent of {expr1} / {expr2} |
| autocmd_add({acmds}) Bool add a list of autocmds and groups |
| autocmd_delete({acmds}) Bool delete a list of autocmds and groups |
| autocmd_get([{opts}]) List return a list of autocmds |
| balloon_gettext() String current text in the balloon |
| balloon_show({expr}) none show {expr} inside the balloon |
| balloon_split({msg}) List split {msg} as used for a balloon |
| base64_decode({string}) Blob base64 decode {string} characters |
| base64_encode({blob}) String base64 encode the bytes in {blob} |
| bindtextdomain({package}, {path}) |
| Bool bind text domain to specified path |
| blob2list({blob}) List convert {blob} into a list of numbers |
| blob2str({blob} [, {options}]) List convert {blob} into a list of strings |
| browse({save}, {title}, {initdir}, {default}) |
| String put up a file requester |
| browsedir({title}, {initdir}) String put up a directory requester |
| bufadd({name}) Number add a buffer to the buffer list |
| bufexists({buf}) Number |TRUE| if buffer {buf} exists |
| buflisted({buf}) Number |TRUE| if buffer {buf} is listed |
| bufload({buf}) Number load buffer {buf} if not loaded yet |
| bufloaded({buf}) Number |TRUE| if buffer {buf} is loaded |
| bufname([{buf}]) String Name of the buffer {buf} |
| bufnr([{buf} [, {create}]]) Number Number of the buffer {buf} |
| bufwinid({buf}) Number window ID of buffer {buf} |
| bufwinnr({buf}) Number window number of buffer {buf} |
| byte2line({byte}) Number line number at byte count {byte} |
| byteidx({expr}, {nr} [, {utf16}]) |
| Number byte index of {nr}'th char in {expr} |
| byteidxcomp({expr}, {nr} [, {utf16}]) |
| Number byte index of {nr}'th char in {expr} |
| call({func}, {arglist} [, {dict}]) |
| any call {func} with arguments {arglist} |
| ceil({expr}) Float round {expr} up |
| ch_canread({handle}) Number check if there is something to read |
| ch_close({handle}) none close {handle} |
| ch_close_in({handle}) none close in part of {handle} |
| ch_evalexpr({handle}, {expr} [, {options}]) |
| any evaluate {expr} on JSON {handle} |
| ch_evalraw({handle}, {string} [, {options}]) |
| any evaluate {string} on raw {handle} |
| ch_getbufnr({handle}, {what}) Number get buffer number for {handle}/{what} |
| ch_getjob({channel}) Job get the Job of {channel} |
| ch_info({handle}) String info about channel {handle} |
| ch_log({msg} [, {handle}]) none write {msg} in the channel log file |
| ch_logfile({fname} [, {mode}]) none start logging channel activity |
| ch_open({address} [, {options}]) |
| Channel open a channel to {address} |
| ch_read({handle} [, {options}]) String read from {handle} |
| ch_readblob({handle} [, {options}]) |
| Blob read Blob from {handle} |
| ch_readraw({handle} [, {options}]) |
| String read raw from {handle} |
| ch_sendexpr({handle}, {expr} [, {options}]) |
| any send {expr} over JSON {handle} |
| ch_sendraw({handle}, {expr} [, {options}]) |
| any send {expr} over raw {handle} |
| ch_setoptions({handle}, {options}) |
| none set options for {handle} |
| ch_status({handle} [, {options}]) |
| String status of channel {handle} |
| changenr() Number current change number |
| char2nr({expr} [, {utf8}]) Number ASCII/UTF-8 value of first char in {expr} |
| charclass({string}) Number character class of {string} |
| charcol({expr} [, {winid}]) Number column number of cursor or mark |
| charidx({string}, {idx} [, {countcc} [, {utf16}]]) |
| Number char index of byte {idx} in {string} |
| chdir({dir}) String change current working directory |
| cindent({lnum}) Number C indent for line {lnum} |
| clearmatches([{win}]) none clear all matches |
| cmdcomplete_info() Dict get current cmdline completion |
| information |
| col({expr} [, {winid}]) Number column byte index of cursor or mark |
| complete({startcol}, {matches}) none set Insert mode completion |
| complete_add({expr}) Number add completion match |
| complete_check() Number check for key typed during completion |
| complete_info([{what}]) Dict get current completion information |
| complete_match([{lnum}, {col}]) List get completion column and trigger text |
| confirm({msg} [, {choices} [, {default} [, {type}]]]) |
| Number number of choice picked by user |
| copy({expr}) any make a shallow copy of {expr} |
| cos({expr}) Float cosine of {expr} |
| cosh({expr}) Float hyperbolic cosine of {expr} |
| count({comp}, {expr} [, {ic} [, {start}]]) |
| Number count how many {expr} are in {comp} |
| cscope_connection([{num}, {dbpath} [, {prepend}]]) |
| Number checks existence of cscope connection |
| cursor({lnum}, {col} [, {off}]) |
| Number move cursor to {lnum}, {col}, {off} |
| cursor({list}) Number move cursor to position in {list} |
| debugbreak({pid}) Number interrupt process being debugged |
| deepcopy({expr} [, {noref}]) any make a full copy of {expr} |
| delete({fname} [, {flags}]) Number delete the file or directory {fname} |
| deletebufline({buf}, {first} [, {last}]) |
| Number delete lines from buffer {buf} |
| did_filetype() Number |TRUE| if FileType autocmd event used |
| diff({fromlist}, {tolist} [, {options}]) |
| List diff two Lists of strings |
| diff_filler({lnum}) Number diff filler lines about {lnum} |
| diff_hlID({lnum}, {col}) Number diff highlighting at {lnum}/{col} |
| digraph_get({chars}) String get the |digraph| of {chars} |
| digraph_getlist([{listall}]) List get all |digraph|s |
| digraph_set({chars}, {digraph}) Bool register |digraph| |
| digraph_setlist({digraphlist}) Bool register multiple |digraph|s |
| echoraw({expr}) none output {expr} as-is |
| empty({expr}) Number |TRUE| if {expr} is empty |
| environ() Dict return environment variables |
| err_teapot([{expr}]) none give E418, or E503 if {expr} is |TRUE| |
| escape({string}, {chars}) String escape {chars} in {string} with '\' |
| eval({string}) any evaluate {string} into its value |
| eventhandler() Number |TRUE| if inside an event handler |
| executable({expr}) Number 1 if executable {expr} exists |
| execute({command}) String execute {command} and get the output |
| exepath({expr}) String full path of the command {expr} |
| exists({expr}) Number |TRUE| if {expr} exists |
| exists_compiled({expr}) Number |TRUE| if {expr} exists at compile time |
| exp({expr}) Float exponential of {expr} |
| expand({expr} [, {nosuf} [, {list}]]) |
| any expand special keywords in {expr} |
| expandcmd({string} [, {options}]) |
| String expand {string} like with `:edit` |
| extend({expr1}, {expr2} [, {expr3}]) |
| List/Dict insert items of {expr2} into {expr1} |
| extendnew({expr1}, {expr2} [, {expr3}]) |
| List/Dict like |extend()| but creates a new |
| List or Dictionary |
| feedkeys({string} [, {mode}]) Number add key sequence to typeahead buffer |
| filecopy({from}, {to}) Number |TRUE| if copying file {from} to {to} |
| worked |
| filereadable({file}) Number |TRUE| if {file} is a readable file |
| filewritable({file}) Number |TRUE| if {file} is a writable file |
| filter({expr1}, {expr2}) List/Dict/Blob/String |
| remove items from {expr1} where |
| {expr2} is 0 |
| finddir({name} [, {path} [, {count}]]) |
| findfile({name} [, {path} [, {count}]]) |
| String/List find dir/file {name} in {path} |
| flatten({list} [, {maxdepth}]) List flatten {list} up to {maxdepth} levels |
| flattennew({list} [, {maxdepth}]) |
| List flatten a copy of {list} |
| float2nr({expr}) Number convert Float {expr} to a Number |
| floor({expr}) Float round {expr} down |
| fmod({expr1}, {expr2}) Float remainder of {expr1} / {expr2} |
| fnameescape({fname}) String escape special characters in {fname} |
| fnamemodify({fname}, {mods}) String modify file name |
| foldclosed({lnum}) Number first line of fold at {lnum} if closed |
| foldclosedend({lnum}) Number last line of fold at {lnum} if closed |
| foldlevel({lnum}) Number fold level at {lnum} |
| foldtext() String line displayed for closed fold |
| foldtextresult({lnum}) String text for closed fold at {lnum} |
| foreach({expr1}, {expr2}) List/Tuple/Dict/Blob/String |
| for each item in {expr1} call {expr2} |
| foreground() Number bring the Vim window to the foreground |
| fullcommand({name} [, {vim9}]) String get full command from {name} |
| funcref({name} [, {arglist}] [, {dict}]) |
| Funcref reference to function {name} |
| function({name} [, {arglist}] [, {dict}]) |
| Funcref named reference to function {name} |
| garbagecollect([{atexit}]) none free memory, breaking cyclic references |
| get({list}, {idx} [, {def}]) any get item {idx} from {list} or {def} |
| get({dict}, {key} [, {def}]) any get item {key} from {dict} or {def} |
| get({func}, {what}) any get property of funcref/partial {func} |
| getbufinfo([{buf}]) List information about buffers |
| getbufline({buf}, {lnum} [, {end}]) |
| List lines {lnum} to {end} of buffer {buf} |
| getbufoneline({buf}, {lnum}) String line {lnum} of buffer {buf} |
| getbufvar({buf}, {varname} [, {def}]) |
| any variable {varname} in buffer {buf} |
| getcellpixels() List get character cell pixel size |
| getcellwidths() List get character cell width overrides |
| getchangelist([{buf}]) List list of change list items |
| getchar([{expr} [, {opts}]]) Number or String |
| get one character from the user |
| getcharmod() Number modifiers for the last typed character |
| getcharpos({expr}) List position of cursor, mark, etc. |
| getcharsearch() Dict last character search |
| getcharstr([{expr} [, {opts}]]) String get one character from the user |
| getcmdcomplpat() String return the completion pattern of the |
| current command-line completion |
| getcmdcompltype() String return the type of the current |
| command-line completion |
| getcmdline() String return the current command-line input |
| getcmdpos() Number return cursor position in command-line |
| getcmdprompt() String return the current command-line prompt |
| getcmdscreenpos() Number return cursor screen position in |
| command-line |
| getcmdtype() String return current command-line type |
| getcmdwintype() String return current command-line window type |
| getcompletion({pat}, {type} [, {filtered}]) |
| List list of cmdline completion matches |
| getcompletiontype({pat}) String return the type of the command-line |
| completion using {pat} |
| getcurpos([{winnr}]) List position of the cursor |
| getcursorcharpos([{winnr}]) List character position of the cursor |
| getcwd([{winnr} [, {tabnr}]]) String get the current working directory |
| getenv({name}) String return environment variable |
| getfontname([{name}]) String name of font being used |
| getfperm({fname}) String file permissions of file {fname} |
| getfsize({fname}) Number size in bytes of file {fname} |
| getftime({fname}) Number last modification time of file |
| getftype({fname}) String description of type of file {fname} |
| getimstatus() Number |TRUE| if the IME status is active |
| getjumplist([{winnr} [, {tabnr}]]) |
| List list of jump list items |
| getline({lnum}) String line {lnum} of current buffer |
| getline({lnum}, {end}) List lines {lnum} to {end} of current buffer |
| getloclist({nr}) List list of location list items |
| getloclist({nr}, {what}) Dict get specific location list properties |
| getmarklist([{buf}]) List list of global/local marks |
| getmatches([{win}]) List list of current matches |
| getmousepos() Dict last known mouse position |
| getmouseshape() String current mouse shape name |
| getpid() Number process ID of Vim |
| getpos({expr}) List position of cursor, mark, etc. |
| getqflist() List list of quickfix items |
| getqflist({what}) Dict get specific quickfix list properties |
| getreg([{regname} [, 1 [, {list}]]]) |
| String or List contents of a register |
| getreginfo([{regname}]) Dict information about a register |
| getregion({pos1}, {pos2} [, {opts}]) |
| List get the text from {pos1} to {pos2} |
| getregionpos({pos1}, {pos2} [, {opts}]) |
| List get a list of positions for a region |
| getregtype([{regname}]) String type of a register |
| getscriptinfo([{opts}]) List list of sourced scripts |
| getstacktrace() List get current stack trace of Vim scripts |
| gettabinfo([{expr}]) List list of tab pages |
| gettabvar({nr}, {varname} [, {def}]) |
| any variable {varname} in tab {nr} or {def} |
| gettabwinvar({tabnr}, {winnr}, {name} [, {def}]) |
| any {name} in {winnr} in tab page {tabnr} |
| gettagstack([{nr}]) Dict get the tag stack of window {nr} |
| gettext({text} [, {package}]) String lookup translation of {text} |
| getwininfo([{winid}]) List list of info about each window |
| getwinpos([{timeout}]) List X and Y coord in pixels of Vim window |
| getwinposx() Number X coord in pixels of the Vim window |
| getwinposy() Number Y coord in pixels of the Vim window |
| getwinvar({nr}, {varname} [, {def}]) |
| any variable {varname} in window {nr} |
| glob({expr} [, {nosuf} [, {list} [, {alllinks}]]]) |
| any expand file wildcards in {expr} |
| glob2regpat({expr}) String convert a glob pat into a search pat |
| globpath({path}, {expr} [, {nosuf} [, {list} [, {alllinks}]]]) |
| String do glob({expr}) for all dirs in {path} |
| has({feature} [, {check}]) Number |TRUE| if feature {feature} supported |
| has_key({dict}, {key}) Number |TRUE| if {dict} has entry {key} |
| haslocaldir([{winnr} [, {tabnr}]]) |
| Number |TRUE| if the window executed |:lcd| |
| or |:tcd| |
| hasmapto({what} [, {mode} [, {abbr}]]) |
| Number |TRUE| if mapping to {what} exists |
| histadd({history}, {item}) Number add an item to a history |
| histdel({history} [, {item}]) Number remove an item from a history |
| histget({history} [, {index}]) String get the item {index} from a history |
| histnr({history}) Number highest index of a history |
| hlID({name}) Number syntax ID of highlight group {name} |
| hlexists({name}) Number |TRUE| if highlight group {name} exists |
| hlget([{name} [, {resolve}]]) List get highlight group attributes |
| hlset({list}) Number set highlight group attributes |
| hostname() String name of the machine Vim is running on |
| iconv({expr}, {from}, {to}) String convert encoding of {expr} |
| id({item}) String get unique identity string of item |
| indent({lnum}) Number indent of line {lnum} |
| index({object}, {expr} [, {start} [, {ic}]]) |
| Number index in {object} where {expr} appears |
| indexof({object}, {expr} [, {opts}]]) |
| Number index in {object} where {expr} is true |
| input({prompt} [, {text} [, {completion}]]) |
| String get input from the user |
| inputdialog({prompt} [, {text} [, {cancelreturn}]]) |
| String like input() but in a GUI dialog |
| inputlist({textlist}) Number let the user pick from a choice list |
| inputrestore() Number restore typeahead |
| inputsave() Number save and clear typeahead |
| inputsecret({prompt} [, {text}]) String like input() but hiding the text |
| insert({object}, {item} [, {idx}]) List insert {item} in {object} [before {idx}] |
| instanceof({object}, {class}) Number |TRUE| if {object} is an instance of {class} |
| interrupt() none interrupt script execution |
| invert({expr}) Number bitwise invert |
| isabsolutepath({path}) Number |TRUE| if {path} is an absolute path |
| isdirectory({directory}) Number |TRUE| if {directory} is a directory |
| isinf({expr}) Number determine if {expr} is infinity value |
| (positive or negative) |
| islocked({expr}) Number |TRUE| if {expr} is locked |
| isnan({expr}) Number |TRUE| if {expr} is NaN |
| items({dict}) List key-value pairs in {dict} |
| job_getchannel({job}) Channel get the channel handle for {job} |
| job_info([{job}]) Dict get information about {job} |
| job_setoptions({job}, {options}) none set options for {job} |
| job_start({command} [, {options}]) |
| Job start a job |
| job_status({job}) String get the status of {job} |
| job_stop({job} [, {how}]) Number stop {job} |
| join({expr} [, {sep}]) String join items in {expr} into one String |
| js_decode({string}) any decode JS style JSON |
| js_encode({expr}) String encode JS style JSON |
| json_decode({string}) any decode JSON |
| json_encode({expr}) String encode JSON |
| keys({dict}) List keys in {dict} |
| keytrans({string}) String translate internal keycodes to a form |
| that can be used by |:map| |
| len({expr}) Number the length of {expr} |
| libcall({lib}, {func}, {arg}) String call {func} in library {lib} with {arg} |
| libcallnr({lib}, {func}, {arg}) Number idem, but return a Number |
| line({expr} [, {winid}]) Number line nr of cursor, last line or mark |
| line2byte({lnum}) Number byte count of line {lnum} |
| lispindent({lnum}) Number Lisp indent for line {lnum} |
| list2blob({list}) Blob turn {list} of numbers into a Blob |
| list2str({list} [, {utf8}]) String turn {list} of numbers into a String |
| list2tuple({list}) Tuple turn {list} of items into a tuple |
| listener_add({callback} [, {buf}]) |
| Number add a callback to listen to changes |
| listener_flush([{buf}]) none invoke listener callbacks |
| listener_remove({id}) none remove a listener callback |
| localtime() Number current time |
| log({expr}) Float natural logarithm (base e) of {expr} |
| log10({expr}) Float logarithm of Float {expr} to base 10 |
| luaeval({expr} [, {expr}]) any evaluate |Lua| expression |
| map({expr1}, {expr2}) List/Dict/Blob/String |
| change each item in {expr1} to {expr2} |
| maparg({name} [, {mode} [, {abbr} [, {dict}]]]) |
| String or Dict |
| rhs of mapping {name} in mode {mode} |
| mapcheck({name} [, {mode} [, {abbr}]]) |
| String check for mappings matching {name} |
| maplist([{abbr}]) List list of all mappings, a dict for each |
| mapnew({expr1}, {expr2}) List/Dict/Blob/String |
| like |map()| but creates a new List or |
| Dictionary |
| mapset({mode}, {abbr}, {dict}) none restore mapping from |maparg()| result |
| match({expr}, {pat} [, {start} [, {count}]]) |
| Number position where {pat} matches in {expr} |
| matchadd({group}, {pattern} [, {priority} [, {id} [, {dict}]]]) |
| Number highlight {pattern} with {group} |
| matchaddpos({group}, {pos} [, {priority} [, {id} [, {dict}]]]) |
| Number highlight positions with {group} |
| matcharg({nr}) List arguments of |:match| |
| matchbufline({buf}, {pat}, {lnum}, {end}, [, {dict}) |
| List all the {pat} matches in buffer {buf} |
| matchdelete({id} [, {win}]) Number delete match identified by {id} |
| matchend({expr}, {pat} [, {start} [, {count}]]) |
| Number position where {pat} ends in {expr} |
| matchfuzzy({list}, {str} [, {dict}]) |
| List fuzzy match {str} in {list} |
| matchfuzzypos({list}, {str} [, {dict}]) |
| List fuzzy match {str} in {list} |
| matchlist({expr}, {pat} [, {start} [, {count}]]) |
| List match and submatches of {pat} in {expr} |
| matchstr({expr}, {pat} [, {start} [, {count}]]) |
| String {count}'th match of {pat} in {expr} |
| matchstrlist({list}, {pat} [, {dict}) |
| List all the {pat} matches in {list} |
| matchstrpos({expr}, {pat} [, {start} [, {count}]]) |
| List {count}'th match of {pat} in {expr} |
| max({expr}) Number maximum value of items in {expr} |
| menu_info({name} [, {mode}]) Dict get menu item information |
| min({expr}) Number minimum value of items in {expr} |
| mkdir({name} [, {flags} [, {prot}]]) |
| Number create directory {name} |
| mode([{expr}]) String current editing mode |
| mzeval({expr}) any evaluate |MzScheme| expression |
| nextnonblank({lnum}) Number line nr of non-blank line >= {lnum} |
| ngettext({single}, {plural}, {number}[, {domain}]) |
| String translate text based on {number} |
| nr2char({expr} [, {utf8}]) String single char with ASCII/UTF-8 value {expr} |
| or({expr}, {expr}) Number bitwise OR |
| pathshorten({expr} [, {len}]) String shorten directory names in a path |
| perleval({expr}) any evaluate |Perl| expression |
| popup_atcursor({what}, {options}) Number create popup window near the cursor |
| popup_beval({what}, {options}) Number create popup window for 'ballooneval' |
| popup_clear() none close all popup windows |
| popup_close({id} [, {result}]) none close popup window {id} |
| popup_create({what}, {options}) Number create a popup window |
| popup_dialog({what}, {options}) Number create a popup window used as a dialog |
| popup_filter_menu({id}, {key}) Number filter for a menu popup window |
| popup_filter_yesno({id}, {key}) Number filter for a dialog popup window |
| popup_findecho() Number get window ID of popup for `:echowin` |
| popup_findinfo() Number get window ID of info popup window |
| popup_findpreview() Number get window ID of preview popup window |
| popup_getoptions({id}) Dict get options of popup window {id} |
| popup_getpos({id}) Dict get position of popup window {id} |
| popup_hide({id}) none hide popup menu {id} |
| popup_list() List get a list of window IDs of all popups |
| popup_locate({row}, {col}) Number get window ID of popup at position |
| popup_menu({what}, {options}) Number create a popup window used as a menu |
| popup_move({id}, {options}) none set position of popup window {id} |
| popup_notification({what}, {options}) |
| Number create a notification popup window |
| popup_setbuf({id}, {buf}) Bool set the buffer for the popup window {id} |
| popup_setoptions({id}, {options}) |
| none set options for popup window {id} |
| popup_settext({id}, {text}) none set the text of popup window {id} |
| popup_show({id}) none unhide popup window {id} |
| pow({x}, {y}) Float {x} to the power of {y} |
| prevnonblank({lnum}) Number line nr of non-blank line <= {lnum} |
| printf({fmt}, {expr1}...) String format text |
| prompt_getprompt({buf}) String get prompt text |
| prompt_setcallback({buf}, {expr}) none set prompt callback function |
| prompt_setinterrupt({buf}, {text}) none set prompt interrupt function |
| prompt_setprompt({buf}, {text}) none set prompt text |
| prop_add({lnum}, {col}, {props}) none add one text property |
| prop_add_list({props}, [[{lnum}, {col}, {end-lnum}, {end-col}], ...]) |
| none add multiple text properties |
| prop_clear({lnum} [, {lnum-end} [, {props}]]) |
| none remove all text properties |
| prop_find({props} [, {direction}]) |
| Dict search for a text property |
| prop_list({lnum} [, {props}]) List text properties in {lnum} |
| prop_remove({props} [, {lnum} [, {lnum-end}]]) |
| Number remove a text property |
| prop_type_add({name}, {props}) none define a new property type |
| prop_type_change({name}, {props}) |
| none change an existing property type |
| prop_type_delete({name} [, {props}]) |
| none delete a property type |
| prop_type_get({name} [, {props}]) |
| Dict get property type values |
| prop_type_list([{props}]) List get list of property types |
| pum_getpos() Dict position and size of pum if visible |
| pumvisible() Number whether popup menu is visible |
| py3eval({expr} [, {locals}]) any evaluate |python3| expression |
| pyeval({expr} [, {locals}]) any evaluate |Python| expression |
| pyxeval({expr} [, {locals}]) any evaluate |python_x| expression |
| rand([{expr}]) Number get pseudo-random number |
| range({expr} [, {max} [, {stride}]]) |
| List items from {expr} to {max} |
| readblob({fname} [, {offset} [, {size}]]) |
| Blob read a |Blob| from {fname} |
| readdir({dir} [, {expr} [, {dict}]]) |
| List file names in {dir} selected by {expr} |
| readdirex({dir} [, {expr} [, {dict}]]) |
| List file info in {dir} selected by {expr} |
| readfile({fname} [, {type} [, {max}]]) |
| List get list of lines from file {fname} |
| reduce({object}, {func} [, {initial}]) |
| any reduce {object} using {func} |
| reg_executing() String get the executing register name |
| reg_recording() String get the recording register name |
| reltime([{start} [, {end}]]) List get time value |
| reltimefloat({time}) Float turn the time value into a Float |
| reltimestr({time}) String turn time value into a String |
| remote_expr({server}, {string} [, {idvar} [, {timeout}]]) |
| String send expression |
| remote_foreground({server}) Number bring Vim server to the foreground |
| remote_peek({serverid} [, {retvar}]) |
| Number check for reply string |
| remote_read({serverid} [, {timeout}]) |
| String read reply string |
| remote_send({server}, {string} [, {idvar}]) |
| String send key sequence |
| remote_startserver({name}) none become server {name} |
| remove({list}, {idx} [, {end}]) any/List |
| remove items {idx}-{end} from {list} |
| remove({blob}, {idx} [, {end}]) Number/Blob |
| remove bytes {idx}-{end} from {blob} |
| remove({dict}, {key}) any remove entry {key} from {dict} |
| rename({from}, {to}) Number rename (move) file from {from} to {to} |
| repeat({expr}, {count}) List/Tuple/Blob/String |
| repeat {expr} {count} times |
| resolve({filename}) String get filename a shortcut points to |
| reverse({obj}) List/Tuple/Blob/String |
| reverse {obj} |
| round({expr}) Float round off {expr} |
| rubyeval({expr}) any evaluate |Ruby| expression |
| screenattr({row}, {col}) Number attribute at screen position |
| screenchar({row}, {col}) Number character at screen position |
| screenchars({row}, {col}) List List of characters at screen position |
| screencol() Number current cursor column |
| screenpos({winid}, {lnum}, {col}) Dict screen row and col of a text character |
| screenrow() Number current cursor row |
| screenstring({row}, {col}) String characters at screen position |
| search({pattern} [, {flags} [, {stopline} [, {timeout} [, {skip}]]]]) |
| Number search for {pattern} |
| searchcount([{options}]) Dict get or update search stats |
| searchdecl({name} [, {global} [, {thisblock}]]) |
| Number search for variable declaration |
| searchpair({start}, {middle}, {end} [, {flags} [, {skip} [...]]]) |
| Number search for other end of start/end pair |
| searchpairpos({start}, {middle}, {end} [, {flags} [, {skip} [...]]]) |
| List search for other end of start/end pair |
| searchpos({pattern} [, {flags} [, {stopline} [, {timeout} [, {skip}]]]]) |
| List search for {pattern} |
| server2client({clientid}, {string}) |
| Number send reply string |
| serverlist() String get a list of available servers |
| setbufline({buf}, {lnum}, {text}) |
| Number set line {lnum} to {text} in buffer |
| {buf} |
| setbufvar({buf}, {varname}, {val}) |
| none set {varname} in buffer {buf} to {val} |
| setcellwidths({list}) none set character cell width overrides |
| setcharpos({expr}, {list}) Number set the {expr} position to {list} |
| setcharsearch({dict}) Dict set character search from {dict} |
| setcmdline({str} [, {pos}]) Number set command-line |
| setcmdpos({pos}) Number set cursor position in command-line |
| setcursorcharpos({list}) Number move cursor to position in {list} |
| setenv({name}, {val}) none set environment variable |
| setfperm({fname}, {mode}) Number set {fname} file permissions to {mode} |
| setline({lnum}, {line}) Number set line {lnum} to {line} |
| setloclist({nr}, {list} [, {action}]) |
| Number modify location list using {list} |
| setloclist({nr}, {list}, {action}, {what}) |
| Number modify specific location list props |
| setmatches({list} [, {win}]) Number restore a list of matches |
| setpos({expr}, {list}) Number set the {expr} position to {list} |
| setqflist({list} [, {action}]) Number modify quickfix list using {list} |
| setqflist({list}, {action}, {what}) |
| Number modify specific quickfix list props |
| setreg({n}, {v} [, {opt}]) Number set register to value and type |
| settabvar({nr}, {varname}, {val}) none set {varname} in tab page {nr} to {val} |
| settabwinvar({tabnr}, {winnr}, {varname}, {val}) |
| none set {varname} in window {winnr} in tab |
| page {tabnr} to {val} |
| settagstack({nr}, {dict} [, {action}]) |
| Number modify tag stack using {dict} |
| setwinvar({nr}, {varname}, {val}) none set {varname} in window {nr} to {val} |
| sha256({string}) String SHA256 checksum of {string} |
| shellescape({string} [, {special}]) |
| String escape {string} for use as shell |
| command argument |
| shiftwidth([{col}]) Number effective value of 'shiftwidth' |
| sign_define({name} [, {dict}]) Number define or update a sign |
| sign_define({list}) List define or update a list of signs |
| sign_getdefined([{name}]) List get a list of defined signs |
| sign_getplaced([{buf} [, {dict}]]) |
| List get a list of placed signs |
| sign_jump({id}, {group}, {buf}) |
| Number jump to a sign |
| sign_place({id}, {group}, {name}, {buf} [, {dict}]) |
| Number place a sign |
| sign_placelist({list}) List place a list of signs |
| sign_undefine([{name}]) Number undefine a sign |
| sign_undefine({list}) List undefine a list of signs |
| sign_unplace({group} [, {dict}]) |
| Number unplace a sign |
| sign_unplacelist({list}) List unplace a list of signs |
| simplify({filename}) String simplify filename as much as possible |
| sin({expr}) Float sine of {expr} |
| sinh({expr}) Float hyperbolic sine of {expr} |
| slice({expr}, {start} [, {end}]) String, List or Blob |
| slice of a String, List or Blob |
| sort({list} [, {how} [, {dict}]]) |
| List sort {list}, compare with {how} |
| sound_clear() none stop playing all sounds |
| sound_playevent({name} [, {callback}]) |
| Number play an event sound |
| sound_playfile({path} [, {callback}]) |
| Number play sound file {path} |
| sound_stop({id}) none stop playing sound {id} |
| soundfold({word}) String sound-fold {word} |
| spellbadword() String badly spelled word at cursor |
| spellsuggest({word} [, {max} [, {capital}]]) |
| List spelling suggestions |
| split({expr} [, {pat} [, {keepempty}]]) |
| List make |List| from {pat} separated {expr} |
| sqrt({expr}) Float square root of {expr} |
| srand([{expr}]) List get seed for |rand()| |
| state([{what}]) String current state of Vim |
| str2blob({list} [, {options}]) Blob convert list of strings into a Blob |
| str2float({expr} [, {quoted}]) Float convert String to Float |
| str2list({expr} [, {utf8}]) List convert each character of {expr} to |
| ASCII/UTF-8 value |
| str2nr({expr} [, {base} [, {quoted}]]) |
| Number convert String to Number |
| strcharlen({expr}) Number character length of the String {expr} |
| strcharpart({str}, {start} [, {len} [, {skipcc}]]) |
| String {len} characters of {str} at |
| character {start} |
| strchars({expr} [, {skipcc}]) Number character count of the String {expr} |
| strdisplaywidth({expr} [, {col}]) Number display length of the String {expr} |
| strftime({format} [, {time}]) String format time with a specified format |
| strgetchar({str}, {index}) Number get char {index} from {str} |
| stridx({haystack}, {needle} [, {start}]) |
| Number index of {needle} in {haystack} |
| string({expr}) String String representation of {expr} value |
| strlen({expr}) Number length of the String {expr} |
| strpart({str}, {start} [, {len} [, {chars}]]) |
| String {len} bytes/chars of {str} at |
| byte {start} |
| strptime({format}, {timestring}) |
| Number Convert {timestring} to unix timestamp |
| strridx({haystack}, {needle} [, {start}]) |
| Number last index of {needle} in {haystack} |
| strtrans({expr}) String translate string to make it printable |
| strutf16len({string} [, {countcc}]) |
| Number number of UTF-16 code units in {string} |
| strwidth({expr}) Number display cell length of the String {expr} |
| submatch({nr} [, {list}]) String or List |
| specific match in ":s" or substitute() |
| substitute({expr}, {pat}, {sub}, {flags}) |
| String all {pat} in {expr} replaced with {sub} |
| swapfilelist() List swap files found in 'directory' |
| swapinfo({fname}) Dict information about swap file {fname} |
| swapname({buf}) String swap file of buffer {buf} |
| synID({lnum}, {col}, {trans}) Number syntax ID at {lnum} and {col} |
| synIDattr({synID}, {what} [, {mode}]) |
| String attribute {what} of syntax ID {synID} |
| synIDtrans({synID}) Number translated syntax ID of {synID} |
| synconcealed({lnum}, {col}) List info about concealing |
| synstack({lnum}, {col}) List stack of syntax IDs at {lnum} and {col} |
| system({expr} [, {input}]) String output of shell command/filter {expr} |
| systemlist({expr} [, {input}]) List output of shell command/filter {expr} |
| tabpagebuflist([{arg}]) List list of buffer numbers in tab page |
| tabpagenr([{arg}]) Number number of current or last tab page |
| tabpagewinnr({tabarg} [, {arg}]) Number number of current window in tab page |
| tagfiles() List tags files used |
| taglist({expr} [, {filename}]) List list of tags matching {expr} |
| tan({expr}) Float tangent of {expr} |
| tanh({expr}) Float hyperbolic tangent of {expr} |
| tempname() String name for a temporary file |
| term_dumpdiff({filename}, {filename} [, {options}]) |
| Number display difference between two dumps |
| term_dumpload({filename} [, {options}]) |
| Number displaying a screen dump |
| term_dumpwrite({buf}, {filename} [, {options}]) |
| none dump terminal window contents |
| term_getaltscreen({buf}) Number get the alternate screen flag |
| term_getansicolors({buf}) List get ANSI palette in GUI color mode |
| term_getattr({attr}, {what}) Number get the value of attribute {what} |
| term_getcursor({buf}) List get the cursor position of a terminal |
| term_getjob({buf}) Job get the job associated with a terminal |
| term_getline({buf}, {row}) String get a line of text from a terminal |
| term_getscrolled({buf}) Number get the scroll count of a terminal |
| term_getsize({buf}) List get the size of a terminal |
| term_getstatus({buf}) String get the status of a terminal |
| term_gettitle({buf}) String get the title of a terminal |
| term_gettty({buf}, [{input}]) String get the tty name of a terminal |
| term_list() List get the list of terminal buffers |
| term_scrape({buf}, {row}) List get row of a terminal screen |
| term_sendkeys({buf}, {keys}) none send keystrokes to a terminal |
| term_setansicolors({buf}, {colors}) |
| none set ANSI palette in GUI color mode |
| term_setapi({buf}, {expr}) none set |terminal-api| function name prefix |
| term_setkill({buf}, {how}) none set signal to stop job in terminal |
| term_setrestore({buf}, {command}) none set command to restore terminal |
| term_setsize({buf}, {rows}, {cols}) |
| none set the size of a terminal |
| term_start({cmd} [, {options}]) Number open a terminal window and run a job |
| term_wait({buf} [, {time}]) Number wait for screen to be updated |
| terminalprops() Dict properties of the terminal |
| test_alloc_fail({id}, {countdown}, {repeat}) |
| none make memory allocation fail |
| test_autochdir() none enable 'autochdir' during startup |
| test_feedinput({string}) none add key sequence to input buffer |
| test_garbagecollect_now() none free memory right now for testing |
| test_garbagecollect_soon() none free memory soon for testing |
| test_getvalue({string}) any get value of an internal variable |
| test_gui_event({event}, {args}) bool generate a GUI event for testing |
| test_ignore_error({expr}) none ignore a specific error |
| test_mswin_event({event}, {args}) |
| bool generate MS-Windows event for testing |
| test_null_blob() Blob null value for testing |
| test_null_channel() Channel null value for testing |
| test_null_dict() Dict null value for testing |
| test_null_function() Funcref null value for testing |
| test_null_job() Job null value for testing |
| test_null_list() List null value for testing |
| test_null_partial() Funcref null value for testing |
| test_null_string() String null value for testing |
| test_null_tuple() Tuple null value for testing |
| test_option_not_set({name}) none reset flag indicating option was set |
| test_override({expr}, {val}) none test with Vim internal overrides |
| test_refcount({expr}) Number get the reference count of {expr} |
| test_setmouse({row}, {col}) none set the mouse position for testing |
| test_settime({expr}) none set current time for testing |
| test_srand_seed([{seed}]) none set seed for testing srand() |
| test_unknown() any unknown value for testing |
| test_void() any void value for testing |
| timer_info([{id}]) List information about timers |
| timer_pause({id}, {pause}) none pause or unpause a timer |
| timer_start({time}, {callback} [, {options}]) |
| Number create a timer |
| timer_stop({timer}) none stop a timer |
| timer_stopall() none stop all timers |
| tolower({expr}) String the String {expr} switched to lowercase |
| toupper({expr}) String the String {expr} switched to uppercase |
| tr({src}, {fromstr}, {tostr}) String translate chars of {src} in {fromstr} |
| to chars in {tostr} |
| trim({text} [, {mask} [, {dir}]]) |
| String trim characters in {mask} from {text} |
| trunc({expr}) Float truncate Float {expr} |
| tuple2list({tuple}) List turn {tuple} of items into a list |
| type({expr}) Number type of value {expr} |
| typename({expr}) String representation of the type of {expr} |
| undofile({name}) String undo file name for {name} |
| undotree([{buf}]) List undo file tree for buffer {buf} |
| uniq({list} [, {func} [, {dict}]]) |
| List remove adjacent duplicates from a list |
| utf16idx({string}, {idx} [, {countcc} [, {charidx}]]) |
| Number UTF-16 index of byte {idx} in {string} |
| values({dict}) List values in {dict} |
| virtcol({expr} [, {list} [, {winid}]) |
| Number or List |
| screen column of cursor or mark |
| virtcol2col({winid}, {lnum}, {col}) |
| Number byte index of a character on screen |
| visualmode([{expr}]) String last visual mode used |
| wildmenumode() Number whether 'wildmenu' mode is active |
| win_execute({id}, {command} [, {silent}]) |
| String execute {command} in window {id} |
| win_findbuf({bufnr}) List find windows containing {bufnr} |
| win_getid([{win} [, {tab}]]) Number get window ID for {win} in {tab} |
| win_gettype([{nr}]) String type of window {nr} |
| win_gotoid({expr}) Number go to window with ID {expr} |
| win_id2tabwin({expr}) List get tab and window nr from window ID |
| win_id2win({expr}) Number get window nr from window ID |
| win_move_separator({nr}) Number move window vertical separator |
| win_move_statusline({nr}) Number move window status line |
| win_screenpos({nr}) List get screen position of window {nr} |
| win_splitmove({nr}, {target} [, {options}]) |
| Number move window {nr} to split of {target} |
| winbufnr({nr}) Number buffer number of window {nr} |
| wincol() Number window column of the cursor |
| windowsversion() String MS-Windows OS version |
| winheight({nr}) Number height of window {nr} |
| winlayout([{tabnr}]) List layout of windows in tab {tabnr} |
| winline() Number window line of the cursor |
| winnr([{expr}]) Number number of current window |
| winrestcmd() String returns command to restore window sizes |
| winrestview({dict}) none restore view of current window |
| winsaveview() Dict save view of current window |
| winwidth({nr}) Number width of window {nr} |
| wordcount() Dict get byte/char/word statistics |
| writefile({object}, {fname} [, {flags}]) |
| Number write |Blob| or |List| of lines to file |
| xor({expr}, {expr}) Number bitwise XOR |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 2. Details *builtin-function-details* |
| |
| Not all functions are here, some have been moved to a help file covering the |
| specific functionality. |
| Return type specifies the type for |Vim9-script|, see |vim9-types| |
| |
| abs({expr}) *abs()* |
| Return the absolute value of {expr}. When {expr} evaluates to |
| a |Float| abs() returns a |Float|. When {expr} can be |
| converted to a |Number| abs() returns a |Number|. Otherwise |
| abs() gives an error message and returns -1. |
| Examples: > |
| echo abs(1.456) |
| < 1.456 > |
| echo abs(-5.456) |
| < 5.456 > |
| echo abs(-4) |
| < 4 |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Compute()->abs() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| or |Float| depending on {expr} |
| |
| |
| acos({expr}) *acos()* |
| Return the arc cosine of {expr} measured in radians, as a |
| |Float| in the range of [0, pi]. |
| {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number| in the range |
| [-1, 1]. Otherwise acos() returns "nan". |
| Examples: > |
| :echo acos(0) |
| < 1.570796 > |
| :echo acos(-0.5) |
| < 2.094395 |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Compute()->acos() |
| < |
| Return type: |Float| |
| |
| |
| add({object}, {expr}) *add()* |
| Append the item {expr} to |List| or |Blob| {object}. Returns |
| the resulting |List| or |Blob|. Examples: > |
| :let alist = add([1, 2, 3], item) |
| :call add(mylist, "woodstock") |
| < Note that when {expr} is a |List| it is appended as a single |
| item. Use |extend()| to concatenate |Lists|. |
| When {object} is a |Blob| then {expr} must be a number. |
| Use |insert()| to add an item at another position. |
| Returns 1 if {object} is not a |List| or a |Blob|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mylist->add(val1)->add(val2) |
| < |
| Return type: list<{type}> (depending on the given |List|) or |
| |Blob| |
| |
| |
| and({expr}, {expr}) *and()* |
| Bitwise AND on the two arguments. The arguments are converted |
| to a number. A List, Dict or Float argument causes an error. |
| Also see `or()` and `xor()`. |
| Example: > |
| :let flag = and(bits, 0x80) |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| :let flag = bits->and(0x80) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| append({lnum}, {text}) *append()* |
| When {text} is a |List|: Append each item of the |List| as a |
| text line below line {lnum} in the current buffer. |
| Otherwise append {text} as one text line below line {lnum} in |
| the current buffer. |
| Any type of item is accepted and converted to a String. |
| {lnum} can be zero to insert a line before the first one. |
| {lnum} is used like with |getline()|. |
| Returns 1 for failure ({lnum} out of range or out of memory), |
| 0 for success. When {text} is an empty list zero is returned, |
| no matter the value of {lnum}. |
| In |Vim9| script an invalid argument or negative number |
| results in an error. Example: > |
| :let failed = append(line('$'), "# THE END") |
| :let failed = append(0, ["Chapter 1", "the beginning"]) |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method| after a List, the base is |
| passed as the second argument: > |
| mylist->append(lnum) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| appendbufline({buf}, {lnum}, {text}) *appendbufline()* |
| Like |append()| but append the text in buffer {buf}. |
| |
| This function works only for loaded buffers. First call |
| |bufload()| if needed. |
| |
| For the use of {buf}, see |bufname()|. |
| |
| {lnum} is the line number to append below. Note that using |
| |line()| would use the current buffer, not the one appending |
| to. Use "$" to append at the end of the buffer. Other string |
| values are not supported. |
| |
| On success 0 is returned, on failure 1 is returned. |
| In |Vim9| script an error is given for an invalid {lnum}. |
| |
| If {buf} is not a valid buffer or {lnum} is not valid, an |
| error message is given. Example: > |
| :let failed = appendbufline(13, 0, "# THE START") |
| < However, when {text} is an empty list then no error is given |
| for an invalid {lnum}, since {lnum} isn't actually used. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method| after a List, the base is |
| passed as the second argument: > |
| mylist->appendbufline(buf, lnum) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| argc([{winid}]) *argc()* |
| The result is the number of files in the argument list. See |
| |arglist|. |
| If {winid} is not supplied, the argument list of the current |
| window is used. |
| If {winid} is -1, the global argument list is used. |
| Otherwise {winid} specifies the window of which the argument |
| list is used: either the window number or the window ID. |
| Returns -1 if the {winid} argument is invalid. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| *argidx()* |
| argidx() The result is the current index in the argument list. 0 is |
| the first file. argc() - 1 is the last one. See |arglist|. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| *arglistid()* |
| arglistid([{winnr} [, {tabnr}]]) |
| Return the argument list ID. This is a number which |
| identifies the argument list being used. Zero is used for the |
| global argument list. See |arglist|. |
| Returns -1 if the arguments are invalid. |
| |
| Without arguments use the current window. |
| With {winnr} only use this window in the current tab page. |
| With {winnr} and {tabnr} use the window in the specified tab |
| page. |
| {winnr} can be the window number or the |window-ID|. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| *argv()* |
| argv([{nr} [, {winid}]]) |
| The result is the {nr}th file in the argument list. See |
| |arglist|. "argv(0)" is the first one. Example: > |
| :let i = 0 |
| :while i < argc() |
| : let f = escape(fnameescape(argv(i)), '.') |
| : exe 'amenu Arg.' .. f .. ' :e ' .. f .. '<CR>' |
| : let i = i + 1 |
| :endwhile |
| < Without the {nr} argument, or when {nr} is -1, a |List| with |
| the whole |arglist| is returned. |
| |
| The {winid} argument specifies the window ID, see |argc()|. |
| For the Vim command line arguments see |v:argv|. |
| |
| Returns an empty string if {nr}th argument is not present in |
| the argument list. Returns an empty List if the {winid} |
| argument is invalid. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| asin({expr}) *asin()* |
| Return the arc sine of {expr} measured in radians, as a |Float| |
| in the range of [-pi/2, pi/2]. |
| {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number| in the range |
| [-1, 1]. |
| Returns "nan" if {expr} is outside the range [-1, 1]. Returns |
| 0.0 if {expr} is not a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Examples: > |
| :echo asin(0.8) |
| < 0.927295 > |
| :echo asin(-0.5) |
| < -0.523599 |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Compute()->asin() |
| < |
| Return type: |Float| |
| |
| assert_ functions are documented here: |assert-functions-details| |
| |
| |
| atan({expr}) *atan()* |
| Return the principal value of the arc tangent of {expr}, in |
| the range [-pi/2, +pi/2] radians, as a |Float|. |
| {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Returns 0.0 if {expr} is not a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Examples: > |
| :echo atan(100) |
| < 1.560797 > |
| :echo atan(-4.01) |
| < -1.326405 |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Compute()->atan() |
| < |
| Return type: |Float| |
| |
| |
| atan2({expr1}, {expr2}) *atan2()* |
| Return the arc tangent of {expr1} / {expr2}, measured in |
| radians, as a |Float| in the range [-pi, pi]. |
| {expr1} and {expr2} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Returns 0.0 if {expr1} or {expr2} is not a |Float| or a |
| |Number|. |
| Examples: > |
| :echo atan2(-1, 1) |
| < -0.785398 > |
| :echo atan2(1, -1) |
| < 2.356194 |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Compute()->atan2(1) |
| < |
| Return type: |Float| |
| |
| |
| autocmd_add({acmds}) *autocmd_add()* |
| Adds a List of autocmds and autocmd groups. |
| |
| The {acmds} argument is a List where each item is a Dict with |
| the following optional items: |
| bufnr buffer number to add a buffer-local autocmd. |
| If this item is specified, then the "pattern" |
| item is ignored. |
| cmd Ex command to execute for this autocmd event |
| event autocmd event name. Refer to |autocmd-events|. |
| This can be either a String with a single |
| event name or a List of event names. |
| group autocmd group name. Refer to |autocmd-groups|. |
| If this group doesn't exist then it is |
| created. If not specified or empty, then the |
| default group is used. |
| nested boolean flag, set to v:true to add a nested |
| autocmd. Refer to |autocmd-nested|. |
| once boolean flag, set to v:true to add an autocmd |
| which executes only once. Refer to |
| |autocmd-once|. |
| pattern autocmd pattern string. Refer to |
| |autocmd-patterns|. If "bufnr" item is |
| present, then this item is ignored. This can |
| be a String with a single pattern or a List of |
| patterns. |
| replace boolean flag, set to v:true to remove all the |
| commands associated with the specified autocmd |
| event and group and add the {cmd}. This is |
| useful to avoid adding the same command |
| multiple times for an autocmd event in a group. |
| |
| Returns v:true on success and v:false on failure. |
| Examples: > |
| " Create a buffer-local autocmd for buffer 5 |
| let acmd = {} |
| let acmd.group = 'MyGroup' |
| let acmd.event = 'BufEnter' |
| let acmd.bufnr = 5 |
| let acmd.cmd = 'call BufEnterFunc()' |
| call autocmd_add([acmd]) |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetAutocmdList()->autocmd_add() |
| < |
| Return type: |vim9-boolean| |
| |
| |
| autocmd_delete({acmds}) *autocmd_delete()* |
| Deletes a List of autocmds and autocmd groups. |
| |
| The {acmds} argument is a List where each item is a Dict with |
| the following optional items: |
| bufnr buffer number to delete a buffer-local autocmd. |
| If this item is specified, then the "pattern" |
| item is ignored. |
| cmd Ex command for this autocmd event |
| event autocmd event name. Refer to |autocmd-events|. |
| If '*' then all the autocmd events in this |
| group are deleted. |
| group autocmd group name. Refer to |autocmd-groups|. |
| If not specified or empty, then the default |
| group is used. |
| nested set to v:true for a nested autocmd. |
| Refer to |autocmd-nested|. |
| once set to v:true for an autocmd which executes |
| only once. Refer to |autocmd-once|. |
| pattern autocmd pattern string. Refer to |
| |autocmd-patterns|. If "bufnr" item is |
| present, then this item is ignored. |
| |
| If only {group} is specified in a {acmds} entry and {event}, |
| {pattern} and {cmd} are not specified, then that autocmd group |
| is deleted. |
| |
| Returns |v:true| on success and |v:false| on failure. |
| Examples: > |
| " :autocmd! BufLeave *.vim |
| let acmd = #{event: 'BufLeave', pattern: '*.vim'} |
| call autocmd_delete([acmd]}) |
| " :autocmd! MyGroup1 BufLeave |
| let acmd = #{group: 'MyGroup1', event: 'BufLeave'} |
| call autocmd_delete([acmd]) |
| " :autocmd! MyGroup2 BufEnter *.c |
| let acmd = #{group: 'MyGroup2', event: 'BufEnter', |
| \ pattern: '*.c'} |
| " :autocmd! MyGroup2 * *.c |
| let acmd = #{group: 'MyGroup2', event: '*', |
| \ pattern: '*.c'} |
| call autocmd_delete([acmd]) |
| " :autocmd! MyGroup3 |
| let acmd = #{group: 'MyGroup3'} |
| call autocmd_delete([acmd]) |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetAutocmdList()->autocmd_delete() |
| < |
| Return type: |vim9-boolean| |
| |
| |
| autocmd_get([{opts}]) *autocmd_get()* |
| Returns a |List| of autocmds. If {opts} is not supplied, then |
| returns the autocmds for all the events in all the groups. |
| |
| The optional {opts} Dict argument supports the following |
| items: |
| group Autocmd group name. If specified, returns only |
| the autocmds defined in this group. If the |
| specified group doesn't exist, results in an |
| error message. If set to an empty string, |
| then the default autocmd group is used. |
| event Autocmd event name. If specified, returns only |
| the autocmds defined for this event. If set |
| to "*", then returns autocmds for all the |
| events. If the specified event doesn't exist, |
| results in an error message. |
| pattern Autocmd pattern. If specified, returns only |
| the autocmds defined for this pattern. |
| A combination of the above three times can be supplied in |
| {opts}. |
| |
| Each Dict in the returned List contains the following items: |
| bufnr For buffer-local autocmds, buffer number where |
| the autocmd is defined. |
| cmd Command executed for this autocmd. |
| event Autocmd event name. |
| group Autocmd group name. |
| nested Boolean flag, set to v:true for a nested |
| autocmd. See |autocmd-nested|. |
| once Boolean flag, set to v:true, if the autocmd |
| will be executed only once. See |autocmd-once|. |
| pattern Autocmd pattern. For a buffer-local |
| autocmd, this will be of the form "<buffer=n>". |
| If there are multiple commands for an autocmd event in a |
| group, then separate items are returned for each command. |
| |
| Returns an empty List if an autocmd with the specified group |
| or event or pattern is not found. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| " :autocmd MyGroup |
| echo autocmd_get(#{group: 'Mygroup'}) |
| " :autocmd G BufUnload |
| echo autocmd_get(#{group: 'G', event: 'BufUnload'}) |
| " :autocmd G * *.ts |
| let acmd = #{group: 'G', event: '*', pattern: '*.ts'} |
| echo autocmd_get(acmd) |
| " :autocmd Syntax |
| echo autocmd_get(#{event: 'Syntax'}) |
| " :autocmd G BufEnter *.ts |
| let acmd = #{group: 'G', event: 'BufEnter', |
| \ pattern: '*.ts'} |
| echo autocmd_get(acmd) |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Getopts()->autocmd_get() |
| < |
| Return type: list<dict<any>> |
| |
| |
| balloon_gettext() *balloon_gettext()* |
| Return the current text in the balloon. Only for the string, |
| not used for the List. Returns an empty string if balloon |
| is not present. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| balloon_show({expr}) *balloon_show()* |
| Show {expr} inside the balloon. For the GUI {expr} is used as |
| a string. For a terminal {expr} can be a list, which contains |
| the lines of the balloon. If {expr} is not a list it will be |
| split with |balloon_split()|. |
| If {expr} is an empty string any existing balloon is removed. |
| |
| Example: > |
| func GetBalloonContent() |
| " ... initiate getting the content |
| return '' |
| endfunc |
| set balloonexpr=GetBalloonContent() |
| |
| func BalloonCallback(result) |
| call balloon_show(a:result) |
| endfunc |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetText()->balloon_show() |
| < |
| The intended use is that fetching the content of the balloon |
| is initiated from 'balloonexpr'. It will invoke an |
| asynchronous method, in which a callback invokes |
| balloon_show(). The 'balloonexpr' itself can return an |
| empty string or a placeholder, e.g. "loading...". |
| |
| When showing a balloon is not possible then nothing happens, |
| no error message is given. |
| {only available when compiled with the |+balloon_eval| or |
| |+balloon_eval_term| feature} |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| balloon_split({msg}) *balloon_split()* |
| Split String {msg} into lines to be displayed in a balloon. |
| The splits are made for the current window size and optimize |
| to show debugger output. |
| Returns a |List| with the split lines. Returns an empty List |
| on error. |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetText()->balloon_split()->balloon_show() |
| |
| < {only available when compiled with the |+balloon_eval_term| |
| feature} |
| |
| Return type: list<any> or list<string> |
| |
| base64_decode({string}) *base64_decode()* |
| Return a Blob containing the bytes decoded from the base64 |
| encoded characters in {string}. |
| |
| The {string} argument should contain only base64-encoded |
| characters and should have a length that is a multiple of 4. |
| |
| Returns an empty blob on error. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| " Write the decoded contents to a binary file |
| call writefile(base64_decode(s), 'tools.bmp') |
| " Decode a base64-encoded string |
| echo blob2str(base64_decode(encodedstr)) |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetEncodedString()->base64_decode() |
| < |
| Return type: |Blob| |
| |
| |
| base64_encode({blob}) *base64_encode()* |
| Return a base64-encoded String representing the bytes in |
| {blob}. The base64 alphabet defined in RFC 4648 is used. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| " Encode the contents of a binary file |
| echo base64_encode(readblob('somefile.bin')) |
| " Encode a string |
| echo base64_encode(str2blob([somestr])) |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetBinaryData()->base64_encode() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| bindtextdomain({package}, {path}) *bindtextdomain()* |
| Bind a specific {package} to a {path} so that the |
| |gettext()| function can be used to get language-specific |
| translations for a package. {path} is the directory name |
| for the translations. See |package-translation|. |
| |
| Returns v:true on success and v:false on failure (out of |
| memory). |
| |
| Return type: |vim9-boolean| |
| |
| blob2list({blob}) *blob2list()* |
| Return a List containing the number value of each byte in Blob |
| {blob}. Examples: > |
| blob2list(0z0102.0304) returns [1, 2, 3, 4] |
| blob2list(0z) returns [] |
| < Returns an empty List on error. |list2blob()| does the |
| opposite. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetBlob()->blob2list() |
| < |
| Return type: list<any> or list<number> |
| |
| |
| blob2str({blob} [, {options}]) *blob2str()* |
| Return a List of Strings in the current 'encoding' by |
| converting the bytes in {blob} into characters. |
| |
| Each <NL> byte in the blob is interpreted as the end of a |
| string and a new list item is added. Each <NUL> byte in the |
| blob is converted into a <NL> character. |
| |
| If {options} is not supplied, the current 'encoding' value is |
| used to decode the bytes in {blob}. |
| |
| The argument {options} is a |Dict| and supports the following |
| items: |
| encoding Decode the bytes in {blob} using this |
| encoding. The value is a |String|. See |
| |encoding-names| for the supported values |
| (plus the special value "none"). |
| *E1515* *E1516* |
| When current 'encoding' is "utf-8", an error is given and an |
| empty List is returned if an invalid byte sequence is |
| encountered in {blob}. To suppress this validation and get |
| potentially invalid string, set "encoding" in {options} to |
| "none". |
| |
| Returns an empty List if blob is empty. |
| |
| See also |str2blob()| |
| |
| Examples: > |
| blob2str(0z6162) returns ['ab'] |
| blob2str(0zC2ABC2BB) returns ['«»'] |
| blob2str(0z610A62) returns ['a', 'b'] |
| blob2str(0z610062) returns ['a\nb'] |
| blob2str(0zABBB, {'encoding': 'latin1'}) returns ['«»'] |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetBlob()->blob2str() |
| < |
| Return type: list<string> |
| |
| |
| *browse()* |
| browse({save}, {title}, {initdir}, {default}) |
| Put up a file requester. This only works when "has("browse")" |
| returns |TRUE| (only in some GUI versions). |
| The input fields are: |
| {save} when |TRUE|, select file to write |
| {title} title for the requester |
| {initdir} directory to start browsing in |
| {default} default file name |
| An empty string is returned when the "Cancel" button is hit, |
| something went wrong, or browsing is not possible. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| browsedir({title}, {initdir}) *browsedir()* |
| Put up a directory requester. This only works when |
| "has("browse")" returns |TRUE| (only in some GUI versions). |
| On systems where a directory browser is not supported a file |
| browser is used. In that case: select a file in the directory |
| to be used. |
| The input fields are: |
| {title} title for the requester |
| {initdir} directory to start browsing in |
| When the "Cancel" button is hit, something went wrong, or |
| browsing is not possible, an empty string is returned. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| bufadd({name}) *bufadd()* |
| Add a buffer to the buffer list with name {name} (must be a |
| String). |
| If a buffer for file {name} already exists, return that buffer |
| number. Otherwise return the buffer number of the newly |
| created buffer. When {name} is an empty string then a new |
| buffer is always created. |
| The buffer will not have 'buflisted' set and not be loaded |
| yet. To add some text to the buffer use this: > |
| let bufnr = bufadd('someName') |
| call bufload(bufnr) |
| call setbufline(bufnr, 1, ['some', 'text']) |
| < Returns 0 on error. |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| let bufnr = 'somename'->bufadd() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| bufexists({buf}) *bufexists()* |
| The result is a Number, which is |TRUE| if a buffer called |
| {buf} exists. |
| If the {buf} argument is a number, buffer numbers are used. |
| Number zero is the alternate buffer for the current window. |
| |
| If the {buf} argument is a string it must match a buffer name |
| exactly. The name can be: |
| - Relative to the current directory. |
| - A full path. |
| - The name of a buffer with 'buftype' set to "nofile". |
| - A URL name. |
| Unlisted buffers will be found. |
| Note that help files are listed by their short name in the |
| output of |:buffers|, but bufexists() requires using their |
| long name to be able to find them. |
| bufexists() may report a buffer exists, but to use the name |
| with a |:buffer| command you may need to use |expand()|. Esp |
| for MS-Windows 8.3 names in the form "c:\DOCUME~1" |
| Use "bufexists(0)" to test for the existence of an alternate |
| file name. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| let exists = 'somename'->bufexists() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| Obsolete name: buffer_exists(). *buffer_exists()* |
| |
| |
| buflisted({buf}) *buflisted()* |
| The result is a Number, which is |TRUE| if a buffer called |
| {buf} exists and is listed (has the 'buflisted' option set). |
| The {buf} argument is used like with |bufexists()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| let listed = 'somename'->buflisted() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| bufload({buf}) *bufload()* |
| Ensure the buffer {buf} is loaded. When the buffer name |
| refers to an existing file then the file is read. Otherwise |
| the buffer will be empty. If the buffer was already loaded |
| then there is no change. If the buffer is not related to a |
| file then no file is read (e.g., when 'buftype' is "nofile"). |
| If there is an existing swap file for the file of the buffer, |
| there will be no dialog, the buffer will be loaded anyway. |
| The {buf} argument is used like with |bufexists()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| eval 'somename'->bufload() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| bufloaded({buf}) *bufloaded()* |
| The result is a Number, which is |TRUE| if a buffer called |
| {buf} exists and is loaded (shown in a window or hidden). |
| The {buf} argument is used like with |bufexists()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| let loaded = 'somename'->bufloaded() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| bufname([{buf}]) *bufname()* |
| The result is the name of a buffer. Mostly as it is displayed |
| by the `:ls` command, but not using special names such as |
| "[No Name]". |
| If {buf} is omitted the current buffer is used. |
| If {buf} is a Number, that buffer number's name is given. |
| Number zero is the alternate buffer for the current window. |
| If {buf} is a String, it is used as a |file-pattern| to match |
| with the buffer names. This is always done like 'magic' is |
| set and 'cpoptions' is empty. When there is more than one |
| match an empty string is returned. |
| "" or "%" can be used for the current buffer, "#" for the |
| alternate buffer. |
| A full match is preferred, otherwise a match at the start, end |
| or middle of the buffer name is accepted. If you only want a |
| full match then put "^" at the start and "$" at the end of the |
| pattern. |
| Listed buffers are found first. If there is a single match |
| with a listed buffer, that one is returned. Next unlisted |
| buffers are searched for. |
| If the {buf} is a String, but you want to use it as a buffer |
| number, force it to be a Number by adding zero to it: > |
| :echo bufname("3" + 0) |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| echo bufnr->bufname() |
| |
| < If the buffer doesn't exist, or doesn't have a name, an empty |
| string is returned. > |
| bufname("#") alternate buffer name |
| bufname(3) name of buffer 3 |
| bufname("%") name of current buffer |
| bufname("file2") name of buffer where "file2" matches. |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| *buffer_name()* |
| Obsolete name: buffer_name(). |
| |
| |
| bufnr([{buf} [, {create}]]) *bufnr()* |
| The result is the number of a buffer, as it is displayed by |
| the `:ls` command. For the use of {buf}, see |bufname()| |
| above. |
| |
| If the buffer doesn't exist, -1 is returned. Or, if the |
| {create} argument is present and TRUE, a new, unlisted, |
| buffer is created and its number is returned. Example: > |
| let newbuf = bufnr('Scratch001', 1) |
| < Using an empty name uses the current buffer. To create a new |
| buffer with an empty name use |bufadd()|. |
| |
| bufnr("$") is the last buffer: > |
| :let last_buffer = bufnr("$") |
| < The result is a Number, which is the highest buffer number |
| of existing buffers. Note that not all buffers with a smaller |
| number necessarily exist, because ":bwipeout" may have removed |
| them. Use bufexists() to test for the existence of a buffer. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| echo bufref->bufnr() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| Obsolete name: buffer_number(). *buffer_number()* |
| *last_buffer_nr()* |
| Obsolete name for bufnr("$"): last_buffer_nr(). |
| |
| |
| bufwinid({buf}) *bufwinid()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the |window-ID| of the first |
| window associated with buffer {buf}. For the use of {buf}, |
| see |bufname()| above. If buffer {buf} doesn't exist or |
| there is no such window, -1 is returned. Example: > |
| |
| echo "A window containing buffer 1 is " .. (bufwinid(1)) |
| < |
| Only deals with the current tab page. See |win_findbuf()| for |
| finding more. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| FindBuffer()->bufwinid() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| bufwinnr({buf}) *bufwinnr()* |
| Like |bufwinid()| but return the window number instead of the |
| |window-ID|. |
| If buffer {buf} doesn't exist or there is no such window, -1 |
| is returned. Example: > |
| |
| echo "A window containing buffer 1 is " .. (bufwinnr(1)) |
| |
| < The number can be used with |CTRL-W_w| and ":wincmd w" |
| |:wincmd|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| FindBuffer()->bufwinnr() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| byte2line({byte}) *byte2line()* |
| Return the line number that contains the character at byte |
| count {byte} in the current buffer. This includes the |
| end-of-line character, depending on the 'fileformat' option |
| for the current buffer. The first character has byte count |
| one. |
| Also see |line2byte()|, |go| and |:goto|. |
| |
| Returns -1 if the {byte} value is invalid. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetOffset()->byte2line() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| {not available when compiled without the |+byte_offset| |
| feature} |
| |
| |
| byteidx({expr}, {nr} [, {utf16}]) *byteidx()* |
| Return byte index of the {nr}'th character in the String |
| {expr}. Use zero for the first character, it then returns |
| zero. |
| If there are no multibyte characters the returned value is |
| equal to {nr}. |
| Composing characters are not counted separately, their byte |
| length is added to the preceding base character. See |
| |byteidxcomp()| below for counting composing characters |
| separately. |
| When {utf16} is present and TRUE, {nr} is used as the UTF-16 |
| index in the String {expr} instead of as the character index. |
| The UTF-16 index is the index in the string when it is encoded |
| with 16-bit words. If the specified UTF-16 index is in the |
| middle of a character (e.g. in a 4-byte character), then the |
| byte index of the first byte in the character is returned. |
| Refer to |string-offset-encoding| for more information. |
| Example : > |
| echo matchstr(str, ".", byteidx(str, 3)) |
| < will display the fourth character. Another way to do the |
| same: > |
| let s = strpart(str, byteidx(str, 3)) |
| echo strpart(s, 0, byteidx(s, 1)) |
| < Also see |strgetchar()| and |strcharpart()|. |
| |
| If there are less than {nr} characters -1 is returned. |
| If there are exactly {nr} characters the length of the string |
| in bytes is returned. |
| See |charidx()| and |utf16idx()| for getting the character and |
| UTF-16 index respectively from the byte index. |
| Examples: > |
| echo byteidx('a😊😊', 2) returns 5 |
| echo byteidx('a😊😊', 2, 1) returns 1 |
| echo byteidx('a😊😊', 3, 1) returns 5 |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetName()->byteidx(idx) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| byteidxcomp({expr}, {nr} [, {utf16}]) *byteidxcomp()* |
| Like byteidx(), except that a composing character is counted |
| as a separate character. Example: > |
| let s = 'e' .. nr2char(0x301) |
| echo byteidx(s, 1) |
| echo byteidxcomp(s, 1) |
| echo byteidxcomp(s, 2) |
| < The first and third echo result in 3 ('e' plus composing |
| character is 3 bytes), the second echo results in 1 ('e' is |
| one byte). |
| Only works differently from byteidx() when 'encoding' is set |
| to a Unicode encoding. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetName()->byteidxcomp(idx) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| call({func}, {arglist} [, {dict}]) *call()* *E699* |
| Call function {func} with the items in |List| {arglist} as |
| arguments. |
| {func} can either be a |Funcref| or the name of a function. |
| a:firstline and a:lastline are set to the cursor line. |
| Returns the return value of the called function. |
| {dict} is for functions with the "dict" attribute. It will be |
| used to set the local variable "self". |Dictionary-function| |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetFunc()->call([arg, arg], dict) |
| < |
| Return type: any, depending on {func} |
| |
| |
| ceil({expr}) *ceil()* |
| Return the smallest integral value greater than or equal to |
| {expr} as a |Float| (round up). |
| {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Examples: > |
| echo ceil(1.456) |
| < 2.0 > |
| echo ceil(-5.456) |
| < -5.0 > |
| echo ceil(4.0) |
| < 4.0 |
| |
| Returns 0.0 if {expr} is not a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Compute()->ceil() |
| < |
| Return type: |Float| |
| |
| |
| ch_ functions are documented here: |channel-functions-details| |
| |
| |
| changenr() *changenr()* |
| Return the number of the most recent change. This is the same |
| number as what is displayed with |:undolist| and can be used |
| with the |:undo| command. |
| When a change was made it is the number of that change. After |
| redo it is the number of the redone change. After undo it is |
| one less than the number of the undone change. |
| Returns 0 if the undo list is empty. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| char2nr({string} [, {utf8}]) *char2nr()* |
| Return Number value of the first char in {string}. |
| Examples: > |
| char2nr(" ") returns 32 |
| char2nr("ABC") returns 65 |
| < When {utf8} is omitted or zero, the current 'encoding' is used. |
| Example for "utf-8": > |
| char2nr("á") returns 225 |
| char2nr("á"[0]) returns 195 |
| < When {utf8} is TRUE, always treat as UTF-8 characters. |
| A combining character is a separate character. |
| |nr2char()| does the opposite. |
| To turn a string into a list of character numbers: > |
| let str = "ABC" |
| let list = map(split(str, '\zs'), {_, val -> char2nr(val)}) |
| < Result: [65, 66, 67] |
| |
| Returns 0 if {string} is not a |String|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetChar()->char2nr() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| charclass({string}) *charclass()* |
| Return the character class of the first character in {string}. |
| The character class is one of: |
| 0 blank |
| 1 punctuation |
| 2 word character (depends on 'iskeyword') |
| 3 emoji |
| other specific Unicode class |
| The class is used in patterns and word motions. |
| Returns 0 if {string} is not a |String|. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| charcol({expr} [, {winid}]) *charcol()* |
| Same as |col()| but returns the character index of the column |
| position given with {expr} instead of the byte position. |
| |
| Example: |
| With the cursor on '세' in line 5 with text "여보세요": > |
| charcol('.') returns 3 |
| col('.') returns 7 |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetPos()->col() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| *charidx()* |
| charidx({string}, {idx} [, {countcc} [, {utf16}]]) |
| Return the character index of the byte at {idx} in {string}. |
| The index of the first character is zero. |
| If there are no multibyte characters the returned value is |
| equal to {idx}. |
| |
| When {countcc} is omitted or |FALSE|, then composing characters |
| are not counted separately, their byte length is added to the |
| preceding base character. |
| When {countcc} is |TRUE|, then composing characters are |
| counted as separate characters. |
| |
| When {utf16} is present and TRUE, {idx} is used as the UTF-16 |
| index in the String {expr} instead of as the byte index. |
| |
| Returns -1 if the arguments are invalid or if there are less |
| than {idx} bytes. If there are exactly {idx} bytes the length |
| of the string in characters is returned. |
| |
| An error is given and -1 is returned if the first argument is |
| not a string, the second argument is not a number or when the |
| third argument is present and is not zero or one. |
| |
| See |byteidx()| and |byteidxcomp()| for getting the byte index |
| from the character index and |utf16idx()| for getting the |
| UTF-16 index from the character index. |
| Refer to |string-offset-encoding| for more information. |
| Examples: > |
| echo charidx('áb́ć', 3) returns 1 |
| echo charidx('áb́ć', 6, 1) returns 4 |
| echo charidx('áb́ć', 16) returns -1 |
| echo charidx('a😊😊', 4, 0, 1) returns 2 |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetName()->charidx(idx) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| chdir({dir}) *chdir()* |
| Change the current working directory to {dir}. The scope of |
| the directory change depends on the directory of the current |
| window: |
| - If the current window has a window-local directory |
| (|:lcd|), then changes the window local directory. |
| - Otherwise, if the current tabpage has a local |
| directory (|:tcd|) then changes the tabpage local |
| directory. |
| - Otherwise, changes the global directory. |
| {dir} must be a String. |
| If successful, returns the previous working directory. Pass |
| this to another chdir() to restore the directory. |
| On failure, returns an empty string. |
| |
| Example: > |
| let save_dir = chdir(newdir) |
| if save_dir != "" |
| " ... do some work |
| call chdir(save_dir) |
| endif |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetDir()->chdir() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| cindent({lnum}) *cindent()* |
| Get the amount of indent for line {lnum} according the C |
| indenting rules, as with 'cindent'. |
| The indent is counted in spaces, the value of 'tabstop' is |
| relevant. {lnum} is used just like in |getline()|. |
| When {lnum} is invalid -1 is returned. |
| See |C-indenting|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetLnum()->cindent() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| clearmatches([{win}]) *clearmatches()* |
| Clears all matches previously defined for the current window |
| by |matchadd()| and the |:match| commands. |
| If {win} is specified, use the window with this number or |
| window ID instead of the current window. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetWin()->clearmatches() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| cmdcomplete_info() *cmdcomplete_info()* |
| Returns a |Dictionary| with information about cmdline |
| completion. See |cmdline-completion|. |
| The items are: |
| cmdline_orig The original command-line string before |
| completion began. |
| pum_visible |TRUE| if popup menu is visible. |
| See |pumvisible()|. |
| matches List of all completion candidates. Each item |
| is a string. |
| selected Selected item index. First index is zero. |
| Index is -1 if no item is selected (showing |
| typed text only, or the last completion after |
| no item is selected when using the <Up> or |
| <Down> keys) |
| |
| Returns an empty |Dictionary| if no completion was attempted, |
| if there was only one candidate and it was fully completed, or |
| if an error occurred. |
| |
| Return type: dict<any> |
| |
| |
| col({expr} [, {winid}]) *col()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the byte index of the column |
| position given with {expr}. |
| For accepted positions see |getpos()|. |
| When {expr} is "$", it means the end of the cursor line, so |
| the result is the number of bytes in the cursor line plus one. |
| Additionally {expr} can be [lnum, col]: a |List| with the line |
| and column number. Most useful when the column is "$", to get |
| the last column of a specific line. When "lnum" or "col" is |
| out of range then col() returns zero. |
| |
| With the optional {winid} argument the values are obtained for |
| that window instead of the current window. |
| |
| To get the line number use |line()|. To get both use |
| |getpos()|. |
| For the screen column position use |virtcol()|. For the |
| character position use |charcol()|. |
| |
| Note that only marks in the current file can be used. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| col(".") column of cursor |
| col("$") length of cursor line plus one |
| col("'t") column of mark t |
| col("'" .. markname) column of mark markname |
| < |
| The first column is 1. Returns 0 if {expr} is invalid or when |
| the window with ID {winid} is not found. |
| For an uppercase mark the column may actually be in another |
| buffer. |
| For the cursor position, when 'virtualedit' is active, the |
| column is one higher if the cursor is after the end of the |
| line. Also, when using a <Cmd> mapping the cursor isn't |
| moved, this can be used to obtain the column in Insert mode: > |
| :imap <F2> <Cmd>echowin col(".")<CR> |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetPos()->col() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| complete({startcol}, {matches}) *complete()* *E785* |
| Set the matches for Insert mode completion. |
| Can only be used in Insert mode. You need to use a mapping |
| with CTRL-R = (see |i_CTRL-R|). It does not work after CTRL-O |
| or with an expression mapping. |
| {startcol} is the byte offset in the line where the completed |
| text start. The text up to the cursor is the original text |
| that will be replaced by the matches. Use col('.') for an |
| empty string. "col('.') - 1" will replace one character by a |
| match. |
| {matches} must be a |List|. Each |List| item is one match. |
| See |complete-items| for the kind of items that are possible. |
| "longest" in 'completeopt' is ignored. |
| Note that the after calling this function you need to avoid |
| inserting anything that would cause completion to stop. |
| The match can be selected with CTRL-N and CTRL-P as usual with |
| Insert mode completion. The popup menu will appear if |
| specified, see |ins-completion-menu|. |
| Example: > |
| inoremap <F5> <C-R>=ListMonths()<CR> |
| |
| func ListMonths() |
| call complete(col('.'), ['January', 'February', 'March', |
| \ 'April', 'May', 'June', 'July', 'August', 'September', |
| \ 'October', 'November', 'December']) |
| return '' |
| endfunc |
| < This isn't very useful, but it shows how it works. Note that |
| an empty string is returned to avoid a zero being inserted. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|, the base is passed as the |
| second argument: > |
| GetMatches()->complete(col('.')) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| complete_add({expr}) *complete_add()* |
| Add {expr} to the list of matches. Only to be used by the |
| function specified with the 'completefunc' option. |
| Returns 0 for failure (empty string or out of memory), |
| 1 when the match was added, 2 when the match was already in |
| the list. |
| See |complete-functions| for an explanation of {expr}. It is |
| the same as one item in the list that 'omnifunc' would return. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetMoreMatches()->complete_add() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| complete_check() *complete_check()* |
| Check for a key typed while looking for completion matches. |
| This is to be used when looking for matches takes some time. |
| Returns |TRUE| when searching for matches is to be aborted, |
| zero otherwise. |
| Only to be used by the function specified with the |
| 'completefunc' option. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| complete_info([{what}]) *complete_info()* |
| Returns a |Dictionary| with information about Insert mode |
| completion. See |ins-completion|. |
| The items are: |
| mode Current completion mode name string. |
| See |complete_info_mode| for the values. |
| pum_visible |TRUE| if popup menu is visible. |
| See |pumvisible()|. |
| items List of all completion candidates. Each item |
| is a dictionary containing the entries "word", |
| "abbr", "menu", "kind", "info" and "user_data". |
| See |complete-items|. |
| matches Same as "items", but only returns items that |
| are matching current query. If both "matches" |
| and "items" are in "what", the returned list |
| will still be named "items", but each item |
| will have an additional "match" field. |
| selected Selected item index. First index is zero. |
| Index is -1 if no item is selected (showing |
| typed text only, or the last completion after |
| no item is selected when using the <Up> or |
| <Down> keys) |
| completed Return a dictionary containing the entries of |
| the currently selected index item. |
| |
| *complete_info_mode* |
| mode values are: |
| "" Not in completion mode |
| "keyword" Keyword completion |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-N| |
| "ctrl_x" Just pressed CTRL-X |i_CTRL-X| |
| "scroll" Scrolling with |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-E| or |
| |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-Y| |
| "whole_line" Whole lines |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-L| |
| "files" File names |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-F| |
| "tags" Tags |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-]| |
| "path_defines" Definition completion |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-D| |
| "path_patterns" Include completion |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-I| |
| "dictionary" Dictionary |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-K| |
| "thesaurus" Thesaurus |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-T| |
| "cmdline" Vim Command line |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-V| |
| "function" User defined completion |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-U| |
| "omni" Omni completion |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-O| |
| "spell" Spelling suggestions |i_CTRL-X_s| |
| "eval" |complete()| completion |
| "register" Words from registers |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-R| |
| "unknown" Other internal modes |
| |
| If the optional {what} list argument is supplied, then only |
| the items listed in {what} are returned. Unsupported items in |
| {what} are silently ignored. |
| |
| To get the position and size of the popup menu, see |
| |pum_getpos()|. It's also available in |v:event| during the |
| |CompleteChanged| event. |
| |
| Returns an empty |Dictionary| on error. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| " Get all items |
| call complete_info() |
| " Get only 'mode' |
| call complete_info(['mode']) |
| " Get only 'mode' and 'pum_visible' |
| call complete_info(['mode', 'pum_visible']) |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetItems()->complete_info() |
| < |
| Return type: dict<any> |
| |
| complete_match([{lnum}, {col}]) *complete_match()* |
| Searches backward from the given position and returns a List |
| of matches according to the 'isexpand' option. When no |
| arguments are provided, uses the current cursor position. |
| |
| Each match is represented as a List containing |
| [startcol, trigger_text] where: |
| - startcol: column position where completion should start, |
| or -1 if no trigger position is found. For multi-character |
| triggers, returns the column of the first character. |
| - trigger_text: the matching trigger string from 'isexpand', |
| or empty string if no match was found or when using the |
| default 'iskeyword' pattern. |
| |
| When 'isexpand' is empty, uses the 'iskeyword' pattern "\k\+$" |
| to find the start of the current keyword. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| set isexpand=.,->,/,/*,abc |
| func CustomComplete() |
| let res = complete_match() |
| if res->len() == 0 | return | endif |
| let [col, trigger] = res[0] |
| let items = [] |
| if trigger == '/*' |
| let items = ['/** */'] |
| elseif trigger == '/' |
| let items = ['/*! */', '// TODO:', '// fixme:'] |
| elseif trigger == '.' |
| let items = ['length()'] |
| elseif trigger =~ '^\->' |
| let items = ['map()', 'reduce()'] |
| elseif trigger =~ '^\abc' |
| let items = ['def', 'ghk'] |
| endif |
| if items->len() > 0 |
| let startcol = trigger =~ '^/' ? col : col + len(trigger) |
| call complete(startcol, items) |
| endif |
| endfunc |
| inoremap <Tab> <Cmd>call CustomComplete()<CR> |
| < |
| Return type: list<list<any>> |
| |
| *confirm()* |
| confirm({msg} [, {choices} [, {default} [, {type}]]]) |
| confirm() offers the user a dialog, from which a choice can be |
| made. It returns the number of the choice. For the first |
| choice this is 1. |
| Note: confirm() is only supported when compiled with dialog |
| support, see |+dialog_con| |+dialog_con_gui| and |+dialog_gui|. |
| |
| {msg} is displayed in a |dialog| with {choices} as the |
| alternatives. When {choices} is missing or empty, "&OK" is |
| used (and translated). |
| {msg} is a String, use '\n' to include a newline. Only on |
| some systems the string is wrapped when it doesn't fit. |
| |
| {choices} is a String, with the individual choices separated |
| by '\n', e.g. > |
| confirm("Save changes?", "&Yes\n&No\n&Cancel") |
| < The letter after the '&' is the shortcut key for that choice. |
| Thus you can type 'c' to select "Cancel". The shortcut does |
| not need to be the first letter: > |
| confirm("file has been modified", "&Save\nSave &All") |
| < For the console, the first letter of each choice is used as |
| the default shortcut key. Case is ignored. |
| |
| The optional {default} argument is the number of the choice |
| that is made if the user hits <CR>. Use 1 to make the first |
| choice the default one. Use 0 to not set a default. If |
| {default} is omitted, 1 is used. |
| |
| The optional {type} String argument gives the type of dialog. |
| This is only used for the icon of the GTK, Mac, Motif and |
| Win32 GUI. It can be one of these values: "Error", |
| "Question", "Info", "Warning" or "Generic". Only the first |
| character is relevant. When {type} is omitted, "Generic" is |
| used. |
| |
| If the user aborts the dialog by pressing <Esc>, CTRL-C, |
| or another valid interrupt key, confirm() returns 0. |
| |
| An example: > |
| let choice = confirm("What do you want?", |
| \ "&Apples\n&Oranges\n&Bananas", 2) |
| if choice == 0 |
| echo "make up your mind!" |
| elseif choice == 3 |
| echo "tasteful" |
| else |
| echo "I prefer bananas myself." |
| endif |
| < In a GUI dialog, buttons are used. The layout of the buttons |
| depends on the 'v' flag in 'guioptions'. If it is included, |
| the buttons are always put vertically. Otherwise, confirm() |
| tries to put the buttons in one horizontal line. If they |
| don't fit, a vertical layout is used anyway. For some systems |
| the horizontal layout is always used. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|in: > |
| BuildMessage()->confirm("&Yes\n&No") |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| copy({expr}) *copy()* |
| Make a copy of {expr}. For Numbers and Strings this isn't |
| different from using {expr} directly. |
| When {expr} is a |List| a shallow copy is created. This means |
| that the original |List| can be changed without changing the |
| copy, and vice versa. But the items are identical, thus |
| changing an item changes the contents of both |Lists|. |
| A |Tuple| or |Dictionary| is copied in a similar way as a |
| |List|. |
| Also see |deepcopy()|. |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mylist->copy() |
| < |
| Return type: any, depending on {expr} |
| |
| |
| cos({expr}) *cos()* |
| Return the cosine of {expr}, measured in radians, as a |Float|. |
| {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Returns 0.0 if {expr} is not a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Examples: > |
| :echo cos(100) |
| < 0.862319 > |
| :echo cos(-4.01) |
| < -0.646043 |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Compute()->cos() |
| < |
| Return type: |Float| |
| |
| |
| cosh({expr}) *cosh()* |
| Return the hyperbolic cosine of {expr} as a |Float| in the range |
| [1, inf]. |
| {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Returns 0.0 if {expr} is not a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Examples: > |
| :echo cosh(0.5) |
| < 1.127626 > |
| :echo cosh(-0.5) |
| < -1.127626 |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Compute()->cosh() |
| < |
| Return type: |Float| |
| |
| |
| count({comp}, {expr} [, {ic} [, {start}]]) *count()* *E706* |
| Return the number of times an item with value {expr} appears |
| in |String|, |List|, |Tuple| or |Dictionary| {comp}. |
| |
| If {start} is given then start with the item with this index. |
| {start} can only be used with a |List| or a |Tuple|. |
| |
| When {ic} is given and it's |TRUE| then case is ignored. |
| |
| When {comp} is a string then the number of not overlapping |
| occurrences of {expr} is returned. Zero is returned when |
| {expr} is an empty string. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mylist->count(val) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| *cscope_connection()* |
| cscope_connection([{num} , {dbpath} [, {prepend}]]) |
| Checks for the existence of a |cscope| connection. If no |
| parameters are specified, then the function returns: |
| 0, if cscope was not available (not compiled in), or |
| if there are no cscope connections; |
| 1, if there is at least one cscope connection. |
| |
| If parameters are specified, then the value of {num} |
| determines how existence of a cscope connection is checked: |
| |
| {num} Description of existence check |
| ----- ------------------------------ |
| 0 Same as no parameters (e.g., "cscope_connection()"). |
| 1 Ignore {prepend}, and use partial string matches for |
| {dbpath}. |
| 2 Ignore {prepend}, and use exact string matches for |
| {dbpath}. |
| 3 Use {prepend}, use partial string matches for both |
| {dbpath} and {prepend}. |
| 4 Use {prepend}, use exact string matches for both |
| {dbpath} and {prepend}. |
| |
| Note: All string comparisons are case sensitive! |
| |
| Examples. Suppose we had the following (from ":cs show"): > |
| |
| # pid database name prepend path |
| 0 27664 cscope.out /usr/local |
| < |
| Invocation Return Val ~ |
| ---------- ---------- > |
| cscope_connection() 1 |
| cscope_connection(1, "out") 1 |
| cscope_connection(2, "out") 0 |
| cscope_connection(3, "out") 0 |
| cscope_connection(3, "out", "local") 1 |
| cscope_connection(4, "out") 0 |
| cscope_connection(4, "out", "local") 0 |
| cscope_connection(4, "cscope.out", "/usr/local") 1 |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| cursor({lnum}, {col} [, {off}]) *cursor()* |
| cursor({list}) |
| Positions the cursor at the column (byte count) {col} in the |
| line {lnum}. The first column is one. |
| |
| When there is one argument {list} this is used as a |List| |
| with two, three or four item: |
| [{lnum}, {col}] |
| [{lnum}, {col}, {off}] |
| [{lnum}, {col}, {off}, {curswant}] |
| This is like the return value of |getpos()| or |getcurpos()|, |
| but without the first item. |
| |
| To position the cursor using {col} as the character count, use |
| |setcursorcharpos()|. |
| |
| Does not change the jumplist. |
| {lnum} is used like with |getline()|, except that if {lnum} is |
| zero, the cursor will stay in the current line. |
| If {lnum} is greater than the number of lines in the buffer, |
| the cursor will be positioned at the last line in the buffer. |
| If {col} is greater than the number of bytes in the line, |
| the cursor will be positioned at the last character in the |
| line. |
| If {col} is zero, the cursor will stay in the current column. |
| If {curswant} is given it is used to set the preferred column |
| for vertical movement. Otherwise {col} is used. |
| |
| When 'virtualedit' is used {off} specifies the offset in |
| screen columns from the start of the character. E.g., a |
| position within a <Tab> or after the last character. |
| Returns 0 when the position could be set, -1 otherwise. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetCursorPos()->cursor() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| debugbreak({pid}) *debugbreak()* |
| Specifically used to interrupt a program being debugged. It |
| will cause process {pid} to get a SIGTRAP. Behavior for other |
| processes is undefined. See |terminal-debugger|. |
| {only available on MS-Windows} |
| |
| Returns |TRUE| if successfully interrupted the program. |
| Otherwise returns |FALSE|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetPid()->debugbreak() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| deepcopy({expr} [, {noref}]) *deepcopy()* *E698* |
| Make a copy of {expr}. For Numbers and Strings this isn't |
| different from using {expr} directly. |
| When {expr} is a |List| a full copy is created. This means |
| that the original |List| can be changed without changing the |
| copy, and vice versa. When an item is a |List| or |
| |Dictionary|, a copy for it is made, recursively. Thus |
| changing an item in the copy does not change the contents of |
| the original |List|. |
| A |Tuple| or |Dictionary| is copied in a similar way as a |
| |List|. |
| |
| When {noref} is omitted or zero a contained |List| or |
| |Dictionary| is only copied once. All references point to |
| this single copy. With {noref} set to 1 every occurrence of a |
| |List| or |Dictionary| results in a new copy. This also means |
| that a cyclic reference causes deepcopy() to fail. |
| *E724* |
| Nesting is possible up to 100 levels. When there is an item |
| that refers back to a higher level making a deep copy with |
| {noref} set to 1 will fail. |
| Also see |copy()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetObject()->deepcopy() |
| < |
| Return type: any, depending on {expr} |
| |
| |
| delete({fname} [, {flags}]) *delete()* |
| Without {flags} or with {flags} empty: Deletes the file by the |
| name {fname}. |
| |
| This also works when {fname} is a symbolic link. The symbolic |
| link itself is deleted, not what it points to. |
| |
| When {flags} is "d": Deletes the directory by the name |
| {fname}. This fails when directory {fname} is not empty. |
| |
| When {flags} is "rf": Deletes the directory by the name |
| {fname} and everything in it, recursively. BE CAREFUL! |
| Note: on MS-Windows it is not possible to delete a directory |
| that is being used. |
| |
| The result is a Number, which is 0/false if the delete |
| operation was successful and -1/true when the deletion failed |
| or partly failed. |
| |
| Use |remove()| to delete an item from a |List|. |
| To delete a line from the buffer use |:delete| or |
| |deletebufline()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetName()->delete() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| deletebufline({buf}, {first} [, {last}]) *deletebufline()* |
| Delete lines {first} to {last} (inclusive) from buffer {buf}. |
| If {last} is omitted then delete line {first} only. |
| On success 0 is returned, on failure 1 is returned. |
| |
| This function works only for loaded buffers. First call |
| |bufload()| if needed. |
| |
| For the use of {buf}, see |bufname()| above. |
| |
| {first} and {last} are used like with |getline()|. Note that |
| when using |line()| this refers to the current buffer. Use "$" |
| to refer to the last line in buffer {buf}. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetBuffer()->deletebufline(1) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| *did_filetype()* |
| did_filetype() Returns |TRUE| when autocommands are being executed and the |
| FileType event has been triggered at least once. Can be used |
| to avoid triggering the FileType event again in the scripts |
| that detect the file type. |FileType| |
| Returns |FALSE| when `:setf FALLBACK` was used. |
| When editing another file, the counter is reset, thus this |
| really checks if the FileType event has been triggered for the |
| current buffer. This allows an autocommand that starts |
| editing another buffer to set 'filetype' and load a syntax |
| file. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| diff({fromlist}, {tolist} [, {options}]) *diff()* |
| Returns a String or a List containing the diff between the |
| strings in {fromlist} and {tolist}. Uses the Vim internal |
| diff library to compute the diff. |
| |
| *E106* |
| The optional "output" item in {options} specifies the returned |
| diff format. The following values are supported: |
| indices Return a List of the starting and ending |
| indices and a count of the strings in each |
| diff hunk. |
| unified Return the unified diff output as a String. |
| This is the default. |
| |
| If the "output" item in {options} is "indices", then a List is |
| returned. Each List item contains a Dict with the following |
| items for each diff hunk: |
| from_idx start index in {fromlist} for this diff hunk. |
| from_count number of strings in {fromlist} that are |
| added/removed/modified in this diff hunk. |
| to_idx start index in {tolist} for this diff hunk. |
| to_count number of strings in {tolist} that are |
| added/removed/modified in this diff hunk. |
| |
| The {options} Dict argument also specifies diff options |
| (similar to 'diffopt') and supports the following items: |
| algorithm Dict specifying the diff algorithm to |
| use. Supported boolean items are |
| "myers", "minimal", "patience" and |
| "histogram". |
| context diff context length. Default is 0. |
| iblank ignore changes where lines are all |
| blank. |
| icase ignore changes in case of text. |
| indent-heuristic use the indent heuristic for the |
| internal diff library. |
| iwhite ignore changes in amount of white |
| space. |
| iwhiteall ignore all white space changes. |
| iwhiteeol ignore white space changes at end of |
| line. |
| For more information about these options, refer to 'diffopt'. |
| |
| To compute the unified diff, all the items in {fromlist} are |
| concatenated into a string using a newline separator and the |
| same for {tolist}. The unified diff output uses line numbers. |
| |
| Returns an empty List or String if {fromlist} and {tolist} are |
| identical. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| :echo diff(['abc'], ['xxx']) |
| @@ -1 +1 @@ |
| -abc |
| +xxx |
| |
| :echo diff(['abc'], ['xxx'], {'output': 'indices'}) |
| [{'from_idx': 0, 'from_count': 1, 'to_idx': 0, 'to_count': 1}] |
| :echo diff(readfile('oldfile'), readfile('newfile')) |
| :echo diff(getbufline(5, 1, '$'), getbufline(6, 1, '$')) |
| < |
| For more examples, refer to |diff-func-examples| |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetFromList->diff(to_list) |
| < |
| Return type: |String| or list<dict<number>> or list<any> |
| depending on {options} |
| |
| |
| diff_filler({lnum}) *diff_filler()* |
| Returns the number of filler lines above line {lnum}. |
| These are the lines that were inserted at this point in |
| another diff'ed window. These filler lines are shown in the |
| display but don't exist in the buffer. |
| {lnum} is used like with |getline()|. Thus "." is the current |
| line, "'m" mark m, etc. |
| Returns 0 if the current window is not in diff mode. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetLnum()->diff_filler() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| diff_hlID({lnum}, {col}) *diff_hlID()* |
| Returns the highlight ID for diff mode at line {lnum} column |
| {col} (byte index). When the current line does not have a |
| diff change zero is returned. |
| {lnum} is used like with |getline()|. Thus "." is the current |
| line, "'m" mark m, etc. |
| {col} is 1 for the leftmost column, {lnum} is 1 for the first |
| line. |
| The highlight ID can be used with |synIDattr()| to obtain |
| syntax information about the highlighting. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetLnum()->diff_hlID(col) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| digraph_get({chars}) *digraph_get()* *E1214* |
| Return the digraph of {chars}. This should be a string with |
| exactly two characters. If {chars} are not just two |
| characters, or the digraph of {chars} does not exist, an error |
| is given and an empty string is returned. |
| |
| The character will be converted from Unicode to 'encoding' |
| when needed. This does require the conversion to be |
| available, it might fail. |
| |
| Also see |digraph_getlist()|. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| " Get a built-in digraph |
| :echo digraph_get('00') " Returns '∞' |
| |
| " Get a user-defined digraph |
| :call digraph_set('aa', 'あ') |
| :echo digraph_get('aa') " Returns 'あ' |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetChars()->digraph_get() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| This function works only when compiled with the |+digraphs| |
| feature. If this feature is disabled, this function will |
| display an error message. |
| |
| |
| digraph_getlist([{listall}]) *digraph_getlist()* |
| Return a list of digraphs. If the {listall} argument is given |
| and it is TRUE, return all digraphs, including the default |
| digraphs. Otherwise, return only user-defined digraphs. |
| |
| The characters will be converted from Unicode to 'encoding' |
| when needed. This does require the conservation to be |
| available, it might fail. |
| |
| Also see |digraph_get()|. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| " Get user-defined digraphs |
| :echo digraph_getlist() |
| |
| " Get all the digraphs, including default digraphs |
| :echo digraph_getlist(1) |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetNumber()->digraph_getlist() |
| < |
| Return type: list<list<string>> |
| |
| This function works only when compiled with the |+digraphs| |
| feature. If this feature is disabled, this function will |
| display an error message. |
| |
| |
| digraph_set({chars}, {digraph}) *digraph_set()* |
| Add digraph {chars} to the list. {chars} must be a string |
| with two characters. {digraph} is a string with one UTF-8 |
| encoded character. *E1215* |
| Be careful, composing characters are NOT ignored. This |
| function is similar to |:digraphs| command, but useful to add |
| digraphs start with a white space. |
| |
| The function returns v:true if |digraph| is registered. If |
| this fails an error message is given and v:false is returned. |
| |
| If you want to define multiple digraphs at once, you can use |
| |digraph_setlist()|. |
| |
| Example: > |
| call digraph_set(' ', 'あ') |
| < |
| Can be used as a |method|: > |
| GetString()->digraph_set('あ') |
| < |
| Return type: |vim9-boolean| |
| |
| This function works only when compiled with the |+digraphs| |
| feature. If this feature is disabled, this function will |
| display an error message. |
| |
| |
| digraph_setlist({digraphlist}) *digraph_setlist()* |
| Similar to |digraph_set()| but this function can add multiple |
| digraphs at once. {digraphlist} is a list composed of lists, |
| where each list contains two strings with {chars} and |
| {digraph} as in |digraph_set()|. *E1216* |
| Example: > |
| call digraph_setlist([['aa', 'あ'], ['ii', 'い']]) |
| < |
| It is similar to the following: > |
| for [chars, digraph] in [['aa', 'あ'], ['ii', 'い']] |
| call digraph_set(chars, digraph) |
| endfor |
| < Except that the function returns after the first error, |
| following digraphs will not be added. |
| |
| Can be used as a |method|: > |
| GetList()->digraph_setlist() |
| < |
| Return type: |vim9-boolean| |
| |
| This function works only when compiled with the |+digraphs| |
| feature. If this feature is disabled, this function will |
| display an error message. |
| |
| |
| echoraw({string}) *echoraw()* |
| Output {string} as-is, including unprintable characters. |
| This can be used to output a terminal code. For example, to |
| disable modifyOtherKeys: > |
| call echoraw(&t_TE) |
| < and to enable it again: > |
| call echoraw(&t_TI) |
| < Use with care, you can mess up the terminal this way. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| empty({expr}) *empty()* |
| Return the Number 1 if {expr} is empty, zero otherwise. |
| - A |List|, |Tuple| or |Dictionary| is empty when it does |
| not have any items. |
| - A |String| is empty when its length is zero. |
| - A |Number| and |Float| are empty when their value is zero. |
| - |v:false|, |v:none| and |v:null| are empty, |v:true| is not. |
| - A |Job| is empty when it failed to start. |
| - A |Channel| is empty when it is closed. |
| - A |Blob| is empty when its length is zero. |
| - An |Object| is empty, when the empty() method in the object |
| (if present) returns true. |object-empty()| |
| |
| For a long |List| this is much faster than comparing the |
| length with zero. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mylist->empty() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| environ() *environ()* |
| Return all of environment variables as dictionary. You can |
| check if an environment variable exists like this: > |
| :echo has_key(environ(), 'HOME') |
| < Note that the variable name may be CamelCase; to ignore case |
| use this: > |
| :echo index(keys(environ()), 'HOME', 0, 1) != -1 |
| < |
| Return type: dict<string> |
| |
| |
| err_teapot([{expr}]) *err_teapot()* |
| Produce an error with number 418, needed for implementation of |
| RFC 2324. |
| If {expr} is present and it is TRUE error 503 is given, |
| indicating that coffee is temporarily not available. |
| If {expr} is present it must be a String. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| escape({string}, {chars}) *escape()* |
| Escape the characters in {chars} that occur in {string} with a |
| backslash. Example: > |
| :echo escape('c:\program files\vim', ' \') |
| < results in: > |
| c:\\program\ files\\vim |
| < Also see |shellescape()| and |fnameescape()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetText()->escape(' \') |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| *eval()* |
| eval({string}) Evaluate {string} and return the result. Especially useful to |
| turn the result of |string()| back into the original value. |
| This works for Numbers, Floats, Strings, Blobs and composites |
| of them. Also works for |Funcref|s that refer to existing |
| functions. In |Vim9| script, it can be used to obtain |enum| |
| values from their fully qualified names. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| argv->join()->eval() |
| < |
| Return type: any, depending on {string} |
| |
| |
| eventhandler() *eventhandler()* |
| Returns 1 when inside an event handler. That is that Vim got |
| interrupted while waiting for the user to type a character, |
| e.g., when dropping a file on Vim. This means interactive |
| commands cannot be used. Otherwise zero is returned. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| executable({expr}) *executable()* |
| This function checks if an executable with the name {expr} |
| exists. {expr} must be the name of the program without any |
| arguments. |
| |
| executable() uses the value of $PATH and/or the normal |
| searchpath for programs. |
| *PATHEXT* |
| On MS-Windows the ".exe", ".bat", etc. can optionally be |
| included. Then the extensions in $PATHEXT are tried. Thus if |
| "foo.exe" does not exist, "foo.exe.bat" can be found. If |
| $PATHEXT is not set then ".com;.exe;.bat;.cmd" is used. A dot |
| by itself can be used in $PATHEXT to try using the name |
| without an extension. When 'shell' looks like a Unix shell, |
| then the name is also tried without adding an extension. |
| On MS-Windows it only checks if the file exists and is not a |
| directory, not if it's really executable. |
| On MS-Windows an executable in the same directory as the Vim |
| executable is always found. Since this directory is added to |
| $PATH it should also work to execute it |win32-PATH|. |
| *NoDefaultCurrentDirectoryInExePath* |
| On MS-Windows an executable in Vim's current working directory |
| is also normally found, but this can be disabled by setting |
| the $NoDefaultCurrentDirectoryInExePath environment variable. |
| |
| The result is a Number: |
| 1 exists |
| 0 does not exist |
| -1 not implemented on this system |
| |exepath()| can be used to get the full path of an executable. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetCommand()->executable() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| execute({command} [, {silent}]) *execute()* |
| Execute an Ex command or commands and return the output as a |
| string. |
| {command} can be a string or a List. In case of a List the |
| lines are executed one by one. |
| This is more or less equivalent to: > |
| redir => var |
| {command} |
| redir END |
| < Except that line continuation in {command} is not recognized. |
| |
| The optional {silent} argument can have these values: |
| "" no `:silent` used |
| "silent" `:silent` used |
| "silent!" `:silent!` used |
| The default is "silent". Note that with "silent!", unlike |
| `:redir`, error messages are dropped. When using an external |
| command the screen may be messed up, use `system()` instead. |
| *E930* |
| It is not possible to use `:redir` anywhere in {command}. |
| |
| To get a list of lines use `split()` on the result: > |
| execute('args')->split("\n") |
| |
| < To execute a command in another window than the current one |
| use `win_execute()`. |
| |
| When used recursively the output of the recursive call is not |
| included in the output of the higher level call. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetCommand()->execute() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| exepath({expr}) *exepath()* |
| If {expr} is an executable and is either an absolute path, a |
| relative path or found in $PATH, return the full path. |
| Note that the current directory is used when {expr} starts |
| with "./", which may be a problem for Vim: > |
| echo exepath(v:progpath) |
| < If {expr} cannot be found in $PATH or is not executable then |
| an empty string is returned. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetCommand()->exepath() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| exists({expr}) *exists()* |
| The result is a Number, which is |TRUE| if {expr} is defined, |
| zero otherwise. |
| |
| Note: In a compiled |:def| function the evaluation is done at |
| runtime. Use `exists_compiled()` to evaluate the expression |
| at compile time. |
| |
| For checking for a supported feature use |has()|. |
| For checking if a file exists use |filereadable()|. |
| |
| The {expr} argument is a string, which contains one of these: |
| varname internal variable (see |
| dict.key |internal-variables|). Also works |
| list[i] for |curly-braces-names|, |Dictionary| |
| import.Func entries, |List| items, class and |
| class.Func object methods, imported items, etc. |
| object.Func Does not work for local variables in a |
| class.varname compiled `:def` function. |
| object.varname Also works for a function in |Vim9| |
| script, since it can be used as a |
| function reference. |
| Beware that evaluating an index may |
| cause an error message for an invalid |
| expression. E.g.: > |
| :let l = [1, 2, 3] |
| :echo exists("l[5]") |
| < 0 > |
| :echo exists("l[xx]") |
| < E121: Undefined variable: xx |
| 0 |
| &option-name Vim option (only checks if it exists, |
| not if it really works) |
| +option-name Vim option that works. |
| $ENVNAME environment variable (could also be |
| done by comparing with an empty |
| string) |
| *funcname built-in function (see |functions|) |
| or user defined function (see |
| |user-functions|) that is implemented. |
| Also works for a variable that is a |
| Funcref. |
| ?funcname built-in function that could be |
| implemented; to be used to check if |
| "funcname" is valid |
| :cmdname Ex command: built-in command, user |
| command or command modifier |:command|. |
| Returns: |
| 1 for match with start of a command |
| 2 full match with a command |
| 3 matches several user commands |
| To check for a supported command |
| always check the return value to be 2. |
| :2match The |:2match| command. |
| :3match The |:3match| command (but you |
| probably should not use it, it is |
| reserved for internal usage) |
| #event autocommand defined for this event |
| #event#pattern autocommand defined for this event and |
| pattern (the pattern is taken |
| literally and compared to the |
| autocommand patterns character by |
| character) |
| #group autocommand group exists |
| #group#event autocommand defined for this group and |
| event. |
| #group#event#pattern |
| autocommand defined for this group, |
| event and pattern. |
| ##event autocommand for this event is |
| supported. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| exists("&shortname") |
| exists("$HOSTNAME") |
| exists("*strftime") |
| exists("*s:MyFunc") " only for legacy script |
| exists("*MyFunc") |
| exists("bufcount") |
| exists(":Make") |
| exists("#CursorHold") |
| exists("#BufReadPre#*.gz") |
| exists("#filetypeindent") |
| exists("#filetypeindent#FileType") |
| exists("#filetypeindent#FileType#*") |
| exists("##ColorScheme") |
| < There must be no space between the symbol (&/$/*/#) and the |
| name. |
| There must be no extra characters after the name, although in |
| a few cases this is ignored. That may become stricter in the |
| future, thus don't count on it! |
| Working example: > |
| exists(":make") |
| < NOT working example: > |
| exists(":make install") |
| |
| < Note that the argument must be a string, not the name of the |
| variable itself. For example: > |
| exists(bufcount) |
| < This doesn't check for existence of the "bufcount" variable, |
| but gets the value of "bufcount", and checks if that exists. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Varname()->exists() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| exists_compiled({expr}) *exists_compiled()* |
| Like `exists()` but evaluated at compile time. This is useful |
| to skip a block where a function is used that would otherwise |
| give an error: > |
| if exists_compiled('*ThatFunction') |
| ThatFunction('works') |
| endif |
| < If `exists()` were used then a compilation error would be |
| given if ThatFunction() is not defined. |
| |
| {expr} must be a literal string. *E1232* |
| Can only be used in a |:def| function. *E1233* |
| This does not work to check for arguments or local variables. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| exp({expr}) *exp()* |
| Return the exponential of {expr} as a |Float| in the range |
| [0, inf]. |
| {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Returns 0.0 if {expr} is not a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Examples: > |
| :echo exp(2) |
| < 7.389056 > |
| :echo exp(-1) |
| < 0.367879 |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Compute()->exp() |
| < |
| Return type: |Float| |
| |
| |
| expand({string} [, {nosuf} [, {list}]]) *expand()* |
| Expand wildcards and the following special keywords in |
| {string}. 'wildignorecase' applies. |
| |
| If {list} is given and it is |TRUE|, a List will be returned. |
| Otherwise the result is a String and when there are several |
| matches, they are separated by <NL> characters. [Note: in |
| version 5.0 a space was used, which caused problems when a |
| file name contains a space] |
| |
| If the expansion fails, the result is an empty string. A name |
| for a non-existing file is not included, unless {string} does |
| not start with '%', '#' or '<', see below. |
| |
| For a |:terminal| window '%' expands to a '!' followed by |
| the command or shell that is run. |terminal-bufname| |
| |
| When {string} starts with '%', '#' or '<', the expansion is |
| done like for the |cmdline-special| variables with their |
| associated modifiers. Here is a short overview: |
| |
| % current file name |
| # alternate file name |
| #n alternate file name n |
| <cfile> file name under the cursor |
| <afile> autocmd file name |
| <abuf> autocmd buffer number (as a String!) |
| <amatch> autocmd matched name |
| <cexpr> C expression under the cursor |
| <sfile> sourced script file or function name |
| <slnum> sourced script line number or function |
| line number |
| <sflnum> script file line number, also when in |
| a function |
| <SID> "<SNR>123_" where "123" is the |
| current script ID |<SID>| |
| <script> sourced script file, or script file |
| where the current function was defined |
| <stack> call stack |
| <cword> word under the cursor |
| <cWORD> WORD under the cursor |
| <client> the {clientid} of the last received |
| message |server2client()| |
| Modifiers: |
| :p expand to full path |
| :h head (last path component removed) |
| :t tail (last path component only) |
| :r root (one extension removed) |
| :e extension only |
| |
| Example: > |
| :let &tags = expand("%:p:h") .. "/tags" |
| < Note that when expanding a string that starts with '%', '#' or |
| '<', any following text is ignored. This does NOT work: > |
| :let doesntwork = expand("%:h.bak") |
| < Use this: > |
| :let doeswork = expand("%:h") .. ".bak" |
| < Also note that expanding "<cfile>" and others only returns the |
| referenced file name without further expansion. If "<cfile>" |
| is "~/.cshrc", you need to do another expand() to have the |
| "~/" expanded into the path of the home directory: > |
| :echo expand(expand("<cfile>")) |
| < |
| There cannot be white space between the variables and the |
| following modifier. The |fnamemodify()| function can be used |
| to modify normal file names. |
| |
| When using '%' or '#', and the current or alternate file name |
| is not defined, an empty string is used. Using "%:p" in a |
| buffer with no name, results in the current directory, with a |
| '/' added. |
| When 'verbose' is set then expanding '%', '#' and <> items |
| will result in an error message if the argument cannot be |
| expanded. |
| |
| When {string} does not start with '%', '#' or '<', it is |
| expanded like a file name is expanded on the command line. |
| 'suffixes' and 'wildignore' are used, unless the optional |
| {nosuf} argument is given and it is |TRUE|. |
| Names for non-existing files are included. The "**" item can |
| be used to search in a directory tree. For example, to find |
| all "README" files in the current directory and below: > |
| :echo expand("**/README") |
| < |
| expand() can also be used to expand variables and environment |
| variables that are only known in a shell. But this can be |
| slow, because a shell may be used to do the expansion. See |
| |expr-env-expand|. |
| The expanded variable is still handled like a list of file |
| names. When an environment variable cannot be expanded, it is |
| left unchanged. Thus ":echo expand('$FOOBAR')" results in |
| "$FOOBAR". |
| |
| See |glob()| for finding existing files. See |system()| for |
| getting the raw output of an external command. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Getpattern()->expand() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| or list<string> depending on {list} |
| |
| |
| expandcmd({string} [, {options}]) *expandcmd()* |
| Expand special items in String {string} like what is done for |
| an Ex command such as `:edit`. This expands special keywords, |
| like with |expand()|, and environment variables, anywhere in |
| {string}. "~user" and "~/path" are only expanded at the |
| start. |
| |
| The following items are supported in the {options} Dict |
| argument: |
| errmsg If set to TRUE, error messages are displayed |
| if an error is encountered during expansion. |
| By default, error messages are not displayed. |
| |
| Returns the expanded string. If an error is encountered |
| during expansion, the unmodified {string} is returned. |
| |
| Example: > |
| :echo expandcmd('make %<.o') |
| make /path/runtime/doc/builtin.o |
| :echo expandcmd('make %<.o', {'errmsg': v:true}) |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetCommand()->expandcmd() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| or list<string> depending on {list} |
| |
| extend({expr1}, {expr2} [, {expr3}]) *extend()* |
| {expr1} and {expr2} must be both |Lists| or both |
| |Dictionaries|. |
| |
| If they are |Lists|: Append {expr2} to {expr1}. |
| If {expr3} is given insert the items of {expr2} before the |
| item with index {expr3} in {expr1}. When {expr3} is zero |
| insert before the first item. When {expr3} is equal to |
| len({expr1}) then {expr2} is appended. |
| Examples: > |
| :echo sort(extend(mylist, [7, 5])) |
| :call extend(mylist, [2, 3], 1) |
| < When {expr1} is the same List as {expr2} then the number of |
| items copied is equal to the original length of the List. |
| E.g., when {expr3} is 1 you get N new copies of the first item |
| (where N is the original length of the List). |
| Use |add()| to concatenate one item to a list. To concatenate |
| two lists into a new list use the + operator: > |
| :let newlist = [1, 2, 3] + [4, 5] |
| < |
| If they are |Dictionaries|: |
| Add all entries from {expr2} to {expr1}. |
| If a key exists in both {expr1} and {expr2} then {expr3} is |
| used to decide what to do: |
| {expr3} = "keep": keep the value of {expr1} |
| {expr3} = "force": use the value of {expr2} |
| {expr3} = "error": give an error message *E737* |
| When {expr3} is omitted then "force" is assumed. |
| |
| {expr1} is changed when {expr2} is not empty. If necessary |
| make a copy of {expr1} first or use |extendnew()| to return a |
| new List/Dictionary. |
| {expr2} remains unchanged. |
| When {expr1} is locked and {expr2} is not empty the operation |
| fails. |
| Returns {expr1}. Returns 0 on error. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mylist->extend(otherlist) |
| < |
| Return type: list<{type}> or dict<{type}> depending on {expr1} |
| and {expr2}, in case of error: |Number| |
| |
| |
| extendnew({expr1}, {expr2} [, {expr3}]) *extendnew()* |
| Like |extend()| but instead of adding items to {expr1} a new |
| List or Dictionary is created and returned. {expr1} remains |
| unchanged. |
| |
| Return type: list<{type}> or dict<{type}> depending on {expr1} |
| and {expr2}, in case of error: |Number| |
| |
| |
| feedkeys({string} [, {mode}]) *feedkeys()* |
| Characters in {string} are queued for processing as if they |
| come from a mapping or were typed by the user. |
| |
| By default the string is added to the end of the typeahead |
| buffer, thus if a mapping is still being executed the |
| characters come after them. Use the 'i' flag to insert before |
| other characters, they will be executed next, before any |
| characters from a mapping. |
| |
| The function does not wait for processing of keys contained in |
| {string}. |
| |
| To include special keys into {string}, use double-quotes |
| and "\..." notation |expr-quote|. For example, |
| feedkeys("\<CR>") simulates pressing of the <Enter> key. But |
| feedkeys('\<CR>') pushes 5 characters. |
| A special code that might be useful is <Ignore>, it exits the |
| wait for a character without doing anything. *<Ignore>* |
| |
| {mode} is a String, which can contain these character flags: |
| 'm' Remap keys. This is default. If {mode} is absent, |
| keys are remapped. |
| 'n' Do not remap keys. |
| 't' Handle keys as if typed; otherwise they are handled as |
| if coming from a mapping. This matters for undo, |
| opening folds, etc. |
| 'L' Lowlevel input. Only works for Unix or when using the |
| GUI. Keys are used as if they were coming from the |
| terminal. Other flags are not used. *E980* |
| When a CTRL-C interrupts and 't' is included it sets |
| the internal "got_int" flag. |
| 'i' Insert the string instead of appending (see above). |
| 'x' Execute commands until typeahead is empty. This is |
| similar to using ":normal!". You can call feedkeys() |
| several times without 'x' and then one time with 'x' |
| (possibly with an empty {string}) to execute all the |
| typeahead. Note that when Vim ends in Insert mode it |
| will behave as if <Esc> is typed, to avoid getting |
| stuck, waiting for a character to be typed before the |
| script continues. |
| Note that if you manage to call feedkeys() while |
| executing commands, thus calling it recursively, then |
| all typeahead will be consumed by the last call. |
| 'c' Remove any script context when executing, so that |
| legacy script syntax applies, "s:var" does not work, |
| etc. Note that if the string being fed sets a script |
| context this still applies. |
| '!' When used with 'x' will not end Insert mode. Can be |
| used in a test when a timer is set to exit Insert mode |
| a little later. Useful for testing CursorHoldI. |
| |
| Return value is always 0. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetInput()->feedkeys() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| filecopy({from}, {to}) *filecopy()* |
| Copy the file pointed to by the name {from} to {to}. The |
| result is a Number, which is |TRUE| if the file was copied |
| successfully, and |FALSE| when it failed. |
| If a file with name {to} already exists, it will fail. |
| Note that it does not handle directories (yet). |
| |
| This function is not available in the |sandbox|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetOldName()->filecopy(newname) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| filereadable({file}) *filereadable()* |
| The result is a Number, which is |TRUE| when a file with the |
| name {file} exists, and can be read. If {file} doesn't exist, |
| or is a directory, the result is |FALSE|. {file} is any |
| expression, which is used as a String. |
| If you don't care about the file being readable you can use |
| |glob()|. |
| {file} is used as-is, you may want to expand wildcards first: > |
| echo filereadable('~/.vimrc') |
| 0 |
| echo filereadable(expand('~/.vimrc')) |
| 1 |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetName()->filereadable() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| *file_readable()* |
| Obsolete name: file_readable(). |
| |
| |
| filewritable({file}) *filewritable()* |
| The result is a Number, which is 1 when a file with the |
| name {file} exists, and can be written. If {file} doesn't |
| exist, or is not writable, the result is 0. If {file} is a |
| directory, and we can write to it, the result is 2. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetName()->filewritable() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| filter({expr1}, {expr2}) *filter()* |
| {expr1} must be a |List|, |String|, |Blob| or |Dictionary|. |
| For each item in {expr1} evaluate {expr2} and when the result |
| is zero or false remove the item from the |List| or |
| |Dictionary|. Similarly for each byte in a |Blob| and each |
| character in a |String|. |
| |
| {expr2} must be a |string| or |Funcref|. |
| |
| If {expr2} is a |string|, inside {expr2} |v:val| has the value |
| of the current item. For a |Dictionary| |v:key| has the key |
| of the current item and for a |List| |v:key| has the index of |
| the current item. For a |Blob| |v:key| has the index of the |
| current byte. For a |String| |v:key| has the index of the |
| current character. |
| Examples: > |
| call filter(mylist, 'v:val !~ "OLD"') |
| < Removes the items where "OLD" appears. > |
| call filter(mydict, 'v:key >= 8') |
| < Removes the items with a key below 8. > |
| call filter(var, 0) |
| < Removes all the items, thus clears the |List| or |Dictionary|. |
| |
| Note that {expr2} is the result of expression and is then |
| used as an expression again. Often it is good to use a |
| |literal-string| to avoid having to double backslashes. |
| |
| If {expr2} is a |Funcref| it must take two arguments: |
| 1. the key or the index of the current item. |
| 2. the value of the current item. |
| The function must return |TRUE| if the item should be kept. |
| Example that keeps the odd items of a list: > |
| func Odd(idx, val) |
| return a:idx % 2 == 1 |
| endfunc |
| call filter(mylist, function('Odd')) |
| < It is shorter when using a |lambda|. In |Vim9| syntax: > |
| call filter(myList, (idx, val) => idx * val <= 42) |
| < In legacy script syntax: > |
| call filter(myList, {idx, val -> idx * val <= 42}) |
| < If you do not use "val" you can leave it out: > |
| call filter(myList, {idx -> idx % 2 == 1}) |
| < |
| In |Vim9| script the result must be true, false, zero or one. |
| Other values will result in a type error. |
| |
| For a |List| and a |Dictionary| the operation is done |
| in-place. If you want it to remain unmodified make a copy |
| first: > |
| :let l = filter(copy(mylist), 'v:val =~ "KEEP"') |
| |
| < Returns {expr1}, the |List| or |Dictionary| that was filtered, |
| or a new |Blob| or |String|. |
| When an error is encountered while evaluating {expr2} no |
| further items in {expr1} are processed. |
| When {expr2} is a Funcref errors inside a function are ignored, |
| unless it was defined with the "abort" flag. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mylist->filter(expr2) |
| < |
| Return type: |String|, |Blob|, list<{type}> or dict<{type}> |
| depending on {expr1} |
| |
| |
| finddir({name} [, {path} [, {count}]]) *finddir()* |
| Find directory {name} in {path}. Supports both downwards and |
| upwards recursive directory searches. See |file-searching| |
| for the syntax of {path}. |
| |
| Returns the path of the first found match. When the found |
| directory is below the current directory a relative path is |
| returned. Otherwise a full path is returned. |
| If {path} is omitted or empty then 'path' is used. |
| |
| If the optional {count} is given, find {count}'s occurrence of |
| {name} in {path} instead of the first one. |
| When {count} is negative return all the matches in a |List|. |
| |
| Returns an empty string if the directory is not found. |
| |
| This is quite similar to the ex-command `:find`. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetName()->finddir() |
| < |
| Return type: list<string> if {count} is negative, |String| |
| otherwise |
| |
| |
| findfile({name} [, {path} [, {count}]]) *findfile()* |
| Just like |finddir()|, but find a file instead of a directory. |
| Uses 'suffixesadd'. |
| Example: > |
| :echo findfile("tags.vim", ".;") |
| < Searches from the directory of the current file upwards until |
| it finds the file "tags.vim". |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetName()->findfile() |
| < |
| Return type: list<string> if {count} is negative, |String| |
| otherwise |
| |
| |
| flatten({list} [, {maxdepth}]) *flatten()* |
| Flatten {list} up to {maxdepth} levels. Without {maxdepth} |
| the result is a |List| without nesting, as if {maxdepth} is |
| a very large number. |
| The {list} is changed in place, use |flattennew()| if you do |
| not want that. |
| In Vim9 script flatten() cannot be used, you must always use |
| |flattennew()|. |
| *E900* |
| {maxdepth} means how deep in nested lists changes are made. |
| {list} is not modified when {maxdepth} is 0. |
| {maxdepth} must be positive number. |
| |
| If there is an error the number zero is returned. |
| |
| Example: > |
| :echo flatten([1, [2, [3, 4]], 5]) |
| < [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] > |
| :echo flatten([1, [2, [3, 4]], 5], 1) |
| < [1, 2, [3, 4], 5] |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mylist->flatten() |
| < |
| Return type: list<{type}> |
| |
| |
| flattennew({list} [, {maxdepth}]) *flattennew()* |
| Like |flatten()| but first make a copy of {list}. |
| |
| Return type: list<{type}> |
| |
| |
| float2nr({expr}) *float2nr()* |
| Convert {expr} to a Number by omitting the part after the |
| decimal point. |
| {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Returns 0 if {expr} is not a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| When the value of {expr} is out of range for a |Number| the |
| result is truncated to 0x7fffffff or -0x7fffffff (or when |
| 64-bit Number support is enabled, 0x7fffffffffffffff or |
| -0x7fffffffffffffff). NaN results in -0x80000000 (or when |
| 64-bit Number support is enabled, -0x8000000000000000). |
| Examples: > |
| echo float2nr(3.95) |
| < 3 > |
| echo float2nr(-23.45) |
| < -23 > |
| echo float2nr(1.0e100) |
| < 2147483647 (or 9223372036854775807) > |
| echo float2nr(-1.0e150) |
| < -2147483647 (or -9223372036854775807) > |
| echo float2nr(1.0e-100) |
| < 0 |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Compute()->float2nr() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| floor({expr}) *floor()* |
| Return the largest integral value less than or equal to |
| {expr} as a |Float| (round down). |
| {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Returns 0.0 if {expr} is not a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Examples: > |
| echo floor(1.856) |
| < 1.0 > |
| echo floor(-5.456) |
| < -6.0 > |
| echo floor(4.0) |
| < 4.0 |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Compute()->floor() |
| < |
| Return type: |Float| |
| |
| |
| fmod({expr1}, {expr2}) *fmod()* |
| Return the remainder of {expr1} / {expr2}, even if the |
| division is not representable. Returns {expr1} - i * {expr2} |
| for some integer i such that if {expr2} is non-zero, the |
| result has the same sign as {expr1} and magnitude less than |
| the magnitude of {expr2}. If {expr2} is zero, the value |
| returned is zero. The value returned is a |Float|. |
| {expr1} and {expr2} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Returns 0.0 if {expr1} or {expr2} is not a |Float| or a |
| |Number|. |
| Examples: > |
| :echo fmod(12.33, 1.22) |
| < 0.13 > |
| :echo fmod(-12.33, 1.22) |
| < -0.13 |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Compute()->fmod(1.22) |
| < |
| Return type: |Float| |
| |
| |
| fnameescape({string}) *fnameescape()* |
| Escape {string} for use as file name command argument. All |
| characters that have a special meaning, such as '%' and '|' |
| are escaped with a backslash. |
| For most systems the characters escaped are |
| " \t\n*?[{`$\\%#'\"|!<". For systems where a backslash |
| appears in a filename, it depends on the value of 'isfname'. |
| A leading '+' and '>' is also escaped (special after |:edit| |
| and |:write|). And a "-" by itself (special after |:cd|). |
| Returns an empty string on error. |
| Example: > |
| :let fname = '+some str%nge|name' |
| :exe "edit " .. fnameescape(fname) |
| < results in executing: > |
| edit \+some\ str\%nge\|name |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetName()->fnameescape() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| fnamemodify({fname}, {mods}) *fnamemodify()* |
| Modify file name {fname} according to {mods}. {mods} is a |
| string of characters like it is used for file names on the |
| command line. See |filename-modifiers|. |
| Example: > |
| :echo fnamemodify("main.c", ":p:h") |
| < results in: > |
| /home/user/vim/vim/src |
| < If {mods} is empty or an unsupported modifier is used then |
| {fname} is returned. |
| When {fname} is empty then with {mods} ":h" returns ".", so |
| that `:cd` can be used with it. This is different from |
| expand('%:h') without a buffer name, which returns an empty |
| string. |
| Note: Environment variables don't work in {fname}, use |
| |expand()| first then. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetName()->fnamemodify(':p:h') |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| foldclosed({lnum}) *foldclosed()* |
| The result is a Number. If the line {lnum} is in a closed |
| fold, the result is the number of the first line in that fold. |
| If the line {lnum} is not in a closed fold, -1 is returned. |
| {lnum} is used like with |getline()|. Thus "." is the current |
| line, "'m" mark m, etc. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetLnum()->foldclosed() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| foldclosedend({lnum}) *foldclosedend()* |
| The result is a Number. If the line {lnum} is in a closed |
| fold, the result is the number of the last line in that fold. |
| If the line {lnum} is not in a closed fold, -1 is returned. |
| {lnum} is used like with |getline()|. Thus "." is the current |
| line, "'m" mark m, etc. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetLnum()->foldclosedend() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| foldlevel({lnum}) *foldlevel()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the foldlevel of line {lnum} |
| in the current buffer. For nested folds the deepest level is |
| returned. If there is no fold at line {lnum}, zero is |
| returned. It doesn't matter if the folds are open or closed. |
| When used while updating folds (from 'foldexpr') -1 is |
| returned for lines where folds are still to be updated and the |
| foldlevel is unknown. As a special case the level of the |
| previous line is usually available. |
| {lnum} is used like with |getline()|. Thus "." is the current |
| line, "'m" mark m, etc. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetLnum()->foldlevel() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| *foldtext()* |
| foldtext() Returns a String, to be displayed for a closed fold. This is |
| the default function used for the 'foldtext' option and should |
| only be called from evaluating 'foldtext'. It uses the |
| |v:foldstart|, |v:foldend| and |v:folddashes| variables. |
| The returned string looks like this: > |
| +-- 45 lines: abcdef |
| < The number of leading dashes depends on the foldlevel. The |
| "45" is the number of lines in the fold. "abcdef" is the text |
| in the first non-blank line of the fold. Leading white space, |
| "//" or "/*" and the text from the 'foldmarker' and |
| 'commentstring' options is removed. |
| When used to draw the actual foldtext, the rest of the line |
| will be filled with the fold char from the 'fillchars' |
| setting. |
| Returns an empty string when there is no fold. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| {not available when compiled without the |+folding| feature} |
| |
| |
| foldtextresult({lnum}) *foldtextresult()* |
| Returns the text that is displayed for the closed fold at line |
| {lnum}. Evaluates 'foldtext' in the appropriate context. |
| When there is no closed fold at {lnum} an empty string is |
| returned. |
| {lnum} is used like with |getline()|. Thus "." is the current |
| line, "'m" mark m, etc. |
| Useful when exporting folded text, e.g., to HTML. |
| {not available when compiled without the |+folding| feature} |
| |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetLnum()->foldtextresult() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| foreach({expr1}, {expr2}) *foreach()* *E1525* |
| {expr1} must be a |List|, |Tuple|, |String|, |Blob| or |
| |Dictionary|. |
| For each item in {expr1} execute {expr2}. {expr1} is not |
| modified; its values may be, as with |:lockvar| 1. |E741| |
| See |map()| and |filter()| to modify {expr1}. |
| |
| {expr2} must be a |string| or |Funcref|. |
| |
| If {expr2} is a |string|, inside {expr2} |v:val| has the value |
| of the current item. For a |Dictionary| |v:key| has the key |
| of the current item and for a |List| or a |Tuple| |v:key| has |
| the index of the current item. For a |Blob| |v:key| has the |
| index of the current byte. For a |String| |v:key| has the |
| index of the current character. |
| Examples: > |
| call foreach(mylist, 'used[v:val] = true') |
| < This records the items that are in the {expr1} list. |
| |
| Note that {expr2} is the result of expression and is then used |
| as a command. Often it is good to use a |literal-string| to |
| avoid having to double backslashes. |
| |
| If {expr2} is a |Funcref| it must take two arguments: |
| 1. the key or the index of the current item. |
| 2. the value of the current item. |
| With a legacy script lambda you don't get an error if it only |
| accepts one argument, but with a Vim9 lambda you get "E1106: |
| One argument too many", the number of arguments must match. |
| If the function returns a value, it is ignored. |
| |
| Returns {expr1} in all cases. |
| When an error is encountered while executing {expr2} no |
| further items in {expr1} are processed. |
| When {expr2} is a Funcref errors inside a function are ignored, |
| unless it was defined with the "abort" flag. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mylist->foreach(expr2) |
| < |
| Return type: |String|, |Blob|, list<{type}>, tuple<{type}> or |
| dict<{type}> depending on {expr1} |
| |
| *foreground()* |
| foreground() Move the Vim window to the foreground. Useful when sent from |
| a client to a Vim server. |remote_send()| |
| On Win32 systems this might not work, the OS does not always |
| allow a window to bring itself to the foreground. Use |
| |remote_foreground()| instead. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| {only in the Win32, Motif and GTK GUI versions and the |
| Win32 console version} |
| |
| fullcommand({name} [, {vim9}]) *fullcommand()* |
| Get the full command name from a short abbreviated command |
| name; see |20.2| for details on command abbreviations. |
| |
| The string argument {name} may start with a `:` and can |
| include a [range], these are skipped and not returned. |
| Returns an empty string if a command doesn't exist, if it's |
| ambiguous (for user-defined commands) or cannot be shortened |
| this way. |vim9-no-shorten| |
| |
| Without the {vim9} argument uses the current script version. |
| If {vim9} is present and FALSE then legacy script rules are |
| used. When {vim9} is present and TRUE then Vim9 rules are |
| used, e.g. "en" is not a short form of "endif". |
| |
| For example `fullcommand('s')`, `fullcommand('sub')`, |
| `fullcommand(':%substitute')` all return "substitute". |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetName()->fullcommand() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| funcref({name} [, {arglist}] [, {dict}]) *funcref()* |
| Just like |function()|, but the returned Funcref will lookup |
| the function by reference, not by name. This matters when the |
| function {name} is redefined later. |
| |
| Unlike |function()|, {name} must be an existing user function. |
| It only works for an autoloaded function if it has already |
| been loaded (to avoid mistakenly loading the autoload script |
| when only intending to use the function name, use |function()| |
| instead). {name} cannot be a builtin function. |
| Returns 0 on error. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetFuncname()->funcref([arg]) |
| < |
| Return type: func(...): any or |Number| on error |
| |
| *function()* *partial* *E700* *E923* |
| function({name} [, {arglist}] [, {dict}]) |
| Return a |Funcref| variable that refers to function {name}. |
| {name} can be the name of a user defined function or an |
| internal function. |
| |
| {name} can also be a Funcref or a partial. When it is a |
| partial the dict stored in it will be used and the {dict} |
| argument is not allowed. E.g.: > |
| let FuncWithArg = function(dict.Func, [arg]) |
| let Broken = function(dict.Func, [arg], dict) |
| < |
| When using the Funcref the function will be found by {name}, |
| also when it was redefined later. Use |funcref()| to keep the |
| same function. |
| |
| When {arglist} or {dict} is present this creates a partial. |
| That means the argument list and/or the dictionary is stored in |
| the Funcref and will be used when the Funcref is called. |
| |
| The arguments are passed to the function in front of other |
| arguments, but after any argument from |method|. Example: > |
| func Callback(arg1, arg2, name) |
| ... |
| let Partial = function('Callback', ['one', 'two']) |
| ... |
| call Partial('name') |
| < Invokes the function as with: > |
| call Callback('one', 'two', 'name') |
| |
| < With a |method|: > |
| func Callback(one, two, three) |
| ... |
| let Partial = function('Callback', ['two']) |
| ... |
| eval 'one'->Partial('three') |
| < Invokes the function as with: > |
| call Callback('one', 'two', 'three') |
| |
| < The function() call can be nested to add more arguments to the |
| Funcref. The extra arguments are appended to the list of |
| arguments. Example: > |
| func Callback(arg1, arg2, name) |
| "... |
| let Func = function('Callback', ['one']) |
| let Func2 = function(Func, ['two']) |
| "... |
| call Func2('name') |
| < Invokes the function as with: > |
| call Callback('one', 'two', 'name') |
| |
| < The Dictionary is only useful when calling a "dict" function. |
| In that case the {dict} is passed in as "self". Example: > |
| function Callback() dict |
| echo "called for " .. self.name |
| endfunction |
| "... |
| let context = {"name": "example"} |
| let Func = function('Callback', context) |
| "... |
| call Func() " will echo: called for example |
| < The use of function() is not needed when there are no extra |
| arguments, these two are equivalent, if Callback() is defined |
| as context.Callback(): > |
| let Func = function('Callback', context) |
| let Func = context.Callback |
| |
| < The argument list and the Dictionary can be combined: > |
| function Callback(arg1, count) dict |
| "... |
| let context = {"name": "example"} |
| let Func = function('Callback', ['one'], context) |
| "... |
| call Func(500) |
| < Invokes the function as with: > |
| call context.Callback('one', 500) |
| < |
| Returns 0 on error. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetFuncname()->function([arg]) |
| |
| < |
| Return type: func(...): any or |Number| on error |
| |
| |
| garbagecollect([{atexit}]) *garbagecollect()* |
| Cleanup unused |Lists|, |Dictionaries|, |Channels| and |Jobs| |
| that have circular references. |
| |
| There is hardly ever a need to invoke this function, as it is |
| automatically done when Vim runs out of memory or is waiting |
| for the user to press a key after 'updatetime'. Items without |
| circular references are always freed when they become unused. |
| This is useful if you have deleted a very big |List| and/or |
| |Dictionary| with circular references in a script that runs |
| for a long time. |
| |
| When the optional {atexit} argument is one, garbage |
| collection will also be done when exiting Vim, if it wasn't |
| done before. This is useful when checking for memory leaks. |
| |
| The garbage collection is not done immediately but only when |
| it's safe to perform. This is when waiting for the user to |
| type a character. To force garbage collection immediately use |
| |test_garbagecollect_now()|. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| get({list}, {idx} [, {default}]) *get()* *get()-list* |
| Get item {idx} from |List| {list}. When this item is not |
| available return {default}. Return zero when {default} is |
| omitted. |
| Preferably used as a |method|: > |
| mylist->get(idx) |
| < |
| Return type: any, depending on {list} |
| |
| get({tuple}, {idx} [, {default}]) *get()-tuple* |
| Get item {idx} from |Tuple| {tuple}. When this item is not |
| available return {default}. Return zero when {default} is |
| omitted. |
| Preferably used as a |method|: > |
| mytuple->get(idx) |
| < |
| Return type: any, depending on {tuple} |
| |
| get({blob}, {idx} [, {default}]) *get()-blob* |
| Get byte {idx} from |Blob| {blob}. When this byte is not |
| available return {default}. Return -1 when {default} is |
| omitted. |
| Preferably used as a |method|: > |
| myblob->get(idx) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| get({dict}, {key} [, {default}]) *get()-dict* |
| Get item with key {key} from |Dictionary| {dict}. When this |
| item is not available return {default}. Return zero when |
| {default} is omitted. Useful example: > |
| let val = get(g:, 'var_name', 'default') |
| < This gets the value of g:var_name if it exists, and uses |
| 'default' when it does not exist. |
| Preferably used as a |method|: > |
| mydict->get(key) |
| < |
| Return type: any, depending on {dict} |
| |
| get({func}, {what}) *get()-func* |
| Get item {what} from |Funcref| {func}. Possible values for |
| {what} are: |
| "name" The function name |
| "func" The function |
| "dict" The dictionary |
| "args" The list with arguments |
| "arity" A dictionary with information about the number of |
| arguments accepted by the function (minus the |
| {arglist}) with the following fields: |
| required the number of positional arguments |
| optional the number of optional arguments, |
| in addition to the required ones |
| varargs |TRUE| if the function accepts a |
| variable number of arguments |...| |
| |
| Note: There is no error, if the {arglist} of |
| the Funcref contains more arguments than the |
| Funcref expects, it's not validated. |
| |
| Returns zero on error. |
| |
| Preferably used as a |method|: > |
| myfunc->get(what) |
| < |
| Return type: any, depending on {func} and {what} |
| |
| *getbufinfo()* |
| getbufinfo([{buf}]) |
| getbufinfo([{dict}]) |
| Get information about buffers as a List of Dictionaries. |
| |
| Without an argument information about all the buffers is |
| returned. |
| |
| When the argument is a |Dictionary| only the buffers matching |
| the specified criteria are returned. The following keys can |
| be specified in {dict}: |
| buflisted include only listed buffers. |
| bufloaded include only loaded buffers. |
| bufmodified include only modified buffers. |
| |
| Otherwise, {buf} specifies a particular buffer to return |
| information for. For the use of {buf}, see |bufname()| |
| above. If the buffer is found the returned List has one item. |
| Otherwise the result is an empty list. |
| |
| Each returned List item is a dictionary with the following |
| entries: |
| bufnr Buffer number. |
| changed TRUE if the buffer is modified. |
| changedtick Number of changes made to the buffer. |
| command TRUE if the buffer belongs to the |
| command-line window |cmdwin|. |
| hidden TRUE if the buffer is hidden. |
| lastused Timestamp in seconds, like |
| |localtime()|, when the buffer was |
| last used. |
| {only with the |+viminfo| feature} |
| listed TRUE if the buffer is listed. |
| lnum Line number used for the buffer when |
| opened in the current window. |
| Only valid if the buffer has been |
| displayed in the window in the past. |
| If you want the line number of the |
| last known cursor position in a given |
| window, use |line()|: > |
| :echo line('.', {winid}) |
| < |
| linecount Number of lines in the buffer (only |
| valid when loaded) |
| loaded TRUE if the buffer is loaded. |
| name Full path to the file in the buffer. |
| signs List of signs placed in the buffer. |
| Each list item is a dictionary with |
| the following fields: |
| id sign identifier |
| lnum line number |
| name sign name |
| variables A reference to the dictionary with |
| buffer-local variables. |
| windows List of |window-ID|s that display this |
| buffer |
| popups List of popup |window-ID|s that |
| display this buffer |
| |
| Examples: > |
| for buf in getbufinfo() |
| echo buf.name |
| endfor |
| for buf in getbufinfo({'buflisted':1}) |
| if buf.changed |
| .... |
| endif |
| endfor |
| < |
| To get buffer-local options use: > |
| getbufvar({bufnr}, '&option_name') |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetBufnr()->getbufinfo() |
| < |
| Return type: list<dict<any>> |
| |
| |
| *getbufline()* |
| getbufline({buf}, {lnum} [, {end}]) |
| Return a |List| with the lines starting from {lnum} to {end} |
| (inclusive) in the buffer {buf}. If {end} is omitted, a |
| |List| with only the line {lnum} is returned. See |
| `getbufoneline()` for only getting the line. |
| |
| For the use of {buf}, see |bufname()| above. |
| |
| For {lnum} and {end} "$" can be used for the last line of the |
| buffer. Otherwise a number must be used. |
| |
| When {lnum} is smaller than 1 or bigger than the number of |
| lines in the buffer, an empty |List| is returned. |
| |
| When {end} is greater than the number of lines in the buffer, |
| it is treated as {end} is set to the number of lines in the |
| buffer. When {end} is before {lnum} an empty |List| is |
| returned. |
| |
| This function works only for loaded buffers. For unloaded and |
| non-existing buffers, an empty |List| is returned. |
| |
| Example: > |
| :let lines = getbufline(bufnr("myfile"), 1, "$") |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetBufnr()->getbufline(lnum) |
| < |
| Return type: list<string> |
| |
| *getbufoneline()* |
| getbufoneline({buf}, {lnum}) |
| Just like `getbufline()` but only get one line and return it |
| as a string. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| getbufvar({buf}, {varname} [, {def}]) *getbufvar()* |
| The result is the value of option or local buffer variable |
| {varname} in buffer {buf}. Note that the name without "b:" |
| must be used. |
| The {varname} argument is a string. |
| When {varname} is empty returns a |Dictionary| with all the |
| buffer-local variables. |
| When {varname} is equal to "&" returns a |Dictionary| with all |
| the buffer-local options. |
| Otherwise, when {varname} starts with "&" returns the value of |
| a buffer-local option. |
| This also works for a global or buffer-local option, but it |
| doesn't work for a global variable, window-local variable or |
| window-local option. |
| For the use of {buf}, see |bufname()| above. |
| When the buffer or variable doesn't exist {def} or an empty |
| string is returned, there is no error message. |
| Examples: > |
| :let bufmodified = getbufvar(1, "&mod") |
| :echo "todo myvar = " .. getbufvar("todo", "myvar") |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetBufnr()->getbufvar(varname) |
| < |
| Return type: any, depending on {varname} |
| |
| |
| getcellpixels() *getcellpixels()* |
| Returns a |List| of terminal cell pixel size. |
| List format is [xpixel, ypixel]. |
| |
| Only works on Unix (terminal and gVim) and Windows (gVim only). |
| Returns [] on other systems or on failure. |
| Note that there could be variations across different terminals. |
| On macOS, system Terminal.app returns sizes in points (before |
| Retina scaling), whereas third-party terminals return raw pixel |
| sizes (post Retina scaling). |
| |
| Return type: list<any> |
| |
| |
| getcellwidths() *getcellwidths()* |
| Returns a |List| of cell widths of character ranges overridden |
| by |setcellwidths()|. The format is equal to the argument of |
| |setcellwidths()|. If no character ranges have their cell |
| widths overridden, an empty List is returned. |
| |
| Return type: list<any> |
| |
| |
| getchangelist([{buf}]) *getchangelist()* |
| Returns the |changelist| for the buffer {buf}. For the use |
| of {buf}, see |bufname()| above. If buffer {buf} doesn't |
| exist, an empty list is returned. |
| |
| The returned list contains two entries: a list with the change |
| locations and the current position in the list. Each |
| entry in the change list is a dictionary with the following |
| entries: |
| col column number |
| coladd column offset for 'virtualedit' |
| lnum line number |
| If buffer {buf} is the current buffer, then the current |
| position refers to the position in the list. For other |
| buffers, it is set to the length of the list. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetBufnr()->getchangelist() |
| < |
| Return type: list<any> |
| |
| |
| getchar([{expr} [, {opts}]]) *getchar()* |
| Get a single character from the user or input stream. |
| If {expr} is omitted or is -1, wait until a character is |
| available. |
| If {expr} is 0, only get a character when one is available. |
| Return zero otherwise. |
| If {expr} is 1, only check if a character is available, it is |
| not consumed. Return zero if no character available. |
| If you prefer always getting a string use |getcharstr()|, or |
| specify |FALSE| as "number" in {opts}. |
| |
| Without {expr} and when {expr} is 0 a whole character or |
| special key is returned. If it is a single character, the |
| result is a Number. Use |nr2char()| to convert it to a String. |
| Otherwise a String is returned with the encoded character. |
| For a special key it's a String with a sequence of bytes |
| starting with 0x80 (decimal: 128). This is the same value as |
| the String "\<Key>", e.g., "\<Left>". The returned value is |
| also a String when a modifier (shift, control, alt) was used |
| that is not included in the character. |keytrans()| can also |
| be used to convert a returned String into a readable form. |
| |
| When {expr} is 0 and Esc is typed, there will be a short delay |
| while Vim waits to see if this is the start of an escape |
| sequence. |
| |
| When {expr} is 1 only the first byte is returned. For a |
| one-byte character it is the character itself as a number. |
| Use nr2char() to convert it to a String. |
| |
| Use getcharmod() to obtain any additional modifiers. |
| |
| The optional argument {opts} is a Dict and supports the |
| following items: |
| |
| cursor A String specifying cursor behavior |
| when waiting for a character. |
| "hide": hide the cursor. |
| "keep": keep current cursor unchanged. |
| "msg": move cursor to message area. |
| (default: "msg") |
| |
| number If |TRUE|, return a Number when getting |
| a single character. |
| If |FALSE|, the return value is always |
| converted to a String, and an empty |
| String (instead of 0) is returned when |
| no character is available. |
| (default: |TRUE|) |
| |
| simplify If |TRUE|, include modifiers in the |
| character if possible. E.g., return |
| the same value for CTRL-I and <Tab>. |
| If |FALSE|, don't include modifiers in |
| the character. |
| (default: |TRUE|) |
| |
| When the user clicks a mouse button, the mouse event will be |
| returned. The position can then be found in |v:mouse_col|, |
| |v:mouse_lnum|, |v:mouse_winid| and |v:mouse_win|. |
| |getmousepos()| can also be used. Mouse move events will be |
| ignored. |
| This example positions the mouse as it would normally happen: > |
| let c = getchar() |
| if c == "\<LeftMouse>" && v:mouse_win > 0 |
| exe v:mouse_win .. "wincmd w" |
| exe v:mouse_lnum |
| exe "normal " .. v:mouse_col .. "|" |
| endif |
| < |
| When using bracketed paste only the first character is |
| returned, the rest of the pasted text is dropped. |
| |xterm-bracketed-paste|. |
| |
| There is no prompt, you will somehow have to make clear to the |
| user that a character has to be typed. The screen is not |
| redrawn, e.g. when resizing the window. When using a popup |
| window it should work better with a |popup-filter|. |
| |
| There is no mapping for the character. |
| Key codes are replaced, thus when the user presses the <Del> |
| key you get the code for the <Del> key, not the raw character |
| sequence. Examples: > |
| getchar() == "\<Del>" |
| getchar() == "\<S-Left>" |
| < This example redefines "f" to ignore case: > |
| :nmap f :call FindChar()<CR> |
| :function FindChar() |
| : let c = nr2char(getchar()) |
| : while col('.') < col('$') - 1 |
| : normal l |
| : if getline('.')[col('.') - 1] ==? c |
| : break |
| : endif |
| : endwhile |
| :endfunction |
| < |
| You may also receive synthetic characters, such as |
| |<CursorHold>|. Often you will want to ignore this and get |
| another character: > |
| :function GetKey() |
| : let c = getchar() |
| : while c == "\<CursorHold>" |
| : let c = getchar() |
| : endwhile |
| : return c |
| :endfunction |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| or |String| |
| |
| |
| getcharmod() *getcharmod()* |
| The result is a Number which is the state of the modifiers for |
| the last obtained character with getchar() or in another way. |
| These values are added together: |
| 2 shift |
| 4 control |
| 8 alt (meta) |
| 16 meta (when it's different from ALT) |
| 32 mouse double click |
| 64 mouse triple click |
| 96 mouse quadruple click (== 32 + 64) |
| 128 command (Mac) or super (GTK) |
| Only the modifiers that have not been included in the |
| character itself are obtained. Thus Shift-a results in "A" |
| without a modifier. Returns 0 if no modifiers are used. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| getcharpos({expr}) *getcharpos()* |
| Get the position for String {expr}. Same as |getpos()| but the |
| column number in the returned List is a character index |
| instead of a byte index. |
| If |getpos()| returns a very large column number, equal to |
| |v:maxcol|, then getcharpos() will return the character index |
| of the last character. |
| |
| Example: |
| With the cursor on '세' in line 5 with text "여보세요": > |
| getcharpos('.') returns [0, 5, 3, 0] |
| getpos('.') returns [0, 5, 7, 0] |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetMark()->getcharpos() |
| < |
| Return type: list<number> |
| |
| |
| getcharsearch() *getcharsearch()* |
| Return the current character search information as a {dict} |
| with the following entries: |
| |
| char character previously used for a character |
| search (|t|, |f|, |T|, or |F|); empty string |
| if no character search has been performed |
| forward direction of character search; 1 for forward, |
| 0 for backward |
| until type of character search; 1 for a |t| or |T| |
| character search, 0 for an |f| or |F| |
| character search |
| |
| This can be useful to always have |;| and |,| search |
| forward/backward regardless of the direction of the previous |
| character search: > |
| :nnoremap <expr> ; getcharsearch().forward ? ';' : ',' |
| :nnoremap <expr> , getcharsearch().forward ? ',' : ';' |
| < Also see |setcharsearch()|. |
| |
| Return type: dict<any> |
| |
| |
| getcharstr([{expr} [, {opts}]]) *getcharstr()* |
| The same as |getchar()|, except that this always returns a |
| String, and "number" isn't allowed in {opts}. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| getcmdcomplpat() *getcmdcomplpat()* |
| Return completion pattern of the current command-line. |
| Only works when the command line is being edited, thus |
| requires use of |c_CTRL-\_e| or |c_CTRL-R_=|. |
| Also see |getcmdtype()|, |setcmdpos()|, |getcmdline()|, |
| |getcmdprompt()|, |getcmdcompltype()| and |setcmdline()|. |
| Returns an empty string when completion is not defined. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| getcmdcompltype() *getcmdcompltype()* |
| Return the type of the current command-line completion. |
| Only works when the command line is being edited, thus |
| requires use of |c_CTRL-\_e| or |c_CTRL-R_=|. |
| See |:command-completion| for the return string. |
| Also see |getcmdtype()|, |setcmdpos()|, |getcmdline()|, |
| |getcmdprompt()|, |getcmdcomplpat()| and |setcmdline()|. |
| Returns an empty string when completion is not defined. |
| |
| To get the type of the command-line completion for a specified |
| string, use |getcompletiontype()|. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| getcmdline() *getcmdline()* |
| Return the current command-line input. Only works when the |
| command line is being edited, thus requires use of |
| |c_CTRL-\_e| or |c_CTRL-R_=|. |
| Example: > |
| :cmap <F7> <C-\>eescape(getcmdline(), ' \')<CR> |
| < Also see |getcmdtype()|, |getcmdpos()|, |setcmdpos()|, |
| |getcmdprompt()| and |setcmdline()|. |
| Returns an empty string when entering a password or using |
| |inputsecret()|. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| getcmdpos() *getcmdpos()* |
| Return the position of the cursor in the command line as a |
| byte count. The first column is 1. |
| Only works when editing the command line, thus requires use of |
| |c_CTRL-\_e| or |c_CTRL-R_=| or an expression mapping. |
| Returns 0 otherwise. |
| Also see |getcmdtype()|, |setcmdpos()|, |getcmdline()|, |
| |getcmdprompt()| and |setcmdline()|. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| getcmdprompt() *getcmdprompt()* |
| Return the current command-line prompt when using functions |
| like |input()| or |confirm()|. |
| Only works when the command line is being edited, thus |
| requires use of |c_CTRL-\_e| or |c_CTRL-R_=|. |
| Also see |getcmdtype()|, |getcmdline()|, |getcmdpos()|, |
| |setcmdpos()| and |setcmdline()|. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| getcmdscreenpos() *getcmdscreenpos()* |
| Return the screen position of the cursor in the command line |
| as a byte count. The first column is 1. |
| Instead of |getcmdpos()|, it adds the prompt position. |
| Only works when editing the command line, thus requires use of |
| |c_CTRL-\_e| or |c_CTRL-R_=| or an expression mapping. |
| Returns 0 otherwise. |
| Also see |getcmdpos()|, |setcmdpos()|, |getcmdline()| and |
| |setcmdline()|. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| getcmdtype() *getcmdtype()* |
| Return the current command-line type. Possible return values |
| are: |
| : normal Ex command |
| > debug mode command |debug-mode| |
| / forward search command |
| ? backward search command |
| @ |input()| command |
| - |:insert| or |:append| command |
| = |i_CTRL-R_=| |
| Only works when editing the command line, thus requires use of |
| |c_CTRL-\_e| or |c_CTRL-R_=| or an expression mapping. |
| Returns an empty string otherwise. |
| Also see |getcmdpos()|, |setcmdpos()| and |getcmdline()|. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| getcmdwintype() *getcmdwintype()* |
| Return the current |command-line-window| type. Possible return |
| values are the same as |getcmdtype()|. Returns an empty string |
| when not in the command-line window. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| getcompletion({pat}, {type} [, {filtered}]) *getcompletion()* |
| Return a list of command-line completion matches. The String |
| {type} argument specifies what for. The following completion |
| types are supported: |
| |
| arglist file names in argument list |
| augroup autocmd groups |
| buffer buffer names |
| behave |:behave| suboptions |
| breakpoint |:breakadd| and |:breakdel| suboptions |
| color color schemes |
| command Ex command |
| cmdline |cmdline-completion| result |
| compiler compilers |
| cscope |:cscope| suboptions |
| custom,{func} custom completion, defined via {func} |
| customlist,{func} custom completion, defined via {func} |
| diff_buffer |:diffget| and |:diffput| completion |
| dir directory names |
| dir_in_path directory names in |'cdpath'| |
| environment environment variable names |
| event autocommand events |
| expression Vim expression |
| file file and directory names |
| file_in_path file and directory names in |'path'| |
| filetype filetype names |'filetype'| |
| filetypecmd |:filetype| suboptions |
| function function name |
| help help subjects |
| highlight highlight groups |
| history |:history| suboptions |
| keymap keyboard mappings |
| locale locale names (as output of locale -a) |
| mapclear buffer argument |
| mapping mapping name |
| menu menus |
| messages |:messages| suboptions |
| option options |
| packadd optional package |pack-add| names |
| runtime |:runtime| completion |
| scriptnames sourced script names |:scriptnames| |
| shellcmd Shell command |
| shellcmdline Shell command line with filename arguments |
| sign |:sign| suboptions |
| syntax syntax file names |'syntax'| |
| syntime |:syntime| suboptions |
| tag tags |
| tag_listfiles tags, file names |
| user user names |
| var user variables |
| |
| If {pat} is an empty string, then all the matches are |
| returned. Otherwise only items matching {pat} are returned. |
| See |wildcards| for the use of special characters in {pat}. |
| |
| If the optional {filtered} flag is set to 1, then 'wildignore' |
| is applied to filter the results. Otherwise all the matches |
| are returned. The 'wildignorecase' option always applies. |
| |
| If the 'wildoptions' option contains 'fuzzy', then fuzzy |
| matching is used to get the completion matches. Otherwise |
| regular expression matching is used. Thus this function |
| follows the user preference, what happens on the command line. |
| If you do not want this you can make 'wildoptions' empty |
| before calling getcompletion() and restore it afterwards. |
| |
| If {type} is "cmdline", then the |cmdline-completion| result is |
| returned. For example, to complete the possible values after |
| a ":call" command: > |
| echo getcompletion('call ', 'cmdline') |
| < |
| If there are no matches, an empty list is returned. An |
| invalid value for {type} produces an error. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetPattern()->getcompletion('color') |
| < |
| Return type: list<string> |
| |
| getcompletiontype({pat}) *getcompletiontype()* |
| Return the type of the command-line completion using {pat}. |
| When no corresponding completion type is found, an empty |
| string is returned. |
| To get the current command-line completion type, use |
| |getcmdcompltype()|. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| *getcurpos()* |
| getcurpos([{winid}]) |
| Get the position of the cursor. This is like getpos('.'), but |
| includes an extra "curswant" item in the list: |
| [0, lnum, col, off, curswant] ~ |
| The "curswant" number is the preferred column when moving the |
| cursor vertically. After |$| command it will be a very large |
| number equal to |v:maxcol|. Also see |getcursorcharpos()| and |
| |getpos()|. |
| The first "bufnum" item is always zero. The byte position of |
| the cursor is returned in 'col'. To get the character |
| position, use |getcursorcharpos()|. |
| |
| The optional {winid} argument can specify the window. It can |
| be the window number or the |window-ID|. The last known |
| cursor position is returned, this may be invalid for the |
| current value of the buffer if it is not the current window. |
| If {winid} is invalid a list with zeroes is returned. |
| |
| This can be used to save and restore the cursor position: > |
| let save_cursor = getcurpos() |
| MoveTheCursorAround |
| call setpos('.', save_cursor) |
| < Note that this only works within the window. See |
| |winrestview()| for restoring more state. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetWinid()->getcurpos() |
| < |
| Return type: list<number> |
| |
| |
| getcursorcharpos([{winid}]) *getcursorcharpos()* |
| Same as |getcurpos()| but the column number in the returned |
| List is a character index instead of a byte index. |
| |
| Example: |
| With the cursor on '보' in line 3 with text "여보세요": > |
| getcursorcharpos() returns [0, 3, 2, 0, 3] |
| getcurpos() returns [0, 3, 4, 0, 3] |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetWinid()->getcursorcharpos() |
| < |
| Return type: list<number> |
| |
| |
| getcwd([{winnr} [, {tabnr}]]) *getcwd()* |
| The result is a String, which is the name of the current |
| working directory. 'autochdir' is ignored. |
| |
| With {winnr} return the local current directory of this window |
| in the current tab page. {winnr} can be the window number or |
| the |window-ID|. |
| If {winnr} is -1 return the name of the global working |
| directory. See also |haslocaldir()|. |
| |
| With {winnr} and {tabnr} return the local current directory of |
| the window in the specified tab page. If {winnr} is -1 return |
| the working directory of the tabpage. |
| If {winnr} is zero use the current window, if {tabnr} is zero |
| use the current tabpage. |
| Without any arguments, return the actual working directory of |
| the current window. |
| Return an empty string if the arguments are invalid. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| " Get the working directory of the current window |
| :echo getcwd() |
| :echo getcwd(0) |
| :echo getcwd(0, 0) |
| " Get the working directory of window 3 in tabpage 2 |
| :echo getcwd(3, 2) |
| " Get the global working directory |
| :echo getcwd(-1) |
| " Get the working directory of tabpage 3 |
| :echo getcwd(-1, 3) |
| " Get the working directory of current tabpage |
| :echo getcwd(-1, 0) |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetWinnr()->getcwd() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| getenv({name}) *getenv()* |
| Return the value of environment variable {name}. The {name} |
| argument is a string, without a leading '$'. Example: > |
| myHome = getenv('HOME') |
| |
| < When the variable does not exist |v:null| is returned. That |
| is different from a variable set to an empty string, although |
| some systems interpret the empty value as the variable being |
| deleted. See also |expr-env|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetVarname()->getenv() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| or |Number| |
| |
| |
| getfontname([{name}]) *getfontname()* |
| Without an argument returns the name of the normal font being |
| used. Like what is used for the Normal highlight group |
| |hl-Normal|. |
| With an argument a check is done whether String {name} is a |
| valid font name. If not then an empty string is returned. |
| Otherwise the actual font name is returned, or {name} if the |
| GUI does not support obtaining the real name. |
| Only works when the GUI is running, thus not in your vimrc or |
| gvimrc file. Use the |GUIEnter| autocommand to use this |
| function just after the GUI has started. |
| Note that the GTK GUI accepts any font name, thus checking for |
| a valid name does not work. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| getfperm({fname}) *getfperm()* |
| The result is a String, which is the read, write, and execute |
| permissions of the given file {fname}. |
| If {fname} does not exist or its directory cannot be read, an |
| empty string is returned. |
| The result is of the form "rwxrwxrwx", where each group of |
| "rwx" flags represent, in turn, the permissions of the owner |
| of the file, the group the file belongs to, and other users. |
| If a user does not have a given permission the flag for this |
| is replaced with the string "-". Examples: > |
| :echo getfperm("/etc/passwd") |
| :echo getfperm(expand("~/.vimrc")) |
| < This will hopefully (from a security point of view) display |
| the string "rw-r--r--" or even "rw-------". |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetFilename()->getfperm() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| For setting permissions use |setfperm()|. |
| |
| |
| getfsize({fname}) *getfsize()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the size in bytes of the |
| given file {fname}. |
| If {fname} is a directory, 0 is returned. |
| If the file {fname} can't be found, -1 is returned. |
| If the size of {fname} is too big to fit in a Number then -2 |
| is returned. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetFilename()->getfsize() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| getftime({fname}) *getftime()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the last modification time of |
| the given file {fname}. The value is measured as seconds |
| since 1st Jan 1970, and may be passed to strftime(). See also |
| |localtime()| and |strftime()|. |
| If the file {fname} can't be found -1 is returned. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetFilename()->getftime() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| getftype({fname}) *getftype()* |
| The result is a String, which is a description of the kind of |
| file of the given file {fname}. |
| If {fname} does not exist an empty string is returned. |
| Here is a table over different kinds of files and their |
| results: |
| Normal file "file" |
| Directory "dir" |
| Symbolic link "link" |
| Block device "bdev" |
| Character device "cdev" |
| Socket "socket" |
| FIFO "fifo" |
| All other "other" |
| Example: > |
| getftype("/home") |
| < Note that a type such as "link" will only be returned on |
| systems that support it. On some systems only "dir" and |
| "file" are returned. On MS-Windows a symbolic link to a |
| directory returns "dir" instead of "link". |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetFilename()->getftype() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| getimstatus() *getimstatus()* |
| The result is a Number, which is |TRUE| when the IME status is |
| active and |FALSE| otherwise. |
| See 'imstatusfunc'. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| getjumplist([{winnr} [, {tabnr}]]) *getjumplist()* |
| Returns the |jumplist| for the specified window. |
| |
| Without arguments use the current window. |
| With {winnr} only use this window in the current tab page. |
| {winnr} can also be a |window-ID|. |
| With {winnr} and {tabnr} use the window in the specified tab |
| page. If {winnr} or {tabnr} is invalid, an empty list is |
| returned. |
| |
| The returned list contains two entries: a list with the jump |
| locations and the last used jump position number in the list. |
| Each entry in the jump location list is a dictionary with |
| the following entries: |
| bufnr buffer number |
| col column number |
| coladd column offset for 'virtualedit' |
| filename filename if available |
| lnum line number |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetWinnr()->getjumplist() |
| < |
| Return type: list<any> |
| |
| *getline()* |
| getline({lnum} [, {end}]) |
| Without {end} the result is a String, which is line {lnum} |
| from the current buffer. Example: > |
| getline(1) |
| < When {lnum} is a String that doesn't start with a |
| digit, |line()| is called to translate the String into a Number. |
| To get the line under the cursor: > |
| getline(".") |
| < When {lnum} is a number smaller than 1 or bigger than the |
| number of lines in the buffer, an empty string is returned. |
| |
| When {end} is given the result is a |List| where each item is |
| a line from the current buffer in the range {lnum} to {end}, |
| including line {end}. |
| {end} is used in the same way as {lnum}. |
| Non-existing lines are silently omitted. |
| When {end} is before {lnum} an empty |List| is returned. |
| Example: > |
| :let start = line('.') |
| :let end = search("^$") - 1 |
| :let lines = getline(start, end) |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| ComputeLnum()->getline() |
| < |
| Return type: list<string> or |String| depending on {end} |
| |
| To get lines from another buffer see |getbufline()| and |
| |getbufoneline()| |
| |
| getloclist({nr} [, {what}]) *getloclist()* |
| Returns a |List| with all the entries in the location list for |
| window {nr}. {nr} can be the window number or the |window-ID|. |
| When {nr} is zero the current window is used. |
| |
| For a location list window, the displayed location list is |
| returned. For an invalid window number {nr}, an empty list is |
| returned. Otherwise, same as |getqflist()|. |
| |
| If the optional {what} dictionary argument is supplied, then |
| returns the items listed in {what} as a dictionary. Refer to |
| |getqflist()| for the supported items in {what}. |
| |
| In addition to the items supported by |getqflist()| in {what}, |
| the following item is supported by |getloclist()|: |
| |
| filewinid id of the window used to display files |
| from the location list. This field is |
| applicable only when called from a |
| location list window. See |
| |location-list-file-window| for more |
| details. |
| |
| Returns a |Dictionary| with default values if there is no |
| location list for the window {nr}. |
| Returns an empty Dictionary if window {nr} does not exist. |
| |
| Examples (See also |getqflist-examples|): > |
| :echo getloclist(3, {'all': 0}) |
| :echo getloclist(5, {'filewinid': 0}) |
| < |
| Return type: list<dict<any>> or list<any> |
| |
| |
| getmarklist([{buf}]) *getmarklist()* |
| Without the {buf} argument returns a |List| with information |
| about all the global marks. |mark| |
| |
| If the optional {buf} argument is specified, returns the |
| local marks defined in buffer {buf}. For the use of {buf}, |
| see |bufname()|. If {buf} is invalid, an empty list is |
| returned. |
| |
| Each item in the returned List is a |Dict| with the following: |
| mark name of the mark prefixed by "'" |
| pos a |List| with the position of the mark: |
| [bufnum, lnum, col, off] |
| Refer to |getpos()| for more information. |
| file file name |
| |
| Refer to |getpos()| for getting information about a specific |
| mark. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetBufnr()->getmarklist() |
| < |
| Return type: list<dict<any>> or list<any> |
| |
| |
| getmatches([{win}]) *getmatches()* |
| Returns a |List| with all matches previously defined for the |
| current window by |matchadd()| and the |:match| commands. |
| |getmatches()| is useful in combination with |setmatches()|, |
| as |setmatches()| can restore a list of matches saved by |
| |getmatches()|. |
| If {win} is specified, use the window with this number or |
| window ID instead of the current window. If {win} is invalid, |
| an empty list is returned. |
| Example: > |
| :echo getmatches() |
| < [{'group': 'MyGroup1', 'pattern': 'TODO', |
| 'priority': 10, 'id': 1}, {'group': 'MyGroup2', |
| 'pattern': 'FIXME', 'priority': 10, 'id': 2}] > |
| :let m = getmatches() |
| :call clearmatches() |
| :echo getmatches() |
| < [] > |
| :call setmatches(m) |
| :echo getmatches() |
| < [{'group': 'MyGroup1', 'pattern': 'TODO', |
| 'priority': 10, 'id': 1}, {'group': 'MyGroup2', |
| 'pattern': 'FIXME', 'priority': 10, 'id': 2}] > |
| :unlet m |
| < |
| Return type: list<dict<any>> or list<any> |
| |
| |
| getmousepos() *getmousepos()* |
| Returns a |Dictionary| with the last known position of the |
| mouse. This can be used in a mapping for a mouse click or in |
| a filter of a popup window. The items are: |
| screenrow screen row |
| screencol screen column |
| winid Window ID of the click |
| winrow row inside "winid" |
| wincol column inside "winid" |
| line text line inside "winid" |
| column text column inside "winid" |
| coladd offset (in screen columns) from the |
| start of the clicked char |
| All numbers are 1-based. |
| |
| If not over a window, e.g. when in the command line or within |
| |tabpanel|, then only "screenrow" and "screencol" are valid, |
| the others are zero. |
| |
| When on the status line below a window or the vertical |
| separator right of a window, the "line" and "column" values |
| are zero. |
| |
| When the position is after the text then "column" is the |
| length of the text in bytes plus one. |
| |
| If the mouse is over a popup window then that window is used. |
| |
| When using |getchar()| the Vim variables |v:mouse_lnum|, |
| |v:mouse_col| and |v:mouse_winid| also provide these values. |
| |
| Return type: dict<number> |
| |
| |
| getmouseshape() *getmouseshape()* |
| Returns the name of the currently showing mouse pointer. |
| When the |+mouseshape| feature is not supported or the shape |
| is unknown an empty string is returned. |
| This function is mainly intended for testing. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| getpid() *getpid()* |
| Return a Number which is the process ID of the Vim process. |
| On Unix and MS-Windows this is a unique number, until Vim |
| exits. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| getpos({expr}) *getpos()* |
| Get the position for String {expr}. |
| The accepted values for {expr} are: *E1209* |
| . The cursor position. |
| $ The last line in the current buffer. |
| 'x Position of mark x (if the mark is not set, 0 is |
| returned for all values). |
| w0 First line visible in current window (one if the |
| display isn't updated, e.g. in silent Ex mode). |
| w$ Last line visible in current window (this is one |
| less than "w0" if no lines are visible). |
| v When not in Visual mode, returns the cursor |
| position. In Visual mode, returns the other end |
| of the Visual area. A good way to think about |
| this is that in Visual mode "v" and "." complement |
| each other. While "." refers to the cursor |
| position, "v" refers to where |v_o| would move the |
| cursor. As a result, you can use "v" and "." |
| together to work on all of a selection in |
| characterwise Visual mode. If the cursor is at |
| the end of a characterwise Visual area, "v" refers |
| to the start of the same Visual area. And if the |
| cursor is at the start of a characterwise Visual |
| area, "v" refers to the end of the same Visual |
| area. "v" differs from |'<| and |'>| in that it's |
| updated right away. |
| Note that a mark in another file can be used. The line number |
| then applies to another buffer. |
| |
| The result is a |List| with four numbers: |
| [bufnum, lnum, col, off] |
| "bufnum" is zero, unless a mark like '0 or 'A is used, then it |
| is the buffer number of the mark. |
| "lnum" and "col" are the position in the buffer. The first |
| column is 1. |
| The "off" number is zero, unless 'virtualedit' is used. Then |
| it is the offset in screen columns from the start of the |
| character. E.g., a position within a <Tab> or after the last |
| character. |
| |
| For getting the cursor position see |getcurpos()|. |
| The column number in the returned List is the byte position |
| within the line. To get the character position in the line, |
| use |getcharpos()|. |
| |
| Note that for '< and '> Visual mode matters: when it is "V" |
| (visual line mode) the column of '< is zero and the column of |
| '> is a large number equal to |v:maxcol|. |
| A very large column number equal to |v:maxcol| can be returned, |
| in which case it means "after the end of the line". |
| If {expr} is invalid, returns a list with all zeros. |
| |
| This can be used to save and restore the position of a mark: > |
| let save_a_mark = getpos("'a") |
| ... |
| call setpos("'a", save_a_mark) |
| < |
| Also see |getcharpos()|, |getcurpos()| and |setpos()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetMark()->getpos() |
| < |
| Return type: list<number> |
| |
| |
| getqflist([{what}]) *getqflist()* |
| Returns a |List| with all the current quickfix errors. Each |
| list item is a dictionary with these entries: |
| bufnr number of buffer that has the file name, use |
| bufname() to get the name |
| module module name |
| lnum line number in the buffer (first line is 1) |
| end_lnum |
| end of line number if the item is multiline |
| col column number (first column is 1) |
| end_col end of column number if the item has range |
| vcol |TRUE|: "col" is visual column |
| |FALSE|: "col" is byte index |
| nr error number |
| pattern search pattern used to locate the error |
| text description of the error |
| type type of the error, 'E', '1', etc. |
| valid |TRUE|: recognized error message |
| user_data |
| custom data associated with the item, can be |
| any type. |
| |
| When there is no error list or it's empty, an empty list is |
| returned. Quickfix list entries with a non-existing buffer |
| number are returned with "bufnr" set to zero (Note: some |
| functions accept buffer number zero for the alternate buffer, |
| you may need to explicitly check for zero). |
| |
| Useful application: Find pattern matches in multiple files and |
| do something with them: > |
| :vimgrep /theword/jg *.c |
| :for d in getqflist() |
| : echo bufname(d.bufnr) ':' d.lnum '=' d.text |
| :endfor |
| < |
| If the optional {what} dictionary argument is supplied, then |
| returns only the items listed in {what} as a dictionary. The |
| following string items are supported in {what}: |
| changedtick get the total number of changes made |
| to the list |quickfix-changedtick| |
| context get the |quickfix-context| |
| efm errorformat to use when parsing "lines". If |
| not present, then the 'errorformat' option |
| value is used. |
| id get information for the quickfix list with |
| |quickfix-ID|; zero means the id for the |
| current list or the list specified by "nr" |
| idx get information for the quickfix entry at this |
| index in the list specified by 'id' or 'nr'. |
| If set to zero, then uses the current entry. |
| See |quickfix-index| |
| items quickfix list entries |
| lines parse a list of lines using 'efm' and return |
| the resulting entries. Only a |List| type is |
| accepted. The current quickfix list is not |
| modified. See |quickfix-parse|. |
| nr get information for this quickfix list; zero |
| means the current quickfix list and "$" means |
| the last quickfix list |
| qfbufnr number of the buffer displayed in the quickfix |
| window. Returns 0 if the quickfix buffer is |
| not present. See |quickfix-buffer|. |
| size number of entries in the quickfix list |
| title get the list title |quickfix-title| |
| winid get the quickfix |window-ID| |
| all all of the above quickfix properties |
| Non-string items in {what} are ignored. To get the value of a |
| particular item, set it to zero. |
| If "nr" is not present then the current quickfix list is used. |
| If both "nr" and a non-zero "id" are specified, then the list |
| specified by "id" is used. |
| To get the number of lists in the quickfix stack, set "nr" to |
| "$" in {what}. The "nr" value in the returned dictionary |
| contains the quickfix stack size. |
| When "lines" is specified, all the other items except "efm" |
| are ignored. The returned dictionary contains the entry |
| "items" with the list of entries. |
| |
| The returned dictionary contains the following entries: |
| changedtick total number of changes made to the |
| list |quickfix-changedtick| |
| context quickfix list context. See |quickfix-context| |
| If not present, set to "". |
| id quickfix list ID |quickfix-ID|. If not |
| present, set to 0. |
| idx index of the quickfix entry in the list. If not |
| present, set to 0. |
| items quickfix list entries. If not present, set to |
| an empty list. |
| nr quickfix list number. If not present, set to 0 |
| qfbufnr number of the buffer displayed in the quickfix |
| window. If not present, set to 0. |
| size number of entries in the quickfix list. If not |
| present, set to 0. |
| title quickfix list title text. If not present, set |
| to "". |
| winid quickfix |window-ID|. If not present, set to 0 |
| |
| Examples (See also |getqflist-examples|): > |
| :echo getqflist({'all': 1}) |
| :echo getqflist({'nr': 2, 'title': 1}) |
| :echo getqflist({'lines' : ["F1:10:L10"]}) |
| < |
| Return type: list<dict<any>> or list<any> |
| |
| |
| getreg([{regname} [, 1 [, {list}]]]) *getreg()* |
| The result is a String, which is the contents of register |
| {regname}. Example: > |
| :let cliptext = getreg('*') |
| < When register {regname} was not set the result is an empty |
| string. |
| The {regname} argument must be a string. *E1162* |
| |
| getreg('=') returns the last evaluated value of the expression |
| register. (For use in maps.) |
| getreg('=', 1) returns the expression itself, so that it can |
| be restored with |setreg()|. For other registers the extra |
| argument is ignored, thus you can always give it. |
| |
| If {list} is present and |TRUE|, the result type is changed |
| to |List|. Each list item is one text line. Use it if you care |
| about zero bytes possibly present inside register: without |
| third argument both NLs and zero bytes are represented as NLs |
| (see |NL-used-for-Nul|). |
| When the register was not set an empty list is returned. |
| |
| If {regname} is "", the unnamed register '"' is used. |
| If {regname} is not specified, |v:register| is used. |
| In |Vim9-script| {regname} must be one character. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetRegname()->getreg() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| or list<string> depending on {list} |
| |
| |
| getreginfo([{regname}]) *getreginfo()* |
| Returns detailed information about register {regname} as a |
| Dictionary with the following entries: |
| regcontents List of lines contained in register |
| {regname}, like |
| |getreg|({regname}, 1, 1). |
| regtype the type of register {regname}, as in |
| |getregtype()|. |
| isunnamed Boolean flag, v:true if this register |
| is currently pointed to by the unnamed |
| register. |
| points_to for the unnamed register, gives the |
| single letter name of the register |
| currently pointed to (see |quotequote|). |
| For example, after deleting a line |
| with `dd`, this field will be "1", |
| which is the register that got the |
| deleted text. |
| |
| The {regname} argument is a string. If {regname} is invalid |
| or not set, an empty Dictionary will be returned. |
| If {regname} is "" or "@", the unnamed register '"' is used. |
| If {regname} is not specified, |v:register| is used. |
| The returned Dictionary can be passed to |setreg()|. |
| In |Vim9-script| {regname} must be one character. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetRegname()->getreginfo() |
| < |
| Return type: dict<any> |
| |
| |
| getregion({pos1}, {pos2} [, {opts}]) *getregion()* |
| Returns the list of strings from {pos1} to {pos2} from a |
| buffer. |
| |
| {pos1} and {pos2} must both be |List|s with four numbers. |
| See |getpos()| for the format of the list. It's possible |
| to specify positions from a different buffer, but please |
| note the limitations at |getregion-notes|. |
| |
| The optional argument {opts} is a Dict and supports the |
| following items: |
| |
| type Specify the region's selection type. |
| See |getregtype()| for possible values, |
| except that the width can be omitted |
| and an empty string cannot be used. |
| (default: "v") |
| |
| exclusive If |TRUE|, use exclusive selection |
| for the end position. |
| (default: follow 'selection') |
| |
| You can get the last selection type by |visualmode()|. |
| If Visual mode is active, use |mode()| to get the Visual mode |
| (e.g., in a |:vmap|). |
| This function is useful to get text starting and ending in |
| different columns, such as a |characterwise-visual| selection. |
| |
| *getregion-notes* |
| Note that: |
| - Order of {pos1} and {pos2} doesn't matter, it will always |
| return content from the upper left position to the lower |
| right position. |
| - If 'virtualedit' is enabled and the region is past the end |
| of the lines, resulting lines are padded with spaces. |
| - If the region is blockwise and it starts or ends in the |
| middle of a multi-cell character, it is not included but |
| its selected part is substituted with spaces. |
| - If {pos1} and {pos2} are not in the same buffer, an empty |
| list is returned. |
| - {pos1} and {pos2} must belong to a |bufloaded()| buffer. |
| - It is evaluated in current window context, which makes a |
| difference if the buffer is displayed in a window with |
| different 'virtualedit' or 'list' values. |
| - When specifying an exclusive selection and {pos1} and {pos2} |
| are equal, the returned list contains a single character as |
| if selection is inclusive, to match the behavior of an empty |
| exclusive selection in Visual mode. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| :xnoremap <CR> |
| \ <Cmd>echow getregion( |
| \ getpos('v'), getpos('.'), #{ type: mode() })<CR> |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| getpos('.')->getregion(getpos("'a")) |
| < |
| Return type: list<string> |
| |
| |
| getregionpos({pos1}, {pos2} [, {opts}]) *getregionpos()* |
| Same as |getregion()|, but returns a list of positions |
| describing the buffer text segments bound by {pos1} and |
| {pos2}. |
| The segments are a pair of positions for every line: > |
| [[{start_pos}, {end_pos}], ...] |
| < |
| The position is a |List| with four numbers: |
| [bufnum, lnum, col, off] |
| "bufnum" is the buffer number. |
| "lnum" and "col" are the position in the buffer. The first |
| column is 1. |
| If the "off" number of a starting position is non-zero, it is |
| the offset in screen columns from the start of the character. |
| E.g., a position within a <Tab> or after the last character. |
| If the "off" number of an ending position is non-zero, it is |
| the offset of the character's first cell not included in the |
| selection, otherwise all its cells are included. |
| |
| Apart from the options supported by |getregion()|, {opts} also |
| supports the following: |
| |
| eol If |TRUE|, indicate positions beyond |
| the end of a line with "col" values |
| one more than the length of the line. |
| If |FALSE|, positions are limited |
| within their lines, and if a line is |
| empty or the selection is entirely |
| beyond the end of a line, a "col" |
| value of 0 is used for both positions. |
| (default: |FALSE|) |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| getpos('.')->getregionpos(getpos("'a")) |
| < |
| For an example, see the highlight-yank plugin |52.6| |
| |
| Return type: list<list<list<number>>> |
| |
| |
| getregtype([{regname}]) *getregtype()* |
| The result is a String, which is type of register {regname}. |
| The value will be one of: |
| "v" for |characterwise| text |
| "V" for |linewise| text |
| "<CTRL-V>{width}" for |blockwise-visual| text |
| "" for an empty or unknown register |
| <CTRL-V> is one character with value 0x16. |
| The {regname} argument is a string. If {regname} is "", the |
| unnamed register '"' is used. If {regname} is not specified, |
| |v:register| is used. |
| In |Vim9-script| {regname} must be one character. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetRegname()->getregtype() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| getscriptinfo([{opts}]) *getscriptinfo()* |
| Returns a |List| with information about all the sourced Vim |
| scripts in the order they were sourced, like what |
| `:scriptnames` shows. |
| |
| The optional Dict argument {opts} supports the following |
| optional items: |
| name Script name match pattern. If specified, |
| and "sid" is not specified, information about |
| scripts with a name that match the pattern |
| "name" are returned. |
| sid Script ID |<SID>|. If specified, only |
| information about the script with ID "sid" is |
| returned and "name" is ignored. |
| |
| Each item in the returned List is a |Dict| with the following |
| items: |
| autoload Set to TRUE for a script that was used with |
| `import autoload` but was not actually sourced |
| yet (see |import-autoload|). |
| functions List of script-local function names defined in |
| the script. Present only when a particular |
| script is specified using the "sid" item in |
| {opts}. |
| name Vim script file name. |
| sid Script ID |<SID>|. |
| sourced Script ID of the actually sourced script that |
| this script name links to, if any, otherwise |
| zero |
| variables A dictionary with the script-local variables. |
| Present only when a particular script is |
| specified using the "sid" item in {opts}. |
| Note that this is a copy, the value of |
| script-local variables cannot be changed using |
| this dictionary. |
| version Vim script version (|scriptversion|) |
| |
| Examples: > |
| :echo getscriptinfo({'name': 'myscript'}) |
| :echo getscriptinfo({'sid': 15})[0].variables |
| < |
| Return type: list<dict<any>> |
| |
| |
| getstacktrace() *getstacktrace()* |
| Returns the current stack trace of Vim scripts. |
| Stack trace is a |List|, of which each item is a |Dictionary| |
| with the following items: |
| funcref The funcref if the stack is at a function, |
| otherwise this item is omitted. |
| event The string of the event description if the |
| stack is at an autocmd event, otherwise this |
| item is omitted. |
| lnum The line number in the script on the stack. |
| filepath The file path of the script on the stack. |
| |
| Return type: list<dict<any>> |
| |
| |
| gettabinfo([{tabnr}]) *gettabinfo()* |
| If {tabnr} is not specified, then information about all the |
| tab pages is returned as a |List|. Each List item is a |
| |Dictionary|. Otherwise, {tabnr} specifies the tab page |
| number and information about that one is returned. If the tab |
| page does not exist an empty List is returned. |
| |
| Each List item is a |Dictionary| with the following entries: |
| tabnr tab page number. |
| variables a reference to the dictionary with |
| tabpage-local variables |
| windows List of |window-ID|s in the tab page. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetTabnr()->gettabinfo() |
| < |
| Return type: list<dict<any>> |
| |
| |
| gettabvar({tabnr}, {varname} [, {def}]) *gettabvar()* |
| Get the value of a tab-local variable {varname} in tab page |
| {tabnr}. |t:var| |
| Tabs are numbered starting with one. |
| The {varname} argument is a string. When {varname} is empty a |
| dictionary with all tab-local variables is returned. |
| Note that the name without "t:" must be used. |
| When the tab or variable doesn't exist {def} or an empty |
| string is returned, there is no error message. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetTabnr()->gettabvar(varname) |
| < |
| Return type: any, depending on {varname} |
| |
| |
| gettabwinvar({tabnr}, {winnr}, {varname} [, {def}]) *gettabwinvar()* |
| Get the value of window-local variable {varname} in window |
| {winnr} in tab page {tabnr}. |
| The {varname} argument is a string. When {varname} is empty a |
| dictionary with all window-local variables is returned. |
| When {varname} is equal to "&" get the values of all |
| window-local options in a |Dictionary|. |
| Otherwise, when {varname} starts with "&" get the value of a |
| window-local option. |
| Note that {varname} must be the name without "w:". |
| Tabs are numbered starting with one. For the current tabpage |
| use |getwinvar()|. |
| {winnr} can be the window number or the |window-ID|. |
| When {winnr} is zero the current window is used. |
| This also works for a global option, buffer-local option and |
| window-local option, but it doesn't work for a global variable |
| or buffer-local variable. |
| When the tab, window or variable doesn't exist {def} or an |
| empty string is returned, there is no error message. |
| Examples: > |
| :let list_is_on = gettabwinvar(1, 2, '&list') |
| :echo "myvar = " .. gettabwinvar(3, 1, 'myvar') |
| < |
| To obtain all window-local variables use: > |
| gettabwinvar({tabnr}, {winnr}, '&') |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetTabnr()->gettabwinvar(winnr, varname) |
| < |
| Return type: any, depending on {varname} |
| |
| |
| gettagstack([{winnr}]) *gettagstack()* |
| The result is a Dict, which is the tag stack of window {winnr}. |
| {winnr} can be the window number or the |window-ID|. |
| When {winnr} is not specified, the current window is used. |
| When window {winnr} doesn't exist, an empty Dict is returned. |
| |
| The returned dictionary contains the following entries: |
| curidx Current index in the stack. When at |
| top of the stack, set to (length + 1). |
| Index of bottom of the stack is 1. |
| items List of items in the stack. Each item |
| is a dictionary containing the |
| entries described below. |
| length Number of entries in the stack. |
| |
| Each item in the stack is a dictionary with the following |
| entries: |
| bufnr buffer number of the current jump |
| from cursor position before the tag jump. |
| See |getpos()| for the format of the |
| returned list. |
| matchnr current matching tag number. Used when |
| multiple matching tags are found for a |
| name. |
| tagname name of the tag |
| |
| See |tagstack| for more information about the tag stack. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetWinnr()->gettagstack() |
| < |
| Return type: dict<any> |
| |
| |
| gettext({text} [, {package}]) *gettext()* |
| Translate String {text} if possible. |
| This is intended for use in Vim scripts. When generating |
| message translations the {text} is extracted by `xgettext`, |
| the translator can add translated messages into the .po file |
| and Vim will lookup the translation when gettext() is called. |
| For {text} double quoted strings are preferred, because |
| `xgettext` does not support single quoted escaped text. |
| |
| When the {package} is specified, the translation is looked up |
| for that specific package. This is mainly required for |
| third-party Vim scripts. You need to specify a path to the |
| translations with the |bindtextdomain()| function before |
| using the gettext() function. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| getwininfo([{winid}]) *getwininfo()* |
| Returns information about windows as a |List| with Dictionaries. |
| |
| If {winid} is given Information about the window with that ID |
| is returned, as a |List| with one item. If the window does not |
| exist the result is an empty list. |
| |
| Without {winid} information about all the windows in all the |
| tab pages is returned. |
| |
| Each List item is a |Dictionary| with the following entries: |
| botline last complete displayed buffer line |
| bufnr number of buffer in the window |
| height window height (excluding winbar) |
| leftcol first column displayed; only used when |
| 'wrap' is off |
| loclist 1 if showing a location list |
| {only with the +quickfix feature} |
| quickfix 1 if quickfix or location list window |
| {only with the +quickfix feature} |
| terminal 1 if a terminal window |
| {only with the +terminal feature} |
| tabnr tab page number |
| topline first displayed buffer line |
| variables a reference to the dictionary with |
| window-local variables |
| width window width |
| winbar 1 if the window has a toolbar, 0 |
| otherwise |
| wincol leftmost screen column of the window; |
| "col" from |win_screenpos()| |
| textoff number of columns occupied by any |
| 'foldcolumn', 'signcolumn' and line |
| number in front of the text |
| winid |window-ID| |
| winnr window number |
| winrow topmost screen line of the window; |
| "row" from |win_screenpos()| |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetWinnr()->getwininfo() |
| < |
| Return type: list<dict<any>> |
| |
| |
| getwinpos([{timeout}]) *getwinpos()* |
| The result is a |List| with two numbers, the result of |
| |getwinposx()| and |getwinposy()| combined: |
| [x-pos, y-pos] |
| {timeout} can be used to specify how long to wait in msec for |
| a response from the terminal. When omitted 100 msec is used. |
| Use a longer time for a remote terminal. |
| When using a value less than 10 and no response is received |
| within that time, a previously reported position is returned, |
| if available. This can be used to poll for the position and |
| do some work in the meantime: > |
| while 1 |
| let res = getwinpos(1) |
| if res[0] >= 0 |
| break |
| endif |
| " Do some work here |
| endwhile |
| < |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetTimeout()->getwinpos() |
| < |
| Return type: list<number> |
| |
| |
| getwinposx() *getwinposx()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the X coordinate in pixels of |
| the left hand side of the GUI Vim window. Also works for an |
| xterm (uses a timeout of 100 msec). |
| The result will be -1 if the information is not available |
| (e.g. on the Wayland backend). |
| The value can be used with `:winpos`. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| getwinposy() *getwinposy()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the Y coordinate in pixels of |
| the top of the GUI Vim window. Also works for an xterm (uses |
| a timeout of 100 msec). |
| The result will be -1 if the information is not available |
| (e.g. on the Wayland backend). |
| The value can be used with `:winpos`. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| getwinvar({winnr}, {varname} [, {def}]) *getwinvar()* |
| Like |gettabwinvar()| for the current tabpage. |
| Examples: > |
| :let list_is_on = getwinvar(2, '&list') |
| :echo "myvar = " .. getwinvar(1, 'myvar') |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetWinnr()->getwinvar(varname) |
| < |
| Return type: any, depending on {varname} |
| |
| |
| glob({expr} [, {nosuf} [, {list} [, {alllinks}]]]) *glob()* |
| Expand the file wildcards in {expr}. See |wildcards| for the |
| use of special characters. |
| |
| Unless the optional {nosuf} argument is given and is |TRUE|, |
| the 'suffixes' and 'wildignore' options apply: Names matching |
| one of the patterns in 'wildignore' will be skipped and |
| 'suffixes' affect the ordering of matches. |
| 'wildignorecase' always applies. |
| |
| When {list} is present and it is |TRUE| the result is a |List| |
| with all matching files. The advantage of using a List is, |
| you also get filenames containing newlines correctly. |
| Otherwise the result is a String and when there are several |
| matches, they are separated by <NL> characters. |
| |
| If the expansion fails, the result is an empty String or List. |
| |
| You can also use |readdir()| if you need to do complicated |
| things, such as limiting the number of matches. |
| |
| A name for a non-existing file is not included. A symbolic |
| link is only included if it points to an existing file. |
| However, when the {alllinks} argument is present and it is |
| |TRUE| then all symbolic links are included. |
| |
| For most systems backticks can be used to get files names from |
| any external command. Example: > |
| :let tagfiles = glob("`find . -name tags -print`") |
| :let &tags = substitute(tagfiles, "\n", ",", "g") |
| < The result of the program inside the backticks should be one |
| item per line. Spaces inside an item are allowed. |
| |
| See |expand()| for expanding special Vim variables. See |
| |system()| for getting the raw output of an external command. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetExpr()->glob() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| or list<string> or list<any> depending |
| on {list} |
| |
| |
| glob2regpat({string}) *glob2regpat()* |
| Convert a file pattern, as used by glob(), into a search |
| pattern. The result can be used to match with a string that |
| is a file name. E.g. > |
| if filename =~ glob2regpat('Make*.mak') |
| < This is equivalent to: > |
| if filename =~ '^Make.*\.mak$' |
| < When {string} is an empty string the result is "^$", match an |
| empty string. |
| Note that the result depends on the system. On MS-Windows |
| a backslash usually means a path separator. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetExpr()->glob2regpat() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| *globpath()* |
| globpath({path}, {expr} [, {nosuf} [, {list} [, {alllinks}]]]) |
| Perform glob() for String {expr} on all directories in {path} |
| and concatenate the results. Example: > |
| :echo globpath(&rtp, "syntax/c.vim") |
| < |
| {path} is a comma-separated list of directory names. Each |
| directory name is prepended to {expr} and expanded like with |
| |glob()|. A path separator is inserted when needed. |
| To add a comma inside a directory name escape it with a |
| backslash. Note that on MS-Windows a directory may have a |
| trailing backslash, remove it if you put a comma after it. |
| If the expansion fails for one of the directories, there is no |
| error message. |
| |
| Unless the optional {nosuf} argument is given and is |TRUE|, |
| the 'suffixes' and 'wildignore' options apply: Names matching |
| one of the patterns in 'wildignore' will be skipped and |
| 'suffixes' affect the ordering of matches. |
| |
| When {list} is present and it is |TRUE| the result is a |List| |
| with all matching files. The advantage of using a List is, you |
| also get filenames containing newlines correctly. Otherwise |
| the result is a String and when there are several matches, |
| they are separated by <NL> characters. Example: > |
| :echo globpath(&rtp, "syntax/c.vim", 0, 1) |
| < |
| {alllinks} is used as with |glob()|. |
| |
| The "**" item can be used to search in a directory tree. |
| For example, to find all "README.txt" files in the directories |
| in 'runtimepath' and below: > |
| :echo globpath(&rtp, "**/README.txt") |
| < Upwards search and limiting the depth of "**" is not |
| supported, thus using 'path' will not always work properly. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|, the base is passed as the |
| second argument: > |
| GetExpr()->globpath(&rtp) |
| < |
| Return type: |String| or list<string> or list<any> depending |
| on {list} |
| |
| |
| has({feature} [, {check}]) *has()* |
| When {check} is omitted or is zero: The result is a Number, |
| which is 1 if the feature {feature} is supported, zero |
| otherwise. The {feature} argument is a string, case is |
| ignored. See |feature-list| below. |
| |
| When {check} is present and not zero: The result is a Number, |
| which is 1 if the feature {feature} could ever be supported, |
| zero otherwise. This is useful to check for a typo in |
| {feature} and to detect dead code. Keep in mind that an older |
| Vim version will not know about a feature added later and |
| features that have been abandoned will not be known by the |
| current Vim version. |
| |
| Also see |exists()| and |exists_compiled()|. |
| |
| Note that to skip code that has a syntax error when the |
| feature is not available, Vim may skip the rest of the line |
| and miss a following `endif`. Therefore put the `endif` on a |
| separate line: > |
| if has('feature') |
| let x = this->breaks->without->the->feature |
| endif |
| < If the `endif` would be moved to the second line as "| endif" it |
| would not be found. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| has_key({dict}, {key}) *has_key()* |
| The result is a Number, which is TRUE if |Dictionary| {dict} |
| has an entry with key {key}. FALSE otherwise. |
| The {key} argument is a string. In |Vim9| script a number is |
| also accepted (and converted to a string) but no other types. |
| In legacy script the usual automatic conversion to string is |
| done. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mydict->has_key(key) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| haslocaldir([{winnr} [, {tabnr}]]) *haslocaldir()* |
| The result is a Number: |
| 1 when the window has set a local directory via |:lcd| |
| 2 when the tab-page has set a local directory via |:tcd| |
| 0 otherwise. |
| |
| Without arguments use the current window. |
| With {winnr} use this window in the current tab page. |
| With {winnr} and {tabnr} use the window in the specified tab |
| page. |
| {winnr} can be the window number or the |window-ID|. |
| If {winnr} is -1 it is ignored and only the tabpage is used. |
| Return 0 if the arguments are invalid. |
| Examples: > |
| if haslocaldir() == 1 |
| " window local directory case |
| elseif haslocaldir() == 2 |
| " tab-local directory case |
| else |
| " global directory case |
| endif |
| |
| " current window |
| :echo haslocaldir() |
| :echo haslocaldir(0) |
| :echo haslocaldir(0, 0) |
| " window n in current tab page |
| :echo haslocaldir(n) |
| :echo haslocaldir(n, 0) |
| " window n in tab page m |
| :echo haslocaldir(n, m) |
| " tab page m |
| :echo haslocaldir(-1, m) |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetWinnr()->haslocaldir() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| hasmapto({what} [, {mode} [, {abbr}]]) *hasmapto()* |
| The result is a Number, which is TRUE if there is a mapping |
| that contains {what} in somewhere in the rhs (what it is |
| mapped to) and this mapping exists in one of the modes |
| indicated by {mode}. |
| The arguments {what} and {mode} are strings. |
| When {abbr} is there and it is |TRUE| use abbreviations |
| instead of mappings. Don't forget to specify Insert and/or |
| Command-line mode. |
| Both the global mappings and the mappings local to the current |
| buffer are checked for a match. |
| If no matching mapping is found FALSE is returned. |
| The following characters are recognized in {mode}: |
| n Normal mode |
| v Visual and Select mode |
| x Visual mode |
| s Select mode |
| o Operator-pending mode |
| i Insert mode |
| l Language-Argument ("r", "f", "t", etc.) |
| c Command-line mode |
| When {mode} is omitted, "nvo" is used. |
| |
| This function is useful to check if a mapping already exists |
| to a function in a Vim script. Example: > |
| :if !hasmapto('\ABCdoit') |
| : map <Leader>d \ABCdoit |
| :endif |
| < This installs the mapping to "\ABCdoit" only if there isn't |
| already a mapping to "\ABCdoit". |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetRHS()->hasmapto() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| histadd({history}, {item}) *histadd()* |
| Add the String {item} to the history {history} which can be |
| one of: *hist-names* |
| "cmd" or ":" command line history |
| "search" or "/" search pattern history |
| "expr" or "=" typed expression history |
| "input" or "@" input line history |
| "debug" or ">" debug command history |
| empty the current or last used history |
| The {history} string does not need to be the whole name, one |
| character is sufficient. |
| If {item} does already exist in the history, it will be |
| shifted to become the newest entry. |
| The result is a Number: TRUE if the operation was successful, |
| otherwise FALSE is returned. |
| |
| Example: > |
| :call histadd("input", strftime("%Y %b %d")) |
| :let date=input("Enter date: ") |
| < This function is not available in the |sandbox|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|, the base is passed as the |
| second argument: > |
| GetHistory()->histadd('search') |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| histdel({history} [, {item}]) *histdel()* |
| Clear {history}, i.e. delete all its entries. See |hist-names| |
| for the possible values of {history}. |
| |
| If the parameter {item} evaluates to a String, it is used as a |
| regular expression. All entries matching that expression will |
| be removed from the history (if there are any). |
| Upper/lowercase must match, unless "\c" is used |/\c|. |
| If {item} evaluates to a Number, it will be interpreted as |
| an index, see |:history-indexing|. The respective entry will |
| be removed if it exists. |
| |
| The result is TRUE for a successful operation, otherwise FALSE |
| is returned. |
| |
| Examples: |
| Clear expression register history: > |
| :call histdel("expr") |
| < |
| Remove all entries starting with "*" from the search history: > |
| :call histdel("/", '^\*') |
| < |
| The following three are equivalent: > |
| :call histdel("search", histnr("search")) |
| :call histdel("search", -1) |
| :call histdel("search", '^' .. histget("search", -1) .. '$') |
| < |
| To delete the last search pattern and use the last-but-one for |
| the "n" command and 'hlsearch': > |
| :call histdel("search", -1) |
| :let @/ = histget("search", -1) |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetHistory()->histdel() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| histget({history} [, {index}]) *histget()* |
| The result is a String, the entry with Number {index} from |
| {history}. See |hist-names| for the possible values of |
| {history}, and |:history-indexing| for {index}. If there is |
| no such entry, an empty String is returned. When {index} is |
| omitted, the most recent item from the history is used. |
| |
| Examples: |
| Redo the second last search from history. > |
| :execute '/' .. histget("search", -2) |
| |
| < Define an Ex command ":H {num}" that supports re-execution of |
| the {num}th entry from the output of |:history|. > |
| :command -nargs=1 H execute histget("cmd", 0+<args>) |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetHistory()->histget() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| histnr({history}) *histnr()* |
| The result is the Number of the current entry in {history}. |
| See |hist-names| for the possible values of {history}. |
| If an error occurred, -1 is returned. |
| |
| Example: > |
| :let inp_index = histnr("expr") |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetHistory()->histnr() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| hlexists({name}) *hlexists()* |
| The result is a Number, which is TRUE if a highlight group |
| called {name} exists. This is when the group has been |
| defined in some way. Not necessarily when highlighting has |
| been defined for it, it may also have been used for a syntax |
| item. |
| *highlight_exists()* |
| Obsolete name: highlight_exists(). |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetName()->hlexists() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| hlget([{name} [, {resolve}]]) *hlget()* |
| Returns a List of all the highlight group attributes. If the |
| optional {name} is specified, then returns a List with only |
| the attributes of the specified highlight group. Returns an |
| empty List if the highlight group {name} is not present. |
| |
| If the optional {resolve} argument is set to v:true and the |
| highlight group {name} is linked to another group, then the |
| link is resolved recursively and the attributes of the |
| resolved highlight group are returned. |
| |
| Each entry in the returned List is a Dictionary with the |
| following items: |
| cleared boolean flag, set to v:true if the highlight |
| group attributes are cleared or not yet |
| specified. See |highlight-clear|. |
| cterm cterm attributes. See |highlight-cterm|. |
| ctermbg cterm background color. |
| See |highlight-ctermbg|. |
| ctermfg cterm foreground color. |
| See |highlight-ctermfg|. |
| ctermul cterm underline color. See |highlight-ctermul|. |
| default boolean flag, set to v:true if the highlight |
| group link is a default link. See |
| |highlight-default|. |
| font highlight group font. See |highlight-font|. |
| gui gui attributes. See |highlight-gui|. |
| guibg gui background color. See |highlight-guibg|. |
| guifg gui foreground color. See |highlight-guifg|. |
| guisp gui special color. See |highlight-guisp|. |
| id highlight group ID. |
| linksto linked highlight group name. |
| See |:highlight-link|. |
| name highlight group name. See |group-name|. |
| start start terminal keycode. See |highlight-start|. |
| stop stop terminal keycode. See |highlight-stop|. |
| term term attributes. See |highlight-term|. |
| |
| The 'term', 'cterm' and 'gui' items in the above Dictionary |
| have a dictionary value with the following optional boolean |
| items: 'bold', 'standout', 'underline', 'undercurl', 'italic', |
| 'reverse', 'inverse' and 'strikethrough'. |
| |
| Example(s): > |
| :echo hlget() |
| :echo hlget('ModeMsg') |
| :echo hlget('Number', v:true) |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetName()->hlget() |
| < |
| Return type: list<dict<any>> |
| |
| |
| hlset({list}) *hlset()* |
| Creates or modifies the attributes of a List of highlight |
| groups. Each item in {list} is a dictionary containing the |
| attributes of a highlight group. See |hlget()| for the list of |
| supported items in this dictionary. |
| |
| In addition to the items described in |hlget()|, the following |
| additional items are supported in the dictionary: |
| |
| force boolean flag to force the creation of |
| a link for an existing highlight group |
| with attributes. |
| |
| The highlight group is identified using the 'name' item and |
| the 'id' item (if supplied) is ignored. If a highlight group |
| with a specified name doesn't exist, then it is created. |
| Otherwise the attributes of an existing highlight group are |
| modified. |
| |
| If an empty dictionary value is used for the 'term' or 'cterm' |
| or 'gui' entries, then the corresponding attributes are |
| cleared. If the 'cleared' item is set to v:true, then all the |
| attributes of the highlight group are cleared. |
| |
| The 'linksto' item can be used to link a highlight group to |
| another highlight group. See |:highlight-link|. |
| |
| Returns zero for success, -1 for failure. |
| |
| Example(s): > |
| " add bold attribute to the Visual highlight group |
| :call hlset([#{name: 'Visual', |
| \ term: #{reverse: 1 , bold: 1}}]) |
| :call hlset([#{name: 'Type', guifg: 'DarkGreen'}]) |
| :let l = hlget() |
| :call hlset(l) |
| " clear the Search highlight group |
| :call hlset([#{name: 'Search', cleared: v:true}]) |
| " clear the 'term' attributes for a highlight group |
| :call hlset([#{name: 'Title', term: {}}]) |
| " create the MyHlg group linking it to DiffAdd |
| :call hlset([#{name: 'MyHlg', linksto: 'DiffAdd'}]) |
| " remove the MyHlg group link |
| :call hlset([#{name: 'MyHlg', linksto: 'NONE'}]) |
| " clear the attributes and a link |
| :call hlset([#{name: 'MyHlg', cleared: v:true, |
| \ linksto: 'NONE'}]) |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetAttrList()->hlset() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| hlID({name}) *hlID()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the ID of the highlight group |
| with name {name}. When the highlight group doesn't exist, |
| zero is returned. |
| This can be used to retrieve information about the highlight |
| group. For example, to get the background color of the |
| "Comment" group: > |
| :echo synIDattr(synIDtrans(hlID("Comment")), "bg") |
| < *highlightID()* |
| Obsolete name: highlightID(). |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetName()->hlID() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| hostname() *hostname()* |
| The result is a String, which is the name of the machine on |
| which Vim is currently running. Machine names greater than |
| 256 characters long are truncated. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| iconv({string}, {from}, {to}) *iconv()* |
| The result is a String, which is the text {string} converted |
| from encoding {from} to encoding {to}. |
| When the conversion completely fails an empty string is |
| returned. When some characters could not be converted they |
| are replaced with "?". |
| The encoding names are whatever the iconv() library function |
| can accept, see ":!man 3 iconv". |
| Most conversions require Vim to be compiled with the |+iconv| |
| feature. Otherwise only UTF-8 to latin1 conversion and back |
| can be done. |
| This can be used to display messages with special characters, |
| no matter what 'encoding' is set to. Write the message in |
| UTF-8 and use: > |
| echo iconv(utf8_str, "utf-8", &enc) |
| < Note that Vim uses UTF-8 for all Unicode encodings, conversion |
| from/to UCS-2 is automatically changed to use UTF-8. You |
| cannot use UCS-2 in a string anyway, because of the NUL bytes. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetText()->iconv('latin1', 'utf-8') |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| id({item}) *id()* |
| The result is a unique String associated with the {item} and |
| not with the {item}'s contents. It is only valid while the |
| {item} exists and is referenced. It is valid only in the |
| instance of vim that produces the result. The whole idea is |
| that `id({item})` does not change if the contents of {item} |
| changes. This is useful as a `key` for creating an identity |
| dictionary, rather than one based on equals. |
| |
| This operation does not reference {item} and there is no |
| function to convert the `id` to the {item}. It may be useful to |
| have a map of `id` to {item}. The following > |
| var referenceMap: dict<any> |
| var id = item->id() |
| referenceMap[id] = item |
| < prevents {item} from being garbage collected and provides a |
| way to get the {item} from the `id`. |
| |
| {item} may be a List, Tuple, Dictionary, Object, Job, Channel |
| or Blob. If the item is not a permitted type, or it is a null |
| value, then an empty String is returned. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetItem()->id() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| indent({lnum}) *indent()* |
| The result is a Number, which is indent of line {lnum} in the |
| current buffer. The indent is counted in spaces, the value |
| of 'tabstop' is relevant. {lnum} is used just like in |
| |getline()|. |
| When {lnum} is invalid -1 is returned. In |Vim9| script an |
| error is given. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetLnum()->indent() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| index({object}, {expr} [, {start} [, {ic}]]) *index()* |
| Find {expr} in {object} and return its index. See |
| |indexof()| for using a lambda to select the item. |
| |
| If {object} is a |List| or a |Tuple| return the lowest index |
| where the item has a value equal to {expr}. There is no |
| automatic conversion, so the String "4" is different from the |
| Number 4. And the number 4 is different from the Float 4.0. |
| The value of 'ignorecase' is not used here, case matters as |
| indicated by the {ic} argument. |
| |
| If {object} is |Blob| return the lowest index where the byte |
| value is equal to {expr}. |
| |
| If {start} is given then start looking at the item with index |
| {start} (may be negative for an item relative to the end). |
| |
| When {ic} is given and it is |TRUE|, ignore case. Otherwise |
| case must match. |
| |
| -1 is returned when {expr} is not found in {object}. |
| Example: > |
| :let idx = index(words, "the") |
| :if index(numbers, 123) >= 0 |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetObject()->index(what) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| indexof({object}, {expr} [, {opts}]) *indexof()* |
| Returns the index of an item in {object} where {expr} is |
| v:true. {object} must be a |List|, a |Tuple| or a |Blob|. |
| |
| If {object} is a |List| or a |Tuple|, evaluate {expr} for each |
| item in the List or Tuple until the expression is v:true |
| and return the index of this item. |
| |
| If {object} is a |Blob| evaluate {expr} for each byte in the |
| Blob until the expression is v:true and return the index of |
| this byte. |
| |
| {expr} must be a |string| or |Funcref|. |
| |
| If {expr} is a |string|: If {object} is a |List| or a |Tuple|, |
| inside {expr} |v:key| has the index of the current List or |
| Tuple item and |v:val| has the value of the item. If {object} |
| is a |Blob|, inside {expr} |v:key| has the index of the |
| current byte and |v:val| has the byte value. |
| |
| If {expr} is a |Funcref| it must take two arguments: |
| 1. the key or the index of the current item. |
| 2. the value of the current item. |
| The function must return |TRUE| if the item is found and the |
| search should stop. |
| |
| The optional argument {opts} is a Dict and supports the |
| following items: |
| startidx start evaluating {expr} at the item with this |
| index; may be negative for an item relative to |
| the end |
| Returns -1 when {expr} evaluates to v:false for all the items. |
| Example: > |
| :let l = [#{n: 10}, #{n: 20}, #{n: 30}] |
| :echo indexof(l, "v:val.n == 20") |
| :echo indexof(l, {i, v -> v.n == 30}) |
| :echo indexof(l, "v:val.n == 20", #{startidx: 1}) |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mylist->indexof(expr) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| input({prompt} [, {text} [, {completion}]]) *input()* |
| The result is a String, which is whatever the user typed on |
| the command-line. The {prompt} argument is either a prompt |
| string, or a blank string (for no prompt). A '\n' can be used |
| in the prompt to start a new line. |
| The highlighting set with |:echohl| is used for the prompt. |
| The input is entered just like a command-line, with the same |
| editing commands and mappings. There is a separate history |
| for lines typed for input(). |
| Example: > |
| :if input("Coffee or beer? ") == "beer" |
| : echo "Cheers!" |
| :endif |
| < |
| If the optional {text} argument is present and not empty, this |
| is used for the default reply, as if the user typed this. |
| Example: > |
| :let color = input("Color? ", "white") |
| |
| < The optional {completion} argument specifies the type of |
| completion supported for the input. Without it completion is |
| not performed. The supported completion types are the same as |
| that can be supplied to a user-defined command using the |
| "-complete=" argument. Refer to |:command-completion| for |
| more information. Example: > |
| let fname = input("File: ", "", "file") |
| < |
| NOTE: This function must not be used in a startup file, for |
| the versions that only run in GUI mode (e.g., the Win32 GUI). |
| Note: When input() is called from within a mapping it will |
| consume remaining characters from that mapping, because a |
| mapping is handled like the characters were typed. |
| Use |inputsave()| before input() and |inputrestore()| |
| after input() to avoid that. Another solution is to avoid |
| that further characters follow in the mapping, e.g., by using |
| |:execute| or |:normal|. |
| |
| Example with a mapping: > |
| :nmap \x :call GetFoo()<CR>:exe "/" .. Foo<CR> |
| :function GetFoo() |
| : call inputsave() |
| : let g:Foo = input("enter search pattern: ") |
| : call inputrestore() |
| :endfunction |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetPrompt()->input() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| inputdialog({prompt} [, {text} [, {cancelreturn}]]) *inputdialog()* |
| Like |input()|, but when the GUI is running and text dialogs |
| are supported, a dialog window pops up to input the text. |
| Example: > |
| :let n = inputdialog("value for shiftwidth", shiftwidth()) |
| :if n != "" |
| : let &sw = n |
| :endif |
| < When the dialog is cancelled {cancelreturn} is returned. When |
| omitted an empty string is returned. |
| Hitting <Enter> works like pressing the OK button. Hitting |
| <Esc> works like pressing the Cancel button. |
| NOTE: Command-line completion is not supported. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetPrompt()->inputdialog() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| inputlist({textlist}) *inputlist()* |
| {textlist} must be a |List| of strings. This |List| is |
| displayed, one string per line. The user will be prompted to |
| enter a number, which is returned. |
| The user can also select an item by clicking on it with the |
| mouse, if the mouse is enabled in the command line ('mouse' is |
| "a" or includes "c"). For the first string 0 is returned. |
| When clicking above the first item a negative number is |
| returned. When clicking on the prompt one more than the |
| length of {textlist} is returned. |
| Make sure {textlist} has less than 'lines' entries, otherwise |
| it won't work. It's a good idea to put the entry number at |
| the start of the string. And put a prompt in the first item. |
| Example: > |
| let color = inputlist(['Select color:', '1. red', |
| \ '2. green', '3. blue']) |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetChoices()->inputlist() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| inputrestore() *inputrestore()* |
| Restore typeahead that was saved with a previous |inputsave()|. |
| Should be called the same number of times inputsave() is |
| called. Calling it more often is harmless though. |
| Returns TRUE when there is nothing to restore, FALSE otherwise. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| inputsave() *inputsave()* |
| Preserve typeahead (also from mappings) and clear it, so that |
| a following prompt gets input from the user. Should be |
| followed by a matching inputrestore() after the prompt. Can |
| be used several times, in which case there must be just as |
| many inputrestore() calls. |
| Returns TRUE when out of memory, FALSE otherwise. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| inputsecret({prompt} [, {text}]) *inputsecret()* |
| This function acts much like the |input()| function with but |
| two exceptions: |
| a) the user's response will be displayed as a sequence of |
| asterisks ("*") thereby keeping the entry secret, and |
| b) the user's response will not be recorded on the input |
| |history| stack. |
| The result is a String, which is whatever the user actually |
| typed on the command-line in response to the issued prompt. |
| NOTE: Command-line completion is not supported. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetPrompt()->inputsecret() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| insert({object}, {item} [, {idx}]) *insert()* |
| When {object} is a |List| or a |Blob| insert {item} at the start |
| of it. |
| |
| If {idx} is specified insert {item} before the item with index |
| {idx}. If {idx} is zero it goes before the first item, just |
| like omitting {idx}. A negative {idx} is also possible, see |
| |list-index|. -1 inserts just before the last item. |
| |
| Returns the resulting |List| or |Blob|. Examples: > |
| :let mylist = insert([2, 3, 5], 1) |
| :call insert(mylist, 4, -1) |
| :call insert(mylist, 6, len(mylist)) |
| < The last example can be done simpler with |add()|. |
| Note that when {item} is a |List| it is inserted as a single |
| item. Use |extend()| to concatenate |Lists|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mylist->insert(item) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| *instanceof()* *E614* *E616* *E693* |
| instanceof({object}, {class}) |
| The result is a Number, which is |TRUE| when the {object} |
| argument is a direct or indirect instance of a |Class|, |
| |Interface|, or class |:type| alias specified by {class}. |
| If {class} is varargs, the function returns |TRUE| when |
| {object} is an instance of any of the specified classes. |
| Example: > |
| instanceof(animal, Dog, Cat) |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| myobj->instanceof(mytype) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| interrupt() *interrupt()* |
| Interrupt script execution. It works more or less like the |
| user typing CTRL-C, most commands won't execute and control |
| returns to the user. This is useful to abort execution |
| from lower down, e.g. in an autocommand. Example: > |
| :function s:check_typoname(file) |
| : if fnamemodify(a:file, ':t') == '[' |
| : echomsg 'Maybe typo' |
| : call interrupt() |
| : endif |
| :endfunction |
| :au BufWritePre * call s:check_typoname(expand('<amatch>')) |
| < |
| Return type: void |
| |
| invert({expr}) *invert()* |
| Bitwise invert. The argument is converted to a number. A |
| List, Dict or Float argument causes an error. Example: > |
| :let bits = invert(bits) |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| :let bits = bits->invert() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| isabsolutepath({path}) *isabsolutepath()* |
| The result is a Number, which is |TRUE| when {path} is an |
| absolute path. |
| On Unix, a path is considered absolute when it starts with '/'. |
| On MS-Windows, it is considered absolute when it starts with an |
| optional drive prefix and is followed by a '\' or '/'. UNC paths |
| are always absolute. |
| Example: > |
| echo isabsolutepath('/usr/share/') " 1 |
| echo isabsolutepath('./foobar') " 0 |
| echo isabsolutepath('C:\Windows') " 1 |
| echo isabsolutepath('foobar') " 0 |
| echo isabsolutepath('\\remote\file') " 1 |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetName()->isabsolutepath() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| isdirectory({directory}) *isdirectory()* |
| The result is a Number, which is |TRUE| when a directory |
| with the name {directory} exists. If {directory} doesn't |
| exist, or isn't a directory, the result is |FALSE|. {directory} |
| is any expression, which is used as a String. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetName()->isdirectory() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| isinf({expr}) *isinf()* |
| Return 1 if {expr} is a positive infinity, or -1 a negative |
| infinity, otherwise 0. > |
| :echo isinf(1.0 / 0.0) |
| < 1 > |
| :echo isinf(-1.0 / 0.0) |
| < -1 |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Compute()->isinf() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| islocked({expr}) *islocked()* *E786* |
| The result is a Number, which is |TRUE| when {expr} is the |
| name of a locked variable. |
| The string argument {expr} must be the name of a variable, |
| |List| item or |Dictionary| entry, not the variable itself! |
| Example: > |
| :let alist = [0, ['a', 'b'], 2, 3] |
| :lockvar 1 alist |
| :echo islocked('alist') " 1 |
| :echo islocked('alist[1]') " 0 |
| |
| < When {expr} is a variable that does not exist -1 is returned. |
| If {expr} uses a range, list or dict index that is out of |
| range or does not exist you get an error message. Use |
| |exists()| to check for existence. |
| In Vim9 script it does not work for local function variables. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetName()->islocked() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| isnan({expr}) *isnan()* |
| Return |TRUE| if {expr} is a float with value NaN. > |
| echo isnan(0.0 / 0.0) |
| < 1 |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Compute()->isnan() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| items({dict}) *items()* |
| Return a |List| with all the key-value pairs of {dict}. Each |
| |List| item is a list with two items: the key of a {dict} |
| entry and the value of this entry. The |List| is in arbitrary |
| order. Also see |keys()| and |values()|. |
| Example: > |
| for [key, value] in items(mydict) |
| echo key .. ': ' .. value |
| endfor |
| < |
| A |List|, a |Tuple| or a |String| argument is also supported. |
| In these cases, items() returns a List with the index and the |
| value at the index. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mydict->items() |
| < |
| Return type: list<list<any>> or list<any> |
| |
| |
| job_ functions are documented here: |job-functions-details| |
| |
| |
| join({expr} [, {sep}]) *join()* |
| Join the items in {expr} together into one String. {expr} can |
| be a |List| or a |Tuple|. |
| When {sep} is specified it is put in between the items. If |
| {sep} is omitted a single space is used. |
| Note that {sep} is not added at the end. You might want to |
| add it there too: > |
| let lines = join(mylist, "\n") .. "\n" |
| < String items are used as-is. |Lists|, |Tuples| and |
| |Dictionaries| are converted into a string like with |
| |string()|. The opposite function is |split()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mylist->join() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| js_decode({string}) *js_decode()* |
| This is similar to |json_decode()| with these differences: |
| - Object key names do not have to be in quotes. |
| - Strings can be in single quotes. |
| - Empty items in an array (between two commas) are allowed and |
| result in v:none items. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| ReadObject()->js_decode() |
| < |
| Return type: any, depending on {varname} |
| |
| |
| js_encode({expr}) *js_encode()* |
| This is similar to |json_encode()| with these differences: |
| - Object key names are not in quotes. |
| - v:none items in an array result in an empty item between |
| commas. |
| For example, the Vim object: |
| [1,v:none,{"one":1},v:none] ~ |
| Will be encoded as: |
| [1,,{one:1},,] ~ |
| While json_encode() would produce: |
| [1,null,{"one":1},null] ~ |
| This encoding is valid for JavaScript. It is more efficient |
| than JSON, especially when using an array with optional items. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetObject()->js_encode() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| json_decode({string}) *json_decode()* *E491* |
| This parses a JSON formatted string and returns the equivalent |
| in Vim values. See |json_encode()| for the relation between |
| JSON and Vim values. |
| The decoding is permissive: |
| - A trailing comma in an array and object is ignored, e.g. |
| "[1, 2, ]" is the same as "[1, 2]". |
| - Integer keys are accepted in objects, e.g. {1:2} is the |
| same as {"1":2}. |
| - More floating point numbers are recognized, e.g. "1." for |
| "1.0", or "001.2" for "1.2". Special floating point values |
| "Infinity", "-Infinity" and "NaN" (capitalization ignored) |
| are accepted. |
| - Leading zeroes in integer numbers are ignored, e.g. "012" |
| for "12" or "-012" for "-12". |
| - Capitalization is ignored in literal names null, true or |
| false, e.g. "NULL" for "null", "True" for "true". |
| - Control characters U+0000 through U+001F which are not |
| escaped in strings are accepted, e.g. " " (tab |
| character in string) for "\t". |
| - An empty JSON expression or made of only spaces is accepted |
| and results in v:none. |
| - Backslash in an invalid 2-character sequence escape is |
| ignored, e.g. "\a" is decoded as "a". |
| - A correct surrogate pair in JSON strings should normally be |
| a 12 character sequence such as "\uD834\uDD1E", but |
| json_decode() silently accepts truncated surrogate pairs |
| such as "\uD834" or "\uD834\u" |
| *E938* |
| A duplicate key in an object, valid in rfc7159, is not |
| accepted by json_decode() as the result must be a valid Vim |
| type, e.g. this fails: {"a":"b", "a":"c"} |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| ReadObject()->json_decode() |
| < |
| Return type: any, depending on {varname} |
| |
| |
| json_encode({expr}) *json_encode()* |
| Encode {expr} as JSON and return this as a string. |
| The encoding is specified in: |
| https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7159.html |
| Vim values are converted as follows: *E1161* |
| |Number| decimal number |
| |Float| floating point number |
| Float nan "NaN" |
| Float inf "Infinity" |
| Float -inf "-Infinity" |
| |String| in double quotes (possibly null) |
| |Funcref| not possible, error |
| |List| as an array (possibly null); when |
| used recursively: [] |
| |Tuple| as an array (possibly null); when |
| used recursively: [] |
| |Dict| as an object (possibly null); when |
| used recursively: {} |
| |Blob| as an array of the individual bytes |
| v:false "false" |
| v:true "true" |
| v:none "null" |
| v:null "null" |
| Note that NaN and Infinity are passed on as values. This is |
| missing in the JSON standard, but several implementations do |
| allow it. If not then you will get an error. |
| If a string contains an illegal character then the replacement |
| character 0xfffd is used. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetObject()->json_encode() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| keys({dict}) *keys()* |
| Return a |List| with all the keys of {dict}. The |List| is in |
| arbitrary order. Also see |items()| and |values()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mydict->keys() |
| < |
| Return type: list<string> |
| |
| |
| keytrans({string}) *keytrans()* |
| Turn the internal byte representation of keys into a form that |
| can be used for |:map|. E.g. > |
| :let xx = "\<C-Home>" |
| :echo keytrans(xx) |
| < <C-Home> |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| "\<C-Home>"->keytrans() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| len({expr}) *len()* *E701* |
| The result is a Number, which is the length of the argument. |
| When {expr} is a String or a Number the length in bytes is |
| used, as with |strlen()|. |
| When {expr} is a |List| the number of items in the |List| is |
| returned. |
| When {expr} is a |Tuple| the number of items in the |Tuple| is |
| returned. |
| When {expr} is a |Blob| the number of bytes is returned. |
| When {expr} is a |Dictionary| the number of entries in the |
| |Dictionary| is returned. |
| When {expr} is an |Object|, invokes the len() method in the |
| object (if present) to get the length (|object-len()|). |
| Otherwise returns zero. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mylist->len() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| *libcall()* *E364* *E368* |
| libcall({libname}, {funcname}, {argument}) |
| Call function {funcname} in the run-time library {libname} |
| with single argument {argument}. |
| This is useful to call functions in a library that you |
| especially made to be used with Vim. Since only one argument |
| is possible, calling standard library functions is rather |
| limited. |
| The result is the String returned by the function. If the |
| function returns NULL, this will appear as an empty string "" |
| to Vim. |
| If the function returns a number, use libcallnr()! |
| If {argument} is a number, it is passed to the function as an |
| int; if {argument} is a string, it is passed as a |
| null-terminated string. |
| This function will fail in |restricted-mode|. |
| |
| libcall() allows you to write your own 'plug-in' extensions to |
| Vim without having to recompile the program. It is NOT a |
| means to call system functions! If you try to do so Vim will |
| very probably crash. |
| |
| For Win32, the functions you write must be placed in a DLL |
| and use the normal C calling convention (NOT Pascal which is |
| used in Windows System DLLs). The function must take exactly |
| one parameter, either a character pointer or a long integer, |
| and must return a character pointer or NULL. The character |
| pointer returned must point to memory that will remain valid |
| after the function has returned (e.g. in static data in the |
| DLL). If it points to allocated memory, that memory will |
| leak away. Using a static buffer in the function should work, |
| it's then freed when the DLL is unloaded. |
| |
| WARNING: If the function returns a non-valid pointer, Vim may |
| crash! This also happens if the function returns a number, |
| because Vim thinks it's a pointer. |
| For Win32 systems, {libname} should be the filename of the DLL |
| without the ".DLL" suffix. A full path is only required if |
| the DLL is not in the usual places. |
| For Unix: When compiling your own plugins, remember that the |
| object code must be compiled as position-independent ('PIC'). |
| {only in Win32 and some Unix versions, when the |+libcall| |
| feature is present} |
| Examples: > |
| :echo libcall("libc.so", "getenv", "HOME") |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|, the base is passed as the |
| third argument: > |
| GetValue()->libcall("libc.so", "getenv") |
| < |
| *libcallnr()* |
| libcallnr({libname}, {funcname}, {argument}) |
| Just like |libcall()|, but used for a function that returns an |
| int instead of a string. |
| {only in Win32 on some Unix versions, when the |+libcall| |
| feature is present} |
| Examples: > |
| :echo libcallnr("/usr/lib/libc.so", "getpid", "") |
| :call libcallnr("libc.so", "printf", "Hello World!\n") |
| :call libcallnr("libc.so", "sleep", 10) |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|, the base is passed as the |
| third argument: > |
| GetValue()->libcallnr("libc.so", "printf") |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| line({expr} [, {winid}]) *line()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the line number of the file |
| position given with {expr}. The {expr} argument is a string. |
| See |getpos()| for accepted positions. |
| |
| To get the column number use |col()|. To get both use |
| |getpos()|. |
| |
| With the optional {winid} argument the values are obtained for |
| that window instead of the current window. |
| |
| Returns 0 for invalid values of {expr} and {winid}. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| line(".") line number of the cursor |
| line(".", winid) idem, in window "winid" |
| line("'t") line number of mark t |
| line("'" .. marker) line number of mark marker |
| < |
| To jump to the last known position when opening a file see |
| |last-position-jump|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetValue()->line() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| line2byte({lnum}) *line2byte()* |
| Return the byte count from the start of the buffer for line |
| {lnum}. This includes the end-of-line character, depending on |
| the 'fileformat' option for the current buffer. The first |
| line returns 1. 'encoding' matters, 'fileencoding' is ignored. |
| This can also be used to get the byte count for the line just |
| below the last line: > |
| line2byte(line("$") + 1) |
| < This is the buffer size plus one. If 'fileencoding' is empty |
| it is the file size plus one. {lnum} is used like with |
| |getline()|. When {lnum} is invalid, or the |+byte_offset| |
| feature has been disabled at compile time, -1 is returned. |
| Also see |byte2line()|, |go| and |:goto|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetLnum()->line2byte() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| lispindent({lnum}) *lispindent()* |
| Get the amount of indent for line {lnum} according the lisp |
| indenting rules, as with 'lisp'. |
| The indent is counted in spaces, the value of 'tabstop' is |
| relevant. {lnum} is used just like in |getline()|. |
| When {lnum} is invalid -1 is returned. In |Vim9| script an |
| error is given. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetLnum()->lispindent() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| list2blob({list}) *list2blob()* |
| Return a Blob concatenating all the number values in {list}. |
| Examples: > |
| list2blob([1, 2, 3, 4]) returns 0z01020304 |
| list2blob([]) returns 0z |
| < Returns an empty Blob on error. If one of the numbers is |
| negative or more than 255 error *E1239* is given. |
| |
| |blob2list()| does the opposite. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetList()->list2blob() |
| < |
| Return type: |Blob| |
| |
| |
| list2str({list} [, {utf8}]) *list2str()* |
| Convert each number in {list} to a character string and |
| concatenates them all. Examples: > |
| list2str([32]) returns " " |
| list2str([65, 66, 67]) returns "ABC" |
| < The same can be done (slowly) with: > |
| join(map(list, {nr, val -> nr2char(val)}), '') |
| < |str2list()| does the opposite. |
| |
| When {utf8} is omitted or zero, the current 'encoding' is used. |
| When {utf8} is TRUE, always return UTF-8 characters. |
| With UTF-8 composing characters work as expected: > |
| list2str([97, 769]) returns "á" |
| < |
| Returns an empty string on error. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetList()->list2str() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| list2tuple({list}) *list2tuple()* |
| Create a Tuple from a shallow copy of the list items. |
| Examples: > |
| list2tuple([1, 2, 3]) returns (1, 2, 3) |
| < |tuple2list()| does the opposite. |
| |
| This function doesn't recursively convert all the List items |
| in {list} to a Tuple. Note that the items are identical |
| between the list and the tuple, changing an item changes the |
| contents of both the tuple and the list. |
| |
| Returns an empty tuple on error. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetList()->list2tuple() |
| < |
| Return type: tuple<{type}> (depending on the given |List|) |
| |
| |
| listener_add({callback} [, {buf}]) *listener_add()* |
| Add a callback function that will be invoked when changes have |
| been made to buffer {buf}. |
| {buf} refers to a buffer name or number. For the accepted |
| values, see |bufname()|. When {buf} is omitted the current |
| buffer is used. |
| Returns a unique ID that can be passed to |listener_remove()|. |
| |
| The {callback} is invoked with five arguments: |
| bufnr the buffer that was changed |
| start first changed line number |
| end first line number below the change |
| added number of lines added, negative if lines were |
| deleted |
| changes a List of items with details about the changes |
| |
| Example: > |
| func Listener(bufnr, start, end, added, changes) |
| echo 'lines ' .. a:start .. ' until ' .. a:end .. ' changed' |
| endfunc |
| call listener_add('Listener', bufnr) |
| |
| < The List cannot be changed. Each item in "changes" is a |
| dictionary with these entries: |
| lnum the first line number of the change |
| end the first line below the change |
| added number of lines added; negative if lines were |
| deleted |
| col first column in "lnum" that was affected by |
| the change; one if unknown or the whole line |
| was affected; this is a byte index, first |
| character has a value of one. |
| When lines are inserted (not when a line is split, e.g. by |
| typing CR in Insert mode) the values are: |
| lnum line above which the new line is added |
| end equal to "lnum" |
| added number of lines inserted |
| col 1 |
| When lines are deleted the values are: |
| lnum the first deleted line |
| end the line below the first deleted line, before |
| the deletion was done |
| added negative, number of lines deleted |
| col 1 |
| When lines are changed: |
| lnum the first changed line |
| end the line below the last changed line |
| added 0 |
| col first column with a change or 1 |
| |
| The entries are in the order the changes were made, thus the |
| most recent change is at the end. The line numbers are valid |
| when the callback is invoked, but later changes may make them |
| invalid, thus keeping a copy for later might not work. |
| |
| The {callback} is invoked just before the screen is updated, |
| when |listener_flush()| is called or when a change is being |
| made that changes the line count in a way it causes a line |
| number in the list of changes to become invalid. |
| |
| The {callback} is invoked with the text locked, see |
| |textlock|. If you do need to make changes to the buffer, use |
| a timer to do this later |timer_start()|. |
| |
| The {callback} is not invoked when the buffer is first loaded. |
| Use the |BufReadPost| autocmd event to handle the initial text |
| of a buffer. |
| The {callback} is also not invoked when the buffer is |
| unloaded, use the |BufUnload| autocmd event for that. |
| |
| Returns zero if {callback} or {buf} is invalid. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|, the base is passed as the |
| second argument: > |
| GetBuffer()->listener_add(callback) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| listener_flush([{buf}]) *listener_flush()* |
| Invoke listener callbacks for buffer {buf}. If there are no |
| pending changes then no callbacks are invoked. |
| |
| {buf} refers to a buffer name or number. For the accepted |
| values, see |bufname()|. When {buf} is omitted the current |
| buffer is used. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetBuffer()->listener_flush() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| listener_remove({id}) *listener_remove()* |
| Remove a listener previously added with listener_add(). |
| Returns FALSE when {id} could not be found, TRUE when {id} was |
| removed. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetListenerId()->listener_remove() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| localtime() *localtime()* |
| Return the current time, measured as seconds since 1st Jan |
| 1970. See also |strftime()|, |strptime()| and |getftime()|. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| log({expr}) *log()* |
| Return the natural logarithm (base e) of {expr} as a |Float|. |
| {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number| in the range |
| (0, inf]. |
| Returns 0.0 if {expr} is not a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Examples: > |
| :echo log(10) |
| < 2.302585 > |
| :echo log(exp(5)) |
| < 5.0 |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Compute()->log() |
| < |
| Return type: |Float| |
| |
| |
| log10({expr}) *log10()* |
| Return the logarithm of Float {expr} to base 10 as a |Float|. |
| {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Returns 0.0 if {expr} is not a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Examples: > |
| :echo log10(1000) |
| < 3.0 > |
| :echo log10(0.01) |
| < -2.0 |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Compute()->log10() |
| < |
| Return type: |Float| |
| |
| |
| luaeval({expr} [, {expr}]) *luaeval()* |
| Evaluate Lua expression {expr} and return its result converted |
| to Vim data structures. Second {expr} may hold additional |
| argument accessible as _A inside first {expr}. |
| Strings are returned as they are. |
| Boolean objects are converted to numbers. |
| Numbers are converted to |Float| values. |
| Dictionaries and lists obtained by vim.eval() are returned |
| as-is. |
| Other objects are returned as zero without any errors. |
| See |lua-luaeval| for more details. |
| Note that in a `:def` function local variables are not visible |
| to {expr}. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetExpr()->luaeval() |
| < |
| Return type: any, depending on {expr} |
| |
| {only available when compiled with the |+lua| feature} |
| |
| |
| map({expr1}, {expr2}) *map()* |
| {expr1} must be a |List|, |String|, |Blob| or |Dictionary|. |
| When {expr1} is a |List| or |Dictionary|, replace each |
| item in {expr1} with the result of evaluating {expr2}. |
| For a |Blob| each byte is replaced. |
| For a |String|, each character, including composing |
| characters, is replaced. |
| If the item type changes you may want to use |mapnew()| to |
| create a new List or Dictionary. This is required when using |
| Vim9 script. |
| |
| {expr2} must be a |String| or |Funcref|. |
| |
| If {expr2} is a |String|, inside {expr2} |v:val| has the value |
| of the current item. For a |Dictionary| |v:key| has the key |
| of the current item and for a |List| |v:key| has the index of |
| the current item. For a |Blob| |v:key| has the index of the |
| current byte. For a |String| |v:key| has the index of the |
| current character. |
| Example: > |
| :call map(mylist, '"> " .. v:val .. " <"') |
| < This puts "> " before and " <" after each item in "mylist". |
| |
| Note that {expr2} is the result of an expression and is then |
| used as an expression again. Often it is good to use a |
| |literal-string| to avoid having to double backslashes. You |
| still have to double ' quotes |
| |
| If {expr2} is a |Funcref| it is called with two arguments: |
| 1. The key or the index of the current item. |
| 2. the value of the current item. |
| With a legacy script lambda you don't get an error if it only |
| accepts one argument, but with a Vim9 lambda you get "E1106: |
| One argument too many", the number of arguments must match. |
| |
| The function must return the new value of the item. Example |
| that changes each value by "key-value": > |
| func KeyValue(key, val) |
| return a:key .. '-' .. a:val |
| endfunc |
| call map(myDict, function('KeyValue')) |
| < It is shorter when using a |lambda|: > |
| call map(myDict, {key, val -> key .. '-' .. val}) |
| < If you do not use "val" you can leave it out: > |
| call map(myDict, {key -> 'item: ' .. key}) |
| < If you do not use "key" you can use a short name: > |
| call map(myDict, {_, val -> 'item: ' .. val}) |
| < |
| The operation is done in-place for a |List| and |Dictionary|. |
| If you want it to remain unmodified make a copy first: > |
| :let tlist = map(copy(mylist), ' v:val .. "\t"') |
| |
| < Returns {expr1}, the |List| or |Dictionary| that was filtered, |
| or a new |Blob| or |String|. |
| When an error is encountered while evaluating {expr2} no |
| further items in {expr1} are processed. |
| When {expr2} is a Funcref errors inside a function are ignored, |
| unless it was defined with the "abort" flag. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mylist->map(expr2) |
| < |
| Return type: |String|, |Blob|, list<{type}> or dict<{type}> |
| depending on {expr1} |
| |
| |
| maparg({name} [, {mode} [, {abbr} [, {dict}]]]) *maparg()* |
| When {dict} is omitted or zero: Return the rhs of mapping |
| {name} in mode {mode}. The returned String has special |
| characters translated like in the output of the ":map" command |
| listing. When {dict} is TRUE a dictionary is returned, see |
| below. To get a list of all mappings see |maplist()|. |
| |
| When there is no mapping for {name}, an empty String is |
| returned if {dict} is FALSE, otherwise returns an empty Dict. |
| When the mapping for {name} is empty, then "<Nop>" is |
| returned. |
| |
| The {name} can have special key names, like in the ":map" |
| command. |
| |
| {mode} can be one of these strings: |
| "n" Normal |
| "v" Visual (including Select) |
| "o" Operator-pending |
| "i" Insert |
| "c" Cmd-line |
| "s" Select |
| "x" Visual |
| "l" langmap |language-mapping| |
| "t" Terminal-Job |
| "" Normal, Visual and Operator-pending |
| When {mode} is omitted, the modes for "" are used. |
| |
| When {abbr} is there and it is |TRUE| use abbreviations |
| instead of mappings. |
| |
| When {dict} is there and it is |TRUE| return a dictionary |
| containing all the information of the mapping with the |
| following items: *mapping-dict* |
| "lhs" The {lhs} of the mapping as it would be typed |
| "lhsraw" The {lhs} of the mapping as raw bytes |
| "lhsrawalt" The {lhs} of the mapping as raw bytes, alternate |
| form, only present when it differs from "lhsraw" |
| "rhs" The {rhs} of the mapping as typed. |
| "silent" 1 for a |:map-silent| mapping, else 0. |
| "noremap" 1 if the {rhs} of the mapping is not remappable. |
| "script" 1 if mapping was defined with <script>. |
| "expr" 1 for an expression mapping (|:map-<expr>|). |
| "buffer" 1 for a buffer local mapping (|:map-local|). |
| "mode" Modes for which the mapping is defined. In |
| addition to the modes mentioned above, these |
| characters will be used: |
| " " Normal, Visual and Operator-pending |
| "!" Insert and Commandline mode |
| (|mapmode-ic|) |
| "sid" The script local ID, used for <sid> mappings |
| (|<SID>|). Negative for special contexts. |
| "scriptversion" The version of the script. 999999 for |
| |Vim9| script. |
| "lnum" The line number in "sid", zero if unknown. |
| "nowait" Do not wait for other, longer mappings. |
| (|:map-<nowait>|). |
| "abbr" True if this is an abbreviation |abbreviations|. |
| "mode_bits" Vim's internal binary representation of "mode". |
| |mapset()| ignores this; only "mode" is used. |
| See |maplist()| for usage examples. The values |
| are from src/vim.h and may change in the future. |
| |
| The dictionary can be used to restore a mapping with |
| |mapset()|. |
| |
| The mappings local to the current buffer are checked first, |
| then the global mappings. |
| This function can be used to map a key even when it's already |
| mapped, and have it do the original mapping too. Sketch: > |
| exe 'nnoremap <Tab> ==' .. maparg('<Tab>', 'n') |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetKey()->maparg('n') |
| < |
| Return type: |String| or dict<any> depending on {dict} |
| |
| |
| mapcheck({name} [, {mode} [, {abbr}]]) *mapcheck()* |
| Check if there is a mapping that matches with {name} in mode |
| {mode}. See |maparg()| for {mode} and special names in |
| {name}. |
| When {abbr} is there and it is |TRUE| use abbreviations |
| instead of mappings. |
| A match happens with a mapping that starts with {name} and |
| with a mapping which is equal to the start of {name}. |
| |
| matches mapping "a" "ab" "abc" ~ |
| mapcheck("a") yes yes yes |
| mapcheck("abc") yes yes yes |
| mapcheck("ax") yes no no |
| mapcheck("b") no no no |
| |
| The difference with maparg() is that mapcheck() finds a |
| mapping that matches with {name}, while maparg() only finds a |
| mapping for {name} exactly. |
| When there is no mapping that starts with {name}, an empty |
| String is returned. If there is one, the RHS of that mapping |
| is returned. If there are several mappings that start with |
| {name}, the RHS of one of them is returned. This will be |
| "<Nop>" if the RHS is empty. |
| The mappings local to the current buffer are checked first, |
| then the global mappings. |
| This function can be used to check if a mapping can be added |
| without being ambiguous. Example: > |
| :if mapcheck("_vv") == "" |
| : map _vv :set guifont=7x13<CR> |
| :endif |
| < This avoids adding the "_vv" mapping when there already is a |
| mapping for "_v" or for "_vvv". |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetKey()->mapcheck('n') |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| maplist([{abbr}]) *maplist()* |
| Returns a |List| of all mappings. Each List item is a |Dict|, |
| the same as what is returned by |maparg()|, see |
| |mapping-dict|. When {abbr} is there and it is |TRUE| use |
| abbreviations instead of mappings. |
| |
| Example to show all mappings with 'MultiMatch' in rhs: > |
| vim9script |
| echo maplist()->filter( |
| (_, m) => match(m.rhs, 'MultiMatch') >= 0) |
| < It can be tricky to find mappings for particular |:map-modes|. |
| |mapping-dict|'s "mode_bits" can simplify this. For example, |
| the mode_bits for Normal, Insert or Command-line modes are |
| 0x19. To find all the mappings available in those modes you |
| can do: > |
| vim9script |
| var saved_maps = [] |
| for m in maplist() |
| if and(m.mode_bits, 0x19) != 0 |
| saved_maps->add(m) |
| endif |
| endfor |
| echo saved_maps->mapnew((_, m) => m.lhs) |
| < The values of the mode_bits are defined in Vim's src/vim.h |
| file and they can be discovered at runtime using |
| |:map-commands| and "maplist()". Example: > |
| vim9script |
| omap xyzzy <Nop> |
| var op_bit = maplist()->filter( |
| (_, m) => m.lhs == 'xyzzy')[0].mode_bits |
| ounmap xyzzy |
| echo printf("Operator-pending mode bit: 0x%x", op_bit) |
| < |
| Return type: list<dict<any>> |
| |
| |
| mapnew({expr1}, {expr2}) *mapnew()* |
| Like |map()| but instead of replacing items in {expr1} a new |
| List or Dictionary is created and returned. {expr1} remains |
| unchanged. Items can still be changed by {expr2}, if you |
| don't want that use |deepcopy()| first. |
| |
| Return type: |String|, |Blob|, list<{type}> or dict<{type}> |
| depending on {expr1} |
| |
| |
| mapset({mode}, {abbr}, {dict}) *mapset()* |
| mapset({dict}) |
| Restore a mapping from a dictionary, possibly returned by |
| |maparg()| or |maplist()|. A buffer mapping, when dict.buffer |
| is true, is set on the current buffer; it is up to the caller |
| to ensure that the intended buffer is the current buffer. This |
| feature allows copying mappings from one buffer to another. |
| The dict.mode value may restore a single mapping that covers |
| more than one mode, like with mode values of '!', ' ', 'nox', |
| or 'v'. *E1276* |
| |
| In the first form, {mode} and {abbr} should be the same as |
| for the call to |maparg()|. *E460* |
| {mode} is used to define the mode in which the mapping is set, |
| not the "mode" entry in {dict}. |
| Example for saving and restoring a mapping: > |
| let save_map = maparg('K', 'n', 0, 1) |
| nnoremap K somethingelse |
| ... |
| call mapset('n', 0, save_map) |
| < Note that if you are going to replace a map in several modes, |
| e.g. with `:map!`, you need to save/restore the mapping for |
| all of them, when they might differ. |
| |
| In the second form, with {dict} as the only argument, mode |
| and abbr are taken from the dict. |
| Example: > |
| vim9script |
| var save_maps = maplist()->filter( |
| (_, m) => m.lhs == 'K') |
| nnoremap K somethingelse |
| cnoremap K somethingelse2 |
| # ... |
| unmap K |
| for d in save_maps |
| mapset(d) |
| endfor |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| match({expr}, {pat} [, {start} [, {count}]]) *match()* |
| When {expr} is a |List| then this returns the index of the |
| first item where {pat} matches. Each item is used as a |
| String, |Lists| and |Dictionaries| are used as echoed. |
| |
| Otherwise, {expr} is used as a String. The result is a |
| Number, which gives the index (byte offset) in {expr} where |
| {pat} matches. |
| |
| A match at the first character or |List| item returns zero. |
| If there is no match -1 is returned. |
| |
| For getting submatches see |matchlist()|. |
| Example: > |
| :echo match("testing", "ing") " results in 4 |
| :echo match([1, 'x'], '\a') " results in 1 |
| < See |string-match| for how {pat} is used. |
| *strpbrk()* |
| Vim doesn't have a strpbrk() function. But you can do: > |
| :let sepidx = match(line, '[.,;: \t]') |
| < *strcasestr()* |
| Vim doesn't have a strcasestr() function. But you can add |
| "\c" to the pattern to ignore case: > |
| :let idx = match(haystack, '\cneedle') |
| < |
| If {start} is given, the search starts from byte index |
| {start} in a String or item {start} in a |List|. |
| The result, however, is still the index counted from the |
| first character/item. Example: > |
| :echo match("testing", "ing", 2) |
| < result is again "4". > |
| :echo match("testing", "ing", 4) |
| < result is again "4". > |
| :echo match("testing", "t", 2) |
| < result is "3". |
| For a String, if {start} > 0 then it is like the string starts |
| {start} bytes later, thus "^" will match at {start}. Except |
| when {count} is given, then it's like matches before the |
| {start} byte are ignored (this is a bit complicated to keep it |
| backwards compatible). |
| For a String, if {start} < 0, it will be set to 0. For a list |
| the index is counted from the end. |
| If {start} is out of range ({start} > strlen({expr}) for a |
| String or {start} > len({expr}) for a |List|) -1 is returned. |
| |
| When {count} is given use the {count}'th match. When a match |
| is found in a String the search for the next one starts one |
| character further. Thus this example results in 1: > |
| echo match("testing", "..", 0, 2) |
| < In a |List| the search continues in the next item. |
| Note that when {count} is added the way {start} works changes, |
| see above. |
| |
| *match-pattern* |
| See |pattern| for the patterns that are accepted. |
| The 'ignorecase' option is used to set the ignore-caseness of |
| the pattern. 'smartcase' is NOT used. The matching is always |
| done like 'magic' is set and 'cpoptions' is empty. |
| Note that a match at the start is preferred, thus when the |
| pattern is using "*" (any number of matches) it tends to find |
| zero matches at the start instead of a number of matches |
| further down in the text. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetText()->match('word') |
| GetList()->match('word') |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| *matchadd()* *E290* *E798* *E799* *E801* *E957* |
| matchadd({group}, {pattern} [, {priority} [, {id} [, {dict}]]]) |
| Defines a pattern to be highlighted in the current window (a |
| "match"). It will be highlighted with {group}. Returns an |
| identification number (ID), which can be used to delete the |
| match using |matchdelete()|. The ID is bound to the window. |
| Matching is case sensitive and magic, unless case sensitivity |
| or magicness are explicitly overridden in {pattern}. The |
| 'magic', 'smartcase' and 'ignorecase' options are not used. |
| The "Conceal" value is special, it causes the match to be |
| concealed. |
| |
| The optional {priority} argument assigns a priority to the |
| match. A match with a high priority will have its |
| highlighting overrule that of a match with a lower priority. |
| A priority is specified as an integer (negative numbers are no |
| exception). If the {priority} argument is not specified, the |
| default priority is 10. The priority of 'hlsearch' is zero, |
| hence all matches with a priority greater than zero will |
| overrule it. Syntax highlighting (see 'syntax') is a separate |
| mechanism, and regardless of the chosen priority a match will |
| always overrule syntax highlighting. |
| |
| The optional {id} argument allows the request for a specific |
| match ID. If a specified ID is already taken, an error |
| message will appear and the match will not be added. An ID |
| is specified as a positive integer (zero excluded). IDs 1, 2 |
| and 3 are reserved for |:match|, |:2match| and |:3match|, |
| respectively. 3 is reserved for use by the |matchparen| |
| plugin. |
| If the {id} argument is not specified or -1, |matchadd()| |
| automatically chooses a free ID, which is at least 1000. |
| |
| The optional {dict} argument allows for further custom |
| values. Currently this is used to specify a match specific |
| conceal character that will be shown for |hl-Conceal| |
| highlighted matches. The dict can have the following members: |
| |
| conceal Special character to show instead of the |
| match (only for |hl-Conceal| highlighted |
| matches, see |:syn-cchar|) |
| window Instead of the current window use the |
| window with this number or window ID. |
| |
| The number of matches is not limited, as it is the case with |
| the |:match| commands. |
| |
| Returns -1 on error. |
| |
| Example: > |
| :highlight MyGroup ctermbg=green guibg=green |
| :let m = matchadd("MyGroup", "TODO") |
| < Deletion of the pattern: > |
| :call matchdelete(m) |
| |
| < A list of matches defined by |matchadd()| and |:match| are |
| available from |getmatches()|. All matches can be deleted in |
| one operation by |clearmatches()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetGroup()->matchadd('TODO') |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| *matchaddpos()* |
| matchaddpos({group}, {pos} [, {priority} [, {id} [, {dict}]]]) |
| Same as |matchadd()|, but requires a list of positions {pos} |
| instead of a pattern. This command is faster than |matchadd()| |
| because it does not handle regular expressions and it sets |
| buffer line boundaries to redraw screen. It is supposed to be |
| used when fast match additions and deletions are required, for |
| example to highlight matching parentheses. |
| |
| {pos} is a list of positions. Each position can be one of |
| these: |
| - A number. This whole line will be highlighted. The first |
| line has number 1. |
| - A list with one number, e.g., [23]. The whole line with this |
| number will be highlighted. |
| - A list with two numbers, e.g., [23, 11]. The first number is |
| the line number, the second one is the column number (first |
| column is 1, the value must correspond to the byte index as |
| |col()| would return). The character at this position will |
| be highlighted. |
| - A list with three numbers, e.g., [23, 11, 3]. As above, but |
| the third number gives the length of the highlight in bytes. |
| |
| Returns -1 on error. |
| |
| Example: > |
| :highlight MyGroup ctermbg=green guibg=green |
| :let m = matchaddpos("MyGroup", [[23, 24], 34]) |
| < Deletion of the pattern: > |
| :call matchdelete(m) |
| |
| < Matches added by |matchaddpos()| are returned by |
| |getmatches()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetGroup()->matchaddpos([23, 11]) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| matcharg({nr}) *matcharg()* |
| Selects the {nr} match item, as set with a |:match|, |
| |:2match| or |:3match| command. |
| Return a |List| with two elements: |
| The name of the highlight group used |
| The pattern used. |
| When {nr} is not 1, 2 or 3 returns an empty |List|. |
| When there is no match item set returns ['', '']. |
| This is useful to save and restore a |:match|. |
| Highlighting matches using the |:match| commands are limited |
| to three matches. |matchadd()| does not have this limitation. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetMatch()->matcharg() |
| < |
| Return type: list<string> |
| |
| *matchbufline()* |
| matchbufline({buf}, {pat}, {lnum}, {end}, [, {dict}]) |
| Returns the |List| of matches in lines from {lnum} to {end} in |
| buffer {buf} where {pat} matches. |
| |
| {lnum} and {end} can either be a line number or the string "$" |
| to refer to the last line in {buf}. |
| |
| The {dict} argument supports following items: |
| submatches include submatch information (|/\(|) |
| |
| For each match, a |Dict| with the following items is returned: |
| byteidx starting byte index of the match |
| lnum line number where there is a match |
| text matched string |
| Note that there can be multiple matches in a single line. |
| |
| This function works only for loaded buffers. First call |
| |bufload()| if needed. |
| |
| See |match-pattern| for information about the effect of some |
| option settings on the pattern. |
| |
| When {buf} is not a valid buffer, the buffer is not loaded or |
| {lnum} or {end} is not valid then an error is given and an |
| empty |List| is returned. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| " Assuming line 3 in buffer 5 contains "a" |
| :echo matchbufline(5, '\<\k\+\>', 3, 3) |
| [{'lnum': 3, 'byteidx': 0, 'text': 'a'}] |
| " Assuming line 4 in buffer 10 contains "tik tok" |
| :echo matchbufline(10, '\<\k\+\>', 1, 4) |
| [{'lnum': 4, 'byteidx': 0, 'text': 'tik'}, {'lnum': 4, 'byteidx': 4, 'text': 'tok'}] |
| < |
| If {submatch} is present and is v:true, then submatches like |
| "\1", "\2", etc. are also returned. Example: > |
| " Assuming line 2 in buffer 2 contains "acd" |
| :echo matchbufline(2, '\(a\)\?\(b\)\?\(c\)\?\(.*\)', 2, 2 |
| \ {'submatches': v:true}) |
| [{'lnum': 2, 'byteidx': 0, 'text': 'acd', 'submatches': ['a', '', 'c', 'd', '', '', '', '', '']}] |
| < The "submatches" List always contains 9 items. If a submatch |
| is not found, then an empty string is returned for that |
| submatch. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetBuffer()->matchbufline('mypat', 1, '$') |
| < |
| Return type: list<dict<any>> or list<any> |
| |
| |
| matchdelete({id} [, {win}) *matchdelete()* *E802* *E803* |
| Deletes a match with ID {id} previously defined by |matchadd()| |
| or one of the |:match| commands. Returns 0 if successful, |
| otherwise -1. See example for |matchadd()|. All matches can |
| be deleted in one operation by |clearmatches()|. |
| If {win} is specified, use the window with this number or |
| window ID instead of the current window. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetMatch()->matchdelete() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| matchend({expr}, {pat} [, {start} [, {count}]]) *matchend()* |
| Same as |match()|, but return the index of first character |
| after the match. Example: > |
| :echo matchend("testing", "ing") |
| < results in "7". |
| *strspn()* *strcspn()* |
| Vim doesn't have a strspn() or strcspn() function, but you can |
| do it with matchend(): > |
| :let span = matchend(line, '[a-zA-Z]') |
| :let span = matchend(line, '[^a-zA-Z]') |
| < Except that -1 is returned when there are no matches. |
| |
| The {start}, if given, has the same meaning as for |match()|. > |
| :echo matchend("testing", "ing", 2) |
| < results in "7". > |
| :echo matchend("testing", "ing", 5) |
| < result is "-1". |
| When {expr} is a |List| the result is equal to |match()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetText()->matchend('word') |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| matchfuzzy({list}, {str} [, {dict}]) *matchfuzzy()* |
| If {list} is a list of strings, then returns a |List| with all |
| the strings in {list} that fuzzy match {str}. The strings in |
| the returned list are sorted based on the matching score. |
| |
| The optional {dict} argument always supports the following |
| items: |
| matchseq When this item is present return only matches |
| that contain the characters in {str} in the |
| given sequence. |
| limit Maximum number of matches in {list} to be |
| returned. Zero means no limit. |
| camelcase Use enhanced camel case scoring making results |
| better suited for completion related to |
| programming languages. Defaults to v:true. |
| |
| If {list} is a list of dictionaries, then the optional {dict} |
| argument supports the following additional items: |
| key Key of the item which is fuzzy matched against |
| {str}. The value of this item should be a |
| string. |
| text_cb |Funcref| that will be called for every item |
| in {list} to get the text for fuzzy matching. |
| This should accept a dictionary item as the |
| argument and return the text for that item to |
| use for fuzzy matching. |
| |
| {str} is treated as a literal string and regular expression |
| matching is NOT supported. The maximum supported {str} length |
| is 256. |
| |
| When {str} has multiple words each separated by white space, |
| then the list of strings that have all the words is returned. |
| |
| If there are no matching strings or there is an error, then an |
| empty list is returned. If length of {str} is greater than |
| 256, then returns an empty list. |
| |
| When {limit} is given, matchfuzzy() will find up to this |
| number of matches in {list} and return them in sorted order. |
| |
| Refer to |fuzzy-matching| for more information about fuzzy |
| matching strings. |
| |
| Example: > |
| :echo matchfuzzy(["clay", "crow"], "cay") |
| < results in ["clay"]. > |
| :echo getbufinfo()->map({_, v -> v.name})->matchfuzzy("ndl") |
| < results in a list of buffer names fuzzy matching "ndl". > |
| :echo getbufinfo()->matchfuzzy("ndl", {'key' : 'name'}) |
| < results in a list of buffer information dicts with buffer |
| names fuzzy matching "ndl". > |
| :echo getbufinfo()->matchfuzzy("spl", |
| \ {'text_cb' : {v -> v.name}}) |
| < results in a list of buffer information dicts with buffer |
| names fuzzy matching "spl". > |
| :echo v:oldfiles->matchfuzzy("test") |
| < results in a list of file names fuzzy matching "test". > |
| :let l = readfile("buffer.c")->matchfuzzy("str") |
| < results in a list of lines in "buffer.c" fuzzy matching "str". > |
| :echo ['one two', 'two one']->matchfuzzy('two one') |
| < results in ['two one', 'one two']. > |
| :echo ['one two', 'two one']->matchfuzzy('two one', |
| \ {'matchseq': 1}) |
| < results in ['two one']. |
| |
| Return type: list<string> or list<any> |
| |
| |
| matchfuzzypos({list}, {str} [, {dict}]) *matchfuzzypos()* |
| Same as |matchfuzzy()|, but returns the list of matched |
| strings, the list of character positions where characters |
| in {str} matches and a list of matching scores. You can |
| use |byteidx()| to convert a character position to a byte |
| position. |
| |
| If {str} matches multiple times in a string, then only the |
| positions for the best match is returned. |
| |
| If there are no matching strings or there is an error, then a |
| list with three empty list items is returned. |
| |
| Example: > |
| :echo matchfuzzypos(['testing'], 'tsg') |
| < results in [['testing'], [[0, 2, 6]], [99]] > |
| :echo matchfuzzypos(['clay', 'lacy'], 'la') |
| < results in [['lacy', 'clay'], [[0, 1], [1, 2]], [153, 133]] > |
| :echo [{'text': 'hello', 'id' : 10}]->matchfuzzypos('ll', {'key' : 'text'}) |
| < results in [[{'id': 10, 'text': 'hello'}], [[2, 3]], [127]] |
| |
| Return type: list<list<any>> |
| |
| |
| matchlist({expr}, {pat} [, {start} [, {count}]]) *matchlist()* |
| Same as |match()|, but return a |List|. The first item in the |
| list is the matched string, same as what matchstr() would |
| return. Following items are submatches, like "\1", "\2", etc. |
| in |:substitute|. When an optional submatch didn't match an |
| empty string is used. Example: > |
| echo matchlist('acd', '\(a\)\?\(b\)\?\(c\)\?\(.*\)') |
| < Results in: ['acd', 'a', '', 'c', 'd', '', '', '', '', ''] |
| When there is no match an empty list is returned. |
| |
| You can pass in a List, but that is not very useful. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetText()->matchlist('word') |
| < |
| Return type: list<string> or list<any> |
| |
| *matchstrlist()* |
| matchstrlist({list}, {pat} [, {dict}]) |
| Returns the |List| of matches in {list} where {pat} matches. |
| {list} is a |List| of strings. {pat} is matched against each |
| string in {list}. |
| |
| The {dict} argument supports following items: |
| submatches include submatch information (|/\(|) |
| |
| For each match, a |Dict| with the following items is returned: |
| byteidx starting byte index of the match. |
| idx index in {list} of the match. |
| text matched string |
| submatches a List of submatches. Present only if |
| "submatches" is set to v:true in {dict}. |
| |
| See |match-pattern| for information about the effect of some |
| option settings on the pattern. |
| |
| Example: > |
| :echo matchstrlist(['tik tok'], '\<\k\+\>') |
| [{'idx': 0, 'byteidx': 0, 'text': 'tik'}, {'idx': 0, 'byteidx': 4, 'text': 'tok'}] |
| :echo matchstrlist(['a', 'b'], '\<\k\+\>') |
| [{'idx': 0, 'byteidx': 0, 'text': 'a'}, {'idx': 1, 'byteidx': 0, 'text': 'b'}] |
| < |
| If "submatches" is present and is v:true, then submatches like |
| "\1", "\2", etc. are also returned. Example: > |
| :echo matchstrlist(['acd'], '\(a\)\?\(b\)\?\(c\)\?\(.*\)', |
| \ #{submatches: v:true}) |
| [{'idx': 0, 'byteidx': 0, 'text': 'acd', 'submatches': ['a', '', 'c', 'd', '', '', '', '', '']}] |
| < The "submatches" List always contains 9 items. If a submatch |
| is not found, then an empty string is returned for that |
| submatch. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetListOfStrings()->matchstrlist('mypat') |
| < |
| Return type: list<dict<any>> or list<any> |
| |
| |
| matchstr({expr}, {pat} [, {start} [, {count}]]) *matchstr()* |
| Same as |match()|, but return the matched string. Example: > |
| :echo matchstr("testing", "ing") |
| < results in "ing". |
| When there is no match "" is returned. |
| The {start}, if given, has the same meaning as for |match()|. > |
| :echo matchstr("testing", "ing", 2) |
| < results in "ing". > |
| :echo matchstr("testing", "ing", 5) |
| < result is "". |
| When {expr} is a |List| then the matching item is returned. |
| The type isn't changed, it's not necessarily a String. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetText()->matchstr('word') |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| matchstrpos({expr}, {pat} [, {start} [, {count}]]) *matchstrpos()* |
| Same as |matchstr()|, but return the matched string, the start |
| position and the end position of the match. Example: > |
| :echo matchstrpos("testing", "ing") |
| < results in ["ing", 4, 7]. |
| When there is no match ["", -1, -1] is returned. |
| The {start}, if given, has the same meaning as for |match()|. > |
| :echo matchstrpos("testing", "ing", 2) |
| < results in ["ing", 4, 7]. > |
| :echo matchstrpos("testing", "ing", 5) |
| < result is ["", -1, -1]. |
| When {expr} is a |List| then the matching item, the index |
| of first item where {pat} matches, the start position and the |
| end position of the match are returned. > |
| :echo matchstrpos([1, '__x'], '\a') |
| < result is ["x", 1, 2, 3]. |
| The type isn't changed, it's not necessarily a String. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetText()->matchstrpos('word') |
| < |
| Return type: list<any> |
| |
| |
| max({expr}) *max()* |
| Return the maximum value of all items in {expr}. Example: > |
| echo max([apples, pears, oranges]) |
| |
| < {expr} can be a |List|, a |Tuple| or a |Dictionary|. For a |
| Dictionary, it returns the maximum of all values in the |
| Dictionary. If {expr} is neither a List nor a Tuple nor a |
| Dictionary, or one of the items in {expr} cannot be used as a |
| Number this results in an error. An empty |List|, |Tuple| |
| or |Dictionary| results in zero. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mylist->max() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| menu_info({name} [, {mode}]) *menu_info()* |
| Return information about the specified menu {name} in |
| mode {mode}. The menu name should be specified without the |
| shortcut character ('&'). If {name} is "", then the top-level |
| menu names are returned. |
| |
| {mode} can be one of these strings: |
| "n" Normal |
| "v" Visual (including Select) |
| "o" Operator-pending |
| "i" Insert |
| "c" Cmd-line |
| "s" Select |
| "x" Visual |
| "t" Terminal-Job |
| "" Normal, Visual and Operator-pending |
| "!" Insert and Cmd-line |
| When {mode} is omitted, the modes for "" are used. |
| |
| Returns a |Dictionary| containing the following items: |
| accel menu item accelerator text |menu-text| |
| display display name (name without '&') |
| enabled v:true if this menu item is enabled |
| Refer to |:menu-enable| |
| icon name of the icon file (for toolbar) |
| |toolbar-icon| |
| iconidx index of a built-in icon |
| modes modes for which the menu is defined. In |
| addition to the modes mentioned above, these |
| characters will be used: |
| " " Normal, Visual and Operator-pending |
| name menu item name. |
| noremenu v:true if the {rhs} of the menu item is not |
| remappable else v:false. |
| priority menu order priority |menu-priority| |
| rhs right-hand-side of the menu item. The returned |
| string has special characters translated like |
| in the output of the ":menu" command listing. |
| When the {rhs} of a menu item is empty, then |
| "<Nop>" is returned. |
| script v:true if script-local remapping of {rhs} is |
| allowed else v:false. See |:menu-script|. |
| shortcut shortcut key (character after '&' in |
| the menu name) |menu-shortcut| |
| silent v:true if the menu item is created |
| with <silent> argument |:menu-silent| |
| submenus |List| containing the names of |
| all the submenus. Present only if the menu |
| item has submenus. |
| |
| Returns an empty dictionary if the menu item is not found. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| :echo menu_info('Edit.Cut') |
| :echo menu_info('File.Save', 'n') |
| |
| " Display the entire menu hierarchy in a buffer |
| func ShowMenu(name, pfx) |
| let m = menu_info(a:name) |
| call append(line('$'), a:pfx .. m.display) |
| for child in m->get('submenus', []) |
| call ShowMenu(a:name .. '.' .. escape(child, '.'), |
| \ a:pfx .. ' ') |
| endfor |
| endfunc |
| new |
| for topmenu in menu_info('').submenus |
| call ShowMenu(topmenu, '') |
| endfor |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetMenuName()->menu_info('v') |
| < |
| Return type: dict<any> |
| |
| min({expr}) *min()* |
| Return the minimum value of all items in {expr}. Example: > |
| echo min([apples, pears, oranges]) |
| |
| < {expr} can be a |List|, a |Tuple| or a |Dictionary|. For a |
| Dictionary, it returns the minimum of all values in the |
| Dictionary. If {expr} is neither a List nor a Tuple nor a |
| Dictionary, or one of the items in {expr} cannot be used as a |
| Number this results in an error. An empty |List|, |Tuple| or |
| |Dictionary| results in zero. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mylist->min() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| mkdir({name} [, {flags} [, {prot}]]) *mkdir()* *E739* |
| Create directory {name}. |
| |
| When {flags} is present it must be a string. An empty string |
| has no effect. |
| |
| {flags} can contain these character flags: |
| "p" intermediate directories will be created as necessary |
| "D" {name} will be deleted at the end of the current |
| function, but not recursively |:defer| |
| "R" {name} will be deleted recursively at the end of the |
| current function |:defer| |
| |
| Note that when {name} has more than one part and "p" is used |
| some directories may already exist. Only the first one that |
| is created and what it contains is scheduled to be deleted. |
| E.g. when using: > |
| call mkdir('subdir/tmp/autoload', 'pR') |
| < and "subdir" already exists then "subdir/tmp" will be |
| scheduled for deletion, like with: > |
| defer delete('subdir/tmp', 'rf') |
| < Note that if scheduling the defer fails the directory is not |
| deleted. This should only happen when out of memory. |
| |
| If {prot} is given it is used to set the protection bits of |
| the new directory. The default is 0o755 (rwxr-xr-x: r/w for |
| the user, readable for others). Use 0o700 to make it |
| unreadable for others. This is used for the newly created |
| directories. Note: umask is applied to {prot} (on Unix). |
| Example: > |
| :call mkdir($HOME .. "/tmp/foo/bar", "p", 0o700) |
| |
| < This function is not available in the |sandbox|. |
| |
| There is no error if the directory already exists and the "p" |
| flag is passed (since patch 8.0.1708). However, without the |
| "p" option the call will fail. |
| |
| The function result is a Number, which is TRUE if the call was |
| successful or FALSE if the directory creation failed or partly |
| failed. |
| |
| Not available on all systems. To check use: > |
| :if exists("*mkdir") |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetName()->mkdir() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| mode([{expr}]) *mode()* |
| Return a string that indicates the current mode. |
| If {expr} is supplied and it evaluates to a non-zero Number or |
| a non-empty String (|non-zero-arg|), then the full mode is |
| returned, otherwise only the first letter is returned. |
| Also see |state()|. |
| |
| n Normal |
| no Operator-pending |
| nov Operator-pending (forced characterwise |o_v|) |
| noV Operator-pending (forced linewise |o_V|) |
| noCTRL-V Operator-pending (forced blockwise |o_CTRL-V|); |
| CTRL-V is one character |
| niI Normal using |i_CTRL-O| in |Insert-mode| |
| niR Normal using |i_CTRL-O| in |Replace-mode| |
| niV Normal using |i_CTRL-O| in |Virtual-Replace-mode| |
| nt Terminal-Normal (insert goes to Terminal-Job mode) |
| v Visual by character |
| vs Visual by character using |v_CTRL-O| in Select mode |
| V Visual by line |
| Vs Visual by line using |v_CTRL-O| in Select mode |
| CTRL-V Visual blockwise |
| CTRL-Vs Visual blockwise using |v_CTRL-O| in Select mode |
| s Select by character |
| S Select by line |
| CTRL-S Select blockwise |
| i Insert |
| ic Insert mode completion |compl-generic| |
| ix Insert mode |i_CTRL-X| completion |
| R Replace |R| |
| Rc Replace mode completion |compl-generic| |
| Rx Replace mode |i_CTRL-X| completion |
| Rv Virtual Replace |gR| |
| Rvc Virtual Replace mode completion |compl-generic| |
| Rvx Virtual Replace mode |i_CTRL-X| completion |
| c Command-line editing |
| ct Command-line editing via Terminal-Job mode |
| cr Command-line editing overstrike mode |c_<Insert>| |
| cv Vim Ex mode |gQ| |
| cvr Vim Ex mode while in overstrike mode |c_<Insert>| |
| ce Normal Ex mode |Q| |
| r Hit-enter prompt |
| rm The -- more -- prompt |
| r? A |:confirm| query of some sort |
| ! Shell or external command is executing |
| t Terminal-Job mode: keys go to the job |
| |
| This is useful in the 'statusline' option or when used |
| with |remote_expr()| In most other places it always returns |
| "c" or "n". |
| Note that in the future more modes and more specific modes may |
| be added. It's better not to compare the whole string but only |
| the leading character(s). |
| Also see |visualmode()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| DoFull()->mode() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| mzeval({expr}) *mzeval()* |
| Evaluate MzScheme expression {expr} and return its result |
| converted to Vim data structures. |
| Numbers and strings are returned as they are. |
| Pairs (including lists and improper lists) and vectors are |
| returned as Vim |Lists|. |
| Hash tables are represented as Vim |Dictionary| type with keys |
| converted to strings. |
| All other types are converted to string with display function. |
| Examples: > |
| :mz (define l (list 1 2 3)) |
| :mz (define h (make-hash)) (hash-set! h "list" l) |
| :echo mzeval("l") |
| :echo mzeval("h") |
| < |
| Note that in a `:def` function local variables are not visible |
| to {expr}. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetExpr()->mzeval() |
| < |
| Return type: any, depending on {expr} |
| |
| {only available when compiled with the |+mzscheme| feature} |
| |
| |
| nextnonblank({lnum}) *nextnonblank()* |
| Return the line number of the first line at or below {lnum} |
| that is not blank. Example: > |
| if getline(nextnonblank(1)) =~ "Java" |
| < When {lnum} is invalid or there is no non-blank line at or |
| below it, zero is returned. |
| {lnum} is used like with |getline()|. |
| See also |prevnonblank()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetLnum()->nextnonblank() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| ngettext({single}, {plural}, {number}[, {domain}) *ngettext()* |
| Return a string that contains the correct value for a |
| message based on the rules for plural form(s) in |
| a language. Examples: > |
| ngettext("File", "Files", 2) # returns "Files" |
| < |
| Can be used as a |method|: > |
| 1->ngettext("File", "Files") # returns "File" |
| < |
| See |gettext()| for information on the domain parameter. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| nr2char({expr} [, {utf8}]) *nr2char()* |
| Return a string with a single character, which has the number |
| value {expr}. Examples: > |
| nr2char(64) returns "@" |
| nr2char(32) returns " " |
| < When {utf8} is omitted or zero, the current 'encoding' is used. |
| Example for "utf-8": > |
| nr2char(300) returns I with bow character |
| < When {utf8} is TRUE, always return UTF-8 characters. |
| Note that a NUL character in the file is specified with |
| nr2char(10), because NULs are represented with newline |
| characters. nr2char(0) is a real NUL and terminates the |
| string, thus results in an empty string. |
| To turn a list of character numbers into a string: > |
| let list = [65, 66, 67] |
| let str = join(map(list, {_, val -> nr2char(val)}), '') |
| < Result: "ABC" |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetNumber()->nr2char() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| or({expr}, {expr}) *or()* |
| Bitwise OR on the two arguments. The arguments are converted |
| to a number. A List, Dict or Float argument causes an error. |
| Also see `and()` and `xor()`. |
| Example: > |
| :let bits = or(bits, 0x80) |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| :let bits = bits->or(0x80) |
| |
| < Rationale: The reason this is a function and not using the "|" |
| character like many languages, is that Vi has always used "|" |
| to separate commands. In many places it would not be clear if |
| "|" is an operator or a command separator. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| pathshorten({path} [, {len}]) *pathshorten()* |
| Shorten directory names in the path {path} and return the |
| result. The tail, the file name, is kept as-is. The other |
| components in the path are reduced to {len} letters in length. |
| If {len} is omitted or smaller than 1 then 1 is used (single |
| letters). Leading '~' and '.' characters are kept. Examples: > |
| :echo pathshorten('~/.vim/autoload/myfile.vim') |
| < ~/.v/a/myfile.vim ~ |
| > |
| :echo pathshorten('~/.vim/autoload/myfile.vim', 2) |
| < ~/.vi/au/myfile.vim ~ |
| It doesn't matter if the path exists or not. |
| Returns an empty string on error. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetDirectories()->pathshorten() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| perleval({expr}) *perleval()* |
| Evaluate Perl expression {expr} in scalar context and return |
| its result converted to Vim data structures. If value can't be |
| converted, it is returned as a string Perl representation. |
| Note: If you want an array or hash, {expr} must return a |
| reference to it. |
| Example: > |
| :echo perleval('[1 .. 4]') |
| < [1, 2, 3, 4] |
| |
| Note that in a `:def` function local variables are not visible |
| to {expr}. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetExpr()->perleval() |
| < |
| Return type: any, depending on {expr} |
| |
| {only available when compiled with the |+perl| feature} |
| |
| |
| popup_ functions are documented here: |popup-functions| |
| |
| |
| pow({x}, {y}) *pow()* |
| Return the power of {x} to the exponent {y} as a |Float|. |
| {x} and {y} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Returns 0.0 if {x} or {y} is not a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Examples: > |
| :echo pow(3, 3) |
| < 27.0 > |
| :echo pow(2, 16) |
| < 65536.0 > |
| :echo pow(32, 0.20) |
| < 2.0 |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Compute()->pow(3) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| prevnonblank({lnum}) *prevnonblank()* |
| Return the line number of the first line at or above {lnum} |
| that is not blank. Example: > |
| let ind = indent(prevnonblank(v:lnum - 1)) |
| < When {lnum} is invalid or there is no non-blank line at or |
| above it, zero is returned. |
| {lnum} is used like with |getline()|. |
| Also see |nextnonblank()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetLnum()->prevnonblank() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| printf({fmt}, {expr1} ...) *printf()* |
| Return a String with {fmt}, where "%" items are replaced by |
| the formatted form of their respective arguments. Example: > |
| printf("%4d: E%d %.30s", lnum, errno, msg) |
| < May result in: |
| " 99: E42 asdfasdfasdfasdfasdfasdfasdfas" ~ |
| |
| When used as a |method| the base is passed as the second |
| argument: > |
| Compute()->printf("result: %d") |
| < |
| You can use `call()` to pass the items as a list. |
| |
| Often used items are: |
| %s string |
| %6S string right-aligned in 6 display cells |
| %6s string right-aligned in 6 bytes |
| %.9s string truncated to 9 bytes |
| %c single byte |
| %d decimal number |
| %5d decimal number padded with spaces to 5 characters |
| %x hex number |
| %04x hex number padded with zeros to at least 4 characters |
| %X hex number using upper case letters |
| %o octal number |
| %08b binary number padded with zeros to at least 8 chars |
| %f floating point number as 12.23, inf, -inf or nan |
| %F floating point number as 12.23, INF, -INF or NAN |
| %e floating point number as 1.23e3, inf, -inf or nan |
| %E floating point number as 1.23E3, INF, -INF or NAN |
| %g floating point number, as %f or %e depending on value |
| %G floating point number, as %F or %E depending on value |
| %% the % character itself |
| |
| Conversion specifications start with '%' and end with the |
| conversion type. All other characters are copied unchanged to |
| the result. |
| |
| The "%" starts a conversion specification. The following |
| arguments appear in sequence: |
| |
| % [pos-argument] [flags] [field-width] [.precision] type |
| |
| pos-argument |
| At most one positional argument specifier. These |
| take the form {n$}, where n is >= 1. |
| |
| flags |
| Zero or more of the following flags: |
| |
| # The value should be converted to an "alternate |
| form". For c, d, and s conversions, this option |
| has no effect. For o conversions, the precision |
| of the number is increased to force the first |
| character of the output string to a zero (except |
| if a zero value is printed with an explicit |
| precision of zero). |
| For b and B conversions, a non-zero result has |
| the string "0b" (or "0B" for B conversions) |
| prepended to it. |
| For x and X conversions, a non-zero result has |
| the string "0x" (or "0X" for X conversions) |
| prepended to it. |
| |
| 0 (zero) Zero padding. For all conversions the converted |
| value is padded on the left with zeros rather |
| than blanks. If a precision is given with a |
| numeric conversion (d, b, B, o, x, and X), the 0 |
| flag is ignored. |
| |
| - A negative field width flag; the converted value |
| is to be left adjusted on the field boundary. |
| The converted value is padded on the right with |
| blanks, rather than on the left with blanks or |
| zeros. A - overrides a 0 if both are given. |
| |
| ' ' (space) A blank should be left before a positive |
| number produced by a signed conversion (d). |
| |
| + A sign must always be placed before a number |
| produced by a signed conversion. A + overrides |
| a space if both are used. |
| |
| field-width |
| An optional decimal digit string specifying a minimum |
| field width. If the converted value has fewer bytes |
| than the field width, it will be padded with spaces on |
| the left (or right, if the left-adjustment flag has |
| been given) to fill out the field width. For the S |
| conversion the count is in cells. |
| |
| .precision |
| An optional precision, in the form of a period '.' |
| followed by an optional digit string. If the digit |
| string is omitted, the precision is taken as zero. |
| This gives the minimum number of digits to appear for |
| d, o, x, and X conversions, the maximum number of |
| bytes to be printed from a string for s conversions, |
| or the maximum number of cells to be printed from a |
| string for S conversions. |
| For floating point it is the number of digits after |
| the decimal point. |
| |
| type |
| A character that specifies the type of conversion to |
| be applied, see below. |
| |
| A field width or precision, or both, may be indicated by an |
| asterisk '*' instead of a digit string. In this case, a |
| Number argument supplies the field width or precision. A |
| negative field width is treated as a left adjustment flag |
| followed by a positive field width; a negative precision is |
| treated as though it were missing. Example: > |
| :echo printf("%d: %.*s", nr, width, line) |
| < This limits the length of the text used from "line" to |
| "width" bytes. |
| |
| If the argument to be formatted is specified using a |
| positional argument specifier, and a '*' is used to indicate |
| that a number argument is to be used to specify the width or |
| precision, the argument(s) to be used must also be specified |
| using a {n$} positional argument specifier. See |printf-$|. |
| |
| The conversion specifiers and their meanings are: |
| |
| *printf-d* *printf-b* *printf-B* *printf-o* |
| *printf-x* *printf-X* |
| dbBoxX The Number argument is converted to signed decimal |
| (d), unsigned binary (b and B), unsigned octal (o), or |
| unsigned hexadecimal (x and X) notation. The letters |
| "abcdef" are used for x conversions; the letters |
| "ABCDEF" are used for X conversions. |
| The precision, if any, gives the minimum number of |
| digits that must appear; if the converted value |
| requires fewer digits, it is padded on the left with |
| zeros. |
| In no case does a non-existent or small field width |
| cause truncation of a numeric field; if the result of |
| a conversion is wider than the field width, the field |
| is expanded to contain the conversion result. |
| The 'h' modifier indicates the argument is 16 bits. |
| The 'l' modifier indicates the argument is a long |
| integer. The size will be 32 bits or 64 bits |
| depending on your platform. |
| The "ll" modifier indicates the argument is 64 bits. |
| The b and B conversion specifiers never take a width |
| modifier and always assume their argument is a 64 bit |
| integer. |
| Generally, these modifiers are not useful. They are |
| ignored when type is known from the argument. |
| |
| i alias for d |
| D alias for ld |
| U alias for lu |
| O alias for lo |
| |
| *printf-c* |
| c The Number argument is converted to a byte, and the |
| resulting character is written. |
| |
| *printf-s* |
| s The text of the String argument is used. If a |
| precision is specified, no more bytes than the number |
| specified are used. |
| If the argument is not a String type, it is |
| automatically converted to text with the same format |
| as ":echo". |
| *printf-S* |
| S The text of the String argument is used. If a |
| precision is specified, no more display cells than the |
| number specified are used. |
| |
| *printf-f* *E807* |
| f F The Float argument is converted into a string of the |
| form 123.456. The precision specifies the number of |
| digits after the decimal point. When the precision is |
| zero the decimal point is omitted. When the precision |
| is not specified 6 is used. A really big number |
| (out of range or dividing by zero) results in "inf" |
| or "-inf" with %f (INF or -INF with %F). |
| "0.0 / 0.0" results in "nan" with %f (NAN with %F). |
| Example: > |
| echo printf("%.2f", 12.115) |
| < 12.12 |
| Note that roundoff depends on the system libraries. |
| Use |round()| when in doubt. |
| |
| *printf-e* *printf-E* |
| e E The Float argument is converted into a string of the |
| form 1.234e+03 or 1.234E+03 when using 'E'. The |
| precision specifies the number of digits after the |
| decimal point, like with 'f'. |
| |
| *printf-g* *printf-G* |
| g G The Float argument is converted like with 'f' if the |
| value is between 0.001 (inclusive) and 10000000.0 |
| (exclusive). Otherwise 'e' is used for 'g' and 'E' |
| for 'G'. When no precision is specified superfluous |
| zeroes and '+' signs are removed, except for the zero |
| immediately after the decimal point. Thus 10000000.0 |
| results in 1.0e7. |
| |
| *printf-%* |
| % A '%' is written. No argument is converted. The |
| complete conversion specification is "%%". |
| |
| When a Number argument is expected a String argument is also |
| accepted and automatically converted. |
| When a Float or String argument is expected a Number argument |
| is also accepted and automatically converted. |
| Any other argument type results in an error message. |
| |
| *E766* *E767* |
| The number of {exprN} arguments must exactly match the number |
| of "%" items. If there are not sufficient or too many |
| arguments an error is given. Up to 18 arguments can be used. |
| |
| *printf-$* |
| In certain languages, error and informative messages are |
| more readable when the order of words is different from the |
| corresponding message in English. To accommodate translations |
| having a different word order, positional arguments may be |
| used to indicate this. For instance: > |
| |
| #, c-format |
| msgid "%s returning %s" |
| msgstr "waarde %2$s komt terug van %1$s" |
| < |
| In this example, the sentence has its 2 string arguments |
| reversed in the output. > |
| |
| echo printf( |
| "In The Netherlands, vim's creator's name is: %1$s %2$s", |
| "Bram", "Moolenaar") |
| < In The Netherlands, vim's creator's name is: Bram Moolenaar > |
| |
| echo printf( |
| "In Belgium, vim's creator's name is: %2$s %1$s", |
| "Bram", "Moolenaar") |
| < In Belgium, vim's creator's name is: Moolenaar Bram |
| |
| Width (and precision) can be specified using the '*' specifier. |
| In this case, you must specify the field width position in the |
| argument list. > |
| |
| echo printf("%1$*2$.*3$d", 1, 2, 3) |
| < 001 > |
| echo printf("%2$*3$.*1$d", 1, 2, 3) |
| < 2 > |
| echo printf("%3$*1$.*2$d", 1, 2, 3) |
| < 03 > |
| echo printf("%1$*2$.*3$g", 1.4142, 2, 3) |
| < 1.414 |
| |
| You can mix specifying the width and/or precision directly |
| and via positional arguments: > |
| |
| echo printf("%1$4.*2$f", 1.4142135, 6) |
| < 1.414214 > |
| echo printf("%1$*2$.4f", 1.4142135, 6) |
| < 1.4142 > |
| echo printf("%1$*2$.*3$f", 1.4142135, 6, 2) |
| < 1.41 |
| |
| You will get an overflow error |E1510|, when the field-width |
| or precision will result in a string longer than 1 MiB |
| (1024*1024 = 1048576) chars. |
| |
| *E1500* |
| You cannot mix positional and non-positional arguments: > |
| echo printf("%s%1$s", "One", "Two") |
| < E1500: Cannot mix positional and non-positional arguments: |
| %s%1$s |
| |
| *E1501* |
| You cannot skip a positional argument in a format string: > |
| echo printf("%3$s%1$s", "One", "Two", "Three") |
| < E1501: format argument 2 unused in $-style format: |
| %3$s%1$s |
| |
| *E1502* |
| You can re-use a [field-width] (or [precision]) argument: > |
| echo printf("%1$d at width %2$d is: %01$*2$d", 1, 2) |
| < 1 at width 2 is: 01 |
| |
| However, you can't use it as a different type: > |
| echo printf("%1$d at width %2$ld is: %01$*2$d", 1, 2) |
| < E1502: Positional argument 2 used as field width reused as |
| different type: long int/int |
| |
| *E1503* |
| When a positional argument is used, but not the correct number |
| or arguments is given, an error is raised: > |
| echo printf("%1$d at width %2$d is: %01$*2$.*3$d", 1, 2) |
| < E1503: Positional argument 3 out of bounds: %1$d at width |
| %2$d is: %01$*2$.*3$d |
| |
| Only the first error is reported: > |
| echo printf("%01$*2$.*3$d %4$d", 1, 2) |
| < E1503: Positional argument 3 out of bounds: %01$*2$.*3$d |
| %4$d |
| |
| *E1504* |
| A positional argument can be used more than once: > |
| echo printf("%1$s %2$s %1$s", "One", "Two") |
| < One Two One |
| |
| However, you can't use a different type the second time: > |
| echo printf("%1$s %2$s %1$d", "One", "Two") |
| < E1504: Positional argument 1 type used inconsistently: |
| int/string |
| |
| *E1505* |
| Various other errors that lead to a format string being |
| wrongly formatted lead to: > |
| echo printf("%1$d at width %2$d is: %01$*2$.3$d", 1, 2) |
| < E1505: Invalid format specifier: %1$d at width %2$d is: |
| %01$*2$.3$d |
| |
| *E1507* |
| This internal error indicates that the logic to parse a |
| positional format argument ran into a problem that couldn't be |
| otherwise reported. Please file a bug against Vim if you run |
| into this, copying the exact format string and parameters that |
| were used. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| prompt_getprompt({buf}) *prompt_getprompt()* |
| Returns the effective prompt text for buffer {buf}. {buf} can |
| be a buffer name or number. See |prompt-buffer|. |
| |
| If the buffer doesn't exist or isn't a prompt buffer, an empty |
| string is returned. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetBuffer()->prompt_getprompt() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| {only available when compiled with the |+channel| feature} |
| |
| |
| prompt_setcallback({buf}, {expr}) *prompt_setcallback()* |
| Set prompt callback for buffer {buf} to {expr}. When {expr} |
| is an empty string the callback is removed. This has only |
| effect if {buf} has 'buftype' set to "prompt". |
| |
| The callback is invoked when pressing Enter. The current |
| buffer will always be the prompt buffer. A new line for a |
| prompt is added before invoking the callback, thus the prompt |
| for which the callback was invoked will be in the last but one |
| line. |
| If the callback wants to add text to the buffer, it must |
| insert it above the last line, since that is where the current |
| prompt is. This can also be done asynchronously. |
| The callback is invoked with one argument, which is the text |
| that was entered at the prompt. This can be an empty string |
| if the user only typed Enter. |
| Example: > |
| func s:TextEntered(text) |
| if a:text == 'exit' || a:text == 'quit' |
| stopinsert |
| " Reset 'modified' to allow the buffer to be closed. |
| " We assume there is nothing useful to be saved. |
| set nomodified |
| close |
| else |
| " Do something useful with "a:text". In this example |
| " we just repeat it. |
| call append(line('$') - 1, 'Entered: "' .. a:text .. '"') |
| endif |
| endfunc |
| call prompt_setcallback(bufnr(), function('s:TextEntered')) |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetBuffer()->prompt_setcallback(callback) |
| |
| < {only available when compiled with the |+channel| feature} |
| |
| prompt_setinterrupt({buf}, {expr}) *prompt_setinterrupt()* |
| Set a callback for buffer {buf} to {expr}. When {expr} is an |
| empty string the callback is removed. This has only effect if |
| {buf} has 'buftype' set to "prompt". |
| |
| This callback will be invoked when pressing CTRL-C in Insert |
| mode. Without setting a callback Vim will exit Insert mode, |
| as in any buffer. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetBuffer()->prompt_setinterrupt(callback) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| {only available when compiled with the |+channel| feature} |
| |
| prompt_setprompt({buf}, {text}) *prompt_setprompt()* |
| Set prompt for buffer {buf} to {text}. You most likely want |
| {text} to end in a space. |
| The result is only visible if {buf} has 'buftype' set to |
| "prompt". Example: > |
| call prompt_setprompt(bufnr(), 'command: ') |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetBuffer()->prompt_setprompt('command: ') |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| {only available when compiled with the |+channel| feature} |
| |
| prop_ functions are documented here: |text-prop-functions| |
| |
| pum_getpos() *pum_getpos()* |
| If the popup menu (see |ins-completion-menu|) is not visible, |
| returns an empty |Dictionary|, otherwise, returns a |
| |Dictionary| with the following keys: |
| height nr of items visible |
| width screen cells |
| row top screen row (0 first row) |
| col leftmost screen column (0 first col) |
| size total nr of items |
| scrollbar |TRUE| if scrollbar is visible |
| |
| The values are the same as in |v:event| during |
| |CompleteChanged|. |
| |
| Return type: dict<any> |
| |
| |
| pumvisible() *pumvisible()* |
| Returns non-zero when the popup menu is visible, zero |
| otherwise. See |ins-completion-menu|. |
| This can be used to avoid some things that would remove the |
| popup menu. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| py3eval({expr} [, {locals}]) *py3eval()* |
| Evaluate Python expression {expr} and return its result |
| converted to Vim data structures. |
| If a {locals} |Dictionary| is given, it defines set of local |
| variables available in the expression. The keys are variable |
| names and the values are the variable values. |Dictionary|, |
| |List| and |Tuple| values are referenced, and may be updated |
| by the expression (as if |python-bindeval| was used). |
| Numbers and strings are returned as they are (strings are |
| copied though, Unicode strings are additionally converted to |
| 'encoding'). |
| Lists are represented as Vim |List| type. |
| Tuples are represented as Vim |Tuple| type. |
| Dictionaries are represented as Vim |Dictionary| type with |
| keys converted to strings. |
| Note that in a `:def` function local variables are not visible |
| to {expr}. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetExpr()->py3eval() |
| 'b",".join(l)'->py3eval({'l': ['a', 'b', 'c']}) |
| < |
| Return type: any, depending on {expr} |
| |
| {only available when compiled with the |+python3| feature} |
| |
| *E858* *E859* |
| pyeval({expr} [, {locals}]) *pyeval()* |
| Evaluate Python expression {expr} and return its result |
| converted to Vim data structures. |
| For {locals} see |py3eval()|. |
| Numbers and strings are returned as they are (strings are |
| copied though). |
| Lists are represented as Vim |List| type. |
| Tuples are represented as Vim |Tuple| type. |
| Dictionaries are represented as Vim |Dictionary| type, |
| non-string keys result in error. |
| Note that in a `:def` function local variables are not visible |
| to {expr}. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetExpr()->pyeval() |
| < |
| Return type: any, depending on {expr} |
| |
| {only available when compiled with the |+python| feature} |
| |
| pyxeval({expr} [, {locals}]) *pyxeval()* |
| Evaluate Python expression {expr} and return its result |
| converted to Vim data structures. |
| For {locals} see |py3eval()|. |
| Uses Python 2 or 3, see |python_x| and 'pyxversion'. |
| See also: |pyeval()|, |py3eval()| |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetExpr()->pyxeval() |
| < |
| Return type: any, depending on {expr} |
| |
| {only available when compiled with the |+python| or the |
| |+python3| feature} |
| |
| rand([{expr}]) *rand()* *random* |
| Return a pseudo-random Number generated with an xoshiro128** |
| algorithm using seed {expr}. The returned number is 32 bits, |
| also on 64 bits systems, for consistency. |
| {expr} can be initialized by |srand()| and will be updated by |
| rand(). If {expr} is omitted, an internal seed value is used |
| and updated. |
| Returns -1 if {expr} is invalid. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| :echo rand() |
| :let seed = srand() |
| :echo rand(seed) |
| :echo rand(seed) % 16 " random number 0 - 15 |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| *E726* *E727* |
| range({expr} [, {max} [, {stride}]]) *range()* |
| Returns a |List| with Numbers: |
| - If only {expr} is specified: [0, 1, ..., {expr} - 1] |
| - If {max} is specified: [{expr}, {expr} + 1, ..., {max}] |
| - If {stride} is specified: [{expr}, {expr} + {stride}, ..., |
| {max}] (increasing {expr} with {stride} each time, not |
| producing a value past {max}). |
| When the maximum is one before the start the result is an |
| empty list. When the maximum is more than one before the |
| start this is an error. |
| Examples: > |
| range(4) " [0, 1, 2, 3] |
| range(2, 4) " [2, 3, 4] |
| range(2, 9, 3) " [2, 5, 8] |
| range(2, -2, -1) " [2, 1, 0, -1, -2] |
| range(0) " [] |
| range(2, 0) " error! |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetExpr()->range() |
| < |
| Return type: list<number> |
| |
| |
| readblob({fname} [, {offset} [, {size}]]) *readblob()* |
| Read file {fname} in binary mode and return a |Blob|. |
| If {offset} is specified, read the file from the specified |
| offset. If it is a negative value, it is used as an offset |
| from the end of the file. E.g., to read the last 12 bytes: > |
| readblob('file.bin', -12) |
| < If {size} is specified, only the specified size will be read. |
| E.g. to read the first 100 bytes of a file: > |
| readblob('file.bin', 0, 100) |
| < If {size} is -1 or omitted, the whole data starting from |
| {offset} will be read. |
| This can be also used to read the data from a character device |
| on Unix when {size} is explicitly set. Only if the device |
| supports seeking {offset} can be used. Otherwise it should be |
| zero. E.g. to read 10 bytes from a serial console: > |
| readblob('/dev/ttyS0', 0, 10) |
| < When the file can't be opened an error message is given and |
| the result is an empty |Blob|. |
| When the offset is beyond the end of the file the result is an |
| empty blob. |
| When trying to read more bytes than are available the result |
| is truncated. |
| Also see |readfile()| and |writefile()|. |
| |
| Return type: |Blob| |
| |
| |
| readdir({directory} [, {expr} [, {dict}]]) *readdir()* |
| Return a list with file and directory names in {directory}. |
| You can also use |glob()| if you don't need to do complicated |
| things, such as limiting the number of matches. |
| The list will be sorted (case sensitive), see the {dict} |
| argument below for changing the sort order. |
| |
| When {expr} is omitted all entries are included. |
| When {expr} is given, it is evaluated to check what to do: |
| If {expr} results in -1 then no further entries will |
| be handled. |
| If {expr} results in 0 then this entry will not be |
| added to the list. |
| If {expr} results in 1 then this entry will be added |
| to the list. |
| The entries "." and ".." are always excluded. |
| Each time {expr} is evaluated |v:val| is set to the entry name. |
| When {expr} is a function the name is passed as the argument. |
| For example, to get a list of files ending in ".txt": > |
| readdir(dirname, {n -> n =~ '.txt$'}) |
| < To skip hidden and backup files: > |
| readdir(dirname, {n -> n !~ '^\.\|\~$'}) |
| < *E857* |
| The optional {dict} argument allows for further custom |
| values. Currently this is used to specify if and how sorting |
| should be performed. The dict can have the following members: |
| |
| sort How to sort the result returned from the system. |
| Valid values are: |
| "none" do not sort (fastest method) |
| "case" sort case sensitive (byte value of |
| each character, technically, using |
| strcmp()) (default) |
| "icase" sort case insensitive (technically |
| using strcasecmp()) |
| "collate" sort using the collation order |
| of the "POSIX" or "C" |locale| |
| (technically using strcoll()) |
| Other values are silently ignored. |
| |
| For example, to get a list of all files in the current |
| directory without sorting the individual entries: > |
| readdir('.', '1', #{sort: 'none'}) |
| < If you want to get a directory tree: > |
| function! s:tree(dir) |
| return {a:dir : map(readdir(a:dir), |
| \ {_, x -> isdirectory(x) ? |
| \ {x : s:tree(a:dir .. '/' .. x)} : x})} |
| endfunction |
| echo s:tree(".") |
| < |
| Returns an empty List on error. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetDirName()->readdir() |
| < |
| Return type: list<string> or list<any> |
| |
| |
| readdirex({directory} [, {expr} [, {dict}]]) *readdirex()* |
| Extended version of |readdir()|. |
| Return a list of Dictionaries with file and directory |
| information in {directory}. |
| This is useful if you want to get the attributes of file and |
| directory at the same time as getting a list of a directory. |
| This is much faster than calling |readdir()| then calling |
| |getfperm()|, |getfsize()|, |getftime()| and |getftype()| for |
| each file and directory especially on MS-Windows. |
| The list will by default be sorted by name (case sensitive), |
| the sorting can be changed by using the optional {dict} |
| argument, see |readdir()|. |
| |
| The Dictionary for file and directory information has the |
| following items: |
| group Group name of the entry. (Only on Unix) |
| name Name of the entry. |
| perm Permissions of the entry. See |getfperm()|. |
| size Size of the entry. See |getfsize()|. |
| time Timestamp of the entry. See |getftime()|. |
| type Type of the entry. |
| On Unix, almost same as |getftype()| except: |
| Symlink to a dir "linkd" |
| Other symlink "link" |
| On MS-Windows: |
| Normal file "file" |
| Directory "dir" |
| Junction "junction" |
| Symlink to a dir "linkd" |
| Other symlink "link" |
| Other reparse point "reparse" |
| user User name of the entry's owner. (Only on Unix) |
| On Unix, if the entry is a symlink, the Dictionary includes |
| the information of the target (except the "type" item). |
| On MS-Windows, it includes the information of the symlink |
| itself because of performance reasons. |
| |
| When {expr} is omitted all entries are included. |
| When {expr} is given, it is evaluated to check what to do: |
| If {expr} results in -1 then no further entries will |
| be handled. |
| If {expr} results in 0 then this entry will not be |
| added to the list. |
| If {expr} results in 1 then this entry will be added |
| to the list. |
| The entries "." and ".." are always excluded. |
| Each time {expr} is evaluated |v:val| is set to a |Dictionary| |
| of the entry. |
| When {expr} is a function the entry is passed as the argument. |
| For example, to get a list of files ending in ".txt": > |
| readdirex(dirname, {e -> e.name =~ '.txt$'}) |
| < |
| For example, to get a list of all files in the current |
| directory without sorting the individual entries: > |
| readdirex(dirname, '1', #{sort: 'none'}) |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetDirName()->readdirex() |
| < |
| Return type: list<dict<any>> or list<any> |
| |
| |
| *readfile()* |
| readfile({fname} [, {type} [, {max}]]) |
| Read file {fname} and return a |List|, each line of the file |
| as an item. Lines are broken at NL characters. Macintosh |
| files separated with CR will result in a single long line |
| (unless a NL appears somewhere). |
| All NUL characters are replaced with a NL character. |
| When {type} contains "b" binary mode is used: |
| - When the last line ends in a NL an extra empty list item is |
| added. |
| - No CR characters are removed. |
| Otherwise: |
| - CR characters that appear before a NL are removed. |
| - Whether the last line ends in a NL or not does not matter. |
| - When 'encoding' is Unicode any UTF-8 byte order mark is |
| removed from the text. |
| When {max} is given this specifies the maximum number of lines |
| to be read. Useful if you only want to check the first ten |
| lines of a file: > |
| :for line in readfile(fname, '', 10) |
| : if line =~ 'Date' | echo line | endif |
| :endfor |
| < When {max} is negative -{max} lines from the end of the file |
| are returned, or as many as there are. |
| When {max} is zero the result is an empty list. |
| Note that without {max} the whole file is read into memory. |
| Also note that there is no recognition of encoding. Read a |
| file into a buffer if you need to. |
| Deprecated (use |readblob()| instead): When {type} contains |
| "B" a |Blob| is returned with the binary data of the file |
| unmodified. |
| When the file can't be opened an error message is given and |
| the result is an empty list. |
| Also see |writefile()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetFileName()->readfile() |
| < |
| Return type: list<string> or list<any> |
| |
| reduce({object}, {func} [, {initial}]) *reduce()* *E998* |
| {func} is called for every item in {object}, which can be a |
| |String|, |List|, |Tuple| or a |Blob|. {func} is called with |
| two arguments: the result so far and current item. After |
| processing all items the result is returned. *E1132* |
| |
| {initial} is the initial result. When omitted, the first item |
| in {object} is used and {func} is first called for the second |
| item. If {initial} is not given and {object} is empty no |
| result can be computed, an E998 error is given. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| echo reduce([1, 3, 5], { acc, val -> acc + val }) |
| echo reduce(['x', 'y'], { acc, val -> acc .. val }, 'a') |
| echo reduce(0z1122, { acc, val -> 2 * acc + val }) |
| echo reduce('xyz', { acc, val -> acc .. ',' .. val }) |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| echo mylist->reduce({ acc, val -> acc + val }, 0) |
| < |
| Return type: |String|, |Blob|, list<{type}> or dict<{type}> |
| depending on {object} and {func} |
| |
| |
| reg_executing() *reg_executing()* |
| Returns the single letter name of the register being executed. |
| Returns an empty string when no register is being executed. |
| See |@|. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| reg_recording() *reg_recording()* |
| Returns the single letter name of the register being recorded. |
| Returns an empty string when not recording. See |q|. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| reltime() *reltime()* |
| reltime({start}) |
| reltime({start}, {end}) |
| Return an item that represents a time value. The item is a |
| list with items that depend on the system. In Vim 9 script |
| the type list<any> can be used. |
| The item can be passed to |reltimestr()| to convert it to a |
| string or |reltimefloat()| to convert to a Float. For |
| example, to see the time spent in function Work(): > |
| var startTime = reltime() |
| Work() |
| echo startTime->reltime()->reltimestr() |
| < |
| Without an argument reltime() returns the current time (the |
| representation is system-dependent, it cannot be used as the |
| wall-clock time, see |localtime()| for that). |
| With one argument it returns the time passed since the time |
| specified in the argument. |
| With two arguments it returns the time passed between {start} |
| and {end}. |
| |
| The {start} and {end} arguments must be values returned by |
| reltime(). If there is an error an empty List is returned in |
| legacy script, in Vim9 script an error is given. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetStart()->reltime() |
| < |
| Return type: list<number> |
| |
| {only available when compiled with the |+reltime| feature} |
| |
| |
| reltimefloat({time}) *reltimefloat()* |
| Return a Float that represents the time value of {time}. |
| Example: > |
| let start = reltime() |
| call MyFunction() |
| let seconds = reltimefloat(reltime(start)) |
| < See the note of reltimestr() about overhead. |
| Also see |profiling|. |
| If there is an error 0.0 is returned in legacy script, in Vim9 |
| script an error is given. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| reltime(start)->reltimefloat() |
| < |
| Return type: |Float| |
| |
| {only available when compiled with the |+reltime| feature} |
| |
| |
| reltimestr({time}) *reltimestr()* |
| Return a String that represents the time value of {time}. |
| This is the number of seconds, a dot and the number of |
| microseconds. Example: > |
| let start = reltime() |
| call MyFunction() |
| echo reltimestr(reltime(start)) |
| < Note that overhead for the commands will be added to the time. |
| The accuracy depends on the system. Use reltimefloat() for the |
| greatest accuracy which is nanoseconds on some systems. |
| Leading spaces are used to make the string align nicely. You |
| can use split() to remove it. > |
| echo split(reltimestr(reltime(start)))[0] |
| < Also see |profiling|. |
| If there is an error an empty string is returned in legacy |
| script, in Vim9 script an error is given. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| reltime(start)->reltimestr() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| {only available when compiled with the |+reltime| feature} |
| |
| *remote_expr()* *E449* |
| remote_expr({server}, {string} [, {idvar} [, {timeout}]]) |
| Send the {string} to {server}. The {server} argument is a |
| string, also see |{server}|. |
| |
| The string is sent as an expression and the result is returned |
| after evaluation. The result must be a String or a |List| |
| other types will be converted to String. A |List| is turned |
| into a String by joining the items with a line break in |
| between (not at the end), like with join(expr, "\n"). |
| |
| If {idvar} is present and not empty, it is taken as the name |
| of a variable and a {serverid} for later use with |
| |remote_read()| is stored there. |
| |
| If {timeout} is given the read times out after this many |
| seconds. Otherwise a timeout of 600 seconds is used. |
| |
| See also |clientserver| |RemoteReply|. |
| This function is not available in the |sandbox|. |
| {only available when compiled with the |+clientserver| feature} |
| Note: Any errors will cause a local error message to be issued |
| and the result will be the empty string. |
| |
| Variables will be evaluated in the global namespace, |
| independent of a function currently being active. Except |
| when in debug mode, then local function variables and |
| arguments can be evaluated. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| :echo remote_expr("gvim", "2+2") |
| :echo remote_expr("gvim1", "b:current_syntax") |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| ServerName()->remote_expr(expr) |
| < |
| Return type: |String| or list<{type}> |
| |
| |
| remote_foreground({server}) *remote_foreground()* |
| Move the Vim server with the name {server} to the foreground. |
| The {server} argument is a string, also see |{server}|. |
| This works like: > |
| remote_expr({server}, "foreground()") |
| < Except that on Win32 systems the client does the work, to work |
| around the problem that the OS doesn't always allow the server |
| to bring itself to the foreground. |
| Note: This does not restore the window if it was minimized, |
| like foreground() does. |
| This function is not available in the |sandbox|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| ServerName()->remote_foreground() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| {only in the Win32, Motif and GTK GUI versions and the |
| Win32 console version} |
| |
| |
| remote_peek({serverid} [, {retvar}]) *remote_peek()* |
| Returns a positive number if there are available strings |
| from {serverid}. Copies any reply string into the variable |
| {retvar} if specified. {retvar} must be a string with the |
| name of a variable. |
| Returns zero if none are available. |
| Returns -1 if something is wrong. |
| See also |clientserver|. |
| This function is not available in the |sandbox|. |
| {only available when compiled with the |+clientserver| feature} |
| Examples: > |
| :let repl = "" |
| :echo "PEEK: " .. remote_peek(id, "repl") .. ": " .. repl |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| ServerId()->remote_peek() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| remote_read({serverid}, [{timeout}]) *remote_read()* |
| Return the oldest available reply from {serverid} and consume |
| it. Unless a {timeout} in seconds is given, it blocks until a |
| reply is available. Returns an empty string, if a reply is |
| not available or on error. |
| See also |clientserver|. |
| This function is not available in the |sandbox|. |
| {only available when compiled with the |+clientserver| feature} |
| Example: > |
| :echo remote_read(id) |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| ServerId()->remote_read() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| remote_send({server}, {string} [, {idvar}]) *remote_send()* *E241* |
| Send the {string} to {server}. The {server} argument is a |
| string, also see |{server}|. |
| |
| The string is sent as input keys and the function returns |
| immediately. At the Vim server the keys are not mapped |
| |:map|. |
| |
| If {idvar} is present, it is taken as the name of a variable |
| and a {serverid} for later use with remote_read() is stored |
| there. |
| |
| See also |clientserver| |RemoteReply|. |
| This function is not available in the |sandbox|. |
| {only available when compiled with the |+clientserver| feature} |
| |
| Note: Any errors will be reported in the server and may mess |
| up the display. |
| Examples: > |
| :echo remote_send("gvim", ":DropAndReply " .. file, "serverid") .. |
| \ remote_read(serverid) |
| |
| :autocmd NONE RemoteReply * |
| \ echo remote_read(expand("<amatch>")) |
| :echo remote_send("gvim", ":sleep 10 | echo " .. |
| \ 'server2client(expand("<client>"), "HELLO")<CR>') |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| ServerName()->remote_send(keys) |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| remote_startserver({name}) *remote_startserver()* *E941* *E942* |
| Become the server {name}. {name} must be a non-empty string. |
| This fails if already running as a server, when |v:servername| |
| is not empty. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| ServerName()->remote_startserver() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| {only available when compiled with the |+clientserver| feature} |
| |
| |
| remove({list}, {idx}) *remove()* |
| remove({list}, {idx}, {end}) |
| Without {end}: Remove the item at {idx} from |List| {list} and |
| return the item. |
| With {end}: Remove items from {idx} to {end} (inclusive) and |
| return a |List| with these items. When {idx} points to the same |
| item as {end} a list with one item is returned. When {end} |
| points to an item before {idx} this is an error. |
| See |list-index| for possible values of {idx} and {end}. |
| Returns zero on error. |
| Example: > |
| :echo "last item: " .. remove(mylist, -1) |
| :call remove(mylist, 0, 9) |
| < |
| Use |delete()| to remove a file. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mylist->remove(idx) |
| < |
| Return type: any, depending on {list} |
| |
| |
| remove({blob}, {idx}) |
| remove({blob}, {idx}, {end}) |
| Without {end}: Remove the byte at {idx} from |Blob| {blob} and |
| return the byte. |
| With {end}: Remove bytes from {idx} to {end} (inclusive) and |
| return a |Blob| with these bytes. When {idx} points to the same |
| byte as {end} a |Blob| with one byte is returned. When {end} |
| points to a byte before {idx} this is an error. |
| Returns zero on error. |
| Example: > |
| :echo "last byte: " .. remove(myblob, -1) |
| :call remove(mylist, 0, 9) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| remove({dict}, {key}) |
| Remove the entry from {dict} with key {key} and return it. |
| Example: > |
| :echo "removed " .. remove(dict, "one") |
| < If there is no {key} in {dict} this is an error. |
| Returns zero on error. |
| |
| Return type: any, depending on {dict} |
| |
| |
| rename({from}, {to}) *rename()* |
| Rename the file by the name {from} to the name {to}. This |
| should also work to move files across file systems. The |
| result is a Number, which is 0 if the file was renamed |
| successfully, and non-zero when the renaming failed. |
| NOTE: If {to} exists it is overwritten without warning. |
| This function is not available in the |sandbox|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetOldName()->rename(newname) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| repeat({expr}, {count}) *repeat()* |
| Repeat {expr} {count} times and return the concatenated |
| result. Example: > |
| :let separator = repeat('-', 80) |
| < When {count} is zero or negative the result is empty. |
| When {expr} is a |List|, a |Tuple| or a |Blob| the result is |
| {expr} concatenated {count} times. Example: > |
| :let longlist = repeat(['a', 'b'], 3) |
| < Results in ['a', 'b', 'a', 'b', 'a', 'b']. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mylist->repeat(count) |
| < |
| Return type: |String|, |Blob|, list<{type}> or tuple<{type}> |
| depending on {expr} |
| |
| |
| resolve({filename}) *resolve()* *E655* |
| On MS-Windows, when {filename} is a shortcut (a .lnk file), |
| returns the path the shortcut points to in a simplified form. |
| When {filename} is a symbolic link or junction point, return |
| the full path to the target. If the target of junction is |
| removed, return {filename}. |
| On Unix, repeat resolving symbolic links in all path |
| components of {filename} and return the simplified result. |
| To cope with link cycles, resolving of symbolic links is |
| stopped after 100 iterations. |
| On other systems, return the simplified {filename}. |
| The simplification step is done as by |simplify()|. |
| resolve() keeps a leading path component specifying the |
| current directory (provided the result is still a relative |
| path name) and also keeps a trailing path separator. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetName()->resolve() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| reverse({object}) *reverse()* |
| Reverse the order of items in {object}. {object} can be a |
| |List|, a |Tuple|, a |Blob| or a |String|. For a List and a |
| Blob the items are reversed in-place and {object} is returned. |
| For a Tuple, a new Tuple is returned. |
| For a String a new String is returned. |
| Returns zero if {object} is not a List, Tuple, Blob or a |
| String. If you want a List or Blob to remain unmodified make |
| a copy first: > |
| :let revlist = reverse(copy(mylist)) |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mylist->reverse() |
| < |
| Return type: |String|, |Blob|, list<{type}> or tuple<{type}> |
| depending on {object} |
| |
| |
| round({expr}) *round()* |
| Round off {expr} to the nearest integral value and return it |
| as a |Float|. If {expr} lies halfway between two integral |
| values, then use the larger one (away from zero). |
| {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Returns 0.0 if {expr} is not a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Examples: > |
| echo round(0.456) |
| < 0.0 > |
| echo round(4.5) |
| < 5.0 > |
| echo round(-4.5) |
| < -5.0 |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Compute()->round() |
| < |
| Return type: |Float| |
| |
| |
| rubyeval({expr}) *rubyeval()* |
| Evaluate Ruby expression {expr} and return its result |
| converted to Vim data structures. |
| Numbers, floats and strings are returned as they are (strings |
| are copied though). |
| Arrays are represented as Vim |List| type. |
| Hashes are represented as Vim |Dictionary| type. |
| Other objects are represented as strings resulted from their |
| "Object#to_s" method. |
| Note that in a `:def` function local variables are not visible |
| to {expr}. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetRubyExpr()->rubyeval() |
| < |
| Return type: any, depending on {expr} |
| |
| {only available when compiled with the |+ruby| feature} |
| |
| screenattr({row}, {col}) *screenattr()* |
| Like |screenchar()|, but return the attribute. This is a rather |
| arbitrary number that can only be used to compare to the |
| attribute at other positions. |
| Returns -1 when row or col is out of range. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetRow()->screenattr(col) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| screenchar({row}, {col}) *screenchar()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the character at position |
| [row, col] on the screen. This works for every possible |
| screen position, also status lines, window separators and the |
| command line. The top left position is row one, column one |
| The character excludes composing characters. For double-byte |
| encodings it may only be the first byte. |
| This is mainly to be used for testing. |
| Returns -1 when row or col is out of range. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetRow()->screenchar(col) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| screenchars({row}, {col}) *screenchars()* |
| The result is a |List| of Numbers. The first number is the same |
| as what |screenchar()| returns. Further numbers are |
| composing characters on top of the base character. |
| This is mainly to be used for testing. |
| Returns an empty List when row or col is out of range. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetRow()->screenchars(col) |
| < |
| Return type: list<number> or list<any> |
| |
| |
| screencol() *screencol()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the current screen column of |
| the cursor. The leftmost column has number 1. |
| This function is mainly used for testing. |
| |
| Note: Always returns the current screen column, thus if used |
| in a command (e.g. ":echo screencol()") it will return the |
| column inside the command line, which is 1 when the command is |
| executed. To get the cursor position in the file use one of |
| the following mappings: > |
| nnoremap <expr> GG ":echom " .. screencol() .. "\n" |
| nnoremap <silent> GG :echom screencol()<CR> |
| nnoremap GG <Cmd>echom screencol()<CR> |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| screenpos({winid}, {lnum}, {col}) *screenpos()* |
| The result is a Dict with the screen position of the text |
| character in window {winid} at buffer line {lnum} and column |
| {col}. {col} is a one-based byte index. |
| The Dict has these members: |
| row screen row |
| col first screen column |
| endcol last screen column |
| curscol cursor screen column |
| If the specified position is not visible, all values are zero. |
| The "endcol" value differs from "col" when the character |
| occupies more than one screen cell. E.g. for a Tab "col" can |
| be 1 and "endcol" can be 8. |
| The "curscol" value is where the cursor would be placed. For |
| a Tab it would be the same as "endcol", while for a double |
| width character it would be the same as "col". |
| The |conceal| feature is ignored here, the column numbers are |
| as if 'conceallevel' is zero. You can set the cursor to the |
| right position and use |screencol()| to get the value with |
| |conceal| taken into account. |
| If the position is in a closed fold the screen position of the |
| first character is returned, {col} is not used. |
| Returns an empty Dict if {winid} is invalid. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetWinid()->screenpos(lnum, col) |
| < |
| Return type: dict<number> or dict<any> |
| |
| |
| screenrow() *screenrow()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the current screen row of the |
| cursor. The top line has number one. |
| This function is mainly used for testing. |
| Alternatively you can use |winline()|. |
| |
| Note: Same restrictions as with |screencol()|. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| screenstring({row}, {col}) *screenstring()* |
| The result is a String that contains the base character and |
| any composing characters at position [row, col] on the screen. |
| This is like |screenchars()| but returning a String with the |
| characters. |
| This is mainly to be used for testing. |
| Returns an empty String when row or col is out of range. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetRow()->screenstring(col) |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| *search()* |
| search({pattern} [, {flags} [, {stopline} [, {timeout} [, {skip}]]]]) |
| Search for regexp pattern {pattern}. The search starts at the |
| cursor position (you can use |cursor()| to set it). |
| |
| When a match has been found its line number is returned. |
| If there is no match a 0 is returned and the cursor doesn't |
| move. No error message is given. |
| To get the matched string, use |matchbufline()|. |
| |
| {flags} is a String, which can contain these character flags: |
| 'b' search Backward instead of forward |
| 'c' accept a match at the Cursor position |
| 'e' move to the End of the match |
| 'n' do Not move the cursor |
| 'p' return number of matching sub-Pattern (see below) |
| 's' Set the ' mark at the previous location of the cursor |
| 'w' Wrap around the end of the file |
| 'W' don't Wrap around the end of the file |
| 'z' start searching at the cursor column instead of Zero |
| If neither 'w' or 'W' is given, the 'wrapscan' option applies. |
| |
| If the 's' flag is supplied, the ' mark is set, only if the |
| cursor is moved. The 's' flag cannot be combined with the 'n' |
| flag. |
| |
| 'ignorecase', 'smartcase' and 'magic' are used. |
| |
| When the 'z' flag is not given, forward searching always |
| starts in column zero and then matches before the cursor are |
| skipped. When the 'c' flag is present in 'cpo' the next |
| search starts after the match. Without the 'c' flag the next |
| search starts one column after the start of the match. This |
| matters for overlapping matches. See |cpo-c|. You can also |
| insert "\ze" to change where the match ends, see |/\ze|. |
| |
| When searching backwards and the 'z' flag is given then the |
| search starts in column zero, thus no match in the current |
| line will be found (unless wrapping around the end of the |
| file). |
| |
| When the {stopline} argument is given then the search stops |
| after searching this line. This is useful to restrict the |
| search to a range of lines. Examples: > |
| let match = search('(', 'b', line("w0")) |
| let end = search('END', '', line("w$")) |
| < When {stopline} is used and it is not zero this also implies |
| that the search does not wrap around the end of the file. |
| A zero value is equal to not giving the argument. |
| *E1285* *E1286* *E1287* *E1288* *E1289* |
| When the {timeout} argument is given the search stops when |
| more than this many milliseconds have passed. Thus when |
| {timeout} is 500 the search stops after half a second. |
| The value must not be negative. A zero value is like not |
| giving the argument. |
| |
| Note: the timeout is only considered when searching, not |
| while evaluating the {skip} expression. |
| {only available when compiled with the |+reltime| feature} |
| |
| If the {skip} expression is given it is evaluated with the |
| cursor positioned on the start of a match. If it evaluates to |
| non-zero this match is skipped. This can be used, for |
| example, to skip a match in a comment or a string. |
| {skip} can be a string, which is evaluated as an expression, a |
| function reference or a lambda. |
| When {skip} is omitted or empty, every match is accepted. |
| When evaluating {skip} causes an error the search is aborted |
| and -1 returned. |
| *search()-sub-match* |
| With the 'p' flag the returned value is one more than the |
| first sub-match in \(\). One if none of them matched but the |
| whole pattern did match. |
| To get the column number too use |searchpos()|. |
| |
| The cursor will be positioned at the match, unless the 'n' |
| flag is used. |
| |
| Example (goes over all files in the argument list): > |
| :let n = 1 |
| :while n <= argc() " loop over all files in arglist |
| : exe "argument " .. n |
| : " start at the last char in the file and wrap for the |
| : " first search to find match at start of file |
| : normal G$ |
| : let flags = "w" |
| : while search("foo", flags) > 0 |
| : s/foo/bar/g |
| : let flags = "W" |
| : endwhile |
| : update " write the file if modified |
| : let n = n + 1 |
| :endwhile |
| < |
| Example for using some flags: > |
| :echo search('\<if\|\(else\)\|\(endif\)', 'ncpe') |
| < This will search for the keywords "if", "else", and "endif" |
| under or after the cursor. Because of the 'p' flag, it |
| returns 1, 2, or 3 depending on which keyword is found, or 0 |
| if the search fails. With the cursor on the first word of the |
| line: |
| if (foo == 0) | let foo = foo + 1 | endif ~ |
| the function returns 1. Without the 'c' flag, the function |
| finds the "endif" and returns 3. The same thing happens |
| without the 'e' flag if the cursor is on the "f" of "if". |
| The 'n' flag tells the function not to move the cursor. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetPattern()->search() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| searchcount([{options}]) *searchcount()* |
| Get or update the last search count, like what is displayed |
| without the "S" flag in 'shortmess'. This works even if |
| 'shortmess' does contain the "S" flag. |
| |
| This returns a |Dictionary|. The dictionary is empty if the |
| previous pattern was not set and "pattern" was not specified. |
| |
| key type meaning ~ |
| current |Number| current position of match; |
| 0 if the cursor position is |
| before the first match |
| exact_match |Boolean| 1 if "current" is matched on |
| "pos", otherwise 0 |
| total |Number| total count of matches found |
| incomplete |Number| 0: search was fully completed |
| 1: recomputing was timed out |
| 2: max count exceeded |
| |
| For {options} see further down. |
| |
| To get the last search count when |n| or |N| was pressed, call |
| this function with `recompute: 0` . This sometimes returns |
| wrong information because |n| and |N|'s maximum count is 99. |
| If it exceeded 99 the result must be max count + 1 (100). If |
| you want to get correct information, specify `recompute: 1`: > |
| |
| " result == maxcount + 1 (100) when many matches |
| let result = searchcount(#{recompute: 0}) |
| |
| " Below returns correct result (recompute defaults |
| " to 1) |
| let result = searchcount() |
| < |
| The function is useful to add the count to 'statusline': > |
| function! LastSearchCount() abort |
| let result = searchcount(#{recompute: 0}) |
| if empty(result) |
| return '' |
| endif |
| if result.incomplete ==# 1 " timed out |
| return printf(' /%s [?/??]', @/) |
| elseif result.incomplete ==# 2 " max count exceeded |
| if result.total > result.maxcount && |
| \ result.current > result.maxcount |
| return printf(' /%s [>%d/>%d]', @/, |
| \ result.current, result.total) |
| elseif result.total > result.maxcount |
| return printf(' /%s [%d/>%d]', @/, |
| \ result.current, result.total) |
| endif |
| endif |
| return printf(' /%s [%d/%d]', @/, |
| \ result.current, result.total) |
| endfunction |
| let &statusline ..= '%{LastSearchCount()}' |
| |
| " Or if you want to show the count only when |
| " 'hlsearch' was on |
| " let &statusline ..= |
| " \ '%{v:hlsearch ? LastSearchCount() : ""}' |
| < |
| You can also update the search count, which can be useful in a |
| |CursorMoved| or |CursorMovedI| autocommand: > |
| |
| autocmd CursorMoved,CursorMovedI * |
| \ let s:searchcount_timer = timer_start( |
| \ 200, function('s:update_searchcount')) |
| function! s:update_searchcount(timer) abort |
| if a:timer ==# s:searchcount_timer |
| call searchcount(#{ |
| \ recompute: 1, maxcount: 0, timeout: 100}) |
| redrawstatus |
| endif |
| endfunction |
| < |
| This can also be used to count matched texts with specified |
| pattern in the current buffer using "pattern": > |
| |
| " Count '\<foo\>' in this buffer |
| " (Note that it also updates search count) |
| let result = searchcount(#{pattern: '\<foo\>'}) |
| |
| " To restore old search count by old pattern, |
| " search again |
| call searchcount() |
| < |
| {options} must be a |Dictionary|. It can contain: |
| key type meaning ~ |
| recompute |Boolean| if |TRUE|, recompute the count |
| like |n| or |N| was executed. |
| otherwise returns the last |
| computed result (when |n| or |
| |N| was used when "S" is not |
| in 'shortmess', or this |
| function was called). |
| (default: |TRUE|) |
| pattern |String| recompute if this was given |
| and different with |@/|. |
| this works as same as the |
| below command is executed |
| before calling this function > |
| let @/ = pattern |
| < (default: |@/|) |
| timeout |Number| 0 or negative number is no |
| timeout. timeout milliseconds |
| for recomputing the result |
| (default: 0) |
| maxcount |Number| 0 or negative number is no |
| limit. max count of matched |
| text while recomputing the |
| result. if search exceeded |
| total count, "total" value |
| becomes `maxcount + 1` |
| (default: 99) |
| pos |List| `[lnum, col, off]` value |
| when recomputing the result. |
| this changes "current" result |
| value. see |cursor()|, |
| |getpos()| |
| (default: cursor's position) |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetSearchOpts()->searchcount() |
| < |
| Return type: dict<number> |
| |
| |
| searchdecl({name} [, {global} [, {thisblock}]]) *searchdecl()* |
| Search for the declaration of {name}. |
| |
| With a non-zero {global} argument it works like |gD|, find |
| first match in the file. Otherwise it works like |gd|, find |
| first match in the function. |
| |
| With a non-zero {thisblock} argument matches in a {} block |
| that ends before the cursor position are ignored. Avoids |
| finding variable declarations only valid in another scope. |
| |
| Moves the cursor to the found match. |
| Returns zero for success, non-zero for failure. |
| Example: > |
| if searchdecl('myvar') == 0 |
| echo getline('.') |
| endif |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetName()->searchdecl() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| *searchpair()* |
| searchpair({start}, {middle}, {end} [, {flags} [, {skip} |
| [, {stopline} [, {timeout}]]]]) |
| Search for the match of a nested start-end pair. This can be |
| used to find the "endif" that matches an "if", while other |
| if/endif pairs in between are ignored. |
| The search starts at the cursor. The default is to search |
| forward, include 'b' in {flags} to search backward. |
| If a match is found, the cursor is positioned at it and the |
| line number is returned. If no match is found 0 or -1 is |
| returned and the cursor doesn't move. No error message is |
| given. |
| |
| {start}, {middle} and {end} are patterns, see |pattern|. They |
| must not contain \( \) pairs. Use of \%( \) is allowed. When |
| {middle} is not empty, it is found when searching from either |
| direction, but only when not in a nested start-end pair. A |
| typical use is: > |
| searchpair('\<if\>', '\<else\>', '\<endif\>') |
| < By leaving {middle} empty the "else" is skipped. |
| |
| {flags} 'b', 'c', 'n', 's', 'w' and 'W' are used like with |
| |search()|. Additionally: |
| 'r' Repeat until no more matches found; will find the |
| outer pair. Implies the 'W' flag. |
| 'm' Return number of matches instead of line number with |
| the match; will be > 1 when 'r' is used. |
| Note: it's nearly always a good idea to use the 'W' flag, to |
| avoid wrapping around the end of the file. |
| |
| When a match for {start}, {middle} or {end} is found, the |
| {skip} expression is evaluated with the cursor positioned on |
| the start of the match. It should return non-zero if this |
| match is to be skipped. E.g., because it is inside a comment |
| or a string. |
| When {skip} is omitted or empty, every match is accepted. |
| When evaluating {skip} causes an error the search is aborted |
| and -1 returned. |
| {skip} can be a string, a lambda, a funcref or a partial. |
| Anything else makes the function fail. |
| In a `:def` function when the {skip} argument is a string |
| constant it is compiled into instructions. |
| |
| For {stopline} and {timeout} see |search()|. |
| |
| The value of 'ignorecase' is used. 'magic' is ignored, the |
| patterns are used like it's on. |
| |
| The search starts exactly at the cursor. A match with |
| {start}, {middle} or {end} at the next character, in the |
| direction of searching, is the first one found. Example: > |
| if 1 |
| if 2 |
| endif 2 |
| endif 1 |
| < When starting at the "if 2", with the cursor on the "i", and |
| searching forwards, the "endif 2" is found. When starting on |
| the character just before the "if 2", the "endif 1" will be |
| found. That's because the "if 2" will be found first, and |
| then this is considered to be a nested if/endif from "if 2" to |
| "endif 2". |
| When searching backwards and {end} is more than one character, |
| it may be useful to put "\zs" at the end of the pattern, so |
| that when the cursor is inside a match with the end it finds |
| the matching start. |
| |
| Example, to find the "endif" command in a Vim script: > |
| |
| :echo searchpair('\<if\>', '\<el\%[seif]\>', '\<en\%[dif]\>', 'W', |
| \ 'getline(".") =~ "^\\s*\""') |
| |
| < The cursor must be at or after the "if" for which a match is |
| to be found. Note that single-quote strings are used to avoid |
| having to double the backslashes. The skip expression only |
| catches comments at the start of a line, not after a command. |
| Also, a word "en" or "if" halfway a line is considered a |
| match. |
| Another example, to search for the matching "{" of a "}": > |
| |
| :echo searchpair('{', '', '}', 'bW') |
| |
| < This works when the cursor is at or before the "}" for which a |
| match is to be found. To reject matches that syntax |
| highlighting recognized as strings: > |
| |
| :echo searchpair('{', '', '}', 'bW', |
| \ 'synIDattr(synID(line("."), col("."), 0), "name") =~? "string"') |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| *searchpairpos()* |
| searchpairpos({start}, {middle}, {end} [, {flags} [, {skip} |
| [, {stopline} [, {timeout}]]]]) |
| Same as |searchpair()|, but returns a |List| with the line and |
| column position of the match. The first element of the |List| |
| is the line number and the second element is the byte index of |
| the column position of the match. If no match is found, |
| returns [0, 0]. > |
| |
| :let [lnum,col] = searchpairpos('{', '', '}', 'n') |
| < |
| See |match-parens| for a bigger and more useful example. |
| |
| Return type: list<number> |
| |
| *searchpos()* |
| searchpos({pattern} [, {flags} [, {stopline} [, {timeout} [, {skip}]]]]) |
| Same as |search()|, but returns a |List| with the line and |
| column position of the match. The first element of the |List| |
| is the line number and the second element is the byte index of |
| the column position of the match. If no match is found, |
| returns [0, 0]. |
| Example: > |
| :let [lnum, col] = searchpos('mypattern', 'n') |
| |
| < When the 'p' flag is given then there is an extra item with |
| the sub-pattern match number |search()-sub-match|. Example: > |
| :let [lnum, col, submatch] = searchpos('\(\l\)\|\(\u\)', 'np') |
| < In this example "submatch" is 2 when a lowercase letter is |
| found |/\l|, 3 when an uppercase letter is found |/\u|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetPattern()->searchpos() |
| < |
| Return type: list<number> |
| |
| |
| server2client({clientid}, {string}) *server2client()* |
| Send a reply string to {clientid}. The most recent {clientid} |
| that sent a string can be retrieved with expand("<client>"). |
| {only available when compiled with the |+clientserver| feature} |
| Returns zero for success, -1 for failure. |
| Note: |
| This id has to be stored before the next command can be |
| received. I.e. before returning from the received command and |
| before calling any commands that waits for input. |
| See also |clientserver|. |
| Example: > |
| :echo server2client(expand("<client>"), "HELLO") |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetClientId()->server2client(string) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| serverlist() *serverlist()* |
| Return a list of available server names, one per line. |
| When there are no servers or the information is not available |
| an empty string is returned. See also |clientserver|. |
| {only available when compiled with the |+clientserver| feature} |
| Example: > |
| :echo serverlist() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| setbufline({buf}, {lnum}, {text}) *setbufline()* |
| Set line {lnum} to {text} in buffer {buf}. This works like |
| |setline()| for the specified buffer. |
| |
| This function works only for loaded buffers. First call |
| |bufload()| if needed. |
| |
| To insert lines use |appendbufline()|. |
| Any text properties in {lnum} are cleared. |
| |
| {text} can be a string to set one line, or a List of strings |
| to set multiple lines. If the List extends below the last |
| line then those lines are added. If the List is empty then |
| nothing is changed and zero is returned. |
| |
| For the use of {buf}, see |bufname()| above. |
| |
| {lnum} is used like with |setline()|. |
| Use "$" to refer to the last line in buffer {buf}. |
| When {lnum} is just below the last line the {text} will be |
| added below the last line. |
| |
| When {buf} is not a valid buffer, the buffer is not loaded or |
| {lnum} is not valid then 1 is returned. In |Vim9| script an |
| error is given. |
| On success 0 is returned. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|, the base is passed as the |
| third argument: > |
| GetText()->setbufline(buf, lnum) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| setbufvar({buf}, {varname}, {val}) *setbufvar()* |
| Set option or local variable {varname} in buffer {buf} to |
| {val}. |
| This also works for a global or local window option, but it |
| doesn't work for a global or local window variable. |
| For a local window option the global value is unchanged. |
| For the use of {buf}, see |bufname()| above. |
| The {varname} argument is a string. |
| Note that the variable name without "b:" must be used. |
| Examples: > |
| :call setbufvar(1, "&mod", 1) |
| :call setbufvar("todo", "myvar", "foobar") |
| < This function is not available in the |sandbox|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|, the base is passed as the |
| third argument: > |
| GetValue()->setbufvar(buf, varname) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| setcellwidths({list}) *setcellwidths()* |
| Specify overrides for cell widths of character ranges. This |
| tells Vim how wide characters are when displayed in the |
| terminal, counted in screen cells. The values override |
| 'ambiwidth'. Example: > |
| call setcellwidths([ |
| \ [0x111, 0x111, 1], |
| \ [0x2194, 0x2199, 2], |
| \ ]) |
| |
| < The {list} argument is a List of Lists with each three |
| numbers: [{low}, {high}, {width}]. *E1109* *E1110* |
| {low} and {high} can be the same, in which case this refers to |
| one character. Otherwise it is the range of characters from |
| {low} to {high} (inclusive). *E1111* *E1114* |
| Only characters with value 0x80 and higher can be used. |
| |
| {width} must be either 1 or 2, indicating the character width |
| in screen cells. *E1112* |
| An error is given if the argument is invalid, also when a |
| range overlaps with another. *E1113* |
| |
| If the new value causes 'fillchars' or 'listchars' to become |
| invalid it is rejected and an error is given. |
| |
| To clear the overrides pass an empty {list}: > |
| setcellwidths([]); |
| |
| < You can use the script $VIMRUNTIME/tools/emoji_list.vim to see |
| the effect for known emoji characters. Move the cursor |
| through the text to check if the cell widths of your terminal |
| match with what Vim knows about each emoji. If it doesn't |
| look right you need to adjust the {list} argument. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| setcharpos({expr}, {list}) *setcharpos()* |
| Same as |setpos()| but uses the specified column number as the |
| character index instead of the byte index in the line. |
| |
| Example: |
| With the text "여보세요" in line 8: > |
| call setcharpos('.', [0, 8, 4, 0]) |
| < positions the cursor on the fourth character '요'. > |
| call setpos('.', [0, 8, 4, 0]) |
| < positions the cursor on the second character '보'. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetPosition()->setcharpos('.') |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| setcharsearch({dict}) *setcharsearch()* |
| Set the current character search information to {dict}, |
| which contains one or more of the following entries: |
| |
| char character which will be used for a subsequent |
| |,| or |;| command; an empty string clears the |
| character search |
| forward direction of character search; 1 for forward, |
| 0 for backward |
| until type of character search; 1 for a |t| or |T| |
| character search, 0 for an |f| or |F| |
| character search |
| |
| This can be useful to save/restore a user's character search |
| from a script: > |
| :let prevsearch = getcharsearch() |
| :" Perform a command which clobbers user's search |
| :call setcharsearch(prevsearch) |
| < Also see |getcharsearch()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| SavedSearch()->setcharsearch() |
| < |
| Return type: dict<any> |
| |
| |
| setcmdline({str} [, {pos}]) *setcmdline()* |
| Set the command line to {str} and set the cursor position to |
| {pos}. |
| If {pos} is omitted, the cursor is positioned after the text. |
| Returns 0 when successful, 1 when not editing the command |
| line. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetText()->setcmdline() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| setcmdpos({pos}) *setcmdpos()* |
| Set the cursor position in the command line to byte position |
| {pos}. The first position is 1. |
| Use |getcmdpos()| to obtain the current position. |
| Only works while editing the command line, thus you must use |
| |c_CTRL-\_e|, |c_CTRL-R_=| or |c_CTRL-R_CTRL-R| with '='. For |
| |c_CTRL-\_e| and |c_CTRL-R_CTRL-R| with '=' the position is |
| set after the command line is set to the expression. For |
| |c_CTRL-R_=| it is set after evaluating the expression but |
| before inserting the resulting text. |
| When the number is too big the cursor is put at the end of the |
| line. A number smaller than one has undefined results. |
| Returns 0 when successful, 1 when not editing the command |
| line. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetPos()->setcmdpos() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| setcursorcharpos({lnum}, {col} [, {off}]) *setcursorcharpos()* |
| setcursorcharpos({list}) |
| Same as |cursor()| but uses the specified column number as the |
| character index instead of the byte index in the line. |
| |
| Example: |
| With the text "여보세요" in line 4: > |
| call setcursorcharpos(4, 3) |
| < positions the cursor on the third character '세'. > |
| call cursor(4, 3) |
| < positions the cursor on the first character '여'. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetCursorPos()->setcursorcharpos() |
| < |
| Returns 0 when the position could be set, -1 otherwise. |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| setenv({name}, {val}) *setenv()* |
| Set environment variable {name} to {val}. Example: > |
| call setenv('HOME', '/home/myhome') |
| |
| < When {val} is |v:null| the environment variable is deleted. |
| See also |expr-env|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|, the base is passed as the |
| second argument: > |
| GetPath()->setenv('PATH') |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| setfperm({fname}, {mode}) *setfperm()* *chmod* |
| Set the file permissions for {fname} to {mode}. |
| {mode} must be a string with 9 characters. It is of the form |
| "rwxrwxrwx", where each group of "rwx" flags represent, in |
| turn, the permissions of the owner of the file, the group the |
| file belongs to, and other users. A '-' character means the |
| permission is off, any other character means on. Multi-byte |
| characters are not supported. |
| |
| For example "rw-r-----" means read-write for the user, |
| readable by the group, not accessible by others. "xx-x-----" |
| would do the same thing. |
| |
| Returns non-zero for success, zero for failure. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetFilename()->setfperm(mode) |
| < |
| To read permissions see |getfperm()|. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| setline({lnum}, {text}) *setline()* |
| Set line {lnum} of the current buffer to {text}. To insert |
| lines use |append()|. To set lines in another buffer use |
| |setbufline()|. |
| Any text properties in {lnum} are cleared. See |
| |text-prop-cleared| |
| |
| {lnum} is used like with |getline()|. |
| When {lnum} is just below the last line the {text} will be |
| added below the last line. |
| {text} can be any type or a List of any type, each item is |
| converted to a String. When {text} is an empty List then |
| nothing is changed and FALSE is returned. |
| |
| If this succeeds, FALSE is returned. If this fails (most likely |
| because {lnum} is invalid) TRUE is returned. |
| In |Vim9| script an error is given if {lnum} is invalid. |
| |
| Example: > |
| :call setline(5, strftime("%c")) |
| |
| < When {text} is a |List| then line {lnum} and following lines |
| will be set to the items in the list. Example: > |
| :call setline(5, ['aaa', 'bbb', 'ccc']) |
| < This is equivalent to: > |
| :for [n, l] in [[5, 'aaa'], [6, 'bbb'], [7, 'ccc']] |
| : call setline(n, l) |
| :endfor |
| |
| < Note: The '[ and '] marks are not set. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|, the base is passed as the |
| second argument: > |
| GetText()->setline(lnum) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| setloclist({nr}, {list} [, {action} [, {what}]]) *setloclist()* |
| Create or replace or add to the location list for window {nr}. |
| {nr} can be the window number or the |window-ID|. |
| When {nr} is zero the current window is used. |
| |
| For a location list window, the displayed location list is |
| modified. For an invalid window number {nr}, -1 is returned. |
| Otherwise, same as |setqflist()|. |
| Also see |location-list|. |
| |
| For {action} see |setqflist-action|. |
| |
| If the optional {what} dictionary argument is supplied, then |
| only the items listed in {what} are set. Refer to |setqflist()| |
| for the list of supported keys in {what}. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|, the base is passed as the |
| second argument: > |
| GetLoclist()->setloclist(winnr) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| setmatches({list} [, {win}]) *setmatches()* |
| Restores a list of matches saved by |getmatches()| for the |
| current window. Returns 0 if successful, otherwise -1. All |
| current matches are cleared before the list is restored. See |
| example for |getmatches()|. |
| If {win} is specified, use the window with this number or |
| window ID instead of the current window. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetMatches()->setmatches() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| setpos({expr}, {list}) *setpos()* |
| Set the position for String {expr}. Possible values: |
| . the cursor |
| 'x mark x |
| |
| {list} must be a |List| with four or five numbers: |
| [bufnum, lnum, col, off] |
| [bufnum, lnum, col, off, curswant] |
| |
| "bufnum" is the buffer number. Zero can be used for the |
| current buffer. When setting an uppercase mark "bufnum" is |
| used for the mark position. For other marks it specifies the |
| buffer to set the mark in. You can use the |bufnr()| function |
| to turn a file name into a buffer number. |
| For setting the cursor and the ' mark "bufnum" is ignored, |
| since these are associated with a window, not a buffer. |
| Does not change the jumplist. |
| |
| "lnum" and "col" are the position in the buffer. The first |
| column is 1. Use a zero "lnum" to delete a mark. If "col" is |
| smaller than 1 then 1 is used. To use the character count |
| instead of the byte count, use |setcharpos()|. |
| |
| The "off" number is only used when 'virtualedit' is set. Then |
| it is the offset in screen columns from the start of the |
| character. E.g., a position within a <Tab> or after the last |
| character. |
| |
| The "curswant" number is only used when setting the cursor |
| position. It sets the preferred column for when moving the |
| cursor vertically. When the "curswant" number is missing the |
| preferred column is not set. When it is present and setting a |
| mark position it is not used. |
| |
| Note that for '< and '> changing the line number may result in |
| the marks to be effectively be swapped, so that '< is always |
| before '>. |
| |
| Returns 0 when the position could be set, -1 otherwise. |
| An error message is given if {expr} is invalid. |
| |
| Also see |setcharpos()|, |getpos()| and |getcurpos()|. |
| |
| This does not restore the preferred column for moving |
| vertically; if you set the cursor position with this, |j| and |
| |k| motions will jump to previous columns! Use |cursor()| to |
| also set the preferred column. Also see the "curswant" key in |
| |winrestview()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetPosition()->setpos('.') |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| setqflist({list} [, {action} [, {what}]]) *setqflist()* |
| Create or replace or add to the quickfix list. |
| |
| If the optional {what} dictionary argument is supplied, then |
| only the items listed in {what} are set. The first {list} |
| argument is ignored. See below for the supported items in |
| {what}. |
| *setqflist-what* |
| When {what} is not present, the items in {list} are used. Each |
| item must be a dictionary. Non-dictionary items in {list} are |
| ignored. Each dictionary item can contain the following |
| entries: |
| |
| bufnr buffer number; must be the number of a valid |
| buffer |
| filename name of a file; only used when "bufnr" is not |
| present or it is invalid. |
| module name of a module; if given it will be used in |
| quickfix error window instead of the filename. |
| lnum line number in the file |
| end_lnum end of lines, if the item spans multiple lines |
| pattern search pattern used to locate the error |
| col column number |
| vcol when non-zero: "col" is visual column |
| when zero: "col" is byte index |
| end_col end column, if the item spans multiple columns |
| nr error number |
| text description of the error |
| type single-character error type, 'E', 'W', etc. |
| valid recognized error message |
| user_data custom data associated with the item, can be |
| any type. |
| |
| The "col", "vcol", "nr", "type" and "text" entries are |
| optional. Either "lnum" or "pattern" entry can be used to |
| locate a matching error line. |
| If the "filename" and "bufnr" entries are not present or |
| neither the "lnum" or "pattern" entries are present, then the |
| item will not be handled as an error line. |
| If both "pattern" and "lnum" are present then "pattern" will |
| be used. |
| If the "valid" entry is not supplied, then the valid flag is |
| set when "bufnr" is a valid buffer or "filename" exists. |
| If you supply an empty {list}, the quickfix list will be |
| cleared. |
| Note that the list is not exactly the same as what |
| |getqflist()| returns. |
| |
| {action} values: *setqflist-action* *E927* |
| 'a' The items from {list} are added to the existing |
| quickfix list. If there is no existing list, then a |
| new list is created. |
| |
| 'r' The items from the current quickfix list are replaced |
| with the items from {list}. This can also be used to |
| clear the list: > |
| :call setqflist([], 'r') |
| < |
| 'u' Like 'r', but tries to preserve the current selection |
| in the quickfix list. |
| 'f' All the quickfix lists in the quickfix stack are |
| freed. |
| |
| If {action} is not present or is set to ' ', then a new list |
| is created. The new quickfix list is added after the current |
| quickfix list in the stack and all the following lists are |
| freed. To add a new quickfix list at the end of the stack, |
| set "nr" in {what} to "$". |
| |
| The following items can be specified in dictionary {what}: |
| context quickfix list context. See |quickfix-context| |
| efm errorformat to use when parsing text from |
| "lines". If this is not present, then the |
| 'errorformat' option value is used. |
| See |quickfix-parse| |
| id quickfix list identifier |quickfix-ID| |
| idx index of the current entry in the quickfix |
| list specified by 'id' or 'nr'. If set to '$', |
| then the last entry in the list is set as the |
| current entry. See |quickfix-index| |
| items list of quickfix entries. Same as the {list} |
| argument. |
| lines use 'errorformat' to parse a list of lines and |
| add the resulting entries to the quickfix list |
| {nr} or {id}. Only a |List| value is supported. |
| See |quickfix-parse| |
| nr list number in the quickfix stack; zero |
| means the current quickfix list and "$" means |
| the last quickfix list. |
| quickfixtextfunc |
| function to get the text to display in the |
| quickfix window. The value can be the name of |
| a function or a funcref or a lambda. Refer to |
| |quickfix-window-function| for an explanation |
| of how to write the function and an example. |
| title quickfix list title text. See |quickfix-title| |
| Unsupported keys in {what} are ignored. |
| If the "nr" item is not present, then the current quickfix list |
| is modified. When creating a new quickfix list, "nr" can be |
| set to a value one greater than the quickfix stack size. |
| When modifying a quickfix list, to guarantee that the correct |
| list is modified, "id" should be used instead of "nr" to |
| specify the list. |
| |
| Examples (See also |setqflist-examples|): > |
| :call setqflist([], 'r', {'title': 'My search'}) |
| :call setqflist([], 'r', {'nr': 2, 'title': 'Errors'}) |
| :call setqflist([], 'a', {'id':qfid, 'lines':["F1:10:L10"]}) |
| < |
| Returns zero for success, -1 for failure. |
| |
| This function can be used to create a quickfix list |
| independent of the 'errorformat' setting. Use a command like |
| `:cc 1` to jump to the first position. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|, the base is passed as the |
| second argument: > |
| GetErrorlist()->setqflist() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| setreg({regname}, {value} [, {options}]) *setreg()* |
| Set the register {regname} to {value}. |
| If {regname} is "" or "@", the unnamed register '"' is used. |
| The {regname} argument is a string. In |Vim9-script| |
| {regname} must be one character. |
| |
| {value} may be any value returned by |getreg()| or |
| |getreginfo()|, including a |List| or |Dict|. |
| If {options} contains "a" or {regname} is upper case, |
| then the value is appended. |
| |
| {options} can also contain a register type specification: |
| "c" or "v" |characterwise| mode |
| "l" or "V" |linewise| mode |
| "b" or "<CTRL-V>" |blockwise-visual| mode |
| If a number immediately follows "b" or "<CTRL-V>" then this is |
| used as the width of the selection - if it is not specified |
| then the width of the block is set to the number of characters |
| in the longest line (counting a <Tab> as 1 character). |
| |
| If {options} contains no register settings, then the default |
| is to use character mode unless {value} ends in a <NL> for |
| string {value} and linewise mode for list {value}. Blockwise |
| mode is never selected automatically. |
| Returns zero for success, non-zero for failure. |
| |
| *E883* |
| Note: you may not use |List| containing more than one item to |
| set search and expression registers. Lists containing no |
| items act like empty strings. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| :call setreg(v:register, @*) |
| :call setreg('*', @%, 'ac') |
| :call setreg('a', "1\n2\n3", 'b5') |
| :call setreg('"', { 'points_to': 'a'}) |
| |
| < This example shows using the functions to save and restore a |
| register: > |
| :let var_a = getreginfo() |
| :call setreg('a', var_a) |
| < or: > |
| :let var_a = getreg('a', 1, 1) |
| :let var_amode = getregtype('a') |
| .... |
| :call setreg('a', var_a, var_amode) |
| < Note: you may not reliably restore register value |
| without using the third argument to |getreg()| as without it |
| newlines are represented as newlines AND Nul bytes are |
| represented as newlines as well, see |NL-used-for-Nul|. |
| |
| You can also change the type of a register by appending |
| nothing: > |
| :call setreg('a', '', 'al') |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|, the base is passed as the |
| second argument: > |
| GetText()->setreg('a') |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| settabvar({tabnr}, {varname}, {val}) *settabvar()* |
| Set tab-local variable {varname} to {val} in tab page {tabnr}. |
| |t:var| |
| The {varname} argument is a string. |
| Note that autocommands are blocked, side effects may not be |
| triggered, e.g. when setting 'filetype'. |
| Note that the variable name without "t:" must be used. |
| Tabs are numbered starting with one. |
| This function is not available in the |sandbox|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|, the base is passed as the |
| third argument: > |
| GetValue()->settabvar(tab, name) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| settabwinvar({tabnr}, {winnr}, {varname}, {val}) *settabwinvar()* |
| Set option or local variable {varname} in window {winnr} to |
| {val}. |
| Tabs are numbered starting with one. For the current tabpage |
| use |setwinvar()|. |
| {winnr} can be the window number or the |window-ID|. |
| When {winnr} is zero the current window is used. |
| Note that autocommands are blocked, side effects may not be |
| triggered, e.g. when setting 'filetype' or 'syntax'. |
| This also works for a global or local buffer option, but it |
| doesn't work for a global or local buffer variable. |
| For a local buffer option the global value is unchanged. |
| Note that the variable name without "w:" must be used. |
| Examples: > |
| :call settabwinvar(1, 1, "&list", 0) |
| :call settabwinvar(3, 2, "myvar", "foobar") |
| < This function is not available in the |sandbox|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|, the base is passed as the |
| fourth argument: > |
| GetValue()->settabwinvar(tab, winnr, name) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| settagstack({nr}, {dict} [, {action}]) *settagstack()* |
| Modify the tag stack of the window {nr} using {dict}. |
| {nr} can be the window number or the |window-ID|. |
| |
| For a list of supported items in {dict}, refer to |
| |gettagstack()|. "curidx" takes effect before changing the tag |
| stack. |
| *E962* |
| How the tag stack is modified depends on the {action} |
| argument: |
| - If {action} is not present or is set to 'r', then the tag |
| stack is replaced. |
| - If {action} is set to 'a', then new entries from {dict} are |
| pushed (added) onto the tag stack. |
| - If {action} is set to 't', then all the entries from the |
| current entry in the tag stack or "curidx" in {dict} are |
| removed and then new entries are pushed to the stack. |
| |
| The current index is set to one after the length of the tag |
| stack after the modification. |
| |
| Returns zero for success, -1 for failure. |
| |
| Examples (for more examples see |tagstack-examples|): |
| Empty the tag stack of window 3: > |
| call settagstack(3, {'items' : []}) |
| |
| < Save and restore the tag stack: > |
| let stack = gettagstack(1003) |
| " do something else |
| call settagstack(1003, stack) |
| unlet stack |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|, the base is passed as the |
| second argument: > |
| GetStack()->settagstack(winnr) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| setwinvar({winnr}, {varname}, {val}) *setwinvar()* |
| Like |settabwinvar()| for the current tab page. |
| Examples: > |
| :call setwinvar(1, "&list", 0) |
| :call setwinvar(2, "myvar", "foobar") |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|, the base is passed as the |
| third argument: > |
| GetValue()->setwinvar(winnr, name) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| sha256({string}) *sha256()* |
| Returns a String with 64 hex characters, which is the SHA256 |
| checksum of {string}. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetText()->sha256() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| {only available when compiled with the |+cryptv| feature} |
| |
| shellescape({string} [, {special}]) *shellescape()* |
| Escape {string} for use as a shell command argument. |
| When the 'shell' contains powershell (MS-Windows) or pwsh |
| (MS-Windows, Linux, and macOS) then it will enclose {string} |
| in single quotes and will double up all internal single |
| quotes. |
| On MS-Windows, when 'shellslash' is not set, it will enclose |
| {string} in double quotes and double all double quotes within |
| {string}. |
| Otherwise it will enclose {string} in single quotes and |
| replace all "'" with "'\''". |
| |
| The {special} argument adds additional escaping of keywords |
| used in Vim commands. When it is not omitted and a non-zero |
| number or a non-empty String (|non-zero-arg|), then special |
| items such as "!", "%", "#" and "<cword>" (as listed in |
| |expand()|) will be preceded by a backslash. |
| This backslash will be removed again by the |:!| command. |
| |
| The "!" character will be escaped (again with a |non-zero-arg| |
| {special}) when 'shell' contains "csh" in the tail. That is |
| because for csh and tcsh "!" is used for history replacement |
| even when inside single quotes. |
| |
| With a |non-zero-arg| {special} the <NL> character is also |
| escaped. When 'shell' containing "csh" in the tail it's |
| escaped a second time. |
| |
| The "\" character will be escaped when 'shell' contains "fish" |
| in the tail. That is because for fish "\" is used as an escape |
| character inside single quotes. |
| |
| Example of use with a |:!| command: > |
| :exe '!dir ' .. shellescape(expand('<cfile>'), 1) |
| < This results in a directory listing for the file under the |
| cursor. Example of use with |system()|: > |
| :call system("chmod +w -- " .. shellescape(expand("%"))) |
| < See also |::S|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetCommand()->shellescape() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| shiftwidth([{col}]) *shiftwidth()* |
| Returns the effective value of 'shiftwidth'. This is the |
| 'shiftwidth' value unless it is zero, in which case it is the |
| 'tabstop' value. This function was introduced with patch |
| 7.3.694 in 2012, everybody should have it by now (however it |
| did not allow for the optional {col} argument until 8.1.542). |
| |
| When there is one argument {col} this is used as column number |
| for which to return the 'shiftwidth' value. This matters for the |
| 'vartabstop' feature. If the 'vartabstop' setting is enabled and |
| no {col} argument is given, column 1 will be assumed. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetColumn()->shiftwidth() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| sign_ functions are documented here: |sign-functions-details| |
| |
| |
| simplify({filename}) *simplify()* |
| Simplify the file name as much as possible without changing |
| the meaning. Shortcuts (on MS-Windows) or symbolic links (on |
| Unix) are not resolved. If the first path component in |
| {filename} designates the current directory, this will be |
| valid for the result as well. A trailing path separator is |
| not removed either. On Unix "//path" is unchanged, but |
| "///path" is simplified to "/path" (this follows the Posix |
| standard). |
| Example: > |
| simplify("./dir/.././/file/") == "./file/" |
| < Note: The combination "dir/.." is only removed if "dir" is |
| a searchable directory or does not exist. On Unix, it is also |
| removed when "dir" is a symbolic link within the same |
| directory. In order to resolve all the involved symbolic |
| links before simplifying the path name, use |resolve()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetName()->simplify() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| sin({expr}) *sin()* |
| Return the sine of {expr}, measured in radians, as a |Float|. |
| {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Returns 0.0 if {expr} is not a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Examples: > |
| :echo sin(100) |
| < -0.506366 > |
| :echo sin(-4.01) |
| < 0.763301 |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Compute()->sin() |
| < |
| Return type: |Float| |
| |
| |
| sinh({expr}) *sinh()* |
| Return the hyperbolic sine of {expr} as a |Float| in the range |
| [-inf, inf]. |
| {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Returns 0.0 if {expr} is not a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Examples: > |
| :echo sinh(0.5) |
| < 0.521095 > |
| :echo sinh(-0.9) |
| < -1.026517 |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Compute()->sinh() |
| < |
| Return type: |Float| |
| |
| |
| slice({expr}, {start} [, {end}]) *slice()* |
| Similar to using a |slice| "expr[start : end]", but "end" is |
| used exclusive. And for a string the indexes are used as |
| character indexes instead of byte indexes, like in |
| |vim9script|. Also, composing characters are treated as a |
| part of the preceding base character. |
| When {end} is omitted the slice continues to the last item. |
| When {end} is -1 the last item is omitted. |
| Returns an empty value if {start} or {end} are invalid. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetList()->slice(offset) |
| < |
| Return type: list<{type}> or tuple<{type}> |
| |
| |
| sort({list} [, {how} [, {dict}]]) *sort()* *E702* |
| Sort the items in {list} in-place. Returns {list}. |
| |
| If you want a list to remain unmodified make a copy first: > |
| :let sortedlist = sort(copy(mylist)) |
| |
| < When {how} is omitted or is a string, then sort() uses the |
| string representation of each item to sort on. Numbers sort |
| after Strings, |Lists| after Numbers. For sorting text in the |
| current buffer use |:sort|. |
| |
| When {how} is given and it is 'i' then case is ignored. |
| In legacy script, for backwards compatibility, the value one |
| can be used to ignore case. Zero means to not ignore case. |
| |
| When {how} is given and it is 'l' then the current collation |
| locale is used for ordering. Implementation details: strcoll() |
| is used to compare strings. See |:language| check or set the |
| collation locale. |v:collate| can also be used to check the |
| current locale. Sorting using the locale typically ignores |
| case. Example: > |
| " ö is sorted similarly to o with English locale. |
| :language collate en_US.UTF8 |
| :echo sort(['n', 'o', 'O', 'ö', 'p', 'z'], 'l') |
| < ['n', 'o', 'O', 'ö', 'p', 'z'] ~ |
| > |
| " ö is sorted after z with Swedish locale. |
| :language collate sv_SE.UTF8 |
| :echo sort(['n', 'o', 'O', 'ö', 'p', 'z'], 'l') |
| < ['n', 'o', 'O', 'p', 'z', 'ö'] ~ |
| This does not work properly on Mac. |
| |
| When {how} is given and it is 'n' then all items will be |
| sorted numerical (Implementation detail: this uses the |
| strtod() function to parse numbers. Strings, Lists, Dicts and |
| Funcrefs will be considered as being 0). Note that this won't |
| sort a list of strings with numbers! |
| |
| When {how} is given and it is 'N' then all items will be |
| sorted numerical. This is like 'n' but a string containing |
| digits will be used as the number they represent. |
| |
| When {how} is given and it is 'f' then all items will be |
| sorted numerical. All values must be a Number or a Float. |
| |
| When {how} is a |Funcref| or a function name, this function |
| is called to compare items. The function is invoked with two |
| items as argument and must return zero if they are equal, 1 or |
| bigger if the first one sorts after the second one, -1 or |
| smaller if the first one sorts before the second one. |
| |
| {dict} is for functions with the "dict" attribute. It will be |
| used to set the local variable "self". |Dictionary-function| |
| |
| The sort is stable, items which compare equal (as number or as |
| string) will keep their relative position. E.g., when sorting |
| on numbers, text strings will sort next to each other, in the |
| same order as they were originally. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mylist->sort() |
| |
| < Also see |uniq()|. |
| |
| Example: > |
| func MyCompare(i1, i2) |
| return a:i1 == a:i2 ? 0 : a:i1 > a:i2 ? 1 : -1 |
| endfunc |
| eval mylist->sort("MyCompare") |
| < A shorter compare version for this specific simple case, which |
| ignores overflow: > |
| func MyCompare(i1, i2) |
| return a:i1 - a:i2 |
| endfunc |
| < For a simple expression you can use a lambda: > |
| eval mylist->sort({i1, i2 -> i1 - i2}) |
| < |
| Return type: list<{type}> |
| |
| |
| sound_clear() *sound_clear()* |
| Stop playing all sounds. |
| |
| On some Linux systems you may need the libcanberra-pulse |
| package, otherwise sound may not stop. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| {only available when compiled with the |+sound| feature} |
| |
| *sound_playevent()* |
| sound_playevent({name} [, {callback}]) |
| Play a sound identified by {name}. Which event names are |
| supported depends on the system. Often the XDG sound names |
| are used. On Ubuntu they may be found in |
| /usr/share/sounds/freedesktop/stereo. Example: > |
| call sound_playevent('bell') |
| < On MS-Windows, {name} can be SystemAsterisk, SystemDefault, |
| SystemExclamation, SystemExit, SystemHand, SystemQuestion, |
| SystemStart, SystemWelcome, etc. |
| On macOS, {name} refers to files located in |
| /System/Library/Sounds (e.g. "Tink"). It will also work for |
| custom installed sounds in folders like ~/Library/Sounds. |
| |
| When {callback} is specified it is invoked when the sound is |
| finished. The first argument is the sound ID, the second |
| argument is the status: |
| 0 sound was played to the end |
| 1 sound was interrupted |
| 2 error occurred after sound started |
| Example: > |
| func Callback(id, status) |
| echomsg "sound " .. a:id .. " finished with " .. a:status |
| endfunc |
| call sound_playevent('bell', 'Callback') |
| |
| < MS-Windows: {callback} doesn't work for this function. |
| |
| Returns the sound ID, which can be passed to `sound_stop()`. |
| Returns zero if the sound could not be played. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetSoundName()->sound_playevent() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| {only available when compiled with the |+sound| feature} |
| |
| *sound_playfile()* |
| sound_playfile({path} [, {callback}]) |
| Like `sound_playevent()` but play sound file {path}. {path} |
| must be a full path. On Ubuntu you may find files to play |
| with this command: > |
| :!find /usr/share/sounds -type f | grep -v index.theme |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetSoundPath()->sound_playfile() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| {only available when compiled with the |+sound| feature} |
| |
| |
| sound_stop({id}) *sound_stop()* |
| Stop playing sound {id}. {id} must be previously returned by |
| `sound_playevent()` or `sound_playfile()`. |
| |
| On some Linux systems you may need the libcanberra-pulse |
| package, otherwise sound may not stop. |
| |
| On MS-Windows, this does not work for event sound started by |
| `sound_playevent()`. To stop event sounds, use `sound_clear()`. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| soundid->sound_stop() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| {only available when compiled with the |+sound| feature} |
| |
| *soundfold()* |
| soundfold({word}) |
| Return the sound-folded equivalent of {word}. Uses the first |
| language in 'spelllang' for the current window that supports |
| soundfolding. 'spell' must be set. When no sound folding is |
| possible the {word} is returned unmodified. |
| This can be used for making spelling suggestions. Note that |
| the method can be quite slow. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetWord()->soundfold() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| spellbadword([{sentence}]) *spellbadword()* |
| Without argument: The result is the badly spelled word under |
| or after the cursor. The cursor is moved to the start of the |
| bad word. When no bad word is found in the cursor line the |
| result is an empty string and the cursor doesn't move. |
| |
| With argument: The result is the first word in {sentence} that |
| is badly spelled. If there are no spelling mistakes the |
| result is an empty string. |
| |
| The return value is a list with two items: |
| - The badly spelled word or an empty string. |
| - The type of the spelling error: |
| "bad" spelling mistake |
| "rare" rare word |
| "local" word only valid in another region |
| "caps" word should start with Capital |
| Example: > |
| echo spellbadword("the quik brown fox") |
| < ['quik', 'bad'] ~ |
| |
| The spelling information for the current window and the value |
| of 'spelllang' are used. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetText()->spellbadword() |
| < |
| Return type: list<string> |
| |
| |
| spellsuggest({word} [, {max} [, {capital}]]) *spellsuggest()* |
| Return a |List| with spelling suggestions to replace {word}. |
| When {max} is given up to this number of suggestions are |
| returned. Otherwise up to 25 suggestions are returned. |
| |
| When the {capital} argument is given and it's non-zero only |
| suggestions with a leading capital will be given. Use this |
| after a match with 'spellcapcheck'. |
| |
| {word} can be a badly spelled word followed by other text. |
| This allows for joining two words that were split. The |
| suggestions also include the following text, thus you can |
| replace a line. |
| |
| {word} may also be a good word. Similar words will then be |
| returned. {word} itself is not included in the suggestions, |
| although it may appear capitalized. |
| |
| The spelling information for the current window is used. The |
| values of 'spelllang' and 'spellsuggest' are used. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetWord()->spellsuggest() |
| < |
| Return type: list<string> or list<any> |
| |
| |
| split({string} [, {pattern} [, {keepempty}]]) *split()* |
| Make a |List| out of {string}. When {pattern} is omitted or |
| empty each white space separated sequence of characters |
| becomes an item. |
| Otherwise the string is split where {pattern} matches, |
| removing the matched characters. 'ignorecase' is not used |
| here, add \c to ignore case. |/\c| |
| When the first or last item is empty it is omitted, unless the |
| {keepempty} argument is given and it's non-zero. |
| Other empty items are kept when {pattern} matches at least one |
| character or when {keepempty} is non-zero. |
| Example: > |
| :let words = split(getline('.'), '\W\+') |
| < To split a string in individual characters: > |
| :for c in split(mystring, '\zs') |
| < If you want to keep the separator you can also use '\zs' at |
| the end of the pattern: > |
| :echo split('abc:def:ghi', ':\zs') |
| < ['abc:', 'def:', 'ghi'] ~ |
| Splitting a table where the first element can be empty: > |
| :let items = split(line, ':', 1) |
| < The opposite function is |join()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetString()->split() |
| < |
| Return type: list<string> |
| |
| sqrt({expr}) *sqrt()* |
| Return the non-negative square root of Float {expr} as a |
| |Float|. |
| {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|. When {expr} |
| is negative the result is NaN (Not a Number). Returns 0.0 if |
| {expr} is not a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Examples: > |
| :echo sqrt(100) |
| < 10.0 > |
| :echo sqrt(-4.01) |
| < nan |
| "nan" may be different, it depends on system libraries. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Compute()->sqrt() |
| < |
| Return type: |Float| |
| |
| |
| srand([{expr}]) *srand()* |
| Initialize seed used by |rand()|: |
| - If {expr} is not given, seed values are initialized by |
| reading from /dev/urandom, if possible, or using time(NULL) |
| a.k.a. epoch time otherwise; this only has second accuracy. |
| - If {expr} is given it must be a Number. It is used to |
| initialize the seed values. This is useful for testing or |
| when a predictable sequence is intended. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| :let seed = srand() |
| :let seed = srand(userinput) |
| :echo rand(seed) |
| < |
| Return type: list<number> |
| |
| |
| state([{what}]) *state()* |
| Return a string which contains characters indicating the |
| current state. Mostly useful in callbacks that want to do |
| work that may not always be safe. Roughly this works like: |
| - callback uses state() to check if work is safe to do. |
| Yes: then do it right away. |
| No: add to work queue and add a |SafeState| and/or |
| |SafeStateAgain| autocommand (|SafeState| triggers at |
| toplevel, |SafeStateAgain| triggers after handling |
| messages and callbacks). |
| - When SafeState or SafeStateAgain is triggered and executes |
| your autocommand, check with `state()` if the work can be |
| done now, and if yes remove it from the queue and execute. |
| Remove the autocommand if the queue is now empty. |
| Also see |mode()|. |
| |
| When {what} is given only characters in this string will be |
| added. E.g, this checks if the screen has scrolled: > |
| if state('s') == '' |
| " screen has not scrolled |
| < |
| These characters indicate the state, generally indicating that |
| something is busy: |
| m halfway a mapping, :normal command, feedkeys() or |
| stuffed command |
| o operator pending, e.g. after |d| |
| a Insert mode autocomplete active |
| x executing an autocommand |
| w blocked on waiting, e.g. ch_evalexpr(), ch_read() and |
| ch_readraw() when reading json |
| S not triggering SafeState or SafeStateAgain, e.g. after |
| |f| or a count |
| c callback invoked, including timer (repeats for |
| recursiveness up to "ccc") |
| s screen has scrolled for messages |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| str2blob({list} [, {options}]) *str2blob()* |
| Return a Blob by converting the characters in the List of |
| strings in {list} into bytes. |
| |
| A <NL> byte is added to the blob after each list item. A |
| newline character in the string is translated into a <NUL> |
| byte in the blob. |
| |
| If {options} is not supplied, the current 'encoding' value is |
| used to convert the characters into bytes. |
| |
| The argument {options} is a |Dict| and supports the following |
| items: |
| encoding Convert the characters using this encoding |
| before making the Blob. |
| The value is a |String|. See |encoding-names| |
| for the supported values. |
| |
| An error is given and an empty blob is returned if the |
| character encoding fails. |
| |
| Returns an empty Blob if {list} is empty. |
| |
| See also |blob2str()| |
| |
| Examples: > |
| str2blob(["ab"]) returns 0z6162 |
| str2blob(["«»"]) returns 0zC2ABC2BB |
| str2blob(["a\nb"]) returns 0z610062 |
| str2blob(["a","b"]) returns 0z610A62 |
| str2blob(["«»"], {'encoding': 'latin1'}) returns 0zABBB |
| str2blob(readfile('myfile.txt')) |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetListOfStrings()->str2blob() |
| < |
| Return type: |Blob| |
| |
| str2float({string} [, {quoted}]) *str2float()* |
| Convert String {string} to a Float. This mostly works the |
| same as when using a floating point number in an expression, |
| see |floating-point-format|. But it's a bit more permissive. |
| E.g., "1e40" is accepted, while in an expression you need to |
| write "1.0e40". The hexadecimal form "0x123" is also |
| accepted, but not others, like binary or octal. |
| When {quoted} is present and non-zero then embedded single |
| quotes before the dot are ignored, thus "1'000.0" is a |
| thousand. |
| Text after the number is silently ignored. |
| The decimal point is always '.', no matter what the locale is |
| set to. A comma ends the number: "12,345.67" is converted to |
| 12.0. You can strip out thousands separators with |
| |substitute()|: > |
| let f = str2float(substitute(text, ',', '', 'g')) |
| < |
| Returns 0.0 if the conversion fails. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| let f = text->substitute(',', '', 'g')->str2float() |
| < |
| Return type: |Float| |
| |
| |
| str2list({string} [, {utf8}]) *str2list()* |
| Return a list containing the number values which represent |
| each character in String {string}. Examples: > |
| str2list(" ") returns [32] |
| str2list("ABC") returns [65, 66, 67] |
| < |list2str()| does the opposite. |
| |
| When {utf8} is omitted or zero, the current 'encoding' is used. |
| When {utf8} is TRUE, always treat the String as UTF-8 |
| characters. With UTF-8 composing characters are handled |
| properly: > |
| str2list("á") returns [97, 769] |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetString()->str2list() |
| < |
| Return type: list<number> |
| |
| |
| str2nr({string} [, {base} [, {quoted}]]) *str2nr()* |
| Convert string {string} to a number. |
| {base} is the conversion base, it can be 2, 8, 10 or 16. |
| When {quoted} is present and non-zero then embedded single |
| quotes are ignored, thus "1'000'000" is a million. |
| |
| When {base} is omitted base 10 is used. This also means that |
| a leading zero doesn't cause octal conversion to be used, as |
| with the default String to Number conversion. Example: > |
| let nr = str2nr('0123') |
| < |
| When {base} is 16 a leading "0x" or "0X" is ignored. With a |
| different base the result will be zero. Similarly, when |
| {base} is 8 a leading "0", "0o" or "0O" is ignored, and when |
| {base} is 2 a leading "0b" or "0B" is ignored. |
| Text after the number is silently ignored. |
| |
| Returns 0 if {string} is empty or on error. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetText()->str2nr() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| strcharlen({string}) *strcharlen()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the number of characters |
| in String {string}. Composing characters are ignored. |
| |strchars()| can count the number of characters, counting |
| composing characters separately. |
| |
| Returns 0 if {string} is empty or on error. |
| |
| Also see |strlen()|, |strdisplaywidth()| and |strwidth()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetText()->strcharlen() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| strcharpart({src}, {start} [, {len} [, {skipcc}]]) *strcharpart()* |
| Like |strpart()| but using character index and length instead |
| of byte index and length. |
| When {skipcc} is omitted or zero, composing characters are |
| counted separately. |
| When {skipcc} set to 1, composing characters are treated as a |
| part of the preceding base character, similar to |slice()|. |
| When a character index is used where a character does not |
| exist it is omitted and counted as one character. For |
| example: > |
| strcharpart('abc', -1, 2) |
| < results in 'a'. |
| |
| Returns an empty string on error. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetText()->strcharpart(5) |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| strchars({string} [, {skipcc}]) *strchars()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the number of characters |
| in String {string}. |
| When {skipcc} is omitted or zero, composing characters are |
| counted separately. |
| When {skipcc} set to 1, composing characters are ignored. |
| |strcharlen()| always does this. |
| |
| Returns zero on error. |
| |
| Also see |strlen()|, |strdisplaywidth()| and |strwidth()|. |
| |
| {skipcc} is only available after 7.4.755. For backward |
| compatibility, you can define a wrapper function: > |
| if has("patch-7.4.755") |
| function s:strchars(str, skipcc) |
| return strchars(a:str, a:skipcc) |
| endfunction |
| else |
| function s:strchars(str, skipcc) |
| if a:skipcc |
| return strlen(substitute(a:str, ".", "x", "g")) |
| else |
| return strchars(a:str) |
| endif |
| endfunction |
| endif |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetText()->strchars() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| strdisplaywidth({string} [, {col}]) *strdisplaywidth()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the number of display cells |
| String {string} occupies on the screen when it starts at {col} |
| (first column is zero). When {col} is omitted zero is used. |
| Otherwise it is the screen column where to start. This |
| matters for Tab characters. |
| The option settings of the current window are used. This |
| matters for anything that's displayed differently, such as |
| 'tabstop' and 'display'. |
| When {string} contains characters with East Asian Width Class |
| Ambiguous, this function's return value depends on 'ambiwidth'. |
| Returns zero on error. |
| Also see |strlen()|, |strwidth()| and |strchars()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetText()->strdisplaywidth() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| strftime({format} [, {time}]) *strftime()* |
| The result is a String, which is a formatted date and time, as |
| specified by the {format} string. The given {time} is used, |
| or the current time if no time is given. The accepted |
| {format} depends on your system, thus this is not portable! |
| See the manual page of the C function strftime() for the |
| format. The maximum length of the result is 80 characters. |
| See also |localtime()|, |getftime()| and |strptime()|. |
| The language can be changed with the |:language| command. |
| Examples: > |
| :echo strftime("%c") Sun Apr 27 11:49:23 1997 |
| :echo strftime("%Y %b %d %X") 1997 Apr 27 11:53:25 |
| :echo strftime("%y%m%d %T") 970427 11:53:55 |
| :echo strftime("%H:%M") 11:55 |
| :echo strftime("%c", getftime("file.c")) |
| Show mod time of file.c. |
| < Not available on all systems. To check use: > |
| :if exists("*strftime") |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetFormat()->strftime() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| strgetchar({str}, {index}) *strgetchar()* |
| Get a Number corresponding to the character at {index} in |
| {str}. This uses a zero-based character index, not a byte |
| index. Composing characters are considered separate |
| characters here. Use |nr2char()| to convert the Number to a |
| String. |
| Returns -1 if {index} is invalid. |
| Also see |strcharpart()| and |strchars()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetText()->strgetchar(5) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| stridx({haystack}, {needle} [, {start}]) *stridx()* |
| The result is a Number, which gives the byte index in |
| {haystack} of the first occurrence of the String {needle}. |
| If {start} is specified, the search starts at index {start}. |
| This can be used to find a second match: > |
| :let colon1 = stridx(line, ":") |
| :let colon2 = stridx(line, ":", colon1 + 1) |
| < The search is done case-sensitive. |
| For pattern searches use |match()|. |
| -1 is returned if the {needle} does not occur in {haystack}. |
| See also |strridx()|. |
| Examples: > |
| :echo stridx("An Example", "Example") 3 |
| :echo stridx("Starting point", "Start") 0 |
| :echo stridx("Starting point", "start") -1 |
| < *strstr()* *strchr()* |
| stridx() works similar to the C function strstr(). When used |
| with a single character it works similar to strchr(). |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetHaystack()->stridx(needle) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| string({expr}) *string()* |
| Return {expr} converted to a String. If {expr} is a Number, |
| Float, String, Blob or a composition of them, then the result |
| can be parsed back with |eval()|. |
| {expr} type result ~ |
| String 'string' (single quotes are doubled) |
| Number 123 |
| Float 123.123456 or 1.123456e8 |
| Funcref function('name') |
| Blob 0z00112233.44556677.8899 |
| List [item, item] |
| Tuple (item, item) |
| Dictionary {key: value, key: value} |
| Class class SomeName |
| Object object of SomeName {lnum: 1, col: 3} |
| Enum enum EnumName |
| EnumValue enum name.value {name: str, ordinal: nr} |
| |
| When a |List|, |Tuple| or |Dictionary| has a recursive |
| reference it is replaced by "[...]" or "(...)" or "{...}". |
| Using eval() on the result will then fail. |
| |
| For an object, invokes the string() method to get a textual |
| representation of the object. If the method is not present, |
| then the default representation is used. |object-string()| |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mylist->string() |
| |
| < Also see |strtrans()|. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| strlen({string}) *strlen()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the length of the String |
| {string} in bytes. |
| If the argument is a Number it is first converted to a String. |
| For other types an error is given and zero is returned. |
| If you want to count the number of multibyte characters use |
| |strchars()|. |
| Also see |len()|, |strdisplaywidth()| and |strwidth()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetString()->strlen() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| strpart({src}, {start} [, {len} [, {chars}]]) *strpart()* |
| The result is a String, which is part of {src}, starting from |
| byte {start}, with the byte length {len}. |
| When {chars} is present and TRUE then {len} is the number of |
| characters positions (composing characters are not counted |
| separately, thus "1" means one base character and any |
| following composing characters). |
| To count {start} as characters instead of bytes use |
| |strcharpart()|. |
| |
| When bytes are selected which do not exist, this doesn't |
| result in an error, the bytes are simply omitted. |
| If {len} is missing, the copy continues from {start} till the |
| end of the {src}. > |
| strpart("abcdefg", 3, 2) == "de" |
| strpart("abcdefg", -2, 4) == "ab" |
| strpart("abcdefg", 5, 4) == "fg" |
| strpart("abcdefg", 3) == "defg" |
| |
| < Note: To get the first character, {start} must be 0. For |
| example, to get the character under the cursor: > |
| strpart(getline("."), col(".") - 1, 1, v:true) |
| < |
| Returns an empty string on error. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetText()->strpart(5) |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| strptime({format}, {timestring}) *strptime()* |
| The result is a Number, which is a unix timestamp representing |
| the date and time in {timestring}, which is expected to match |
| the format specified in {format}. |
| |
| The accepted {format} depends on your system, thus this is not |
| portable! See the manual page of the C function strptime() |
| for the format. Especially avoid "%c". The value of $TZ also |
| matters. |
| |
| If the {timestring} cannot be parsed with {format} zero is |
| returned. If you do not know the format of {timestring} you |
| can try different {format} values until you get a non-zero |
| result. |
| |
| See also |strftime()|. |
| Examples: > |
| :echo strptime("%Y %b %d %X", "1997 Apr 27 11:49:23") |
| < 862156163 > |
| :echo strftime("%c", strptime("%y%m%d %T", "970427 11:53:55")) |
| < Sun Apr 27 11:53:55 1997 > |
| :echo strftime("%c", strptime("%Y%m%d%H%M%S", "19970427115355") + 3600) |
| < Sun Apr 27 12:53:55 1997 |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetFormat()->strptime(timestring) |
| < |
| Not available on all systems. To check use: > |
| :if exists("*strptime") |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| strridx({haystack}, {needle} [, {start}]) *strridx()* |
| The result is a Number, which gives the byte index in |
| {haystack} of the last occurrence of the String {needle}. |
| When {start} is specified, matches beyond this index are |
| ignored. This can be used to find a match before a previous |
| match: > |
| :let lastcomma = strridx(line, ",") |
| :let comma2 = strridx(line, ",", lastcomma - 1) |
| < The search is done case-sensitive. |
| For pattern searches use |match()|. |
| -1 is returned if the {needle} does not occur in {haystack}. |
| If the {needle} is empty the length of {haystack} is returned. |
| See also |stridx()|. Examples: > |
| :echo strridx("an angry armadillo", "an") 3 |
| < *strrchr()* |
| When used with a single character it works similar to the C |
| function strrchr(). |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetHaystack()->strridx(needle) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| strtrans({string}) *strtrans()* |
| The result is a String, which is {string} with all unprintable |
| characters translated into printable characters |'isprint'|. |
| Like they are shown in a window. Example: > |
| echo strtrans(@a) |
| < This displays a newline in register a as "^@" instead of |
| starting a new line. |
| |
| Returns an empty string on error. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetString()->strtrans() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| strutf16len({string} [, {countcc}]) *strutf16len()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the number of UTF-16 code |
| units in String {string} (after converting it to UTF-16). |
| |
| When {countcc} is TRUE, composing characters are counted |
| separately. |
| When {countcc} is omitted or FALSE, composing characters are |
| ignored. |
| |
| Returns zero on error. |
| |
| Also see |strlen()| and |strcharlen()|. |
| Examples: > |
| echo strutf16len('a') returns 1 |
| echo strutf16len('©') returns 1 |
| echo strutf16len('😊') returns 2 |
| echo strutf16len('ą́') returns 1 |
| echo strutf16len('ą́', v:true) returns 3 |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetText()->strutf16len() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| strwidth({string}) *strwidth()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the number of display cells |
| String {string} occupies. A Tab character is counted as one |
| cell, alternatively use |strdisplaywidth()|. |
| When {string} contains characters with East Asian Width Class |
| Ambiguous, this function's return value depends on 'ambiwidth'. |
| Returns zero on error. |
| Also see |strlen()|, |strdisplaywidth()| and |strchars()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetString()->strwidth() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| submatch({nr} [, {list}]) *submatch()* *E935* |
| Only for an expression in a |:substitute| command or |
| substitute() function. |
| Returns the {nr}'th submatch of the matched text. When {nr} |
| is 0 the whole matched text is returned. |
| Note that a NL in the string can stand for a line break of a |
| multi-line match or a NUL character in the text. |
| Also see |sub-replace-expression|. |
| |
| If {list} is present and non-zero then submatch() returns |
| a list of strings, similar to |getline()| with two arguments. |
| NL characters in the text represent NUL characters in the |
| text. |
| Only returns more than one item for |:substitute|, inside |
| |substitute()| this list will always contain one or zero |
| items, since there are no real line breaks. |
| |
| When substitute() is used recursively only the submatches in |
| the current (deepest) call can be obtained. |
| |
| Returns an empty string or list on error. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| :s/\d\+/\=submatch(0) + 1/ |
| :echo substitute(text, '\d\+', '\=submatch(0) + 1', '') |
| < This finds the first number in the line and adds one to it. |
| A line break is included as a newline character. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetNr()->submatch() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| or list<string> depending on {list} |
| |
| |
| substitute({string}, {pat}, {sub}, {flags}) *substitute()* |
| The result is a String, which is a copy of {string}, in which |
| the first match of {pat} is replaced with {sub}. |
| When {flags} is "g", all matches of {pat} in {string} are |
| replaced. Otherwise {flags} should be "". |
| |
| This works like the ":substitute" command (without any flags). |
| But the matching with {pat} is always done like the 'magic' |
| option is set and 'cpoptions' is empty (to make scripts |
| portable). 'ignorecase' is still relevant, use |/\c| or |/\C| |
| if you want to ignore or match case and ignore 'ignorecase'. |
| 'smartcase' is not used. See |string-match| for how {pat} is |
| used. |
| |
| A "~" in {sub} is not replaced with the previous {sub}. |
| Note that some codes in {sub} have a special meaning |
| |sub-replace-special|. For example, to replace something with |
| "\n" (two characters), use "\\\\n" or '\\n'. |
| |
| When {pat} does not match in {string}, {string} is returned |
| unmodified. |
| |
| Example: > |
| :let &path = substitute(&path, ",\\=[^,]*$", "", "") |
| < This removes the last component of the 'path' option. > |
| :echo substitute("testing", ".*", "\\U\\0", "") |
| < results in "TESTING". |
| |
| When {sub} starts with "\=", the remainder is interpreted as |
| an expression. See |sub-replace-expression|. Example: > |
| :echo substitute(s, '%\(\x\x\)', |
| \ '\=nr2char("0x" .. submatch(1))', 'g') |
| |
| < When {sub} is a Funcref that function is called, with one |
| optional argument. Example: > |
| :echo substitute(s, '%\(\x\x\)', SubNr, 'g') |
| < The optional argument is a list which contains the whole |
| matched string and up to nine submatches, like what |
| |submatch()| returns. Example: > |
| :echo substitute(s, '%\(\x\x\)', {m -> '0x' .. m[1]}, 'g') |
| |
| < Returns an empty string on error. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetString()->substitute(pat, sub, flags) |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| swapfilelist() *swapfilelist()* |
| Returns a list of swap file names, like what "vim -r" shows. |
| See the |-r| command argument. The 'directory' option is used |
| for the directories to inspect. If you only want to get a |
| list of swap files in the current directory then temporarily |
| set 'directory' to a dot: > |
| let save_dir = &directory |
| let &directory = '.' |
| let swapfiles = swapfilelist() |
| let &directory = save_dir |
| < |
| Return type: list<string> |
| |
| |
| swapinfo({fname}) *swapinfo()* |
| The result is a dictionary, which holds information about the |
| swapfile {fname}. The available fields are: |
| version Vim version |
| user user name |
| host host name |
| fname original file name |
| pid PID of the Vim process that created the swap |
| file |
| mtime last modification time in seconds |
| inode Optional: INODE number of the file |
| dirty 1 if file was modified, 0 if not |
| Note that "user" and "host" are truncated to at most 39 bytes. |
| In case of failure an "error" item is added with the reason: |
| Cannot open file: file not found or in accessible |
| Cannot read file: cannot read first block |
| Not a swap file: does not contain correct block ID |
| Magic number mismatch: Info in first block is invalid |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetFilename()->swapinfo() |
| < |
| Return type: dict<any> or dict<string> |
| |
| |
| swapname({buf}) *swapname()* |
| The result is the swap file path of the buffer {expr}. |
| For the use of {buf}, see |bufname()| above. |
| If buffer {buf} is the current buffer, the result is equal to |
| |:swapname| (unless there is no swap file). |
| If buffer {buf} has no swap file, returns an empty string. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetBufname()->swapname() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| synID({lnum}, {col}, {trans}) *synID()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the syntax ID at the position |
| {lnum} and {col} in the current window. |
| The syntax ID can be used with |synIDattr()| and |
| |synIDtrans()| to obtain syntax information about text. |
| |
| {col} is 1 for the leftmost column, {lnum} is 1 for the first |
| line. 'synmaxcol' applies, in a longer line zero is returned. |
| Note that when the position is after the last character, |
| that's where the cursor can be in Insert mode, synID() returns |
| zero. {lnum} is used like with |getline()|. |
| |
| When {trans} is |TRUE|, transparent items are reduced to the |
| item that they reveal. This is useful when wanting to know |
| the effective color. When {trans} is |FALSE|, the transparent |
| item is returned. This is useful when wanting to know which |
| syntax item is effective (e.g. inside parens). |
| Warning: This function can be very slow. Best speed is |
| obtained by going through the file in forward direction. |
| |
| Returns zero on error. |
| |
| Example (echoes the name of the syntax item under the cursor): > |
| :echo synIDattr(synID(line("."), col("."), 1), "name") |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| synIDattr({synID}, {what} [, {mode}]) *synIDattr()* |
| The result is a String, which is the {what} attribute of |
| syntax ID {synID}. This can be used to obtain information |
| about a syntax item. |
| {mode} can be "gui", "cterm" or "term", to get the attributes |
| for that mode. When {mode} is omitted, or an invalid value is |
| used, the attributes for the currently active highlighting are |
| used (GUI, cterm or term). |
| Use synIDtrans() to follow linked highlight groups. |
| {what} result |
| "name" the name of the syntax item |
| "fg" foreground color (GUI: color name used to set |
| the color, cterm: color number as a string, |
| term: empty string) |
| "bg" background color (as with "fg") |
| "font" font name (only available in the GUI) |
| |highlight-font| |
| "sp" special color for the GUI (as with "fg") |
| |highlight-guisp| |
| "ul" underline color for cterm: number as a string |
| "fg#" like "fg", but for the GUI and the GUI is |
| running the name in "#RRGGBB" form |
| "bg#" like "fg#" for "bg" |
| "sp#" like "fg#" for "sp" |
| "bold" "1" if bold |
| "italic" "1" if italic |
| "reverse" "1" if reverse |
| "inverse" "1" if inverse (= reverse) |
| "standout" "1" if standout |
| "underline" "1" if underlined |
| "undercurl" "1" if undercurled |
| "strike" "1" if strikethrough |
| "nocombine" "1" if nocombine |
| |
| Returns an empty string on error. |
| |
| Example (echoes the color of the syntax item under the |
| cursor): > |
| :echo synIDattr(synIDtrans(synID(line("."), col("."), 1)), "fg") |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| :echo synID(line("."), col("."), 1)->synIDtrans()->synIDattr("fg") |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| synIDtrans({synID}) *synIDtrans()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the translated syntax ID of |
| {synID}. This is the syntax group ID of what is being used to |
| highlight the character. Highlight links given with |
| ":highlight link" are followed. |
| |
| Returns zero on error. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| :echo synID(line("."), col("."), 1)->synIDtrans()->synIDattr("fg") |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| synconcealed({lnum}, {col}) *synconcealed()* |
| The result is a |List| with currently three items: |
| 1. The first item in the list is 0 if the character at the |
| position {lnum} and {col} is not part of a concealable |
| region, 1 if it is. {lnum} is used like with |getline()|. |
| 2. The second item in the list is a string. If the first item |
| is 1, the second item contains the text which will be |
| displayed in place of the concealed text, depending on the |
| current setting of 'conceallevel' and 'listchars'. |
| 3. The third and final item in the list is a number |
| representing the specific syntax region matched in the |
| line. When the character is not concealed the value is |
| zero. This allows detection of the beginning of a new |
| concealable region if there are two consecutive regions |
| with the same replacement character. For an example, if |
| the text is "123456" and both "23" and "45" are concealed |
| and replaced by the character "X", then: |
| call returns ~ |
| synconcealed(lnum, 1) [0, '', 0] |
| synconcealed(lnum, 2) [1, 'X', 1] |
| synconcealed(lnum, 3) [1, 'X', 1] |
| synconcealed(lnum, 4) [1, 'X', 2] |
| synconcealed(lnum, 5) [1, 'X', 2] |
| synconcealed(lnum, 6) [0, '', 0] |
| |
| Note: Doesn't consider |matchadd()| highlighting items, |
| since syntax and matching highlighting are two different |
| mechanisms |syntax-vs-match|. |
| |
| Return type: list<any> |
| |
| |
| synstack({lnum}, {col}) *synstack()* |
| Return a |List|, which is the stack of syntax items at the |
| position {lnum} and {col} in the current window. {lnum} is |
| used like with |getline()|. Each item in the List is an ID |
| like what |synID()| returns. |
| The first item in the List is the outer region, following are |
| items contained in that one. The last one is what |synID()| |
| returns, unless not the whole item is highlighted or it is a |
| transparent item. |
| This function is useful for debugging a syntax file. |
| Example that shows the syntax stack under the cursor: > |
| for id in synstack(line("."), col(".")) |
| echo synIDattr(id, "name") |
| endfor |
| < When the position specified with {lnum} and {col} is invalid |
| an empty List is returned. The position just after the last |
| character in a line and the first column in an empty line are |
| valid positions. |
| |
| Return type: list<number> or list<any> |
| |
| |
| system({expr} [, {input}]) *system()* *E677* |
| Get the output of the shell command {expr} as a |String|. See |
| |systemlist()| to get the output as a |List|. |
| |
| When {input} is given and is a |String| this string is written |
| to a file and passed as stdin to the command. The string is |
| written as-is, you need to take care of using the correct line |
| separators yourself. |
| If {input} is given and is a |List| it is written to the file |
| in a way |writefile()| does with {binary} set to "b" (i.e. |
| with a newline between each list item with newlines inside |
| list items converted to NULs). |
| When {input} is given and is a number that is a valid id for |
| an existing buffer then the content of the buffer is written |
| to the file line by line, each line terminated by a NL and |
| NULs characters where the text has a NL. |
| |
| Pipes are not used, the 'shelltemp' option is not used. |
| |
| When prepended by |:silent| the terminal will not be set to |
| cooked mode. This is meant to be used for commands that do |
| not need the user to type. It avoids stray characters showing |
| up on the screen which require |CTRL-L| to remove. > |
| :silent let f = system('ls *.vim') |
| < |
| Note: Use |shellescape()| or |::S| with |expand()| or |
| |fnamemodify()| to escape special characters in a command |
| argument. Newlines in {expr} may cause the command to fail. |
| The characters in 'shellquote' and 'shellxquote' may also |
| cause trouble. |
| This is not to be used for interactive commands. |
| |
| The result is a String. Example: > |
| :let files = system('ls ' .. shellescape(expand('%:h'))) |
| :let files = system('ls ' .. expand('%:h:S')) |
| |
| < To make the result more system-independent, the shell output |
| is filtered to replace <CR> with <NL> for Macintosh, and |
| <CR><NL> with <NL> for DOS-like systems. |
| To avoid the string being truncated at a NUL, all NUL |
| characters are replaced with SOH (0x01). |
| |
| The command executed is constructed using several options: |
| 'shell' 'shellcmdflag' 'shellxquote' {expr} 'shellredir' {tmp} 'shellxquote' |
| ({tmp} is an automatically generated file name). |
| For Unix, braces are put around {expr} to allow for |
| concatenated commands. |
| |
| The command will be executed in "cooked" mode, so that a |
| CTRL-C will interrupt the command (on Unix at least). |
| |
| The resulting error code can be found in |v:shell_error|. |
| This function will fail in |restricted-mode|. |
| |
| Note that any wrong value in the options mentioned above may |
| make the function fail. It has also been reported to fail |
| when using a security agent application. |
| Unlike ":!cmd" there is no automatic check for changed files. |
| Use |:checktime| to force a check. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| :echo GetCmd()->system() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| systemlist({expr} [, {input}]) *systemlist()* |
| Same as |system()|, but returns a |List| with lines (parts of |
| output separated by NL) with NULs transformed into NLs. Output |
| is the same as |readfile()| will output with {binary} argument |
| set to "b", except that there is no extra empty item when the |
| result ends in a NL. |
| Note that on MS-Windows you may get trailing CR characters. |
| |
| To see the difference between "echo hello" and "echo -n hello" |
| use |system()| and |split()|: > |
| echo system('echo hello')->split('\n', 1) |
| < |
| Returns an empty string on error. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| :echo GetCmd()->systemlist() |
| < |
| Return type: list<string> |
| |
| |
| tabpagebuflist([{arg}]) *tabpagebuflist()* |
| The result is a |List|, where each item is the number of the |
| buffer associated with each window in the current tab page. |
| {arg} specifies the number of the tab page to be used. When |
| omitted the current tab page is used. |
| When {arg} is invalid the number zero is returned. |
| To get a list of all buffers in all tabs use this: > |
| let buflist = [] |
| for i in range(tabpagenr('$')) |
| call extend(buflist, tabpagebuflist(i + 1)) |
| endfor |
| < Note that a buffer may appear in more than one window. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetTabpage()->tabpagebuflist() |
| < |
| Return type: list<number> |
| |
| |
| tabpagenr([{arg}]) *tabpagenr()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the number of the current |
| tab page. The first tab page has number 1. |
| |
| The optional argument {arg} supports the following values: |
| $ the number of the last tab page (the tab page |
| count). |
| # the number of the last accessed tab page |
| (where |g<Tab>| goes to). if there is no |
| previous tab page 0 is returned. |
| The number can be used with the |:tab| command. |
| |
| Returns zero on error. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| tabpagewinnr({tabarg} [, {arg}]) *tabpagewinnr()* |
| Like |winnr()| but for tab page {tabarg}. |
| {tabarg} specifies the number of tab page to be used. |
| {arg} is used like with |winnr()|: |
| - When omitted the current window number is returned. This is |
| the window which will be used when going to this tab page. |
| - When "$" the number of windows is returned. |
| - When "#" the previous window nr is returned. |
| Useful examples: > |
| tabpagewinnr(1) " current window of tab page 1 |
| tabpagewinnr(4, '$') " number of windows in tab page 4 |
| < When {tabarg} is invalid zero is returned. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetTabpage()->tabpagewinnr() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| tagfiles() *tagfiles()* |
| Returns a |List| with the file names used to search for tags |
| for the current buffer. This is the 'tags' option expanded. |
| |
| Return type: list<string> or list<any> |
| |
| |
| taglist({expr} [, {filename}]) *taglist()* |
| Returns a |List| of tags matching the regular expression {expr}. |
| |
| If {filename} is passed it is used to prioritize the results |
| in the same way that |:tselect| does. See |tag-priority|. |
| {filename} should be the full path of the file. |
| |
| Each list item is a dictionary with at least the following |
| entries: |
| name Name of the tag. |
| filename Name of the file where the tag is |
| defined. It is either relative to the |
| current directory or a full path. |
| cmd Ex command used to locate the tag in |
| the file. |
| kind Type of the tag. The value for this |
| entry depends on the language specific |
| kind values. Only available when |
| using a tags file generated by |
| Universal/Exuberant ctags or hdrtag. |
| static A file specific tag. Refer to |
| |static-tag| for more information. |
| More entries may be present, depending on the content of the |
| tags file: access, implementation, inherits and signature. |
| Refer to the ctags documentation for information about these |
| fields. For C code the fields "struct", "class" and "enum" |
| may appear, they give the name of the entity the tag is |
| contained in. |
| |
| The ex-command "cmd" can be either an ex search pattern, a |
| line number or a line number followed by a byte number. |
| |
| If there are no matching tags, then an empty list is returned. |
| |
| To get an exact tag match, the anchors '^' and '$' should be |
| used in {expr}. This also make the function work faster. |
| Refer to |tag-regexp| for more information about the tag |
| search regular expression pattern. |
| |
| Refer to |'tags'| for information about how the tags file is |
| located by Vim. Refer to |tags-file-format| for the format of |
| the tags file generated by the different ctags tools. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetTagpattern()->taglist() |
| < |
| Return type: list<dict<any>> or list<any> |
| |
| |
| tan({expr}) *tan()* |
| Return the tangent of {expr}, measured in radians, as a |Float| |
| in the range [-inf, inf]. |
| {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Returns 0.0 if {expr} is not a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Examples: > |
| :echo tan(10) |
| < 0.648361 > |
| :echo tan(-4.01) |
| < -1.181502 |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Compute()->tan() |
| < |
| Return type: |Float| |
| |
| |
| tanh({expr}) *tanh()* |
| Return the hyperbolic tangent of {expr} as a |Float| in the |
| range [-1, 1]. |
| {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Returns 0.0 if {expr} is not a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Examples: > |
| :echo tanh(0.5) |
| < 0.462117 > |
| :echo tanh(-1) |
| < -0.761594 |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Compute()->tanh() |
| < |
| Return type: |Float| |
| |
| |
| tempname() *tempname()* *temp-file-name* |
| The result is a String, which is the name of a file that |
| doesn't exist. It can be used for a temporary file. The name |
| is different for at least 26 consecutive calls. Example: > |
| :let tmpfile = tempname() |
| :exe "redir > " .. tmpfile |
| < For Unix, the file will be in a private directory |tempfile| |
| that is recursively deleted when Vim exits, on other systems |
| temporary files are not cleaned up automatically on exit. |
| For MS-Windows forward slashes are used when the 'shellslash' |
| option is set, or when 'shellcmdflag' starts with '-' and |
| 'shell' does not contain powershell or pwsh. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| term_ functions are documented here: |terminal-function-details| |
| |
| |
| terminalprops() *terminalprops()* |
| Returns a |Dictionary| with properties of the terminal that Vim |
| detected from the response to |t_RV| request. See |
| |v:termresponse| for the response itself. If |v:termresponse| |
| is empty most values here will be 'u' for unknown. |
| cursor_style whether sending |t_RS| works ** |
| cursor_blink_mode whether sending |t_RC| works ** |
| underline_rgb whether |t_8u| works ** |
| mouse mouse type supported |
| kitty whether Kitty terminal was detected |
| |
| ** value 'u' for unknown, 'y' for yes, 'n' for no |
| |
| If the |+termresponse| feature is missing then the result is |
| an empty dictionary. |
| |
| If "cursor_style" is 'y' then |t_RS| will be sent to request the |
| current cursor style. |
| If "cursor_blink_mode" is 'y' then |t_RC| will be sent to |
| request the cursor blink status. |
| "cursor_style" and "cursor_blink_mode" are also set if |t_u7| |
| is not empty, Vim will detect the working of sending |t_RS| |
| and |t_RC| on startup. |
| |
| When "underline_rgb" is not 'y', then |t_8u| will be made empty. |
| This avoids sending it to xterm, which would clear the colors. |
| |
| For "mouse" the value 'u' is unknown |
| |
| Also see: |
| - 'ambiwidth' - detected by using |t_u7|. |
| - |v:termstyleresp| and |v:termblinkresp| for the response to |
| |t_RS| and |t_RC|. |
| |
| Return type: dict<string> |
| |
| |
| test_ functions are documented here: |test-functions-details| |
| |
| |
| *timer_info()* |
| timer_info([{id}]) |
| Return a list with information about timers. |
| When {id} is given only information about this timer is |
| returned. When timer {id} does not exist an empty list is |
| returned. |
| When {id} is omitted information about all timers is returned. |
| |
| For each timer the information is stored in a |Dictionary| with |
| these items: |
| "id" the timer ID |
| "time" time the timer was started with |
| "remaining" time until the timer fires |
| "repeat" number of times the timer will still fire; |
| -1 means forever |
| "callback" the callback |
| "paused" 1 if the timer is paused, 0 otherwise |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetTimer()->timer_info() |
| < |
| Return type: list<dict<any>> or list<any> |
| |
| {only available when compiled with the |+timers| feature} |
| |
| |
| timer_pause({timer}, {paused}) *timer_pause()* |
| Pause or unpause a timer. A paused timer does not invoke its |
| callback when its time expires. Unpausing a timer may cause |
| the callback to be invoked almost immediately if enough time |
| has passed. |
| |
| Pausing a timer is useful to avoid the callback to be called |
| for a short time. |
| |
| If {paused} evaluates to a non-zero Number or a non-empty |
| String, then the timer is paused, otherwise it is unpaused. |
| See |non-zero-arg|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetTimer()->timer_pause(1) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| {only available when compiled with the |+timers| feature} |
| |
| |
| *timer_start()* *timer* *timers* |
| timer_start({time}, {callback} [, {options}]) |
| Create a timer and return the timer ID. |
| |
| {time} is the waiting time in milliseconds. This is the |
| minimum time before invoking the callback. When the system is |
| busy or Vim is not waiting for input the time will be longer. |
| Zero can be used to execute the callback when Vim is back in |
| the main loop. |
| |
| {callback} is the function to call. It can be the name of a |
| function or a |Funcref|. It is called with one argument, which |
| is the timer ID. The callback is only invoked when Vim is |
| waiting for input. |
| If you want to show a message look at |popup_notification()| |
| to avoid interfering with what the user is doing. |
| |
| {options} is a dictionary. Supported entries: |
| "repeat" Number of times to repeat calling the |
| callback. -1 means forever. When not present |
| the callback will be called once. |
| If the timer causes an error three times in a |
| row the repeat is cancelled. This avoids that |
| Vim becomes unusable because of all the error |
| messages. |
| |
| Returns -1 on error. |
| |
| Example: > |
| func MyHandler(timer) |
| echo 'Handler called' |
| endfunc |
| let timer = timer_start(500, 'MyHandler', |
| \ {'repeat': 3}) |
| < This will invoke MyHandler() three times at 500 msec |
| intervals. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetMsec()->timer_start(callback) |
| |
| < Not available in the |sandbox|. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| {only available when compiled with the |+timers| feature} |
| |
| |
| timer_stop({timer}) *timer_stop()* |
| Stop a timer. The timer callback will no longer be invoked. |
| {timer} is an ID returned by timer_start(), thus it must be a |
| Number. If {timer} does not exist there is no error. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetTimer()->timer_stop() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| {only available when compiled with the |+timers| feature} |
| |
| |
| timer_stopall() *timer_stopall()* |
| Stop all timers. The timer callbacks will no longer be |
| invoked. Useful if a timer is misbehaving. If there are no |
| timers there is no error. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| {only available when compiled with the |+timers| feature} |
| |
| |
| tolower({expr}) *tolower()* |
| The result is a copy of the String given, with all uppercase |
| characters turned into lowercase (just like applying |gu| to |
| the string). Returns an empty string on error. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetText()->tolower() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| toupper({expr}) *toupper()* |
| The result is a copy of the String given, with all lowercase |
| characters turned into uppercase (just like applying |gU| to |
| the string). Returns an empty string on error. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetText()->toupper() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| tr({src}, {fromstr}, {tostr}) *tr()* |
| The result is a copy of the {src} string with all characters |
| which appear in {fromstr} replaced by the character in that |
| position in the {tostr} string. Thus the first character in |
| {fromstr} is translated into the first character in {tostr} |
| and so on. Exactly like the unix "tr" command. |
| This code also deals with multibyte characters properly. |
| |
| Returns an empty string on error. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| echo tr("hello there", "ht", "HT") |
| < returns "Hello THere" > |
| echo tr("<blob>", "<>", "{}") |
| < returns "{blob}" |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetText()->tr(from, to) |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| trim({text} [, {mask} [, {dir}]]) *trim()* |
| Return {text} as a String where any character in {mask} is |
| removed from the beginning and/or end of {text}. |
| |
| If {mask} is not given, or is an empty string, {mask} is all |
| characters up to 0x20, which includes Tab, space, NL and CR, |
| plus the non-breaking space character 0xa0. |
| |
| The optional {dir} argument specifies where to remove the |
| characters: |
| 0 remove from the beginning and end of {text} |
| 1 remove only at the beginning of {text} |
| 2 remove only at the end of {text} |
| When omitted both ends are trimmed. |
| |
| This function deals with multibyte characters properly. |
| Returns an empty string on error. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| echo trim(" some text ") |
| < returns "some text" > |
| echo trim(" \r\t\t\r RESERVE \t\n\x0B\xA0") .. "_TAIL" |
| < returns "RESERVE_TAIL" > |
| echo trim("rm<Xrm<>X>rrm", "rm<>") |
| < returns "Xrm<>X" (characters in the middle are not removed) > |
| echo trim(" vim ", " ", 2) |
| < returns " vim" |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetText()->trim() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| trunc({expr}) *trunc()* |
| Return the largest integral value with magnitude less than or |
| equal to {expr} as a |Float| (truncate towards zero). |
| {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Returns 0.0 if {expr} is not a |Float| or a |Number|. |
| Examples: > |
| echo trunc(1.456) |
| < 1.0 > |
| echo trunc(-5.456) |
| < -5.0 > |
| echo trunc(4.0) |
| < 4.0 |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| Compute()->trunc() |
| < |
| Return type: |Float| |
| |
| |
| tuple2list({tuple}) *tuple2list()* |
| Create a List from a shallow copy of the tuple items. |
| Examples: > |
| tuple2list((1, 2, 3)) returns [1, 2, 3] |
| < |list2tuple()| does the opposite. |
| |
| This function doesn't recursively convert all the Tuple items |
| in {tuple} to a List. Note that the items are identical |
| between the list and the tuple, changing an item changes the |
| contents of both the tuple and the list. |
| |
| Returns an empty list on error. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetTuple()->tuple2list() |
| < |
| Return type: list<{type}> (depending on the given |Tuple|) |
| |
| |
| *type()* |
| type({expr}) The result is a Number representing the type of {expr}. |
| Instead of using the number directly, it is better to use the |
| v:t_ variable that has the value: |
| Number: 0 |v:t_number| |
| String: 1 |v:t_string| |
| Funcref: 2 |v:t_func| |
| List: 3 |v:t_list| |
| Dictionary: 4 |v:t_dict| |
| Float: 5 |v:t_float| |
| Boolean: 6 |v:t_bool| (v:false and v:true) |
| None: 7 |v:t_none| (v:null and v:none) |
| Job: 8 |v:t_job| |
| Channel: 9 |v:t_channel| |
| Blob: 10 |v:t_blob| |
| Class: 12 |v:t_class| |
| Object: 13 |v:t_object| |
| Typealias: 14 |v:t_typealias| |
| Enum: 15 |v:t_enum| |
| EnumValue: 16 |v:t_enumvalue| |
| Tuple: 17 |v:t_tuple| |
| For backward compatibility, this method can be used: > |
| :if type(myvar) == type(0) |
| :if type(myvar) == type("") |
| :if type(myvar) == type(function("tr")) |
| :if type(myvar) == type([]) |
| :if type(myvar) == type({}) |
| :if type(myvar) == type(0.0) |
| :if type(myvar) == type(v:false) |
| :if type(myvar) == type(v:none) |
| < To check if the v:t_ variables exist use this: > |
| :if exists('v:t_number') |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mylist->type() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| typename({expr}) *typename()* |
| Return a string representation of the type of {expr}. |
| Example: > |
| echo typename([1, 2, 3]) |
| < list<number> ~ |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| undofile({name}) *undofile()* |
| Return the name of the undo file that would be used for a file |
| with name {name} when writing. This uses the 'undodir' |
| option, finding directories that exist. It does not check if |
| the undo file exists. |
| {name} is always expanded to the full path, since that is what |
| is used internally. |
| If {name} is empty undofile() returns an empty string, since a |
| buffer without a file name will not write an undo file. |
| Useful in combination with |:wundo| and |:rundo|. |
| When compiled without the |+persistent_undo| option this always |
| returns an empty string. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetFilename()->undofile() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| undotree([{buf}]) *undotree()* |
| Return the current state of the undo tree for the current |
| buffer, or for a specific buffer if {buf} is given. The |
| result is a dictionary with the following items: |
| "seq_last" The highest undo sequence number used. |
| "seq_cur" The sequence number of the current position in |
| the undo tree. This differs from "seq_last" |
| when some changes were undone. |
| "time_cur" Time last used for |:earlier| and related |
| commands. Use |strftime()| to convert to |
| something readable. |
| "save_last" Number of the last file write. Zero when no |
| write yet. |
| "save_cur" Number of the current position in the undo |
| tree. |
| "synced" Non-zero when the last undo block was synced. |
| This happens when waiting from input from the |
| user. See |undo-blocks|. |
| "entries" A list of dictionaries with information about |
| undo blocks. |
| |
| The first item in the "entries" list is the oldest undo item. |
| Each List item is a |Dictionary| with these items: |
| "seq" Undo sequence number. Same as what appears in |
| |:undolist|. |
| "time" Timestamp when the change happened. Use |
| |strftime()| to convert to something readable. |
| "newhead" Only appears in the item that is the last one |
| that was added. This marks the last change |
| and where further changes will be added. |
| "curhead" Only appears in the item that is the last one |
| that was undone. This marks the current |
| position in the undo tree, the block that will |
| be used by a redo command. When nothing was |
| undone after the last change this item will |
| not appear anywhere. |
| "save" Only appears on the last block before a file |
| write. The number is the write count. The |
| first write has number 1, the last one the |
| "save_last" mentioned above. |
| "alt" Alternate entry. This is again a List of undo |
| blocks. Each item may again have an "alt" |
| item. |
| |
| Return type: dict<any> |
| |
| |
| uniq({list} [, {func} [, {dict}]]) *uniq()* *E882* |
| Remove second and succeeding copies of repeated adjacent |
| {list} items in-place. Returns {list}. If you want a list |
| to remain unmodified make a copy first: > |
| :let newlist = uniq(copy(mylist)) |
| < The default compare function uses the string representation of |
| each item. For the use of {func} and {dict} see |sort()|. |
| For deduplicating text in the current buffer see |:uniq|. |
| |
| Returns zero if {list} is not a |List|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mylist->uniq() |
| < |
| Return type: list<{type}> |
| |
| |
| *utf16idx()* |
| utf16idx({string}, {idx} [, {countcc} [, {charidx}]]) |
| Same as |charidx()| but returns the UTF-16 code unit index of |
| the byte at {idx} in {string} (after converting it to UTF-16). |
| |
| When {charidx} is present and TRUE, {idx} is used as the |
| character index in the String {string} instead of as the byte |
| index. |
| An {idx} in the middle of a UTF-8 sequence is rounded |
| downwards to the beginning of that sequence. |
| |
| Returns -1 if the arguments are invalid or if there are less |
| than {idx} bytes in {string}. If there are exactly {idx} bytes |
| the length of the string in UTF-16 code units is returned. |
| |
| See |byteidx()| and |byteidxcomp()| for getting the byte index |
| from the UTF-16 index and |charidx()| for getting the |
| character index from the UTF-16 index. |
| Refer to |string-offset-encoding| for more information. |
| Examples: > |
| echo utf16idx('a😊😊', 3) returns 2 |
| echo utf16idx('a😊😊', 7) returns 4 |
| echo utf16idx('a😊😊', 1, 0, 1) returns 2 |
| echo utf16idx('a😊😊', 2, 0, 1) returns 4 |
| echo utf16idx('aą́c', 6) returns 2 |
| echo utf16idx('aą́c', 6, 1) returns 4 |
| echo utf16idx('a😊😊', 9) returns -1 |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetName()->utf16idx(idx) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| values({dict}) *values()* |
| Return a |List| with all the values of {dict}. The |List| is |
| in arbitrary order. Also see |items()| and |keys()|. |
| Returns zero if {dict} is not a |Dict|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| mydict->values() |
| < |
| Return type: list<any> |
| |
| |
| virtcol({expr} [, {list} [, {winid}]]) *virtcol()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the screen column of the file |
| position given with {expr}. That is, the last screen position |
| occupied by the character at that position, when the screen |
| would be of unlimited width. When there is a <Tab> at the |
| position, the returned Number will be the column at the end of |
| the <Tab>. For example, for a <Tab> in column 1, with 'ts' |
| set to 8, it returns 8. |conceal| is ignored. |
| For the byte position use |col()|. |
| |
| For the use of {expr} see |getpos()| and |col()|. |
| When {expr} is "$", it means the end of the cursor line, so |
| the result is the number of cells in the cursor line plus one. |
| |
| When 'virtualedit' is used {expr} can be [lnum, col, off], |
| where "off" is the offset in screen columns from the start of |
| the character. E.g., a position within a <Tab> or after the |
| last character. When "off" is omitted zero is used. When |
| Virtual editing is active in the current mode, a position |
| beyond the end of the line can be returned. Also see |
| |'virtualedit'| |
| |
| If {list} is present and non-zero then virtcol() returns a |
| List with the first and last screen position occupied by the |
| character. |
| |
| With the optional {winid} argument the values are obtained for |
| that window instead of the current window. |
| |
| Note that only marks in the current file can be used. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| " With text "foo^Lbar" and cursor on the "^L": |
| |
| virtcol(".") " returns 5 |
| virtcol(".", 1) " returns [4, 5] |
| virtcol("$") " returns 9 |
| |
| " With text " there", with 't at 'h': |
| |
| virtcol("'t") " returns 6 |
| < |
| The first column is 1. 0 or [0, 0] is returned for an error. |
| |
| A more advanced example that echoes the maximum length of |
| all lines: > |
| echo max(map(range(1, line('$')), "virtcol([v:val, '$'])")) |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetPos()->virtcol() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| virtcol2col({winid}, {lnum}, {col}) *virtcol2col()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the byte index of the |
| character in window {winid} at buffer line {lnum} and virtual |
| column {col}. |
| |
| If buffer line {lnum} is an empty line, 0 is returned. |
| |
| If {col} is greater than the last virtual column in line |
| {lnum}, then the byte index of the character at the last |
| virtual column is returned. |
| |
| For a multi-byte character, the column number of the first |
| byte in the character is returned. |
| |
| The {winid} argument can be the window number or the |
| |window-ID|. If this is zero, then the current window is used. |
| |
| Returns -1 if the window {winid} doesn't exist or the buffer |
| line {lnum} or virtual column {col} is invalid. |
| |
| See also |screenpos()|, |virtcol()| and |col()|. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetWinid()->virtcol2col(lnum, col) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| visualmode([{expr}]) *visualmode()* |
| The result is a String, which describes the last Visual mode |
| used in the current buffer. Initially it returns an empty |
| string, but once Visual mode has been used, it returns "v", |
| "V", or "<CTRL-V>" (a single CTRL-V character) for |
| character-wise, line-wise, or block-wise Visual mode |
| respectively. |
| Example: > |
| :exe "normal " .. visualmode() |
| < This enters the same Visual mode as before. It is also useful |
| in scripts if you wish to act differently depending on the |
| Visual mode that was used. |
| If Visual mode is active, use |mode()| to get the Visual mode |
| (e.g., in a |:vmap|). |
| If {expr} is supplied and it evaluates to a non-zero Number or |
| a non-empty String, then the Visual mode will be cleared and |
| the old value is returned. See |non-zero-arg|. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| wildmenumode() *wildmenumode()* |
| Returns |TRUE| when the wildmenu is active and |FALSE| |
| otherwise. See 'wildmenu' and 'wildmode'. |
| This can be used in mappings to handle the 'wildcharm' option |
| gracefully. (Makes only sense with |mapmode-c| mappings). |
| |
| For example to make <c-j> work like <down> in wildmode, use: > |
| :cnoremap <expr> <C-j> wildmenumode() ? "\<Down>\<Tab>" : "\<c-j>" |
| < |
| (Note: this needs the 'wildcharm' option set appropriately). |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| win_execute({id}, {command} [, {silent}]) *win_execute()* |
| Like `execute()` but in the context of window {id}. |
| The window will temporarily be made the current window, |
| without triggering autocommands or changing directory. When |
| executing {command} autocommands will be triggered, this may |
| have unexpected side effects. Use `:noautocmd` if needed. |
| Example: > |
| call win_execute(winid, 'set syntax=python') |
| < Doing the same with `setwinvar()` would not trigger |
| autocommands and not actually show syntax highlighting. |
| *E994* |
| Not all commands are allowed in popup windows. |
| When window {id} does not exist then no error is given and |
| an empty string is returned. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|, the base is passed as the |
| second argument: > |
| GetCommand()->win_execute(winid) |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| win_findbuf({bufnr}) *win_findbuf()* |
| Returns a |List| with |window-ID|s for windows that contain |
| buffer {bufnr}. When there is none the list is empty. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetBufnr()->win_findbuf() |
| < |
| Return type: list<number> or list<any> |
| |
| |
| win_getid([{win} [, {tab}]]) *win_getid()* |
| Get the |window-ID| for the specified window. |
| When {win} is missing use the current window. |
| With {win} this is the window number. The top window has |
| number 1. |
| Without {tab} use the current tab, otherwise the tab with |
| number {tab}. The first tab has number one. |
| Return zero if the window cannot be found. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetWinnr()->win_getid() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| win_gettype([{nr}]) *win_gettype()* |
| Return the type of the window: |
| "autocmd" autocommand window. Temporary window |
| used to execute autocommands. |
| "command" command-line window |cmdwin| |
| (empty) normal window |
| "loclist" |location-list-window| |
| "popup" popup window |popup| |
| "preview" preview window |preview-window| |
| "quickfix" |quickfix-window| |
| "unknown" window {nr} not found |
| |
| When {nr} is omitted return the type of the current window. |
| When {nr} is given return the type of this window by number or |
| |window-ID|. |
| |
| Also see the 'buftype' option. When running a terminal in a |
| popup window then 'buftype' is "terminal" and win_gettype() |
| returns "popup". |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetWinid()->win_gettype() |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| win_gotoid({expr}) *win_gotoid()* |
| Go to window with ID {expr}. This may also change the current |
| tabpage. |
| Return TRUE if successful, FALSE if the window cannot be found. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetWinid()->win_gotoid() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| win_id2tabwin({expr}) *win_id2tabwin()* |
| Return a list with the tab number and window number of window |
| with ID {expr}: [tabnr, winnr]. |
| Return [0, 0] if the window cannot be found. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetWinid()->win_id2tabwin() |
| < |
| Return type: list<number> |
| |
| |
| win_id2win({expr}) *win_id2win()* |
| Return the window number of window with ID {expr}. |
| Return 0 if the window cannot be found in the current tabpage. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetWinid()->win_id2win() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| win_move_separator({nr}, {offset}) *win_move_separator()* |
| Move window {nr}'s vertical separator (i.e., the right border) |
| by {offset} columns, as if being dragged by the mouse. {nr} |
| can be a window number or |window-ID|. A positive {offset} |
| moves right and a negative {offset} moves left. Moving a |
| window's vertical separator will change the width of the |
| window and the width of other windows adjacent to the vertical |
| separator. The magnitude of movement may be smaller than |
| specified (e.g., as a consequence of maintaining |
| 'winminwidth'). Returns TRUE if the window can be found and |
| FALSE otherwise. |
| This will fail for the rightmost window and a full-width |
| window, since it has no separator on the right. |
| Only works for the current tab page. *E1308* |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetWinnr()->win_move_separator(offset) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| win_move_statusline({nr}, {offset}) *win_move_statusline()* |
| Move window {nr}'s status line (i.e., the bottom border) by |
| {offset} rows, as if being dragged by the mouse. {nr} can be a |
| window number or |window-ID|. A positive {offset} moves down |
| and a negative {offset} moves up. Moving a window's status |
| line will change the height of the window and the height of |
| other windows adjacent to the status line. The magnitude of |
| movement may be smaller than specified (e.g., as a consequence |
| of maintaining 'winminheight'). Returns TRUE if the window can |
| be found and FALSE otherwise. |
| Only works for the current tab page. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetWinnr()->win_move_statusline(offset) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| win_screenpos({nr}) *win_screenpos()* |
| Return the screen position of window {nr} as a list with two |
| numbers: [row, col]. The first window always has position |
| [1, 1], unless there is a tabline, then it is [2, 1]. |
| {nr} can be the window number or the |window-ID|. Use zero |
| for the current window. |
| Returns [0, 0] if the window cannot be found. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetWinid()->win_screenpos() |
| < |
| Return type: list<number> |
| |
| |
| win_splitmove({nr}, {target} [, {options}]) *win_splitmove()* |
| Temporarily switch to window {target}, then move window {nr} |
| to a new split adjacent to {target}. |
| Unlike commands such as |:split|, no new windows are created |
| (the |window-ID| of window {nr} is unchanged after the move). |
| |
| Both {nr} and {target} can be window numbers or |window-ID|s. |
| Both must be in the current tab page. |
| |
| Returns zero for success, non-zero for failure. |
| |
| {options} is a |Dictionary| with the following optional entries: |
| "vertical" When TRUE, the split is created vertically, |
| like with |:vsplit|. |
| "rightbelow" When TRUE, the split is made below or to the |
| right (if vertical). When FALSE, it is done |
| above or to the left (if vertical). When not |
| present, the values of 'splitbelow' and |
| 'splitright' are used. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetWinid()->win_splitmove(target) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| *winbufnr()* |
| winbufnr({nr}) The result is a Number, which is the number of the buffer |
| associated with window {nr}. {nr} can be the window number or |
| the |window-ID|. |
| When {nr} is zero, the number of the buffer in the current |
| window is returned. |
| When window {nr} doesn't exist, -1 is returned. |
| Example: > |
| :echo "The file in the current window is " . bufname(winbufnr(0)) |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| FindWindow()->winbufnr()->bufname() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| *wincol()* |
| wincol() The result is a Number, which is the virtual column of the |
| cursor in the window. This is counting screen cells from the |
| left side of the window. The leftmost column is one. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| *windowsversion()* |
| windowsversion() |
| The result is a String. For MS-Windows it indicates the OS |
| version. E.g, Windows 10 is "10.0", Windows 8 is "6.2", |
| Windows XP is "5.1". For non-MS-Windows systems the result is |
| an empty string. |
| |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| winheight({nr}) *winheight()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the height of window {nr}. |
| {nr} can be the window number or the |window-ID|. |
| When {nr} is zero, the height of the current window is |
| returned. When window {nr} doesn't exist, -1 is returned. |
| An existing window always has a height of zero or more. |
| This excludes any window toolbar line. |
| Examples: > |
| :echo "The current window has " .. winheight(0) .. " lines." |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetWinid()->winheight() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| winlayout([{tabnr}]) *winlayout()* |
| The result is a nested List containing the layout of windows |
| in a tabpage. |
| |
| Without {tabnr} use the current tabpage, otherwise the tabpage |
| with number {tabnr}. If the tabpage {tabnr} is not found, |
| returns an empty list. |
| |
| For a leaf window, it returns: |
| ['leaf', {winid}] |
| For horizontally split windows, which form a column, it |
| returns: |
| ['col', [{nested list of windows}]] |
| For vertically split windows, which form a row, it returns: |
| ['row', [{nested list of windows}]] |
| |
| Example: > |
| " Only one window in the tab page |
| :echo winlayout() |
| ['leaf', 1000] |
| " Two horizontally split windows |
| :echo winlayout() |
| ['col', [['leaf', 1000], ['leaf', 1001]]] |
| " The second tab page, with three horizontally split |
| " windows, with two vertically split windows in the |
| " middle window |
| :echo winlayout(2) |
| ['col', [['leaf', 1002], ['row', [['leaf', 1003], |
| ['leaf', 1001]]], ['leaf', 1000]]] |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetTabnr()->winlayout() |
| < |
| Return type: list<any> |
| |
| |
| winline() *winline()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the screen line of the cursor |
| in the window. This is counting screen lines from the top of |
| the window. The first line is one. |
| If the cursor was moved the view on the file will be updated |
| first, this may cause a scroll. |
| |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| winnr([{arg}]) *winnr()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the number of the current |
| window. The top window has number 1. |
| Returns zero for a popup window. |
| |
| The optional argument {arg} supports the following values: |
| $ the number of the last window (the window |
| count). |
| # the number of the last accessed window (where |
| |CTRL-W_p| goes to). If there is no previous |
| window or it is in another tab page 0 is |
| returned. May refer to the current window in |
| some cases (e.g. when evaluating 'statusline' |
| expressions). |
| {N}j the number of the Nth window below the |
| current window (where |CTRL-W_j| goes to). |
| {N}k the number of the Nth window above the current |
| window (where |CTRL-W_k| goes to). |
| {N}h the number of the Nth window left of the |
| current window (where |CTRL-W_h| goes to). |
| {N}l the number of the Nth window right of the |
| current window (where |CTRL-W_l| goes to). |
| The number can be used with |CTRL-W_w| and ":wincmd w" |
| |:wincmd|. |
| When {arg} is invalid an error is given and zero is returned. |
| Also see |tabpagewinnr()| and |win_getid()|. |
| Examples: > |
| let window_count = winnr('$') |
| let prev_window = winnr('#') |
| let wnum = winnr('3k') |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetWinval()->winnr() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| winrestcmd() *winrestcmd()* |
| Returns a sequence of |:resize| commands that should restore |
| the current window sizes. Only works properly when no windows |
| are opened or closed and the current window and tab page is |
| unchanged. |
| Example: > |
| :let cmd = winrestcmd() |
| :call MessWithWindowSizes() |
| :exe cmd |
| < |
| Return type: |String| |
| |
| |
| winrestview({dict}) *winrestview()* |
| Uses the |Dictionary| returned by |winsaveview()| to restore |
| the view of the current window. |
| Note: The {dict} does not have to contain all values, that are |
| returned by |winsaveview()|. If values are missing, those |
| settings won't be restored. So you can use: > |
| :call winrestview({'curswant': 4}) |
| < |
| This will only set the curswant value (the column the cursor |
| wants to move on vertical movements) of the cursor to column 5 |
| (yes, that is 5), while all other settings will remain the |
| same. This is useful, if you set the cursor position manually. |
| |
| If you have changed the values the result is unpredictable. |
| If the window size changed the result won't be the same. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetView()->winrestview() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| winsaveview() *winsaveview()* |
| Returns a |Dictionary| that contains information to restore |
| the view of the current window. Use |winrestview()| to |
| restore the view. |
| This is useful if you have a mapping that jumps around in the |
| buffer and you want to go back to the original view. |
| This does not save fold information. Use the 'foldenable' |
| option to temporarily switch off folding, so that folds are |
| not opened when moving around. This may have side effects. |
| The return value includes: |
| lnum cursor line number |
| col cursor column (Note: the first column |
| zero, as opposed to what |getcurpos()| |
| returns) |
| coladd cursor column offset for 'virtualedit' |
| curswant column for vertical movement (Note: |
| the first column is zero, as opposed |
| to what |getcurpos()| returns). After |
| |$| command it will be a very large |
| number equal to |v:maxcol|. |
| topline first line in the window |
| topfill filler lines, only in diff mode |
| leftcol first column displayed; only used when |
| 'wrap' is off |
| skipcol columns skipped |
| Note that no option values are saved. |
| |
| Return type: dict<number> |
| |
| |
| winwidth({nr}) *winwidth()* |
| The result is a Number, which is the width of window {nr}. |
| {nr} can be the window number or the |window-ID|. |
| When {nr} is zero, the width of the current window is |
| returned. When window {nr} doesn't exist, -1 is returned. |
| An existing window always has a width of zero or more. |
| Examples: > |
| :echo "The current window has " .. winwidth(0) .. " columns." |
| :if winwidth(0) <= 50 |
| : 50 wincmd | |
| :endif |
| < For getting the terminal or screen size, see the 'columns' |
| option. |
| |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetWinid()->winwidth() |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| wordcount() *wordcount()* |
| The result is a dictionary of byte/chars/word statistics for |
| the current buffer. This is the same info as provided by |
| |g_CTRL-G| |
| The return value includes: |
| bytes Number of bytes in the buffer |
| chars Number of chars in the buffer |
| words Number of words in the buffer |
| cursor_bytes Number of bytes before cursor position |
| (not in Visual mode) |
| cursor_chars Number of chars before cursor position |
| (not in Visual mode) |
| cursor_words Number of words before cursor position |
| (not in Visual mode) |
| visual_bytes Number of bytes visually selected |
| (only in Visual mode) |
| visual_chars Number of chars visually selected |
| (only in Visual mode) |
| visual_words Number of words visually selected |
| (only in Visual mode) |
| |
| Return type: dict<number> |
| |
| |
| writefile({object}, {fname} [, {flags}]) *writefile()* |
| When {object} is a |List| write it to file {fname}. Each list |
| item is separated with a NL. Each list item must be a String |
| or Number. |
| All NL characters are replaced with a NUL character. |
| Inserting CR characters needs to be done before passing {list} |
| to writefile(). |
| |
| When {object} is a |Blob| write the bytes to file {fname} |
| unmodified, also when binary mode is not specified. |
| |
| {flags} must be a String. These characters are recognized: |
| |
| 'b' Binary mode is used: There will not be a NL after the |
| last list item. An empty item at the end does cause the |
| last line in the file to end in a NL. |
| |
| 'a' Append mode is used, lines are appended to the file: > |
| :call writefile(["foo"], "event.log", "a") |
| :call writefile(["bar"], "event.log", "a") |
| < |
| 'D' Delete the file when the current function ends. This |
| works like: > |
| :defer delete({fname}) |
| < Fails when not in a function. Also see |:defer|. |
| |
| 's' fsync() is called after writing the file. This flushes |
| the file to disk, if possible. This takes more time but |
| avoids losing the file if the system crashes. |
| |
| 'S' fsync() is not called, even when 'fsync' is set. |
| |
| When {flags} does not contain "S" or "s" then fsync() is |
| called if the 'fsync' option is set. |
| |
| An existing file is overwritten, if possible. |
| |
| When the write fails -1 is returned, otherwise 0. There is an |
| error message if the file can't be created or when writing |
| fails. |
| |
| Also see |readfile()|. |
| To copy a file byte for byte: > |
| :let fl = readfile("foo", "b") |
| :call writefile(fl, "foocopy", "b") |
| |
| < Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| GetText()->writefile("thefile") |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| |
| xor({expr}, {expr}) *xor()* |
| Bitwise XOR on the two arguments. The arguments are converted |
| to a number. A List, Dict or Float argument causes an error. |
| Also see `and()` and `or()`. |
| Example: > |
| :let bits = xor(bits, 0x80) |
| < |
| Can also be used as a |method|: > |
| :let bits = bits->xor(0x80) |
| < |
| Return type: |Number| |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 3. Feature list *feature-list* |
| |
| There are three types of features: |
| 1. Features that are only supported when they have been enabled when Vim |
| was compiled |+feature-list|. Example: > |
| :if has("cindent") |
| < *gui_running* |
| 2. Features that are only supported when certain conditions have been met. |
| Example: > |
| :if has("gui_running") |
| < *has-patch* |
| 3. Beyond a certain version or at a certain version and including a specific |
| patch. The "patch-7.4.248" feature means that the Vim version is 7.5 or |
| later, or it is version 7.4 and patch 248 was included. Example: > |
| :if has("patch-7.4.248") |
| < Note that it's possible for patch 248 to be omitted even though 249 is |
| included. Only happens when cherry-picking patches. |
| Note that this form only works for patch 7.4.237 and later, before that |
| you need to check for the patch and the v:version. Example (checking |
| version 6.2.148 or later): > |
| :if v:version > 602 || (v:version == 602 && has("patch148")) |
| |
| Hint: To find out if Vim supports backslashes in a file name (MS-Windows), |
| use: `if exists('+shellslash')` |
| |
| |
| acl Compiled with |ACL| support. |
| all_builtin_terms Compiled with all builtin terminals enabled. (always |
| true) |
| amiga Amiga version of Vim. |
| arabic Compiled with Arabic support |Arabic|. |
| arp Compiled with ARP support (Amiga). |
| autocmd Compiled with autocommand support. (always true) |
| autochdir Compiled with support for 'autochdir' |
| autoservername Automatically enable |clientserver| |
| balloon_eval Compiled with |balloon-eval| support. |
| balloon_multiline GUI supports multiline balloons. |
| beos BeOS version of Vim. |
| browse Compiled with |:browse| support, and browse() will |
| work. |
| browsefilter Compiled with support for |browsefilter|. |
| bsd Compiled on an OS in the BSD family (excluding macOS). |
| builtin_terms Compiled with some builtin terminals. (always true) |
| byte_offset Compiled with support for 'o' in 'statusline' |
| channel Compiled with support for |channel| and |job| |
| cindent Compiled with 'cindent' support. (always true) |
| clientserver Compiled with remote invocation support |clientserver|. |
| clipboard Compiled with 'clipboard' support. |
| clipboard_working Compiled with 'clipboard' support and it can be used. |
| cmdline_compl Compiled with |cmdline-completion| support. |
| cmdline_hist Compiled with |cmdline-history| support. |
| cmdline_info Compiled with 'showcmd' and 'ruler' support. |
| comments Compiled with |'comments'| support. |
| compatible Compiled to be very Vi compatible. |
| conpty Platform where |ConPTY| can be used. |
| cryptv Compiled with encryption support |encryption|. |
| cscope Compiled with |cscope| support. |
| cursorbind Compiled with |'cursorbind'| (always true) |
| debug Compiled with "DEBUG" defined. |
| dialog_con Compiled with console dialog support. |
| dialog_con_gui Compiled with console and GUI dialog support. |
| dialog_gui Compiled with GUI dialog support. |
| diff Compiled with |vimdiff| and 'diff' support. |
| digraphs Compiled with support for digraphs. |
| directx Compiled with support for DirectX and 'renderoptions'. |
| dnd Compiled with support for the "~ register |quote_~|. |
| drop_file Compiled with |drop_file| support. |
| ebcdic Compiled on a machine with ebcdic character set. |
| emacs_tags Compiled with support for Emacs tags. |
| eval Compiled with expression evaluation support. Always |
| true, of course! |
| ex_extra |+ex_extra| (always true) |
| extra_search Compiled with support for |'incsearch'| and |
| |'hlsearch'| |
| farsi Support for Farsi was removed |farsi|. |
| file_in_path Compiled with support for |gf| and |<cfile>| (always |
| true) |
| filterpipe When 'shelltemp' is off pipes are used for shell |
| read/write/filter commands |
| find_in_path Compiled with support for include file searches |
| |+find_in_path|. |
| float Compiled with support for |Float|. |
| fname_case Case in file names matters (for Amiga and MS-Windows |
| this is not present). |
| folding Compiled with |folding| support. |
| footer Compiled with GUI footer support. |gui-footer| |
| fork Compiled to use fork()/exec() instead of system(). |
| gettext Compiled with message translation |multi-lang| |
| gui Compiled with GUI enabled. |
| gui_athena Compiled with Athena GUI (always false). |
| gui_gnome Compiled with Gnome support (gui_gtk is also defined). |
| gui_gtk Compiled with GTK+ GUI (any version). |
| gui_gtk2 Compiled with GTK+ 2 GUI (gui_gtk is also defined). |
| gui_gtk3 Compiled with GTK+ 3 GUI (gui_gtk is also defined). |
| gui_haiku Compiled with Haiku GUI. |
| gui_mac Compiled with Macintosh GUI. |
| gui_motif Compiled with Motif GUI. |
| gui_photon Compiled with Photon GUI. |
| gui_running Vim is running in the GUI, or it will start soon. |
| gui_win32 Compiled with MS-Windows Win32 GUI. |
| gui_win32s idem, and Win32s system being used (Windows 3.1) |
| haiku Haiku version of Vim. |
| hangul_input Compiled with Hangul input support. |hangul| |
| hpux HP-UX version of Vim. |
| hurd GNU/Hurd version of Vim |
| iconv Can use iconv() for conversion. |
| insert_expand Compiled with support for CTRL-X expansion commands in |
| Insert mode. (always true) |
| job Compiled with support for |channel| and |job| |
| ipv6 Compiled with support for IPv6 networking in |channel|. |
| jumplist Compiled with |jumplist| support. (always true) |
| keymap Compiled with 'keymap' support. |
| lambda Compiled with |lambda| support. |
| langmap Compiled with 'langmap' support. |
| libcall Compiled with |libcall()| support. |
| linebreak Compiled with 'linebreak', 'breakat', 'showbreak' and |
| 'breakindent' support. |
| linux Linux version of Vim. |
| lispindent Compiled with support for lisp indenting. |
| (always true) |
| listcmds Compiled with commands for the buffer list |:files| |
| and the argument list |arglist|. |
| localmap Compiled with local mappings and abbr. |:map-local| |
| lua Compiled with Lua interface |Lua|. |
| mac Any Macintosh version of Vim cf. osx |
| macunix Synonym for osxdarwin |
| menu Compiled with support for |:menu|. |
| mksession Compiled with support for |:mksession|. |
| modify_fname Compiled with file name modifiers. |filename-modifiers| |
| (always true) |
| mouse Compiled with support for mouse. |
| mouse_dec Compiled with support for Dec terminal mouse. |
| mouse_gpm Compiled with support for gpm (Linux console mouse) |
| mouse_gpm_enabled GPM mouse is working |
| mouse_netterm Compiled with support for netterm mouse. |
| mouse_pterm Compiled with support for qnx pterm mouse. |
| mouse_sysmouse Compiled with support for sysmouse (*BSD console mouse) |
| mouse_sgr Compiled with support for sgr mouse. |
| mouse_urxvt Compiled with support for urxvt mouse. |
| mouse_xterm Compiled with support for xterm mouse. |
| mouseshape Compiled with support for 'mouseshape'. |
| multi_byte Compiled with support for 'encoding' (always true) |
| multi_byte_encoding 'encoding' is set to a multibyte encoding. |
| multi_byte_ime Compiled with support for IME input method. |
| multi_lang Compiled with support for multiple languages. |
| mzscheme Compiled with MzScheme interface |mzscheme|. |
| nanotime Compiled with sub-second time stamp checks. |
| netbeans_enabled Compiled with support for |netbeans| and connected. |
| netbeans_intg Compiled with support for |netbeans|. |
| num64 Compiled with 64-bit |Number| support. (always true) |
| ole Compiled with OLE automation support for Win32. |
| osx Compiled for macOS cf. mac |
| osxdarwin Compiled for macOS, with |mac-darwin-feature| |
| packages Compiled with |packages| support. |
| path_extra Compiled with up/downwards search in 'path' and 'tags' |
| perl Compiled with Perl interface. |
| persistent_undo Compiled with support for persistent undo history. |
| postscript Compiled with PostScript file printing. |
| printer Compiled with |:hardcopy| support. |
| profile Compiled with |:profile| support. |
| prof_nsec Profile results are in nanoseconds. |
| python Python 2.x interface available. |has-python| |
| python_compiled Compiled with Python 2.x interface. |has-python| |
| python_dynamic Python 2.x interface is dynamically loaded. |has-python| |
| python3 Python 3.x interface available. |has-python| |
| python3_compiled Compiled with Python 3.x interface. |has-python| |
| python3_dynamic Python 3.x interface is dynamically loaded. |has-python| |
| python3_stable Python 3.x interface is using Python Stable ABI. |has-python| |
| pythonx Python 2.x and/or 3.x interface available. |python_x| |
| qnx QNX version of Vim. |
| quickfix Compiled with |quickfix| support. |
| reltime Compiled with |reltime()| support. |
| rightleft Compiled with 'rightleft' support. |
| ruby Compiled with Ruby interface |ruby|. |
| scrollbind Compiled with 'scrollbind' support. (always true) |
| showcmd Compiled with 'showcmd' support. |
| signs Compiled with |:sign| support. |
| smartindent Compiled with 'smartindent' support. (always true) |
| sodium Compiled with libsodium for better crypt support |
| sound Compiled with sound support, e.g. `sound_playevent()` |
| spell Compiled with spell checking support |spell|. |
| startuptime Compiled with |--startuptime| support. |
| statusline Compiled with support for 'statusline', 'rulerformat' |
| and special formats of 'titlestring' and 'iconstring'. |
| sun SunOS version of Vim. |
| sun_workshop Support for Sun |workshop| has been removed. |
| syntax Compiled with syntax highlighting support |syntax|. |
| syntax_items There are active syntax highlighting items for the |
| current buffer. |
| system Compiled to use system() instead of fork()/exec(). |
| tag_binary Compiled with binary searching in tags files |
| |tag-binary-search|. (always true) |
| tag_old_static Support for old static tags was removed, see |
| |tag-old-static|. |
| tcl Compiled with Tcl interface. |
| termguicolors Compiled with true color in terminal support. |
| terminal Compiled with |terminal| support. |
| terminfo Compiled with terminfo instead of termcap. |
| termresponse Compiled with support for |t_RV| and |v:termresponse|. |
| textobjects Compiled with support for |text-objects|. |
| textprop Compiled with support for |text-properties|. |
| tgetent Compiled with tgetent support, able to use a termcap |
| or terminfo file. |
| timers Compiled with |timer_start()| support. |
| title Compiled with window title support |'title'|. |
| (always true) |
| toolbar Compiled with support for |gui-toolbar|. |
| ttyin input is a terminal (tty) |
| ttyout output is a terminal (tty) |
| unix Unix version of Vim. *+unix* |
| unnamedplus Compiled with support for "unnamedplus" in 'clipboard' |
| user_commands User-defined commands. (always true) |
| vartabs Compiled with variable tabstop support |'vartabstop'|. |
| vcon Win32: Virtual console support is working, can use |
| 'termguicolors'. Also see |+vtp|. |
| vertsplit Compiled with vertically split windows |:vsplit|. |
| (always true) |
| vim_starting True while initial source'ing takes place. |startup| |
| *vim_starting* |
| vim9script Compiled with |Vim9| script support |
| viminfo Compiled with viminfo support. |
| vimscript-1 Compiled Vim script version 1 support |
| vimscript-2 Compiled Vim script version 2 support |
| vimscript-3 Compiled Vim script version 3 support |
| vimscript-4 Compiled Vim script version 4 support |
| virtualedit Compiled with 'virtualedit' option. (always true) |
| visual Compiled with Visual mode. (always true) |
| visualextra Compiled with extra Visual mode commands. (always |
| true) |blockwise-operators|. |
| vms VMS version of Vim. |
| vreplace Compiled with |gR| and |gr| commands. (always true) |
| vtp Compiled for vcon support |+vtp| (check vcon to find |
| out if it works in the current console). |
| wayland Compiled with Wayland protocol support. |
| wayland_clipboard Compiled with support for Wayland selections/clipboard |
| wildignore Compiled with 'wildignore' option. |
| wildmenu Compiled with 'wildmenu' option. |
| win16 old version for MS-Windows 3.1 (always false) |
| win32 Win32 version of Vim (MS-Windows 95 and later, 32 or |
| 64 bits) |
| win32unix Win32 version of Vim, using Unix files (Cygwin) |
| win64 Win64 version of Vim (MS-Windows 64 bit). |
| win95 Win32 version for MS-Windows 95/98/ME (always false) |
| winaltkeys Compiled with 'winaltkeys' option. |
| windows Compiled with support for more than one window. |
| (always true) |
| writebackup Compiled with 'writebackup' default on. |
| xattr Compiled with extended attributes support |xattr| |
| (currently only supported on Linux). |
| xfontset Compiled with X fontset support |xfontset|. |
| xim Compiled with X input method support |xim|. |
| xpm Compiled with pixmap support. |
| xpm_w32 Compiled with pixmap support for Win32. (Only for |
| backward compatibility. Use "xpm" instead.) |
| xsmp Compiled with X session management support. |
| xsmp_interact Compiled with interactive X session management support. |
| xterm_clipboard Compiled with support for xterm clipboard. |
| xterm_save Compiled with support for saving and restoring the |
| xterm screen. |
| x11 Compiled with X11 support. |
| |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 4. Matching a pattern in a String *string-match* |
| |
| This is common between several functions. A regexp pattern as explained at |
| |pattern| is normally used to find a match in the buffer lines. When a |
| pattern is used to find a match in a String, almost everything works in the |
| same way. The difference is that a String is handled like it is one line. |
| When it contains a "\n" character, this is not seen as a line break for the |
| pattern. It can be matched with a "\n" in the pattern, or with ".". Example: |
| > |
| :let a = "aaaa\nxxxx" |
| :echo matchstr(a, "..\n..") |
| aa |
| xx |
| :echo matchstr(a, "a.x") |
| a |
| x |
| |
| Don't forget that "^" will only match at the first character of the String and |
| "$" at the last character of the string. They don't match after or before a |
| "\n". |
| |
| vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl: |