| *eval.txt* For Vim version 9.1. Last change: 2025 Jun 28 |
| |
| |
| VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar |
| |
| |
| Expression evaluation *expression* *expr* *E15* *eval* |
| *E1002* |
| Using expressions is introduced in chapter 41 of the user manual |usr_41.txt|. |
| |
| Note: Expression evaluation can be disabled at compile time. If this has been |
| done, the features in this document are not available. See |+eval| and |
| |no-eval-feature|. |
| |
| This file is mainly about the backwards compatible (legacy) Vim script. For |
| specifics of Vim9 script, which can execute much faster, supports type |
| checking and much more, see |vim9.txt|. Where the syntax or semantics differ |
| a remark is given. |
| |
| 1. Variables |variables| |
| 1.1 Variable types |
| 1.2 Function references |Funcref| |
| 1.3 Lists |Lists| |
| 1.4 Tuples |Tuples| |
| 1.5 Dictionaries |Dictionaries| |
| 1.6 Blobs |Blobs| |
| 1.7 More about variables |more-variables| |
| 2. Expression syntax |expression-syntax| |
| 3. Internal variable |internal-variables| |
| 4. Builtin Functions |functions| |
| 5. Defining functions |user-functions| |
| 6. Curly braces names |curly-braces-names| |
| 7. Commands |expression-commands| |
| 8. Exception handling |exception-handling| |
| 9. Examples |eval-examples| |
| 10. Vim script version |vimscript-version| |
| 11. No +eval feature |no-eval-feature| |
| 12. The sandbox |eval-sandbox| |
| 13. Textlock |textlock| |
| 14. Vim script library |vim-script-library| |
| |
| Testing support is documented in |testing.txt|. |
| Profiling is documented at |profiling|. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 1. Variables *variables* |
| |
| 1.1 Variable types ~ |
| *E712* *E896* *E897* *E899* *E1098* |
| *E1107* *E1135* *E1138* *E1523* |
| There are eleven types of variables: |
| |
| *Number* *Integer* |
| Number A 32 or 64 bit signed number. |expr-number| |
| The number of bits is available in |v:numbersize|. |
| Examples: -123 0x10 0177 0o177 0b1011 |
| |
| Float A floating point number. |floating-point-format| *Float* |
| Examples: 123.456 1.15e-6 -1.1e3 |
| |
| String A NUL terminated string of 8-bit unsigned characters (bytes). |
| |expr-string| Examples: "ab\txx\"--" 'x-z''a,c' |
| |
| List An ordered sequence of items, see |List| for details. |
| Example: [1, 2, ['a', 'b']] |
| |
| Tuple An ordered immutable sequence of items, see |Tuple| for |
| details. |
| Example: (1, 2, ('a', 'b')) |
| |
| Dictionary An associative, unordered array: Each entry has a key and a |
| value. |Dictionary| |
| Examples: |
| {'blue': "#0000ff", 'red': "#ff0000"} |
| #{blue: "#0000ff", red: "#ff0000"} |
| |
| Funcref A reference to a function |Funcref|. |
| Example: function("strlen") |
| It can be bound to a dictionary and arguments, it then works |
| like a Partial. |
| Example: function("Callback", [arg], myDict) |
| |
| Special |v:false|, |v:true|, |v:none| and |v:null|. *Special* |
| |
| Job Used for a job, see |job_start()|. *Job* *Jobs* |
| |
| Channel Used for a channel, see |ch_open()|. *Channel* *Channels* |
| |
| Blob Binary Large Object. Stores any sequence of bytes. See |Blob| |
| for details |
| Example: 0zFF00ED015DAF |
| 0z is an empty Blob. |
| |
| The Number and String types are converted automatically, depending on how they |
| are used. |
| |
| Conversion from a Number to a String is by making the ASCII representation of |
| the Number. Examples: |
| Number 123 --> String "123" ~ |
| Number 0 --> String "0" ~ |
| Number -1 --> String "-1" ~ |
| *octal* |
| Conversion from a String to a Number only happens in legacy Vim script, not in |
| Vim9 script. It is done by converting the first digits to a number. |
| Hexadecimal "0xf9", Octal "017" or "0o17", and Binary "0b10" |
| numbers are recognized |
| NOTE: when using |Vim9| script or |scriptversion-4| octal with a leading "0" |
| is not recognized. The 0o notation requires patch 8.2.0886. |
| If the String doesn't start with digits, the result is zero. |
| Examples: |
| String "456" --> Number 456 ~ |
| String "6bar" --> Number 6 ~ |
| String "foo" --> Number 0 ~ |
| String "0xf1" --> Number 241 ~ |
| String "0100" --> Number 64 ~ |
| String "0o100" --> Number 64 ~ |
| String "0b101" --> Number 5 ~ |
| String "-8" --> Number -8 ~ |
| String "+8" --> Number 0 ~ |
| |
| To force conversion from String to Number, add zero to it: > |
| :echo "0100" + 0 |
| < 64 ~ |
| |
| To avoid a leading zero to cause octal conversion, or for using a different |
| base, use |str2nr()|. |
| |
| *TRUE* *FALSE* *Boolean* |
| For boolean operators Numbers are used. Zero is FALSE, non-zero is TRUE. |
| You can also use |v:false| and |v:true|, in Vim9 script |false| and |true|. |
| When TRUE is returned from a function it is the Number one, FALSE is the |
| number zero. |
| |
| Note that in the command: > |
| :if "foo" |
| :" NOT executed |
| "foo" is converted to 0, which means FALSE. If the string starts with a |
| non-zero number it means TRUE: > |
| :if "8foo" |
| :" executed |
| To test for a non-empty string, use empty(): > |
| :if !empty("foo") |
| |
| < *falsy* *truthy* |
| An expression can be used as a condition, ignoring the type and only using |
| whether the value is "sort of true" or "sort of false". Falsy is: |
| the number zero |
| empty string, blob, list or dictionary |
| Other values are truthy. Examples: |
| 0 falsy |
| 1 truthy |
| -1 truthy |
| 0.0 falsy |
| 0.1 truthy |
| '' falsy |
| 'x' truthy |
| [] falsy |
| [0] truthy |
| {} falsy |
| #{x: 1} truthy |
| 0z falsy |
| 0z00 truthy |
| |
| *non-zero-arg* |
| Function arguments often behave slightly different from |TRUE|: If the |
| argument is present and it evaluates to a non-zero Number, |v:true| or a |
| non-empty String, then the value is considered to be TRUE. |
| Note that " " and "0" are also non-empty strings, thus considered to be TRUE. |
| A List, Dictionary or Float is not a Number or String, thus evaluate to FALSE. |
| |
| *E611* *E745* *E728* *E703* *E729* *E730* *E731* *E908* *E910* |
| *E913* *E974* *E975* *E976* *E1319* *E1320* *E1321* *E1322* |
| *E1323* *E1324* *E1520* *E1522* |
| |List|, |Tuple|, |Dictionary|, |Funcref|, |Job|, |Channel|, |Blob|, |Class| |
| and |object| types are not automatically converted. |
| |
| *E805* *E806* *E808* |
| When mixing Number and Float the Number is converted to Float. Otherwise |
| there is no automatic conversion of Float. You can use str2float() for String |
| to Float, printf() for Float to String and float2nr() for Float to Number. |
| |
| *E362* *E891* *E892* *E893* *E894* |
| *E907* *E911* *E914* *E1521* |
| When expecting a Float a Number can also be used, but nothing else. |
| |
| *no-type-checking* |
| You will not get an error if you try to change the type of a variable. |
| |
| |
| 1.2 Function references ~ |
| *Funcref* *E695* *E718* *E1192* |
| A Funcref variable is obtained with the |function()| function, the |funcref()| |
| function, (in |Vim9| script) the name of a function, or created with the |
| lambda expression |expr-lambda|. It can be used in an expression in the place |
| of a function name, before the parenthesis around the arguments, to invoke the |
| function it refers to. Example in |Vim9| script: > |
| |
| :var Fn = MyFunc |
| :echo Fn() |
| |
| Legacy script: > |
| :let Fn = function("MyFunc") |
| :echo Fn() |
| < *E704* *E705* *E707* |
| A Funcref variable must start with a capital, "s:", "w:", "t:" or "b:". You |
| can use "g:" but the following name must still start with a capital. You |
| cannot have both a Funcref variable and a function with the same name. |
| |
| A special case is defining a function and directly assigning its Funcref to a |
| Dictionary entry. Example: > |
| :function dict.init() dict |
| : let self.val = 0 |
| :endfunction |
| |
| The key of the Dictionary can start with a lower case letter. The actual |
| function name is not used here. Also see |numbered-function|. |
| |
| A Funcref can also be used with the |:call| command: > |
| :call Fn() |
| :call dict.init() |
| |
| The name of the referenced function can be obtained with |string()|. > |
| :let func = string(Fn) |
| |
| You can use |call()| to invoke a Funcref and use a list variable for the |
| arguments: > |
| :let r = call(Fn, mylist) |
| < |
| *Partial* |
| A Funcref optionally binds a Dictionary and/or arguments. This is also called |
| a Partial. This is created by passing the Dictionary and/or arguments to |
| function() or funcref(). When calling the function the Dictionary and/or |
| arguments will be passed to the function. Example: > |
| |
| let Cb = function('Callback', ['foo'], myDict) |
| call Cb('bar') |
| |
| This will invoke the function as if using: > |
| call myDict.Callback('foo', 'bar') |
| |
| This is very useful when passing a function around, e.g. in the arguments of |
| |ch_open()|. |
| |
| Note that binding a function to a Dictionary also happens when the function is |
| a member of the Dictionary: > |
| |
| let myDict.myFunction = MyFunction |
| call myDict.myFunction() |
| |
| Here MyFunction() will get myDict passed as "self". This happens when the |
| "myFunction" member is accessed. When making assigning "myFunction" to |
| otherDict and calling it, it will be bound to otherDict: > |
| |
| let otherDict.myFunction = myDict.myFunction |
| call otherDict.myFunction() |
| |
| Now "self" will be "otherDict". But when the dictionary was bound explicitly |
| this won't happen: > |
| |
| let myDict.myFunction = function(MyFunction, myDict) |
| let otherDict.myFunction = myDict.myFunction |
| call otherDict.myFunction() |
| |
| Here "self" will be "myDict", because it was bound explicitly. |
| |
| |
| 1.3 Lists ~ |
| *list* *List* *Lists* *E686* |
| A List is an ordered sequence of items. An item can be of any type. Items |
| can be accessed by their index number. Items can be added and removed at any |
| position in the sequence. |
| |
| |
| List creation ~ |
| *E696* *E697* |
| A List is created with a comma-separated sequence of items in square brackets. |
| Examples: > |
| :let mylist = [1, "two", 3, "four"] |
| :let emptylist = [] |
| |
| An item can be any expression. Using a List for an item creates a |
| List of Lists: > |
| :let nestlist = [[11, 12], [21, 22], [31, 32]] |
| |
| An extra comma after the last item is ignored. |
| |
| |
| List index ~ |
| *list-index* *E684* |
| An item in the List can be accessed by putting the index in square brackets |
| after the List. Indexes are zero-based, thus the first item has index zero. > |
| :let item = mylist[0] " get the first item: 1 |
| :let item = mylist[2] " get the third item: 3 |
| |
| When the resulting item is a list this can be repeated: > |
| :let item = nestlist[0][1] " get the first list, second item: 12 |
| < |
| A negative index is counted from the end. Index -1 refers to the last item in |
| the List, -2 to the last but one item, etc. > |
| :let last = mylist[-1] " get the last item: "four" |
| |
| To avoid an error for an invalid index use the |get()| function. When an item |
| is not available it returns zero or the default value you specify: > |
| :echo get(mylist, idx) |
| :echo get(mylist, idx, "NONE") |
| |
| |
| List concatenation ~ |
| *list-concatenation* |
| Two lists can be concatenated with the "+" operator: > |
| :let longlist = mylist + [5, 6] |
| :let longlist = [5, 6] + mylist |
| To prepend or append an item, turn it into a list by putting [] around it. |
| |
| A list can be concatenated with another one in-place using |:let+=| or |
| |extend()|: > |
| :let mylist += [7, 8] |
| :call extend(mylist, [7, 8]) |
| < |
| See |list-modification| below for more about changing a list in-place. |
| |
| |
| Sublist ~ |
| *sublist* |
| A part of the List can be obtained by specifying the first and last index, |
| separated by a colon in square brackets: > |
| :let shortlist = mylist[2:-1] " get List [3, "four"] |
| |
| Omitting the first index is similar to zero. Omitting the last index is |
| similar to -1. > |
| :let endlist = mylist[2:] " from item 2 to the end: [3, "four"] |
| :let shortlist = mylist[2:2] " List with one item: [3] |
| :let otherlist = mylist[:] " make a copy of the List |
| |
| Notice that the last index is inclusive. If you prefer using an exclusive |
| index use the |slice()| function. |
| |
| If the first index is beyond the last item of the List or the last index is |
| before the first item, the result is an empty list. There is no error |
| message. |
| |
| If the last index is equal to or greater than the length of the list the |
| length minus one is used: > |
| :let mylist = [0, 1, 2, 3] |
| :echo mylist[2:8] " result: [2, 3] |
| |
| NOTE: mylist[s:e] means using the variable "s:e" as index. Watch out for |
| using a single letter variable before the ":". Insert a space when needed: |
| mylist[s : e]. |
| |
| |
| List identity ~ |
| *list-identity* |
| When variable "aa" is a list and you assign it to another variable "bb", both |
| variables refer to the same list. Thus changing the list "aa" will also |
| change "bb": > |
| :let aa = [1, 2, 3] |
| :let bb = aa |
| :call add(aa, 4) |
| :echo bb |
| < [1, 2, 3, 4] |
| |
| Making a copy of a list is done with the |copy()| function. Using [:] also |
| works, as explained above. This creates a shallow copy of the list: Changing |
| a list item in the list will also change the item in the copied list: > |
| :let aa = [[1, 'a'], 2, 3] |
| :let bb = copy(aa) |
| :call add(aa, 4) |
| :let aa[0][1] = 'aaa' |
| :echo aa |
| < [[1, aaa], 2, 3, 4] > |
| :echo bb |
| < [[1, aaa], 2, 3] |
| |
| To make a completely independent list use |deepcopy()|. This also makes a |
| copy of the values in the list, recursively. Up to a hundred levels deep. |
| |
| The operator "is" can be used to check if two variables refer to the same |
| List. "isnot" does the opposite. In contrast "==" compares if two lists have |
| the same value. > |
| :let alist = [1, 2, 3] |
| :let blist = [1, 2, 3] |
| :echo alist is blist |
| < 0 > |
| :echo alist == blist |
| < 1 |
| |
| Note about comparing lists: Two lists are considered equal if they have the |
| same length and all items compare equal, as with using "==". There is one |
| exception: When comparing a number with a string they are considered |
| different. There is no automatic type conversion, as with using "==" on |
| variables. Example: > |
| echo 4 == "4" |
| < 1 > |
| echo [4] == ["4"] |
| < 0 |
| |
| Thus comparing Lists is more strict than comparing numbers and strings. You |
| can compare simple values this way too by putting them in a list: > |
| |
| :let a = 5 |
| :let b = "5" |
| :echo a == b |
| < 1 > |
| :echo [a] == [b] |
| < 0 |
| |
| |
| List unpack ~ |
| |
| To unpack the items in a list to individual variables, put the variables in |
| square brackets, like list items: > |
| :let [var1, var2] = mylist |
| |
| When the number of variables does not match the number of items in the list |
| this produces an error. To handle any extra items from the list append ";" |
| and a variable name: > |
| :let [var1, var2; rest] = mylist |
| |
| This works like: > |
| :let var1 = mylist[0] |
| :let var2 = mylist[1] |
| :let rest = mylist[2:] |
| |
| Except that there is no error if there are only two items. "rest" will be an |
| empty list then. |
| |
| |
| List modification ~ |
| *list-modification* |
| To change a specific item of a list use |:let| this way: > |
| :let list[4] = "four" |
| :let listlist[0][3] = item |
| |
| To change part of a list you can specify the first and last item to be |
| modified. The value must at least have the number of items in the range: > |
| :let list[3:5] = [3, 4, 5] |
| |
| To add items to a List in-place, you can use |:let+=| (|list-concatenation|): > |
| :let listA = [1, 2] |
| :let listA += [3, 4] |
| < |
| When two variables refer to the same List, changing one List in-place will |
| cause the referenced List to be changed in-place: > |
| :let listA = [1, 2] |
| :let listB = listA |
| :let listB += [3, 4] |
| :echo listA |
| [1, 2, 3, 4] |
| < |
| Adding and removing items from a list is done with functions. Here are a few |
| examples: > |
| :call insert(list, 'a') " prepend item 'a' |
| :call insert(list, 'a', 3) " insert item 'a' before list[3] |
| :call add(list, "new") " append String item |
| :call add(list, [1, 2]) " append a List as one new item |
| :call extend(list, [1, 2]) " extend the list with two more items |
| :let i = remove(list, 3) " remove item 3 |
| :unlet list[3] " idem |
| :let l = remove(list, 3, -1) " remove items 3 to last item |
| :unlet list[3 : ] " idem |
| :call filter(list, 'v:val !~ "x"') " remove items with an 'x' |
| |
| Changing the order of items in a list: > |
| :call sort(list) " sort a list alphabetically |
| :call reverse(list) " reverse the order of items |
| :call uniq(sort(list)) " sort and remove duplicates |
| |
| |
| For loop ~ |
| |
| The |:for| loop executes commands for each item in a List, Tuple, String or |
| Blob. A variable is set to each item in sequence. Example with a List: > |
| :for item in mylist |
| : call Doit(item) |
| :endfor |
| |
| This works like: > |
| :let index = 0 |
| :while index < len(mylist) |
| : let item = mylist[index] |
| : :call Doit(item) |
| : let index = index + 1 |
| :endwhile |
| |
| If all you want to do is modify each item in the list then the |map()| |
| function will be a simpler method than a for loop. |
| |
| Just like the |:let| command, |:for| also accepts a list of variables. This |
| requires the argument to be a List of Lists. > |
| :for [lnum, col] in [[1, 3], [2, 8], [3, 0]] |
| : call Doit(lnum, col) |
| :endfor |
| |
| This works like a |:let| command is done for each list item. Again, the types |
| must remain the same to avoid an error. |
| |
| It is also possible to put remaining items in a List variable: > |
| :for [i, j; rest] in listlist |
| : call Doit(i, j) |
| : if !empty(rest) |
| : echo "remainder: " .. string(rest) |
| : endif |
| :endfor |
| |
| For a Tuple one tuple item at a time is used. |
| |
| For a Blob one byte at a time is used. |
| |
| For a String one character, including any composing characters, is used as a |
| String. Example: > |
| for c in text |
| echo 'This character is ' .. c |
| endfor |
| |
| |
| List functions ~ |
| *E714* |
| Functions that are useful with a List: > |
| :let r = call(funcname, list) " call a function with an argument list |
| :if empty(list) " check if list is empty |
| :let l = len(list) " number of items in list |
| :let big = max(list) " maximum value in list |
| :let small = min(list) " minimum value in list |
| :let xs = count(list, 'x') " count nr of times 'x' appears in list |
| :let i = index(list, 'x') " index of first 'x' in list |
| :let lines = getline(1, 10) " get ten text lines from buffer |
| :call append('$', lines) " append text lines in buffer |
| :let list = split("a b c") " create list from items in a string |
| :let string = join(list, ', ') " create string from list items |
| :let s = string(list) " String representation of list |
| :call map(list, '">> " .. v:val') " prepend ">> " to each item |
| |
| Don't forget that a combination of features can make things simple. For |
| example, to add up all the numbers in a list: > |
| :exe 'let sum = ' .. join(nrlist, '+') |
| |
| 1.4 Tuples ~ |
| *tuple* *Tuple* *Tuples* |
| *E1532* *E1533* |
| A Tuple is an ordered sequence of items. An item can be of any type. Items |
| can be accessed by their index number. A Tuple is immutable. |
| |
| A Tuple is similar to a List but uses less memory and provides O(1) lookup |
| time for an item. |
| |
| Tuple creation ~ |
| *E1526* *E1527* |
| A Tuple is created with a comma-separated sequence of items in parentheses. |
| Examples: > |
| :let mytuple = (1, "two", 3, "four") |
| :let tuple = (5,) |
| :let emptytuple = () |
| |
| An item can be any expression. If there is only one item in the tuple, then |
| the item must be followed by a comma. |
| |
| Using a Tuple for an item creates a Tuple of Tuples: > |
| :let nesttuple = ((11, 12), (21, 22), (31, 32)) |
| |
| |
| Tuple index ~ |
| *tuple-index* *E1519* |
| An item in the Tuple can be accessed by putting the index in square brackets |
| after the Tuple. Indexes are zero-based, thus the first item has index zero. |
| > |
| :let item = mytuple[0] " get the first item: 1 |
| :let item = mytuple[2] " get the third item: 3 |
| |
| When the resulting item is a tuple this can be repeated: > |
| :let item = nesttuple[0][1] " get the first tuple, second item: 12 |
| < |
| A negative index is counted from the end. Index -1 refers to the last item in |
| the Tuple, -2 to the last but one item, etc. > |
| :let last = mytuple[-1] " get the last item: "four" |
| |
| To avoid an error for an invalid index use the |get()| function. When an item |
| is not available it returns zero or the default value you specify: > |
| :echo get(mytuple, idx) |
| :echo get(mytuple, idx, "NONE") |
| |
| |
| Tuple modification ~ |
| *tuple-modification* |
| A tuple is immutable and items cannot be added or removed from a tuple. But |
| List and Dict items within a tuple can be modified: > |
| :let tuple = (1, [2, 3], {'a': 4}) |
| :let tuple[1][0] = 10 |
| :let tuple[2]['a'] = 20 |
| |
| |
| Tuple concatenation ~ |
| *tuple-concatenation* |
| Two tuples can be concatenated with the "+" operator: > |
| :let longtuple = mytuple + (5, 6) |
| :let longtuple = (5, 6) + mytuple |
| To prepend or append an item, turn it into a tuple by putting () around it. |
| The item must be followed by a comma. |
| |
| *E1540* |
| Two variadic tuples with same item type can be concatenated but with different |
| item types cannot be concatenated. Examples: > |
| var a: tuple<...list<number>> = (1, 2) |
| var b: tuple<...list<string>> = ('a', 'b') |
| echo a + b # not allowed |
| |
| var a: tuple<number, number> = (1, 2) |
| var b: tuple<...list<string>> = ('a', 'b') |
| echo a + b # allowed |
| |
| var a: tuple<...list<number>> = (1, 2) |
| var b: tuple<number, number> = (3, 4) |
| echo a + b # not allowed |
| |
| var a: tuple<...list<number>> = (1, 2) |
| var b: tuple<number, ...list<number>> = (3, 4) |
| echo a + b # not allowed |
| < |
| Note that a tuple is immutable and items cannot be added or removed from a |
| tuple. |
| |
| |
| Subtuple ~ |
| *subtuple* |
| A part of the Tuple can be obtained by specifying the first and last index, |
| separated by a colon in square brackets: > |
| :let shorttuple = mytuple[2:-1] " get Tuple (3, "four") |
| |
| Omitting the first index is similar to zero. Omitting the last index is |
| similar to -1. > |
| :let endtuple = mytuple[2:] " from item 2 to the end: (3, "four") |
| :let shorttuple = mytuple[2:2] " Tuple with one item: (3,) |
| :let othertuple = mytuple[:] " make a copy of the Tuple |
| |
| Notice that the last index is inclusive. If you prefer using an exclusive |
| index, use the |slice()| function. |
| |
| If the first index is beyond the last item of the Tuple or the last index is |
| before the first item, the result is an empty tuple. There is no error |
| message. |
| |
| If the last index is equal to or greater than the length of the tuple, the |
| length minus one is used: > |
| :let mytuple = (0, 1, 2, 3) |
| :echo mytuple[2:8] " result: (2, 3) |
| |
| NOTE: mytuple[s:e] means using the variable "s:e" as index. Watch out for |
| using a single letter variable before the ":". Insert a space when needed: |
| mytuple[s : e]. |
| |
| |
| Tuple identity ~ |
| *tuple-identity* |
| When variable "aa" is a tuple and you assign it to another variable "bb", both |
| variables refer to the same tuple: > |
| :let aa = (1, 2, 3) |
| :let bb = aa |
| < |
| |
| Making a copy of a tuple is done with the |copy()| function. Using [:] also |
| works, as explained above. This creates a shallow copy of the tuple: For |
| example, changing a list item in the tuple will also change the item in the |
| copied tuple: > |
| :let aa = ([1, 'a'], 2, 3) |
| :let bb = copy(aa) |
| :let aa[0][1] = 'aaa' |
| :echo aa |
| < ([1, aaa], 2, 3) > |
| :echo bb |
| < ([1, aaa], 2, 3) |
| |
| To make a completely independent tuple, use |deepcopy()|. This also makes a |
| copy of the values in the tuple, recursively. Up to a hundred levels deep. |
| |
| The operator "is" can be used to check if two variables refer to the same |
| Tuple. "isnot" does the opposite. In contrast, "==" compares if two tuples |
| have the same value. > |
| :let atuple = (1, 2, 3) |
| :let btuple = (1, 2, 3) |
| :echo atuple is btuple |
| < 0 > |
| :echo atuple == btuple |
| < 1 |
| |
| Note about comparing tuples: Two tuples are considered equal if they have the |
| same length and all items compare equal, as with using "==". There is one |
| exception: When comparing a number with a string they are considered |
| different. There is no automatic type conversion, as with using "==" on |
| variables. Example: > |
| echo 4 == "4" |
| < 1 > |
| echo (4,) == ("4",) |
| < 0 |
| |
| Thus comparing Tuples is more strict than comparing numbers and strings. You |
| can compare simple values this way too by putting them in a tuple: > |
| |
| :let a = 5 |
| :let b = "5" |
| :echo a == b |
| < 1 > |
| :echo (a,) == (b,) |
| < 0 |
| |
| |
| Tuple unpack ~ |
| |
| To unpack the items in a tuple to individual variables, put the variables in |
| square brackets, like list items: > |
| :let [var1, var2] = mytuple |
| |
| When the number of variables does not match the number of items in the tuple |
| this produces an error. To handle any extra items from the tuple, append ";" |
| and a variable name (which will then be of type tuple): > |
| :let [var1, var2; rest] = mytuple |
| |
| This works like: > |
| :let var1 = mytuple[0] |
| :let var2 = mytuple[1] |
| :let rest = mytuple[2:] |
| |
| Except that there is no error if there are only two items. "rest" will be an |
| empty tuple then. |
| |
| |
| Tuple functions ~ |
| *E1536* |
| Functions that are useful with a Tuple: > |
| :let xs = count(tuple, 'x') " count number of 'x's in tuple |
| :if empty(tuple) " check if tuple is empty |
| :let i = index(tuple, 'x') " index of first 'x' in tuple |
| :let l = items(tuple) " list of items in a tuple |
| :let string = join(tuple, ', ') " create string from tuple items |
| :let l = len(tuple) " number of items in tuple |
| :let big = max(tuple) " maximum value in tuple |
| :let small = min(tuple) " minimum value in tuple |
| :let r = repeat(tuple, n) " repeat a tuple n times |
| :let r = reverse(tuple) " reverse a tuple |
| :let s = slice(tuple, n1, n2) " slice a tuple |
| :let s = string(tuple) " String representation of tuple |
| :let l = tuple2list(tuple) " convert a tuple to list |
| :let t = list2tuple(list) " convert a list to tuple |
| < |
| *E1524* |
| A tuple cannot be used with the |map()|, |mapnew()| and |filter()| functions. |
| |
| 1.5 Dictionaries ~ |
| *dict* *Dict* *Dictionaries* *Dictionary* |
| A Dictionary is an associative array: Each entry has a key and a value. The |
| entry can be located with the key. The entries are stored without a specific |
| ordering. |
| |
| |
| Dictionary creation ~ |
| *E720* *E721* *E722* *E723* |
| A Dictionary is created with a comma-separated sequence of entries in curly |
| braces. Each entry has a key and a value, separated by a colon. Each key can |
| only appear once. Examples: > |
| :let mydict = {'one': 1, 'two': 2, 'three': 3} |
| :let emptydict = {} |
| < *E713* *E716* *E717* |
| A key is always a String. You can use a Number, it will be converted to a |
| String automatically. Thus the String '4' and the number 4 will find the same |
| entry. Note that the String '04' and the Number 04 are different, since the |
| Number will be converted to the String '4', leading zeros are dropped. The |
| empty string can also be used as a key. |
| |
| In |Vim9| script a literal key can be used if it consists only of alphanumeric |
| characters, underscore and dash, see |vim9-literal-dict|. |
| *literal-Dict* *#{}* |
| To avoid having to put quotes around every key the #{} form can be used in |
| legacy script. This does require the key to consist only of ASCII letters, |
| digits, '-' and '_'. Example: > |
| :let mydict = #{zero: 0, one_key: 1, two-key: 2, 333: 3} |
| Note that 333 here is the string "333". Empty keys are not possible with #{}. |
| In |Vim9| script the #{} form cannot be used because it can be confused with |
| the start of a comment. |
| |
| A value can be any expression. Using a Dictionary for a value creates a |
| nested Dictionary: > |
| :let nestdict = {1: {11: 'a', 12: 'b'}, 2: {21: 'c'}} |
| |
| An extra comma after the last entry is ignored. |
| |
| |
| Accessing entries ~ |
| |
| The normal way to access an entry is by putting the key in square brackets: > |
| :let mydict = {'one': 1, 'two': 2, 'three': 3} |
| :let val = mydict["one"] |
| :let mydict["four"] = 4 |
| :let val = mydict.one |
| :let mydict.four = 4 |
| |
| You can add new entries to an existing Dictionary this way, unlike Lists. |
| |
| For keys that consist entirely of letters, digits and underscore the following |
| form can be used |expr-entry|: > |
| :let val = mydict.one |
| :let mydict.four = 4 |
| |
| Since an entry can be any type, also a List and a Dictionary, the indexing and |
| key lookup can be repeated: > |
| :echo dict.key[idx].key |
| |
| |
| Dictionary to List conversion ~ |
| |
| You may want to loop over the entries in a dictionary. For this you need to |
| turn the Dictionary into a List and pass it to |:for|. |
| |
| Most often you want to loop over the keys, using the |keys()| function: > |
| :for key in keys(mydict) |
| : echo key .. ': ' .. mydict[key] |
| :endfor |
| |
| The List of keys is unsorted. You may want to sort them first: > |
| :for key in sort(keys(mydict)) |
| |
| To loop over the values use the |values()| function: > |
| :for v in values(mydict) |
| : echo "value: " .. v |
| :endfor |
| |
| If you want both the key and the value use the |items()| function. It returns |
| a List in which each item is a List with two items, the key and the value: > |
| :for [key, value] in items(mydict) |
| : echo key .. ': ' .. value |
| :endfor |
| |
| |
| Dictionary identity ~ |
| *dict-identity* |
| Just like Lists you need to use |copy()| and |deepcopy()| to make a copy of a |
| Dictionary. Otherwise, assignment results in referring to the same |
| Dictionary: > |
| :let onedict = {'a': 1, 'b': 2} |
| :let adict = onedict |
| :let adict['a'] = 11 |
| :echo onedict['a'] |
| 11 |
| |
| Two Dictionaries compare equal if all the key-value pairs compare equal. For |
| more info see |list-identity|. |
| |
| |
| Dictionary modification ~ |
| *dict-modification* |
| To change an already existing entry of a Dictionary, or to add a new entry, |
| use |:let| this way: > |
| :let dict[4] = "four" |
| :let dict['one'] = item |
| |
| Removing an entry from a Dictionary is done with |remove()| or |:unlet|. |
| Three ways to remove the entry with key "aaa" from dict: > |
| :let i = remove(dict, 'aaa') |
| :unlet dict.aaa |
| :unlet dict['aaa'] |
| |
| Merging a Dictionary with another is done with |extend()|: > |
| :call extend(adict, bdict) |
| This extends adict with all entries from bdict. Duplicate keys cause entries |
| in adict to be overwritten. An optional third argument can change this. |
| Note that the order of entries in a Dictionary is irrelevant, thus don't |
| expect ":echo adict" to show the items from bdict after the older entries in |
| adict. |
| |
| Weeding out entries from a Dictionary can be done with |filter()|: > |
| :call filter(dict, 'v:val =~ "x"') |
| This removes all entries from "dict" with a value not matching 'x'. |
| This can also be used to remove all entries: > |
| call filter(dict, 0) |
| |
| In some situations it is not allowed to remove or add entries to a Dictionary. |
| Especially when iterating over all the entries. You will get *E1313* or |
| another error in that case. |
| |
| |
| Dictionary function ~ |
| *Dictionary-function* *self* *E725* *E862* |
| When a function is defined with the "dict" attribute it can be used in a |
| special way with a dictionary. Example: > |
| :function Mylen() dict |
| : return len(self.data) |
| :endfunction |
| :let mydict = {'data': [0, 1, 2, 3], 'len': function("Mylen")} |
| :echo mydict.len() |
| |
| This is like a method in object oriented programming. The entry in the |
| Dictionary is a |Funcref|. The local variable "self" refers to the dictionary |
| the function was invoked from. When using |Vim9| script you can use classes |
| and objects, see `:class`. |
| |
| It is also possible to add a function without the "dict" attribute as a |
| Funcref to a Dictionary, but the "self" variable is not available then. |
| |
| *numbered-function* *anonymous-function* |
| To avoid the extra name for the function it can be defined and directly |
| assigned to a Dictionary in this way: > |
| :let mydict = {'data': [0, 1, 2, 3]} |
| :function mydict.len() |
| : return len(self.data) |
| :endfunction |
| :echo mydict.len() |
| |
| The function will then get a number and the value of dict.len is a |Funcref| |
| that references this function. The function can only be used through a |
| |Funcref|. It will automatically be deleted when there is no |Funcref| |
| remaining that refers to it. |
| |
| It is not necessary to use the "dict" attribute for a numbered function. |
| |
| If you get an error for a numbered function, you can find out what it is with |
| a trick. Assuming the function is 42, the command is: > |
| :function g:42 |
| |
| |
| Functions for Dictionaries ~ |
| *E715* |
| Functions that can be used with a Dictionary: > |
| :if has_key(dict, 'foo') " TRUE if dict has entry with key "foo" |
| :if empty(dict) " TRUE if dict is empty |
| :let l = len(dict) " number of items in dict |
| :let big = max(dict) " maximum value in dict |
| :let small = min(dict) " minimum value in dict |
| :let xs = count(dict, 'x') " count nr of times 'x' appears in dict |
| :let s = string(dict) " String representation of dict |
| :call map(dict, '">> " .. v:val') " prepend ">> " to each item |
| |
| |
| 1.6 Blobs ~ |
| *blob* *Blob* *Blobs* *E978* |
| A Blob is a binary object. It can be used to read an image from a file and |
| send it over a channel, for example. |
| |
| A Blob mostly behaves like a |List| of numbers, where each number has the |
| value of an 8-bit byte, from 0 to 255. |
| |
| |
| Blob creation ~ |
| |
| A Blob can be created with a |blob-literal|: > |
| :let b = 0zFF00ED015DAF |
| Dots can be inserted between bytes (pair of hex characters) for readability, |
| they don't change the value: > |
| :let b = 0zFF00.ED01.5DAF |
| |
| A blob can be read from a file with |readfile()| passing the {type} argument |
| set to "B", for example: > |
| :let b = readfile('image.png', 'B') |
| |
| A blob can be read from a channel with the |ch_readblob()| function. |
| |
| |
| Blob index ~ |
| *blob-index* *E979* |
| A byte in the Blob can be accessed by putting the index in square brackets |
| after the Blob. Indexes are zero-based, thus the first byte has index zero. > |
| :let myblob = 0z00112233 |
| :let byte = myblob[0] " get the first byte: 0x00 |
| :let byte = myblob[2] " get the third byte: 0x22 |
| |
| A negative index is counted from the end. Index -1 refers to the last byte in |
| the Blob, -2 to the last but one byte, etc. > |
| :let last = myblob[-1] " get the last byte: 0x33 |
| |
| To avoid an error for an invalid index use the |get()| function. When an item |
| is not available it returns -1 or the default value you specify: > |
| :echo get(myblob, idx) |
| :echo get(myblob, idx, 999) |
| |
| |
| Blob iteration ~ |
| |
| The |:for| loop executes commands for each byte of a Blob. The loop variable is |
| set to each byte in the Blob. Example: > |
| :for byte in 0z112233 |
| : call Doit(byte) |
| :endfor |
| This calls Doit() with 0x11, 0x22 and 0x33. |
| |
| |
| Blob concatenation ~ |
| *blob-concatenation* |
| Two blobs can be concatenated with the "+" operator: > |
| :let longblob = myblob + 0z4455 |
| :let longblob = 0z4455 + myblob |
| < |
| A blob can be concatenated with another one in-place using |:let+=|: > |
| :let myblob += 0z6677 |
| < |
| See |blob-modification| below for more about changing a blob in-place. |
| |
| |
| Part of a blob ~ |
| |
| A part of the Blob can be obtained by specifying the first and last index, |
| separated by a colon in square brackets: > |
| :let myblob = 0z00112233 |
| :let shortblob = myblob[1:2] " get 0z1122 |
| :let shortblob = myblob[2:-1] " get 0z2233 |
| |
| Omitting the first index is similar to zero. Omitting the last index is |
| similar to -1. > |
| :let endblob = myblob[2:] " from item 2 to the end: 0z2233 |
| :let shortblob = myblob[2:2] " Blob with one byte: 0z22 |
| :let otherblob = myblob[:] " make a copy of the Blob |
| |
| If the first index is beyond the last byte of the Blob or the second index is |
| before the first index, the result is an empty Blob. There is no error |
| message. |
| |
| If the second index is equal to or greater than the length of the list the |
| length minus one is used: > |
| :echo myblob[2:8] " result: 0z2233 |
| |
| |
| Blob modification ~ |
| *blob-modification* *E1184* |
| To change a specific byte of a blob use |:let| this way: > |
| :let blob[4] = 0x44 |
| |
| When the index is just one beyond the end of the Blob, it is appended. Any |
| higher index is an error. |
| |
| To change a sequence of bytes the [:] notation can be used: > |
| let blob[1:3] = 0z445566 |
| The length of the replaced bytes must be exactly the same as the value |
| provided. *E972* |
| |
| To change part of a blob you can specify the first and last byte to be |
| modified. The value must have the same number of bytes in the range: > |
| :let blob[3:5] = 0z334455 |
| |
| To add items to a Blob in-place, you can use |:let+=| (|blob-concatenation|): > |
| :let blobA = 0z1122 |
| :let blobA += 0z3344 |
| < |
| When two variables refer to the same Blob, changing one Blob in-place will |
| cause the referenced Blob to be changed in-place: > |
| :let blobA = 0z1122 |
| :let blobB = blobA |
| :let blobB += 0z3344 |
| :echo blobA |
| 0z11223344 |
| < |
| You can also use the functions |add()|, |remove()| and |insert()|. |
| |
| |
| Blob identity ~ |
| |
| Blobs can be compared for equality: > |
| if blob == 0z001122 |
| And for equal identity: > |
| if blob is otherblob |
| < *blob-identity* *E977* |
| When variable "aa" is a Blob and you assign it to another variable "bb", both |
| variables refer to the same Blob. Then the "is" operator returns true. |
| |
| When making a copy using [:] or |copy()| the values are the same, but the |
| identity is different: > |
| :let blob = 0z112233 |
| :let blob2 = blob |
| :echo blob == blob2 |
| < 1 > |
| :echo blob is blob2 |
| < 1 > |
| :let blob3 = blob[:] |
| :echo blob == blob3 |
| < 1 > |
| :echo blob is blob3 |
| < 0 |
| |
| Making a copy of a Blob is done with the |copy()| function. Using [:] also |
| works, as explained above. |
| |
| |
| 1.7 More about variables ~ |
| *more-variables* |
| If you need to know the type of a variable or expression, use the |type()| |
| function. |
| |
| When the '!' flag is included in the 'viminfo' option, global variables that |
| start with an uppercase letter, and don't contain a lowercase letter, are |
| stored in the viminfo file |viminfo-file|. |
| |
| When the 'sessionoptions' option contains "global", global variables that |
| start with an uppercase letter and contain at least one lowercase letter are |
| stored in the session file |session-file|. |
| |
| variable name can be stored where ~ |
| my_var_6 not |
| My_Var_6 session file |
| MY_VAR_6 viminfo file |
| |
| |
| In legacy script it is possible to form a variable name with curly braces, see |
| |curly-braces-names|. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 2. Expression syntax *expression-syntax* |
| *E1143* |
| Expression syntax summary, from least to most significant: |
| |
| |expr1| expr2 |
| expr2 ? expr1 : expr1 if-then-else |
| |
| |expr2| expr3 |
| expr3 || expr3 ... logical OR |
| |
| |expr3| expr4 |
| expr4 && expr4 ... logical AND |
| |
| |expr4| expr5 |
| expr5 == expr5 equal |
| expr5 != expr5 not equal |
| expr5 > expr5 greater than |
| expr5 >= expr5 greater than or equal |
| expr5 < expr5 smaller than |
| expr5 <= expr5 smaller than or equal |
| expr5 =~ expr5 regexp matches |
| expr5 !~ expr5 regexp doesn't match |
| |
| expr5 ==? expr5 equal, ignoring case |
| expr5 ==# expr5 equal, match case |
| etc. As above, append ? for ignoring case, # for |
| matching case |
| |
| expr5 is expr5 same |List|, |Tuple|, |Dictionary| or |Blob| |
| instance |
| expr5 isnot expr5 different |List|, |Tuple|, |Dictionary| or |
| |Blob| instance |
| |
| |expr5| expr6 |
| expr6 << expr6 bitwise left shift |
| expr6 >> expr6 bitwise right shift |
| |
| |expr6| expr7 |
| expr7 + expr7 ... number addition, list or tuple or blob |
| concatenation |
| expr7 - expr7 ... number subtraction |
| expr7 . expr7 ... string concatenation |
| expr7 .. expr7 ... string concatenation |
| |
| |expr7| expr8 |
| expr8 * expr8 ... number multiplication |
| expr8 / expr8 ... number division |
| expr8 % expr8 ... number modulo |
| |
| |expr8| expr9 |
| <type>expr9 type check and conversion (|Vim9| only) |
| |
| |expr9| expr10 |
| ! expr9 logical NOT |
| - expr9 unary minus |
| + expr9 unary plus |
| |
| |expr10| expr11 |
| expr10[expr1] byte of a String or item of a |List| or |
| |Tuple| |
| expr10[expr1 : expr1] substring of a String or sublist of a |List| |
| or a slice of a |Tuple| |
| expr10.name entry in a |Dictionary| |
| expr10(expr1, ...) function call with |Funcref| variable |
| expr10->name(expr1, ...) |method| call |
| |
| |expr11| number number constant |
| "string" string constant, backslash is special |
| 'string' string constant, ' is doubled |
| [expr1, ...] |List| |
| (expr1, ...) |Tuple| |
| {expr1: expr1, ...} |Dictionary| |
| #{key: expr1, ...} legacy |Dictionary| |
| &option option value |
| (expr1) nested expression |
| variable internal variable |
| va{ria}ble internal variable with curly braces |
| $VAR environment variable |
| @r contents of register 'r' |
| function(expr1, ...) function call |
| func{ti}on(expr1, ...) function call with curly braces |
| {args -> expr1} legacy lambda expression |
| (args) => expr1 Vim9 lambda expression |
| |
| |
| "..." indicates that the operations in this level can be concatenated. |
| Example: > |
| &nu || &list && &shell == "csh" |
| |
| All expressions within one level are parsed from left to right. |
| |
| Expression nesting is limited to 1000 levels deep (300 when build with MSVC) |
| to avoid running out of stack and crashing. *E1169* |
| |
| |
| expr1 *expr1* *ternary* *falsy-operator* *??* *E109* |
| ----- |
| |
| The ternary operator: expr2 ? expr1 : expr1 |
| The falsy operator: expr2 ?? expr1 |
| |
| Ternary operator ~ |
| |
| In legacy script the expression before the '?' is evaluated to a number. If |
| it evaluates to |TRUE|, the result is the value of the expression between the |
| '?' and ':', otherwise the result is the value of the expression after the |
| ':'. |
| |
| In |Vim9| script the first expression must evaluate to a boolean, see |
| |vim9-boolean|. |
| |
| Example: > |
| :echo lnum == 1 ? "top" : lnum |
| |
| Since the first expression is an "expr2", it cannot contain another ?:. The |
| other two expressions can, thus allow for recursive use of ?:. |
| Example: > |
| :echo lnum == 1 ? "top" : lnum == 1000 ? "last" : lnum |
| |
| To keep this readable, using |line-continuation| is suggested: > |
| :echo lnum == 1 |
| :\ ? "top" |
| :\ : lnum == 1000 |
| :\ ? "last" |
| :\ : lnum |
| |
| You should always put a space before the ':', otherwise it can be mistaken for |
| use in a variable such as "a:1". |
| |
| Falsy operator ~ |
| |
| This is also known as the "null coalescing operator", but that's too |
| complicated, thus we just call it the falsy operator. |
| |
| The expression before the '??' is evaluated. If it evaluates to |
| |truthy|, this is used as the result. Otherwise the expression after the '??' |
| is evaluated and used as the result. This is most useful to have a default |
| value for an expression that may result in zero or empty: > |
| echo theList ?? 'list is empty' |
| echo GetName() ?? 'unknown' |
| |
| These are similar, but not equal: > |
| expr2 ?? expr1 |
| expr2 ? expr2 : expr1 |
| In the second line "expr2" is evaluated twice. And in |Vim9| script the type |
| of expr2 before "?" must be a boolean. |
| |
| |
| expr2 and expr3 *expr2* *expr3* |
| --------------- |
| |
| expr3 || expr3 .. logical OR *expr-barbar* |
| expr4 && expr4 .. logical AND *expr-&&* |
| |
| The "||" and "&&" operators take one argument on each side. |
| |
| In legacy script the arguments are (converted to) Numbers. |
| |
| In |Vim9| script the values must be boolean, see |vim9-boolean|. Use "!!" to |
| convert any type to a boolean. |
| |
| The result is: |
| input output ~ |
| n1 n2 n1 || n2 n1 && n2 ~ |
| |FALSE| |FALSE| |FALSE| |FALSE| |
| |FALSE| |TRUE| |TRUE| |FALSE| |
| |TRUE| |FALSE| |TRUE| |FALSE| |
| |TRUE| |TRUE| |TRUE| |TRUE| |
| |
| The operators can be concatenated, for example: > |
| |
| &nu || &list && &shell == "csh" |
| |
| Note that "&&" takes precedence over "||", so this has the meaning of: > |
| |
| &nu || (&list && &shell == "csh") |
| |
| Once the result is known, the expression "short-circuits", that is, further |
| arguments are not evaluated. This is like what happens in C. For example: > |
| |
| let a = 1 |
| echo a || b |
| |
| This is valid even if there is no variable called "b" because "a" is |TRUE|, |
| so the result must be |TRUE|. Similarly below: > |
| |
| echo exists("b") && b == "yes" |
| |
| This is valid whether "b" has been defined or not. The second clause will |
| only be evaluated if "b" has been defined. |
| |
| |
| expr4 *expr4* *E1153* |
| ----- |
| |
| expr5 {cmp} expr5 |
| |
| Compare two expr5 expressions. In legacy script the result is a 0 if it |
| evaluates to false, or 1 if it evaluates to true. In |Vim9| script the result |
| is |true| or |false|. |
| |
| *expr-==* *expr-!=* *expr->* *expr->=* |
| *expr-<* *expr-<=* *expr-=~* *expr-!~* |
| *expr-==#* *expr-!=#* *expr->#* *expr->=#* |
| *expr-<#* *expr-<=#* *expr-=~#* *expr-!~#* |
| *expr-==?* *expr-!=?* *expr->?* *expr->=?* |
| *expr-<?* *expr-<=?* *expr-=~?* *expr-!~?* |
| *expr-is* *expr-isnot* *expr-is#* *expr-isnot#* |
| *expr-is?* *expr-isnot?* *E1072* |
| use 'ignorecase' match case ignore case ~ |
| equal == ==# ==? |
| not equal != !=# !=? |
| greater than > ># >? |
| greater than or equal >= >=# >=? |
| smaller than < <# <? |
| smaller than or equal <= <=# <=? |
| regexp matches =~ =~# =~? |
| regexp doesn't match !~ !~# !~? |
| same instance is is# is? |
| different instance isnot isnot# isnot? |
| |
| Examples: |
| "abc" ==# "Abc" evaluates to 0 |
| "abc" ==? "Abc" evaluates to 1 |
| "abc" == "Abc" evaluates to 1 if 'ignorecase' is set, 0 otherwise |
| NOTE: In |Vim9| script 'ignorecase' is not used. |
| |
| *E691* *E692* *E1517* *E1518* |
| A |List| can only be compared with a |List| and only "equal", "not equal", |
| "is" and "isnot" can be used. This compares the values of the list, |
| recursively. Ignoring case means case is ignored when comparing item values. |
| Same applies for a |Tuple|. |
| |
| *E735* *E736* |
| A |Dictionary| can only be compared with a |Dictionary| and only "equal", "not |
| equal", "is" and "isnot" can be used. This compares the key/values of the |
| |Dictionary| recursively. Ignoring case means case is ignored when comparing |
| item values. |
| |
| *E694* |
| A |Funcref| can only be compared with a |Funcref| and only "equal", "not |
| equal", "is" and "isnot" can be used. Case is never ignored. Whether |
| arguments or a Dictionary are bound (with a partial) matters. The |
| Dictionaries must also be equal (or the same, in case of "is") and the |
| arguments must be equal (or the same). |
| |
| To compare Funcrefs to see if they refer to the same function, ignoring bound |
| Dictionary and arguments, use |get()| to get the function name: > |
| if get(Part1, 'name') == get(Part2, 'name') |
| " Part1 and Part2 refer to the same function |
| < *E1037* |
| Using "is" or "isnot" with a |List|, |Tuple|, |Dictionary| or |Blob| checks |
| whether the expressions are referring to the same |List|, |Tuple|, |
| |Dictionary| or |Blob| instance. A copy of a |List| or |Tuple| is different |
| from the original |List| or |Tuple|. When using "is" without a |List|, |
| |Tuple|, |Dictionary| or |Blob|, it is equivalent to using "equal", using |
| "isnot" is equivalent to using "not equal". Except that a different type |
| means the values are different: > |
| echo 4 == '4' |
| 1 |
| echo 4 is '4' |
| 0 |
| echo 0 is [] |
| 0 |
| "is#"/"isnot#" and "is?"/"isnot?" can be used to match and ignore case. |
| In |Vim9| script this doesn't work, two strings are never identical. |
| |
| In legacy script, when comparing a String with a Number, the String is |
| converted to a Number, and the comparison is done on Numbers. This means |
| that: > |
| echo 0 == 'x' |
| 1 |
| because 'x' converted to a Number is zero. However: > |
| echo [0] == ['x'] |
| 0 |
| Inside a List or Tuple or Dictionary this conversion is not used. |
| |
| In |Vim9| script the types must match. |
| |
| When comparing two Strings, this is done with strcmp() or stricmp(). This |
| results in the mathematical difference (comparing byte values), not |
| necessarily the alphabetical difference in the local language. |
| |
| When using the operators with a trailing '#', or the short version and |
| 'ignorecase' is off, the comparing is done with strcmp(): case matters. |
| |
| When using the operators with a trailing '?', or the short version and |
| 'ignorecase' is set, the comparing is done with stricmp(): case is ignored. |
| |
| 'smartcase' is not used. |
| |
| The "=~" and "!~" operators match the lefthand argument with the righthand |
| argument, which is used as a pattern. See |pattern| for what a pattern is. |
| This matching is always done like 'magic' was set and 'cpoptions' is empty, no |
| matter what the actual value of 'magic' or 'cpoptions' is. This makes scripts |
| portable. To avoid backslashes in the regexp pattern to be doubled, use a |
| single-quote string, see |literal-string|. |
| Since a string is considered to be a single line, a multi-line pattern |
| (containing \n, backslash-n) will not match. However, a literal NL character |
| can be matched like an ordinary character. Examples: |
| "foo\nbar" =~ "\n" evaluates to 1 |
| "foo\nbar" =~ "\\n" evaluates to 0 |
| |
| |
| expr5 *expr5* *bitwise-shift* |
| ----- |
| expr6 << expr6 bitwise left shift *expr-<<* |
| expr6 >> expr6 bitwise right shift *expr->>* |
| *E1282* *E1283* |
| The "<<" and ">>" operators can be used to perform bitwise left or right shift |
| of the left operand by the number of bits specified by the right operand. The |
| operands are used as positive numbers. When shifting right with ">>" the |
| topmost bit (sometimes called the sign bit) is cleared. If the right operand |
| (shift amount) is more than the maximum number of bits in a number |
| (|v:numbersize|) the result is zero. |
| |
| |
| expr6 and expr7 *expr6* *expr7* *E1036* *E1051* |
| --------------- |
| *expr-+* |
| expr7 + expr7 Number addition, |List| or |Tuple| or |Blob| concatenation |
| expr7 - expr7 Number subtraction *expr--* |
| expr7 . expr7 String concatenation *expr-.* |
| expr7 .. expr7 String concatenation *expr-..* |
| |
| For |Lists| only "+" is possible and then both expr7 must be a list. The |
| result is a new list with the two lists concatenated. Same for a |Tuple|. |
| |
| For String concatenation ".." is preferred, since "." is ambiguous, it is also |
| used for |Dict| member access and floating point numbers. |
| In |Vim9| script and when |vimscript-version| is 2 or higher, using "." is not |
| allowed. |
| |
| In |Vim9| script the arguments of ".." are converted to String for simple |
| types: Number, Float, Special and Bool. For other types |string()| should be |
| used. |
| |
| expr8 * expr8 Number multiplication *expr-star* |
| expr8 / expr8 Number division *expr-/* |
| expr8 % expr8 Number modulo *expr-%* |
| |
| In legacy script, for all operators except "." and "..", Strings are converted |
| to Numbers. |
| |
| For bitwise operators see |and()|, |or()| and |xor()|. |
| |
| Note the difference between "+" and ".." in legacy script: |
| "123" + "456" = 579 |
| "123" .. "456" = "123456" |
| |
| Since '..' has the same precedence as '+' and '-', you need to read: > |
| 1 .. 90 + 90.0 |
| As: > |
| (1 .. 90) + 90.0 |
| That works in legacy script, since the String "190" is automatically converted |
| to the Number 190, which can be added to the Float 90.0. However: > |
| 1 .. 90 * 90.0 |
| Should be read as: > |
| 1 .. (90 * 90.0) |
| Since '..' has lower precedence than '*'. This does NOT work, since this |
| attempts to concatenate a Float and a String. |
| |
| When dividing a Number by zero the result depends on the value: |
| 0 / 0 = -0x80000000 (like NaN for Float) |
| >0 / 0 = 0x7fffffff (like positive infinity) |
| <0 / 0 = -0x7fffffff (like negative infinity) |
| (before Vim 7.2 it was always 0x7fffffff) |
| In |Vim9| script dividing a number by zero is an error. *E1154* |
| |
| When 64-bit Number support is enabled: |
| 0 / 0 = -0x8000000000000000 (like NaN for Float) |
| >0 / 0 = 0x7fffffffffffffff (like positive infinity) |
| <0 / 0 = -0x7fffffffffffffff (like negative infinity) |
| |
| When the righthand side of '%' is zero, the result is 0. |
| |
| None of these work for |Funcref|s. |
| |
| ".", ".." and "%" do not work for Float. *E804* *E1035* |
| |
| |
| expr8 *expr8* |
| ----- |
| <type>expr9 |
| |
| This is only available in |Vim9| script, see |type-casting|. |
| |
| |
| expr9 *expr9* |
| ----- |
| ! expr9 logical NOT *expr-!* |
| - expr9 unary minus *expr-unary--* |
| + expr9 unary plus *expr-unary-+* |
| |
| For '!' |TRUE| becomes |FALSE|, |FALSE| becomes |TRUE| (one). |
| For '-' the sign of the number is changed. |
| For '+' the number is unchanged. Note: "++" has no effect. |
| |
| In legacy script a String will be converted to a Number first. Note that if |
| the string does not start with a digit you likely don't get what you expect. |
| |
| In |Vim9| script an error is given when "-" or "+" is used and the type is not |
| a number. |
| |
| In |Vim9| script "!" can be used for any type and the result is always a |
| boolean. Use "!!" to convert any type to a boolean, according to whether the |
| value is |falsy|. |
| |
| These three can be repeated and mixed. Examples: |
| !-1 == 0 |
| !!8 == 1 |
| --9 == 9 |
| |
| |
| expr10 *expr10* |
| ------ |
| This expression is either |expr11| or a sequence of the alternatives below, |
| in any order. E.g., these are all possible: |
| expr10[expr1].name |
| expr10.name[expr1] |
| expr10(expr1, ...)[expr1].name |
| expr10->(expr1, ...)[expr1] |
| Evaluation is always from left to right. |
| |
| *expr-[]* *E111* |
| expr10[expr1] item of String or |List| or |Tuple| |
| *E909* *subscript* *E1062* |
| In legacy Vim script: |
| If expr10 is a Number or String this results in a String that contains the |
| expr1'th single byte from expr10. expr10 is used as a String (a number is |
| automatically converted to a String), expr1 as a Number. This doesn't |
| recognize multibyte encodings, see `byteidx()` for an alternative, or use |
| `split()` to turn the string into a list of characters. Example, to get the |
| byte under the cursor: > |
| :let c = getline(".")[col(".") - 1] |
| |
| In |Vim9| script: *E1147* *E1148* |
| If expr10 is a String this results in a String that contains the expr1'th |
| single character (including any composing characters) from expr10. To use byte |
| indexes use |strpart()|. |
| |
| Index zero gives the first byte or character. Careful: text column numbers |
| start with one! |
| |
| If the length of the String is less than the index, the result is an empty |
| String. A negative index always results in an empty string (reason: backward |
| compatibility). Use [-1:] to get the last byte or character. |
| In Vim9 script a negative index is used like with a list: count from the end. |
| |
| If expr10 is a |List| then it results the item at index expr1. See |list-index| |
| for possible index values. If the index is out of range this results in an |
| error. Example: > |
| :let item = mylist[-1] " get last item |
| |
| Generally, if a |List| index is equal to or higher than the length of the |
| |List|, or more negative than the length of the |List|, this results in an |
| error. |
| |
| A |Tuple| index is similar to a |List| index as explained above. |
| |
| |
| expr10[expr1a : expr1b] substring or |sublist| *expr-[:]* *substring* |
| |
| If expr10 is a String this results in the substring with the bytes or |
| characters from expr1a to and including expr1b. expr10 is used as a String, |
| expr1a and expr1b are used as a Number. |
| |
| In legacy Vim script the indexes are byte indexes. This doesn't recognize |
| multibyte encodings, see |byteidx()| for computing the indexes. If expr10 is |
| a Number it is first converted to a String. |
| |
| In Vim9 script the indexes are character indexes and include composing |
| characters. To use byte indexes use |strpart()|. To use character indexes |
| without including composing characters use |strcharpart()|. |
| |
| The item at index expr1b is included, it is inclusive. For an exclusive index |
| use the |slice()| function. |
| |
| If expr1a is omitted zero is used. If expr1b is omitted the length of the |
| string minus one is used. |
| |
| A negative number can be used to measure from the end of the string. -1 is |
| the last character, -2 the last but one, etc. |
| |
| If an index goes out of range for the string characters are omitted. If |
| expr1b is smaller than expr1a the result is an empty string. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| :let c = name[-1:] " last byte of a string |
| :let c = name[0:-1] " the whole string |
| :let c = name[-2:-2] " last but one byte of a string |
| :let s = line(".")[4:] " from the fifth byte to the end |
| :let s = s[:-3] " remove last two bytes |
| < |
| *slice* |
| If expr10 is a |List| this results in a new |List| with the items indicated by |
| the indexes expr1a and expr1b. This works like with a String, as explained |
| just above. Also see |sublist| below. Examples: > |
| :let l = mylist[:3] " first four items |
| :let l = mylist[4:4] " List with one item |
| :let l = mylist[:] " shallow copy of a List |
| A |Tuple| slice is similar to a |List| slice. |
| |
| If expr10 is a |Blob| this results in a new |Blob| with the bytes in the |
| indexes expr1a and expr1b, inclusive. Examples: > |
| :let b = 0zDEADBEEF |
| :let bs = b[1:2] " 0zADBE |
| :let bs = b[:] " copy of 0zDEADBEEF |
| |
| Using expr10[expr1] or expr10[expr1a : expr1b] on a |Funcref| results in an |
| error. |
| |
| Watch out for confusion between a namespace and a variable followed by a colon |
| for a sublist: > |
| mylist[n:] " uses variable n |
| mylist[s:] " uses namespace s:, error! |
| |
| |
| expr10.name entry in a |Dictionary| *expr-entry* |
| *E1203* *E1229* |
| If expr10 is a |Dictionary| and it is followed by a dot, then the following |
| name will be used as a key in the |Dictionary|. This is just like: |
| expr10[name]. |
| |
| The name must consist of alphanumeric characters, just like a variable name, |
| but it may start with a number. Curly braces cannot be used. |
| |
| There must not be white space before or after the dot. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| :let dict = {"one": 1, 2: "two"} |
| :echo dict.one " shows "1" |
| :echo dict.2 " shows "two" |
| :echo dict .2 " error because of space before the dot |
| |
| Note that the dot is also used for String concatenation. To avoid confusion |
| always put spaces around the dot for String concatenation. |
| |
| |
| expr10(expr1, ...) |Funcref| function call *E1085* |
| |
| When expr10 is a |Funcref| type variable, invoke the function it refers to. |
| |
| |
| expr10->name([args]) method call *method* *->* |
| expr10->{lambda}([args]) |
| *E260* *E276* *E1265* |
| For methods that are also available as global functions this is the same as: > |
| name(expr10 [, args]) |
| There can also be methods specifically for the type of "expr10". |
| |
| This allows for chaining, passing the value that one method returns to the |
| next method: > |
| mylist->filter(filterexpr)->map(mapexpr)->sort()->join() |
| < |
| Example of using a lambda: > |
| GetPercentage()->{x -> x * 100}()->printf('%d%%') |
| < |
| When using -> the |expr9| operators will be applied first, thus: > |
| -1.234->string() |
| Is equivalent to: > |
| (-1.234)->string() |
| And NOT: > |
| -(1.234->string()) |
| |
| What comes after "->" can be a name, a simple expression (not containing any |
| parenthesis), or any expression in parentheses: > |
| base->name(args) |
| base->some.name(args) |
| base->alist[idx](args) |
| base->(getFuncRef())(args) |
| Note that in the last call the base is passed to the function resulting from |
| "(getFuncRef())", inserted before "args". *E1275* |
| |
| *E274* |
| "->name(" must not contain white space. There can be white space before the |
| "->" and after the "(", thus you can split the lines like this: > |
| mylist |
| \ ->filter(filterexpr) |
| \ ->map(mapexpr) |
| \ ->sort() |
| \ ->join() |
| |
| When using the lambda form there must be no white space between the } and the |
| (. |
| |
| |
| *expr11* |
| number |
| ------ |
| number number constant *expr-number* |
| |
| *0x* *hex-number* *0o* *octal-number* *binary-number* |
| Decimal, Hexadecimal (starting with 0x or 0X), Binary (starting with 0b or 0B) |
| and Octal (starting with 0, 0o or 0O). |
| |
| Assuming 64 bit numbers are used (see |v:numbersize|) an unsigned number is |
| truncated to 0x7fffffffffffffff or 9223372036854775807. You can use -1 to get |
| 0xffffffffffffffff. |
| |
| *floating-point-format* |
| Floating point numbers can be written in two forms: |
| |
| [-+]{N}.{M} |
| [-+]{N}.{M}[eE][-+]{exp} |
| |
| {N} and {M} are numbers. Both {N} and {M} must be present and can only |
| contain digits, except that in |Vim9| script in {N} single quotes between |
| digits are ignored. |
| [-+] means there is an optional plus or minus sign. |
| {exp} is the exponent, power of 10. |
| Only a decimal point is accepted, not a comma. No matter what the current |
| locale is. |
| |
| Examples: |
| 123.456 |
| +0.0001 |
| 55.0 |
| -0.123 |
| 1.234e03 |
| 1.0E-6 |
| -3.1416e+88 |
| |
| These are INVALID: |
| 3. empty {M} |
| 1e40 missing .{M} |
| |
| Rationale: |
| Before floating point was introduced, the text "123.456" was interpreted as |
| the two numbers "123" and "456", both converted to a string and concatenated, |
| resulting in the string "123456". Since this was considered pointless, and we |
| could not find it intentionally being used in Vim scripts, this backwards |
| incompatibility was accepted in favor of being able to use the normal notation |
| for floating point numbers. |
| |
| *float-pi* *float-e* |
| A few useful values to copy&paste: > |
| :let pi = 3.14159265359 |
| :let e = 2.71828182846 |
| Or, if you don't want to write them in as floating-point literals, you can |
| also use functions, like the following: > |
| :let pi = acos(-1.0) |
| :let e = exp(1.0) |
| < |
| *floating-point-precision* |
| The precision and range of floating points numbers depends on what "double" |
| means in the library Vim was compiled with. There is no way to change this at |
| runtime. |
| |
| The default for displaying a |Float| is to use 6 decimal places, like using |
| printf("%g", f). You can select something else when using the |printf()| |
| function. Example: > |
| :echo printf('%.15e', atan(1)) |
| < 7.853981633974483e-01 |
| |
| |
| |
| string *string* *String* *expr-string* *E114* |
| ------ |
| "string" string constant *expr-quote* |
| |
| Note that double quotes are used. |
| |
| A string constant accepts these special characters: |
| \... three-digit octal number (e.g., "\316") |
| \.. two-digit octal number (must be followed by non-digit) |
| \. one-digit octal number (must be followed by non-digit) |
| \x.. byte specified with two hex numbers (e.g., "\x1f") |
| \x. byte specified with one hex number (must be followed by non-hex char) |
| \X.. same as \x.. |
| \X. same as \x. |
| \u.... character specified with up to 4 hex numbers, stored according to the |
| current value of 'encoding' (e.g., "\u02a4") |
| \U.... same as \u but allows up to 8 hex numbers. |
| \b backspace <BS> |
| \e escape <Esc> |
| \f formfeed 0x0C |
| \n newline <NL> |
| \r return <CR> |
| \t tab <Tab> |
| \\ backslash |
| \" double quote |
| \<xxx> Special key named "xxx". e.g. "\<C-W>" for CTRL-W. This is for use |
| in mappings, the 0x80 byte is escaped. |
| To use the double quote character it must be escaped: "<M-\">". |
| Don't use <Char-xxxx> to get a UTF-8 character, use \uxxxx as |
| mentioned above. |
| \<*xxx> Like \<xxx> but prepends a modifier instead of including it in the |
| character. E.g. "\<C-w>" is one character 0x17 while "\<*C-w>" is four |
| bytes: 3 for the CTRL modifier and then character "W". |
| |
| Note that "\xff" is stored as the byte 255, which may be invalid in some |
| encodings. Use "\u00ff" to store character 255 according to the current value |
| of 'encoding'. |
| |
| Note that "\000" and "\x00" force the end of the string. |
| |
| |
| blob-literal *blob-literal* *E973* |
| ------------ |
| |
| Hexadecimal starting with 0z or 0Z, with an arbitrary number of bytes. |
| The sequence must be an even number of hex characters. Example: > |
| :let b = 0zFF00ED015DAF |
| |
| |
| literal-string *literal-string* *E115* |
| --------------- |
| 'string' string constant *expr-'* |
| |
| Note that single quotes are used. |
| |
| This string is taken as it is. No backslashes are removed or have a special |
| meaning. The only exception is that two quotes stand for one quote. |
| |
| Single quoted strings are useful for patterns, so that backslashes do not need |
| to be doubled. These two commands are equivalent: > |
| if a =~ "\\s*" |
| if a =~ '\s*' |
| |
| |
| interpolated-string *$quote* *interpolated-string* |
| -------------------- |
| $"string" interpolated string constant *expr-$quote* |
| $'string' interpolated literal string constant *expr-$'* |
| |
| Interpolated strings are an extension of the |string| and |literal-string|, |
| allowing the inclusion of Vim script expressions (see |expr1|). Any |
| expression returning a value can be enclosed between curly braces. The value |
| is converted to a string. All the text and results of the expressions |
| are concatenated to make a new string. |
| *E1278* *E1279* |
| To include an opening brace '{' or closing brace '}' in the string content |
| double it. For double quoted strings using a backslash also works. A single |
| closing brace '}' will result in an error. |
| |
| Examples: > |
| let your_name = input("What's your name? ") |
| < What's your name? Peter ~ |
| > |
| echo |
| echo $"Hello, {your_name}!" |
| < Hello, Peter! ~ |
| > |
| echo $"The square root of {{9}} is {sqrt(9)}" |
| < The square root of {9} is 3.0 ~ |
| |
| *string-offset-encoding* |
| A string consists of multiple characters. How the characters are stored |
| depends on 'encoding'. Most common is UTF-8, which uses one byte for ASCII |
| characters, two bytes for other latin characters and more bytes for other |
| characters. |
| |
| A string offset can count characters or bytes. Other programs may use |
| UTF-16 encoding (16-bit words) and an offset of UTF-16 words. Some functions |
| use byte offsets, usually for UTF-8 encoding. Other functions use character |
| offsets, in which case the encoding doesn't matter. |
| |
| The different offsets for the string "a©😊" are below: |
| |
| UTF-8 offsets: |
| [0]: 61, [1]: C2, [2]: A9, [3]: F0, [4]: 9F, [5]: 98, [6]: 8A |
| UTF-16 offsets: |
| [0]: 0061, [1]: 00A9, [2]: D83D, [3]: DE0A |
| UTF-32 (character) offsets: |
| [0]: 00000061, [1]: 000000A9, [2]: 0001F60A |
| |
| You can use the "g8" and "ga" commands on a character to see the |
| decimal/hex/octal values. |
| |
| The functions |byteidx()|, |utf16idx()| and |charidx()| can be used to convert |
| between these indices. The functions |strlen()|, |strutf16len()| and |
| |strcharlen()| return the number of bytes, UTF-16 code units and characters in |
| a string respectively. |
| |
| option *expr-option* *E112* *E113* |
| ------ |
| &option option value, local value if possible |
| &g:option global option value |
| &l:option local option value |
| |
| Examples: > |
| echo "tabstop is " .. &tabstop |
| if &insertmode |
| |
| Any option name can be used here. See |options|. When using the local value |
| and there is no buffer-local or window-local value, the global value is used |
| anyway. |
| |
| |
| register *expr-register* *@r* |
| -------- |
| @r contents of register 'r' |
| |
| The result is the contents of the named register, as a single string. |
| Newlines are inserted where required. To get the contents of the unnamed |
| register use @" or @@. See |registers| for an explanation of the available |
| registers. |
| |
| When using the '=' register you get the expression itself, not what it |
| evaluates to. Use |eval()| to evaluate it. |
| |
| |
| nesting *expr-nesting* *E110* |
| ------- |
| (expr1) nested expression |
| |
| |
| environment variable *expr-env* |
| -------------------- |
| $VAR environment variable |
| |
| The String value of any environment variable. When it is not defined, the |
| result is an empty string. |
| |
| The functions `getenv()` and `setenv()` can also be used and work for |
| environment variables with non-alphanumeric names. |
| The function `environ()` can be used to get a Dict with all environment |
| variables. |
| |
| |
| *expr-env-expand* |
| Note that there is a difference between using $VAR directly and using |
| expand("$VAR"). Using it directly will only expand environment variables that |
| are known inside the current Vim session. Using expand() will first try using |
| the environment variables known inside the current Vim session. If that |
| fails, a shell will be used to expand the variable. This can be slow, but it |
| does expand all variables that the shell knows about. Example: > |
| :echo $shell |
| :echo expand("$shell") |
| The first one probably doesn't echo anything, the second echoes the $shell |
| variable (if your shell supports it). |
| |
| |
| internal variable *expr-variable* *E1015* *E1089* |
| ----------------- |
| variable internal variable |
| See below |internal-variables|. |
| |
| |
| function call *expr-function* *E116* *E118* *E119* *E120* |
| ------------- |
| function(expr1, ...) function call |
| See below |functions|. |
| |
| |
| lambda expression *expr-lambda* *lambda* |
| ----------------- |
| {args -> expr1} legacy lambda expression *E451* |
| (args) => expr1 |Vim9| lambda expression |
| |
| A lambda expression creates a new unnamed function which returns the result of |
| evaluating |expr1|. Lambda expressions differ from |user-functions| in |
| the following ways: |
| |
| 1. The body of the lambda expression is an |expr1| and not a sequence of |Ex| |
| commands. |
| 2. The prefix "a:" should not be used for arguments. E.g.: > |
| :let F = {arg1, arg2 -> arg1 - arg2} |
| :echo F(5, 2) |
| < 3 |
| |
| The arguments are optional. Example: > |
| :let F = {-> 'error function'} |
| :echo F('ignored') |
| < error function |
| |
| The |Vim9| lambda does not only use a different syntax, it also adds type |
| checking and can be split over multiple lines, see |vim9-lambda|. |
| |
| *closure* |
| Lambda expressions can access outer scope variables and arguments. This is |
| often called a closure. Example where "i" and "a:arg" are used in a lambda |
| while they already exist in the function scope. They remain valid even after |
| the function returns: > |
| :function Foo(arg) |
| : let i = 3 |
| : return {x -> x + i - a:arg} |
| :endfunction |
| :let Bar = Foo(4) |
| :echo Bar(6) |
| < 5 |
| |
| Note that the variables must exist in the outer scope before the lambda is |
| defined for this to work. See also |:func-closure|. |
| |
| Lambda and closure support can be checked with: > |
| if has('lambda') |
| |
| Examples for using a lambda expression with |sort()|, |map()| and |filter()|: > |
| :echo map([1, 2, 3], {idx, val -> val + 1}) |
| < [2, 3, 4] > |
| :echo sort([3,7,2,1,4], {a, b -> a - b}) |
| < [1, 2, 3, 4, 7] |
| |
| The lambda expression is also useful for Channel, Job and timer: > |
| :let timer = timer_start(500, |
| \ {-> execute("echo 'Handler called'", "")}, |
| \ {'repeat': 3}) |
| < Handler called |
| Handler called |
| Handler called |
| |
| Note that it is possible to cause memory to be used and not freed if the |
| closure is referenced by the context it depends on: > |
| function Function() |
| let x = 0 |
| let F = {-> x} |
| endfunction |
| The closure uses "x" from the function scope, and "F" in that same scope |
| refers to the closure. This cycle results in the memory not being freed. |
| Recommendation: don't do this. |
| |
| Notice how execute() is used to execute an Ex command. That's ugly though. |
| In Vim9 script you can use a command block, see |inline-function|. |
| |
| Although you can use the loop variable of a `for` command, it must still exist |
| when the closure is called, otherwise you get an error. *E1302* |
| |
| Lambda expressions have internal names like '<lambda>42'. If you get an error |
| for a lambda expression, you can find what it is with the following command: > |
| :function <lambda>42 |
| See also: |numbered-function| |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 3. Internal variable *internal-variables* *E461* *E1001* |
| |
| An internal variable name can be made up of letters, digits and '_'. But it |
| cannot start with a digit. In legacy script it is also possible to use curly |
| braces, see |curly-braces-names|. |
| |
| In legacy script an internal variable is created with the ":let" command |
| |:let|. An internal variable is explicitly destroyed with the ":unlet" |
| command |:unlet|. |
| Using a name that is not an internal variable or refers to a variable that has |
| been destroyed results in an error. |
| |
| In |Vim9| script `:let` is not used and variables work differently, see |:var|. |
| |
| *variable-scope* |
| There are several name spaces for variables. Which one is to be used is |
| specified by what is prepended: |
| |
| (nothing) In a function: local to the function; |
| in a legacy script: global; |
| in a |Vim9| script: local to the script |
| |buffer-variable| b: Local to the current buffer. |
| |window-variable| w: Local to the current window. |
| |tabpage-variable| t: Local to the current tab page. |
| |global-variable| g: Global. |
| |local-variable| l: Local to a function (only in a legacy function) |
| |script-variable| s: Local to a |:source|'ed Vim script. |
| |function-argument| a: Function argument (only in a legacy function). |
| |vim-variable| v: Global, predefined by Vim. |
| |
| The scope name by itself can be used as a |Dictionary|. For example, to |
| delete all script-local variables: > |
| :for k in keys(s:) |
| : unlet s:[k] |
| :endfor |
| |
| Note: in Vim9 script variables can also be local to a block of commands, see |
| |vim9-scopes|. |
| *buffer-variable* *b:var* *b:* |
| A variable name that is preceded with "b:" is local to the current buffer. |
| Thus you can have several "b:foo" variables, one for each buffer. |
| This kind of variable is deleted when the buffer is wiped out or deleted with |
| |:bdelete|. |
| |
| One local buffer variable is predefined: |
| *b:changedtick* *changetick* |
| b:changedtick The total number of changes to the current buffer. It is |
| incremented for each change. An undo command is also a change |
| in this case. Resetting 'modified' when writing the buffer is |
| also counted. |
| This can be used to perform an action only when the buffer has |
| changed. Example: > |
| :if my_changedtick != b:changedtick |
| : let my_changedtick = b:changedtick |
| : call My_Update() |
| :endif |
| < You cannot change or delete the b:changedtick variable. |
| If you need more information about the change see |
| |listener_add()|. |
| |
| *window-variable* *w:var* *w:* |
| A variable name that is preceded with "w:" is local to the current window. It |
| is deleted when the window is closed. |
| |
| *tabpage-variable* *t:var* *t:* |
| A variable name that is preceded with "t:" is local to the current tab page, |
| It is deleted when the tab page is closed. {not available when compiled |
| without the |+windows| feature} |
| |
| *global-variable* *g:var* *g:* |
| Inside functions and in |Vim9| script global variables are accessed with "g:". |
| Omitting this will access a variable local to a function or script. "g:" |
| can also be used in any other place if you like. |
| |
| *local-variable* *l:var* *l:* |
| Inside functions local variables are accessed without prepending anything. |
| But you can also prepend "l:" if you like. However, without prepending "l:" |
| you may run into reserved variable names. For example "count". By itself it |
| refers to "v:count". Using "l:count" you can have a local variable with the |
| same name. |
| |
| *script-variable* *s:var* |
| In a legacy Vim script variables starting with "s:" can be used. They cannot |
| be accessed from outside of the scripts, thus are local to the script. |
| In |Vim9| script the "s:" prefix can be omitted, variables are script-local by |
| default. |
| |
| They can be used in: |
| - commands executed while the script is sourced |
| - functions defined in the script |
| - autocommands defined in the script |
| - functions and autocommands defined in functions and autocommands which were |
| defined in the script (recursively) |
| - user defined commands defined in the script |
| Thus not in: |
| - other scripts sourced from this one |
| - mappings |
| - menus |
| - etc. |
| |
| Script variables can be used to avoid conflicts with global variable names. |
| Take this example: > |
| |
| let s:counter = 0 |
| function MyCounter() |
| let s:counter = s:counter + 1 |
| echo s:counter |
| endfunction |
| command Tick call MyCounter() |
| |
| You can now invoke "Tick" from any script, and the "s:counter" variable in |
| that script will not be changed, only the "s:counter" in the script where |
| "Tick" was defined is used. |
| |
| Another example that does the same: > |
| |
| let s:counter = 0 |
| command Tick let s:counter = s:counter + 1 | echo s:counter |
| |
| When calling a function and invoking a user-defined command, the context for |
| script variables is set to the script where the function or command was |
| defined. |
| |
| The script variables are also available when a function is defined inside a |
| function that is defined in a script. Example: > |
| |
| let s:counter = 0 |
| function StartCounting(incr) |
| if a:incr |
| function MyCounter() |
| let s:counter = s:counter + 1 |
| endfunction |
| else |
| function MyCounter() |
| let s:counter = s:counter - 1 |
| endfunction |
| endif |
| endfunction |
| |
| This defines the MyCounter() function either for counting up or counting down |
| when calling StartCounting(). It doesn't matter from where StartCounting() is |
| called, the s:counter variable will be accessible in MyCounter(). |
| |
| When the same script is sourced again it will use the same script variables. |
| They will remain valid as long as Vim is running. This can be used to |
| maintain a counter: > |
| |
| if !exists("s:counter") |
| let s:counter = 1 |
| echo "script executed for the first time" |
| else |
| let s:counter = s:counter + 1 |
| echo "script executed " .. s:counter .. " times now" |
| endif |
| |
| Note that this means that filetype plugins don't get a different set of script |
| variables for each buffer. Use local buffer variables instead |b:var|. |
| |
| |
| PREDEFINED VIM VARIABLES *vim-variable* *v:var* *v:* |
| *E963* *E1063* |
| Most variables are read-only, when a variable can be set by the user, it will |
| be mentioned at the variable description below. The type cannot be changed. |
| |
| *v:argv* *argv-variable* |
| v:argv The command line arguments Vim was invoked with. This is a |
| list of strings. The first item is the Vim command. |
| See |v:progpath| for the command with full path. |
| |
| *v:beval_col* *beval_col-variable* |
| v:beval_col The number of the column, over which the mouse pointer is. |
| This is the byte index in the |v:beval_lnum| line. |
| Only valid while evaluating the 'balloonexpr' option. |
| |
| *v:beval_bufnr* *beval_bufnr-variable* |
| v:beval_bufnr The number of the buffer, over which the mouse pointer is. Only |
| valid while evaluating the 'balloonexpr' option. |
| |
| *v:beval_lnum* *beval_lnum-variable* |
| v:beval_lnum The number of the line, over which the mouse pointer is. Only |
| valid while evaluating the 'balloonexpr' option. |
| |
| *v:beval_text* *beval_text-variable* |
| v:beval_text The text under or after the mouse pointer. Usually a word as |
| it is useful for debugging a C program. 'iskeyword' applies, |
| but a dot and "->" before the position is included. When on a |
| ']' the text before it is used, including the matching '[' and |
| word before it. When on a Visual area within one line the |
| highlighted text is used. Also see |<cexpr>|. |
| Only valid while evaluating the 'balloonexpr' option. |
| |
| *v:beval_winnr* *beval_winnr-variable* |
| v:beval_winnr The number of the window, over which the mouse pointer is. Only |
| valid while evaluating the 'balloonexpr' option. The first |
| window has number zero (unlike most other places where a |
| window gets a number). |
| |
| *v:beval_winid* *beval_winid-variable* |
| v:beval_winid The |window-ID| of the window, over which the mouse pointer |
| is. Otherwise like v:beval_winnr. |
| |
| *v:char* *char-variable* |
| v:char Argument for evaluating 'formatexpr' and used for the typed |
| character when using <expr> in an abbreviation |:map-<expr>|. |
| It is also used by the |InsertCharPre|, |InsertEnter| and |
| |KeyInputPre| events. |
| |
| *v:charconvert_from* *charconvert_from-variable* |
| v:charconvert_from |
| The name of the character encoding of a file to be converted. |
| Only valid while evaluating the 'charconvert' option. |
| |
| *v:charconvert_to* *charconvert_to-variable* |
| v:charconvert_to |
| The name of the character encoding of a file after conversion. |
| Only valid while evaluating the 'charconvert' option. |
| |
| *v:clipmethod* |
| v:clipmethod The current method of accessing the clipboard that is being |
| used. Can either have the value of: |
| wayland The Wayland protocol is being used. |
| x11 X11 selections are being used. |
| none The above methods are unavailable or |
| cannot be used. |
| See 'clipmethod' for more details. |
| |
| *v:cmdarg* *cmdarg-variable* |
| v:cmdarg This variable is used for two purposes: |
| 1. The extra arguments given to a file read/write command. |
| Currently these are "++enc=" and "++ff=". This variable is |
| set before an autocommand event for a file read/write |
| command is triggered. There is a leading space to make it |
| possible to append this variable directly after the |
| read/write command. Note: The "+cmd" argument isn't |
| included here, because it will be executed anyway. |
| 2. When printing a PostScript file with ":hardcopy" this is |
| the argument for the ":hardcopy" command. This can be used |
| in 'printexpr'. |
| |
| *v:cmdbang* *cmdbang-variable* |
| v:cmdbang Set like v:cmdarg for a file read/write command. When a "!" |
| was used the value is 1, otherwise it is 0. Note that this |
| can only be used in autocommands. For user commands |<bang>| |
| can be used. |
| |
| *v:collate* *collate-variable* |
| v:collate The current locale setting for collation order of the runtime |
| environment. This allows Vim scripts to be aware of the |
| current locale encoding. Technical: it's the value of |
| LC_COLLATE. When not using a locale the value is "C". |
| This variable can not be set directly, use the |:language| |
| command. |
| See |multi-lang|. |
| |
| *v:colornames* |
| v:colornames A dictionary that maps color names to hex color strings. These |
| color names can be used with the |highlight-guifg|, |
| |highlight-guibg|, and |highlight-guisp| parameters. |
| |
| The key values in the dictionary (the color names) should be |
| lower cased, because Vim looks up a color by its lower case |
| name. |
| |
| Updating an entry in v:colornames has no immediate effect on |
| the syntax highlighting. The highlight commands (probably in a |
| colorscheme script) need to be re-evaluated in order to use |
| the updated color values. For example: > |
| |
| :let v:colornames['fuscia'] = '#cf3ab4' |
| :let v:colornames['mauve'] = '#915f6d' |
| :highlight Normal guifg=fuscia guibg=mauve |
| < |
| This cannot be used to override the |cterm-colors| but it can |
| be used to override other colors. For example, the X11 colors |
| defined in the `colors/lists/default.vim` (previously defined |
| in |rgb.txt|). When defining new color names in a plugin, the |
| recommended practice is to set a color entry only when it does |
| not already exist. For example: > |
| |
| :call extend(v:colornames, { |
| \ 'fuscia': '#cf3ab4', |
| \ 'mauve': '#915f6d, |
| \ }, 'keep') |
| < |
| Using |extend()| with the 'keep' option updates each color only |
| if it did not exist in |v:colornames|. Doing so allows the |
| user to choose the precise color value for a common name |
| by setting it in their |.vimrc|. |
| |
| It is possible to remove entries from this dictionary but |
| doing so is NOT recommended, because it is disruptive to |
| other scripts. It is also unlikely to achieve the desired |
| result because the |:colorscheme| and |:highlight| commands will |
| both automatically load all `colors/lists/default.vim` color |
| scripts. |
| |
| You can make changes to that file, but make sure to add new |
| keys instead of updating existing ones, otherwise Vim will skip |
| loading the file (thinking it hasn't been changed). |
| |
| *v:completed_item* *completed_item-variable* |
| v:completed_item |
| |Dictionary| containing the |complete-items| for the most |
| recently completed word after |CompleteDone|. The |
| |Dictionary| is empty if the completion failed. |
| Note: Plugins can modify the value to emulate the builtin |
| |CompleteDone| event behavior. |
| |
| *v:count* *count-variable* |
| v:count The count given for the last Normal mode command. Can be used |
| to get the count before a mapping. Read-only. Example: > |
| :map _x :<C-U>echo "the count is " .. v:count<CR> |
| < Note: The <C-U> is required to remove the line range that you |
| get when typing ':' after a count. |
| When there are two counts, as in "3d2w", they are multiplied, |
| just like what happens in the command, "d6w" for the example. |
| Also used for evaluating the 'formatexpr' option. |
| "count" also works, for backwards compatibility, unless |
| |scriptversion| is 3 or higher. |
| |
| *v:count1* *count1-variable* |
| v:count1 Just like "v:count", but defaults to one when no count is |
| used. |
| |
| *v:ctype* *ctype-variable* |
| v:ctype The current locale setting for characters of the runtime |
| environment. This allows Vim scripts to be aware of the |
| current locale encoding. Technical: it's the value of |
| LC_CTYPE. When not using a locale the value is "C". |
| This variable can not be set directly, use the |:language| |
| command. |
| See |multi-lang|. |
| |
| *v:dying* *dying-variable* |
| v:dying Normally zero. When a deadly signal is caught it's set to |
| one. When multiple signals are caught the number increases. |
| Can be used in an autocommand to check if Vim didn't |
| terminate normally. {only works on Unix} |
| Example: > |
| :au VimLeave * if v:dying | echo "\nAAAAaaaarrrggghhhh!!!\n" | endif |
| < Note: if another deadly signal is caught when v:dying is one, |
| VimLeave autocommands will not be executed. |
| |
| *v:exiting* *exiting-variable* |
| v:exiting Vim exit code. Normally zero, non-zero when something went |
| wrong. The value is v:null before invoking the |VimLeavePre| |
| and |VimLeave| autocmds. See |:q|, |:x| and |:cquit|. |
| Example: > |
| :au VimLeave * echo "Exit value is " .. v:exiting |
| < |
| *v:echospace* *echospace-variable* |
| v:echospace Number of screen cells that can be used for an `:echo` message |
| in the last screen line before causing the |hit-enter-prompt|. |
| Depends on 'showcmd', 'ruler' and 'columns'. You need to |
| check 'cmdheight' for whether there are full-width lines |
| available above the last line. |
| |
| *v:errmsg* *errmsg-variable* |
| v:errmsg Last given error message. It's allowed to set this variable. |
| Example: > |
| :let v:errmsg = "" |
| :silent! next |
| :if v:errmsg != "" |
| : ... handle error |
| < "errmsg" also works, for backwards compatibility, unless |
| |scriptversion| is 3 or higher. |
| |
| *v:errors* *errors-variable* *assert-return* |
| v:errors Errors found by assert functions, such as |assert_true()|. |
| This is a list of strings. |
| The assert functions append an item when an assert fails. |
| The return value indicates this: a one is returned if an item |
| was added to v:errors, otherwise zero is returned. |
| To remove old results make it empty: > |
| :let v:errors = [] |
| < If v:errors is set to anything but a list it is made an empty |
| list by the assert function. |
| |
| *v:event* *event-variable* |
| v:event Dictionary containing information about the current |
| |autocommand|. See the specific event for what it puts in |
| this dictionary. |
| The dictionary is emptied when the |autocommand| finishes, |
| please refer to |dict-identity| for how to get an independent |
| copy of it. Use |deepcopy()| if you want to keep the |
| information after the event triggers. Example: > |
| au TextYankPost * let g:foo = deepcopy(v:event) |
| < |
| *v:exception* *exception-variable* |
| v:exception The value of the exception most recently caught and not |
| finished. See also |v:stacktrace|, |v:throwpoint|, and |
| |throw-variables|. |
| Example: > |
| :try |
| : throw "oops" |
| :catch /.*/ |
| : echo "caught " .. v:exception |
| :endtry |
| < Output: "caught oops". |
| |
| *v:false* *false-variable* |
| v:false A Number with value zero. Used to put "false" in JSON. See |
| |json_encode()|. |
| When used as a string this evaluates to "v:false". > |
| echo v:false |
| < v:false ~ |
| That is so that eval() can parse the string back to the same |
| value. Read-only. |
| In |Vim9| script "false" can be used which has a boolean type. |
| |
| *v:fcs_reason* *fcs_reason-variable* |
| v:fcs_reason The reason why the |FileChangedShell| event was triggered. |
| Can be used in an autocommand to decide what to do and/or what |
| to set v:fcs_choice to. Possible values: |
| deleted file no longer exists |
| conflict file contents, mode or timestamp was |
| changed and buffer is modified |
| changed file contents has changed |
| mode mode of file changed |
| time only file timestamp changed |
| |
| *v:fcs_choice* *fcs_choice-variable* |
| v:fcs_choice What should happen after a |FileChangedShell| event was |
| triggered. Can be used in an autocommand to tell Vim what to |
| do with the affected buffer: |
| reload Reload the buffer (does not work if |
| the file was deleted). |
| edit Reload the buffer and detect the |
| values for options such as |
| 'fileformat', 'fileencoding', 'binary' |
| (does not work if the file was |
| deleted). |
| ask Ask the user what to do, as if there |
| was no autocommand. Except that when |
| only the timestamp changed nothing |
| will happen. |
| <empty> Nothing, the autocommand should do |
| everything that needs to be done. |
| The default is empty. If another (invalid) value is used then |
| Vim behaves like it is empty, there is no warning message. |
| |
| *v:fname* *fname-variable* |
| v:fname When evaluating 'includeexpr': the file name that was |
| detected. Empty otherwise. |
| |
| *v:fname_in* *fname_in-variable* |
| v:fname_in The name of the input file. Valid while evaluating: |
| option used for ~ |
| 'charconvert' file to be converted |
| 'diffexpr' original file |
| 'patchexpr' original file |
| 'printexpr' file to be printed |
| And set to the swap file name for |SwapExists|. |
| |
| *v:fname_out* *fname_out-variable* |
| v:fname_out The name of the output file. Only valid while |
| evaluating: |
| option used for ~ |
| 'charconvert' resulting converted file (*) |
| 'diffexpr' output of diff |
| 'patchexpr' resulting patched file |
| (*) When doing conversion for a write command (e.g., ":w |
| file") it will be equal to v:fname_in. When doing conversion |
| for a read command (e.g., ":e file") it will be a temporary |
| file and different from v:fname_in. |
| |
| *v:fname_new* *fname_new-variable* |
| v:fname_new The name of the new version of the file. Only valid while |
| evaluating 'diffexpr'. |
| |
| *v:fname_diff* *fname_diff-variable* |
| v:fname_diff The name of the diff (patch) file. Only valid while |
| evaluating 'patchexpr'. |
| |
| *v:folddashes* *folddashes-variable* |
| v:folddashes Used for 'foldtext': dashes representing foldlevel of a closed |
| fold. |
| Read-only in the |sandbox|. |fold-foldtext| |
| |
| *v:foldlevel* *foldlevel-variable* |
| v:foldlevel Used for 'foldtext': foldlevel of closed fold. |
| Read-only in the |sandbox|. |fold-foldtext| |
| |
| *v:foldend* *foldend-variable* |
| v:foldend Used for 'foldtext': last line of closed fold. |
| Read-only in the |sandbox|. |fold-foldtext| |
| |
| *v:foldstart* *foldstart-variable* |
| v:foldstart Used for 'foldtext': first line of closed fold. |
| Read-only in the |sandbox|. |fold-foldtext| |
| |
| *v:hlsearch* *hlsearch-variable* |
| v:hlsearch Variable that indicates whether search highlighting is on. |
| Setting it makes sense only if 'hlsearch' is enabled which |
| requires |+extra_search|. Setting this variable to zero acts |
| like the |:nohlsearch| command, setting it to one acts like > |
| let &hlsearch = &hlsearch |
| < Note that the value is restored when returning from a |
| function. |function-search-undo|. |
| |
| *v:insertmode* *insertmode-variable* |
| v:insertmode Used for the |InsertEnter| and |InsertChange| autocommand |
| events. Values: |
| i Insert mode |
| r Replace mode |
| v Virtual Replace mode |
| |
| *v:key* *key-variable* |
| v:key Key of the current item of a |Dictionary|. Only valid while |
| evaluating the expression used with |map()| and |filter()|. |
| Read-only. |
| |
| *v:lang* *lang-variable* |
| v:lang The current locale setting for messages of the runtime |
| environment. This allows Vim scripts to be aware of the |
| current language. Technical: it's the value of LC_MESSAGES. |
| The value is system dependent. |
| This variable can not be set directly, use the |:language| |
| command. |
| It can be different from |v:ctype| when messages are desired |
| in a different language than what is used for character |
| encoding. See |multi-lang|. |
| |
| *v:lc_time* *lc_time-variable* |
| v:lc_time The current locale setting for time messages of the runtime |
| environment. This allows Vim scripts to be aware of the |
| current language. Technical: it's the value of LC_TIME. |
| This variable can not be set directly, use the |:language| |
| command. See |multi-lang|. |
| |
| *v:lnum* *lnum-variable* |
| v:lnum Line number for the 'foldexpr' |fold-expr|, 'formatexpr' and |
| 'indentexpr' expressions, tab page number for 'guitablabel' |
| and 'guitabtooltip'. Only valid while one of these |
| expressions is being evaluated. Read-only when in the |
| |sandbox|. |
| |
| *v:maxcol* *maxcol-variable* |
| v:maxcol Maximum line length. Depending on where it is used it can be |
| screen columns, characters or bytes. The value currently is |
| 2147483647 on all systems. |
| |
| *v:mouse_win* *mouse_win-variable* |
| v:mouse_win Window number for a mouse click obtained with |getchar()|. |
| First window has number 1, like with |winnr()|. The value is |
| zero when there was no mouse button click. |
| |
| *v:mouse_winid* *mouse_winid-variable* |
| v:mouse_winid Window ID for a mouse click obtained with |getchar()|. |
| The value is zero when there was no mouse button click. |
| |
| *v:mouse_lnum* *mouse_lnum-variable* |
| v:mouse_lnum Line number for a mouse click obtained with |getchar()|. |
| This is the text line number, not the screen line number. The |
| value is zero when there was no mouse button click. |
| |
| *v:mouse_col* *mouse_col-variable* |
| v:mouse_col Column number for a mouse click obtained with |getchar()|. |
| This is the screen column number, like with |virtcol()|. The |
| value is zero when there was no mouse button click. |
| |
| *v:none* *none-variable* *None* |
| v:none An empty String. Used to put an empty item in JSON. See |
| |json_encode()|. |
| This can also be used as a function argument to use the |
| default value, see |none-function_argument|. |
| When used as a number this evaluates to zero. |
| When used as a string this evaluates to "v:none". > |
| echo v:none |
| < v:none ~ |
| That is so that eval() can parse the string back to the same |
| value. Read-only. |
| Note that using `== v:none` and `!= v:none` will often give |
| an error. Instead, use `is v:none` and `isnot v:none` . |
| |
| *v:null* *null-variable* |
| v:null An empty String. Used to put "null" in JSON. See |
| |json_encode()|. |
| When used as a number this evaluates to zero. |
| When used as a string this evaluates to "v:null". > |
| echo v:null |
| < v:null ~ |
| That is so that eval() can parse the string back to the same |
| value. Read-only. |
| In |Vim9| script `null` can be used without "v:". |
| In some places `v:null` and `null` can be used for a List, |
| Dict, Job, etc. that is not set. That is slightly different |
| than an empty List, Dict, etc. |
| |
| *v:numbermax* *numbermax-variable* |
| v:numbermax Maximum value of a number. |
| |
| *v:numbermin* *numbermin-variable* |
| v:numbermin Minimum value of a number (negative). |
| |
| *v:numbersize* *numbersize-variable* |
| v:numbersize Number of bits in a Number. This is normally 64, but on some |
| systems it may be 32. |
| |
| *v:oldfiles* *oldfiles-variable* |
| v:oldfiles List of file names that is loaded from the |viminfo| file on |
| startup. These are the files that Vim remembers marks for. |
| The length of the List is limited by the ' argument of the |
| 'viminfo' option (default is 100). |
| When the |viminfo| file is not used the List is empty. |
| Also see |:oldfiles| and |c_#<|. |
| The List can be modified, but this has no effect on what is |
| stored in the |viminfo| file later. If you use values other |
| than String this will cause trouble. |
| {only when compiled with the |+viminfo| feature} |
| |
| *v:option_new* |
| v:option_new New value of the option. Valid while executing an |OptionSet| |
| autocommand. |
| *v:option_old* |
| v:option_old Old value of the option. Valid while executing an |OptionSet| |
| autocommand. Depending on the command used for setting and the |
| kind of option this is either the local old value or the |
| global old value. |
| *v:option_oldlocal* |
| v:option_oldlocal |
| Old local value of the option. Valid while executing an |
| |OptionSet| autocommand. |
| *v:option_oldglobal* |
| v:option_oldglobal |
| Old global value of the option. Valid while executing an |
| |OptionSet| autocommand. |
| *v:option_type* |
| v:option_type Scope of the set command. Valid while executing an |
| |OptionSet| autocommand. Can be either "global" or "local" |
| *v:option_command* |
| v:option_command |
| Command used to set the option. Valid while executing an |
| |OptionSet| autocommand. |
| value option was set via ~ |
| "setlocal" |:setlocal| or ":let l:xxx" |
| "setglobal" |:setglobal| or ":let g:xxx" |
| "set" |:set| or |:let| |
| "modeline" |modeline| |
| *v:operator* *operator-variable* |
| v:operator The last operator given in Normal mode. This is a single |
| character except for commands starting with <g> or <z>, |
| in which case it is two characters. Best used alongside |
| |v:prevcount| and |v:register|. Useful if you want to cancel |
| Operator-pending mode and then use the operator, e.g.: > |
| :omap O <Esc>:call MyMotion(v:operator)<CR> |
| < The value remains set until another operator is entered, thus |
| don't expect it to be empty. |
| v:operator is not set for |:delete|, |:yank| or other Ex |
| commands. |
| Read-only. |
| |
| *v:prevcount* *prevcount-variable* |
| v:prevcount The count given for the last but one Normal mode command. |
| This is the v:count value of the previous command. Useful if |
| you want to cancel Visual or Operator-pending mode and then |
| use the count, e.g.: > |
| :vmap % <Esc>:call MyFilter(v:prevcount)<CR> |
| < Read-only. |
| |
| *v:profiling* *profiling-variable* |
| v:profiling Normally zero. Set to one after using ":profile start". |
| See |profiling|. |
| |
| *v:progname* *progname-variable* |
| v:progname Contains the name (with path removed) with which Vim was |
| invoked. Allows you to do special initialisations for |view|, |
| |evim| etc., or any other name you might symlink to Vim. |
| Read-only. |
| |
| *v:progpath* *progpath-variable* |
| v:progpath Contains the command with which Vim was invoked, in a form |
| that when passed to the shell will run the same Vim executable |
| as the current one (if $PATH remains unchanged). |
| Useful if you want to message a Vim server using a |
| |--remote-expr|. |
| To get the full path use: > |
| echo exepath(v:progpath) |
| < If the command has a relative path it will be expanded to the |
| full path, so that it still works after `:cd`. Thus starting |
| "./vim" results in "/home/user/path/to/vim/src/vim". |
| On Linux and other systems it will always be the full path. |
| On Mac it may just be "vim" and using exepath() as mentioned |
| above should be used to get the full path. |
| On MS-Windows the executable may be called "vim.exe", but the |
| ".exe" is not added to v:progpath. |
| Read-only. |
| |
| *v:python3_version* *python3-version-variable* |
| v:python3_version |
| Version of Python 3 that Vim was built against. When |
| Python is loaded dynamically (|python-dynamic|), this version |
| should exactly match the Python library up to the minor |
| version (e.g. 3.10.2 and 3.10.3 are compatible as the minor |
| version is "10", whereas 3.9.4 and 3.10.3 are not compatible). |
| When |python-stable-abi| is used, this will be the minimum Python |
| version that you can use instead. (e.g. if v:python3_version |
| indicates 3.9, you can use 3.9, 3.10, or anything above). |
| |
| This number is encoded as a hex number following Python ABI |
| versioning conventions. Do the following to have a |
| human-readable full version in hex: > |
| echo printf("%08X", v:python3_version) |
| < You can obtain only the minor version by doing: > |
| echo and(v:python3_version>>16,0xff) |
| < Read-only. |
| |
| *v:register* *register-variable* |
| v:register The name of the register in effect for the current normal mode |
| command (regardless of whether that command actually used a |
| register). Or for the currently executing normal mode mapping |
| (use this in custom commands that take a register). |
| If none is supplied it is the default register '"', unless |
| 'clipboard' contains "unnamed" or "unnamedplus", then it is |
| '*' or '+'. |
| Also see |getreg()| and |setreg()| |
| |
| *v:scrollstart* *scrollstart-variable* |
| v:scrollstart String describing the script or function that caused the |
| screen to scroll up. It's only set when it is empty, thus the |
| first reason is remembered. It is set to "Unknown" for a |
| typed command. |
| This can be used to find out why your script causes the |
| hit-enter prompt. |
| |
| *v:servername* *servername-variable* |
| v:servername The resulting registered |client-server-name| if any. |
| Read-only. |
| |
| |
| v:searchforward *v:searchforward* *searchforward-variable* |
| Search direction: 1 after a forward search, 0 after a |
| backward search. It is reset to forward when directly setting |
| the last search pattern, see |quote/|. |
| Note that the value is restored when returning from a |
| function. |function-search-undo|. |
| Read-write. |
| |
| *v:shell_error* *shell_error-variable* |
| v:shell_error Result of the last shell command. When non-zero, the last |
| shell command had an error. When zero, there was no problem. |
| This only works when the shell returns the error code to Vim. |
| The value -1 is often used when the command could not be |
| executed. Read-only. |
| Example: > |
| :!mv foo bar |
| :if v:shell_error |
| : echo 'could not rename "foo" to "bar"!' |
| :endif |
| < "shell_error" also works, for backwards compatibility, unless |
| |scriptversion| is 3 or higher. |
| |
| *v:sizeofint* *sizeofint-variable* |
| v:sizeofint Number of bytes in an int. Depends on how Vim was compiled. |
| This is only useful for deciding whether a test will give the |
| expected result. |
| |
| *v:sizeoflong* *sizeoflong-variable* |
| v:sizeoflong Number of bytes in a long. Depends on how Vim was compiled. |
| This is only useful for deciding whether a test will give the |
| expected result. |
| |
| *v:sizeofpointer* *sizeofpointer-variable* |
| v:sizeofpointer Number of bytes in a pointer. Depends on how Vim was compiled. |
| This is only useful for deciding whether a test will give the |
| expected result. |
| |
| *v:stacktrace* *stacktrace-variable* |
| v:stacktrace The stack trace of the exception most recently caught and |
| not finished. Refer to |getstacktrace()| for the structure of |
| stack trace. See also |v:exception|, |v:throwpoint|, and |
| |throw-variables|. |
| |
| *v:statusmsg* *statusmsg-variable* |
| v:statusmsg Last given status message. It's allowed to set this variable. |
| |
| *v:swapname* *swapname-variable* |
| v:swapname Only valid when executing |SwapExists| autocommands: Name of |
| the swap file found. Read-only. |
| |
| *v:swapchoice* *swapchoice-variable* |
| v:swapchoice |SwapExists| autocommands can set this to the selected choice |
| for handling an existing swap file: |
| 'o' Open read-only |
| 'e' Edit anyway |
| 'r' Recover |
| 'd' Delete swapfile |
| 'q' Quit |
| 'a' Abort |
| The value should be a single-character string. An empty value |
| results in the user being asked, as would happen when there is |
| no SwapExists autocommand. The default is empty. |
| |
| *v:swapcommand* *swapcommand-variable* |
| v:swapcommand Normal mode command to be executed after a file has been |
| opened. Can be used for a |SwapExists| autocommand to have |
| another Vim open the file and jump to the right place. For |
| example, when jumping to a tag the value is ":tag tagname\r". |
| For ":edit +cmd file" the value is ":cmd\r". |
| |
| *v:t_TYPE* *v:t_bool* *t_bool-variable* |
| v:t_bool Value of |Boolean| type. Read-only. See: |type()| |
| *v:t_channel* *t_channel-variable* |
| v:t_channel Value of |Channel| type. Read-only. See: |type()| |
| *v:t_dict* *t_dict-variable* |
| v:t_dict Value of |Dictionary| type. Read-only. See: |type()| |
| *v:t_float* *t_float-variable* |
| v:t_float Value of |Float| type. Read-only. See: |type()| |
| *v:t_func* *t_func-variable* |
| v:t_func Value of |Funcref| type. Read-only. See: |type()| |
| *v:t_job* *t_job-variable* |
| v:t_job Value of |Job| type. Read-only. See: |type()| |
| *v:t_list* *t_list-variable* |
| v:t_list Value of |List| type. Read-only. See: |type()| |
| *v:t_none* *t_none-variable* |
| v:t_none Value of |None| type. Read-only. See: |type()| |
| *v:t_number* *t_number-variable* |
| v:t_number Value of |Number| type. Read-only. See: |type()| |
| *v:t_string* *t_string-variable* |
| v:t_string Value of |String| type. Read-only. See: |type()| |
| *v:t_blob* *t_blob-variable* |
| v:t_blob Value of |Blob| type. Read-only. See: |type()| |
| *v:t_class* *t_class-variable* |
| v:t_class Value of |class| type. Read-only. See: |type()| |
| *v:t_object* *t_object-variable* |
| v:t_object Value of |object| type. Read-only. See: |type()| |
| *v:t_typealias* *t_typealias-variable* |
| v:t_typealias Value of |typealias| type. Read-only. See: |type()| |
| *v:t_enum* *t_enum-variable* |
| v:t_enum Value of |enum| type. Read-only. See: |type()| |
| *v:t_enumvalue* *t_enumvalue-variable* |
| v:t_enumvalue Value of |enumvalue| type. Read-only. See: |type()| |
| *v:t_tuple* *t_tuple-variable* |
| v:t_tuple Value of |Tuple| type. Read-only. See: |type()| |
| |
| *v:termresponse* *termresponse-variable* |
| v:termresponse The escape sequence returned by the terminal for the |t_RV| |
| termcap entry. It is set when Vim receives an escape sequence |
| that starts with ESC [ or CSI, then '>' or '?' and ends in a |
| 'c', with only digits and ';' in between. |
| When this option is set, the TermResponse autocommand event is |
| fired, so that you can react to the response from the |
| terminal. The TermResponseAll event is also fired, with |
| <amatch> set to "version". You can use |terminalprops()| to see |
| what Vim figured out about the terminal. |
| The response from a new xterm is: "<Esc>[> Pp ; Pv ; Pc c". Pp |
| is the terminal type: 0 for vt100 and 1 for vt220. Pv is the |
| patch level (since this was introduced in patch 95, it's |
| always 95 or higher). Pc is always zero. |
| If Pv is 141 or higher then Vim will try to request terminal |
| codes. This only works with xterm |xterm-codes|. |
| {only when compiled with |+termresponse| feature} |
| |
| *v:termblinkresp* |
| v:termblinkresp The escape sequence returned by the terminal for the |t_RC| |
| termcap entry. This is used to find out whether the terminal |
| cursor is blinking. This is used by |term_getcursor()|. When |
| this option is set, the TermResponseAll autocommand event is |
| fired, with <amatch> set to "cursorblink". |
| |
| *v:termstyleresp* |
| v:termstyleresp The escape sequence returned by the terminal for the |t_RS| |
| termcap entry. This is used to find out what the shape of the |
| cursor is. This is used by |term_getcursor()|. When this |
| option is set, the TermResponseAll autocommand event is fired, |
| with <amatch> set to "cursorshape". |
| |
| *v:termrbgresp* |
| v:termrbgresp The escape sequence returned by the terminal for the |t_RB| |
| termcap entry. This is used to find out what the terminal |
| background color is; see 'background'. When this option is |
| set, the TermResponseAll autocommand event is fired, with |
| <amatch> set to "background". |
| |
| *v:termrfgresp* |
| v:termrfgresp The escape sequence returned by the terminal for the |t_RF| |
| termcap entry. This is used to find out what the terminal |
| foreground color is. When this option is set, the |
| TermResponseAll autocommand event is fired, with <amatch> set |
| to "foreground". |
| |
| *v:termu7resp* |
| v:termu7resp The escape sequence returned by the terminal for the |t_u7| |
| termcap entry. This is used to find out what the terminal |
| does with ambiguous width characters, see 'ambiwidth'. When |
| this option is set, the TermResponseAll autocommand event is |
| fired, with <amatch> set to "ambiguouswidth". |
| |
| *v:testing* *testing-variable* |
| v:testing Must be set before using `test_garbagecollect_now()`. |
| Also, when set certain error messages won't be shown for 2 |
| seconds. (e.g. "'dictionary' option is empty") |
| |
| *v:this_session* *this_session-variable* |
| v:this_session Full filename of the last loaded or saved session file. See |
| |:mksession|. It is allowed to set this variable. When no |
| session file has been saved, this variable is empty. |
| "this_session" also works, for backwards compatibility, unless |
| |scriptversion| is 3 or higher |
| |
| *v:throwpoint* *throwpoint-variable* |
| v:throwpoint The point where the exception most recently caught and not |
| finished was thrown. Not set when commands are typed. See |
| also |v:exception|, |v:stacktrace|, and |throw-variables|. |
| Example: > |
| :try |
| : throw "oops" |
| :catch /.*/ |
| : echo "Exception from" v:throwpoint |
| :endtry |
| < Output: "Exception from test.vim, line 2" |
| |
| *v:true* *true-variable* |
| v:true A Number with value one. Used to put "true" in JSON. See |
| |json_encode()|. |
| When used as a string this evaluates to "v:true". > |
| echo v:true |
| < v:true ~ |
| That is so that eval() can parse the string back to the same |
| value. Read-only. |
| In |Vim9| script "true" can be used which has a boolean type. |
| *v:val* *val-variable* |
| v:val Value of the current item of a |List| or |Dictionary|. Only |
| valid while evaluating the expression used with |map()| and |
| |filter()|. Read-only. |
| |
| *v:version* *version-variable* |
| v:version Version number of Vim: Major version number times 100 plus |
| minor version number. Version 5.0 is 500. Version 5.1 |
| is 501. Read-only. "version" also works, for backwards |
| compatibility, unless |scriptversion| is 3 or higher. |
| Use |has()| to check if a certain patch was included, e.g.: > |
| if has("patch-7.4.123") |
| < Note that patch numbers are specific to the version, thus both |
| version 5.0 and 5.1 may have a patch 123, but these are |
| completely different. |
| |
| *v:versionlong* *versionlong-variable* |
| v:versionlong Like v:version, but also including the patchlevel in the last |
| four digits. Version 8.1 with patch 123 has value 8010123. |
| This can be used like this: > |
| if v:versionlong >= 8010123 |
| < However, if there are gaps in the list of patches included |
| this will not work well. This can happen if a recent patch |
| was included into an older version, e.g. for a security fix. |
| Use the has() function to make sure the patch is actually |
| included. |
| |
| *v:vim_did_enter* *vim_did_enter-variable* |
| v:vim_did_enter Zero until most of startup is done. It is set to one just |
| before |VimEnter| autocommands are triggered. |
| |
| *v:warningmsg* *warningmsg-variable* |
| v:warningmsg Last given warning message. It's allowed to set this variable. |
| |
| *v:wayland_display* |
| v:wayland_display |
| The name of the Wayland display that Vim is connected to. |
| Equivalent to the $WAYLAND_DISPLAY environment variable. |
| If this is empty, then Vim is not connected to any display. |
| |
| *v:windowid* *windowid-variable* |
| v:windowid When any X11/Wayland based GUI is running or when running in a |
| terminal and Vim connects to the X server (|-X|) this will be |
| set to the window ID. |
| When an MS-Windows GUI is running this will be set to the |
| window handle. |
| Otherwise the value is zero. |
| Note: for windows inside Vim use |winnr()| or |win_getid()|, |
| see |window-ID|. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 4. Builtin Functions *functions* |
| |
| See |function-list| for a list grouped by what the function is used for. |
| |
| The alphabetic list of all builtin functions and details are in a separate |
| help file: |builtin-functions|. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 5. Defining functions *user-functions* |
| |
| New functions can be defined. These can be called just like builtin |
| functions. The function takes arguments, executes a sequence of Ex commands |
| and can return a value. |
| |
| You can find most information about defining functions in |userfunc.txt|. |
| For Vim9 functions, which execute much faster, support type checking and more, |
| see |vim9.txt|. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 6. Curly braces names *curly-braces-names* |
| |
| In most places where you can use a variable, you can use a "curly braces name" |
| variable. This is a regular variable name with one or more expressions |
| wrapped in braces {} like this: > |
| my_{adjective}_variable |
| |
| This only works in legacy Vim script, not in |Vim9| script. |
| |
| When Vim encounters this, it evaluates the expression inside the braces, puts |
| that in place of the expression, and re-interprets the whole as a variable |
| name. So in the above example, if the variable "adjective" was set to |
| "noisy", then the reference would be to "my_noisy_variable", whereas if |
| "adjective" was set to "quiet", then it would be to "my_quiet_variable". |
| |
| One application for this is to create a set of variables governed by an option |
| value. For example, the statement > |
| echo my_{&background}_message |
| |
| would output the contents of "my_dark_message" or "my_light_message" depending |
| on the current value of 'background'. |
| |
| You can use multiple brace pairs: > |
| echo my_{adverb}_{adjective}_message |
| ..or even nest them: > |
| echo my_{ad{end_of_word}}_message |
| where "end_of_word" is either "verb" or "jective". |
| |
| However, the expression inside the braces must evaluate to a valid single |
| variable name, e.g. this is invalid: > |
| :let foo='a + b' |
| :echo c{foo}d |
| .. since the result of expansion is "ca + bd", which is not a variable name. |
| |
| *curly-braces-function-names* |
| You can call and define functions by an evaluated name in a similar way. |
| Example: > |
| :let func_end='whizz' |
| :call my_func_{func_end}(parameter) |
| |
| This would call the function "my_func_whizz(parameter)". |
| |
| This does NOT work: > |
| :let i = 3 |
| :let @{i} = '' " error |
| :echo @{i} " error |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 7. Commands *expression-commands* |
| |
| Note: in |Vim9| script `:let` is not used. `:var` is used for variable |
| declarations and assignments do not use a command. |vim9-declaration| |
| |
| :let {var-name} = {expr1} *:let* *E18* |
| Set internal variable {var-name} to the result of the |
| expression {expr1}. The variable will get the type |
| from the {expr}. If {var-name} didn't exist yet, it |
| is created. |
| |
| :let {var-name}[{idx}] = {expr1} *E689* *E1141* |
| Set a list item to the result of the expression |
| {expr1}. {var-name} must refer to a list and {idx} |
| must be a valid index in that list. For nested list |
| the index can be repeated. |
| This cannot be used to add an item to a |List|. |
| This cannot be used to set a byte in a String. You |
| can do that like this: > |
| :let var = var[0:2] .. 'X' .. var[4:] |
| < When {var-name} is a |Blob| then {idx} can be the |
| length of the blob, in which case one byte is |
| appended. |
| |
| *E711* *E719* *E1165* *E1166* *E1183* |
| :let {var-name}[{idx1}:{idx2}] = {expr1} *E708* *E709* *E710* |
| Set a sequence of items in a |List| to the result of |
| the expression {expr1}, which must be a list with the |
| correct number of items. |
| {idx1} can be omitted, zero is used instead. |
| {idx2} can be omitted, meaning the end of the list. |
| When the selected range of items is partly past the |
| end of the list, items will be added. |
| |
| *:let+=* *:let-=* *:letstar=* *:let/=* *:let%=* |
| *:let.=* *:let..=* *E734* *E985* *E1019* |
| :let {var} += {expr1} Like ":let {var} = {var} + {expr1}". |
| :let {var} -= {expr1} Like ":let {var} = {var} - {expr1}". |
| :let {var} *= {expr1} Like ":let {var} = {var} * {expr1}". |
| :let {var} /= {expr1} Like ":let {var} = {var} / {expr1}". |
| :let {var} %= {expr1} Like ":let {var} = {var} % {expr1}". |
| :let {var} .= {expr1} Like ":let {var} = {var} . {expr1}". |
| :let {var} ..= {expr1} Like ":let {var} = {var} .. {expr1}". |
| These fail if {var} was not set yet and when the type |
| of {var} and {expr1} don't fit the operator. |
| `+=` modifies a |List| or a |Blob| in-place instead of |
| creating a new one. |
| `.=` is not supported with Vim script version 2 and |
| later, see |vimscript-version|. |
| |
| |
| :let ${env-name} = {expr1} *:let-environment* *:let-$* |
| Set environment variable {env-name} to the result of |
| the expression {expr1}. The type is always String. |
| |
| On some systems making an environment variable empty |
| causes it to be deleted. Many systems do not make a |
| difference between an environment variable that is not |
| set and an environment variable that is empty. |
| |
| :let ${env-name} .= {expr1} |
| Append {expr1} to the environment variable {env-name}. |
| If the environment variable didn't exist yet this |
| works like "=". |
| |
| :let @{reg-name} = {expr1} *:let-register* *:let-@* |
| Write the result of the expression {expr1} in register |
| {reg-name}. {reg-name} must be a single letter, and |
| must be the name of a writable register (see |
| |registers|). "@@" can be used for the unnamed |
| register, "@/" for the search pattern. |
| If the result of {expr1} ends in a <CR> or <NL>, the |
| register will be linewise, otherwise it will be set to |
| characterwise. |
| This can be used to clear the last search pattern: > |
| :let @/ = "" |
| < This is different from searching for an empty string, |
| that would match everywhere. |
| |
| :let @{reg-name} .= {expr1} |
| Append {expr1} to register {reg-name}. If the |
| register was empty it's like setting it to {expr1}. |
| |
| :let &{option-name} = {expr1} *:let-option* *:let-&* |
| Set option {option-name} to the result of the |
| expression {expr1}. A String or Number value is |
| always converted to the type of the option. |
| For an option local to a window or buffer the effect |
| is just like using the |:set| command: both the local |
| value and the global value are changed. |
| Example: > |
| :let &path = &path .. ',/usr/local/include' |
| < This also works for terminal codes in the form t_xx. |
| But only for alphanumerical names. Example: > |
| :let &t_k1 = "\<Esc>[234;" |
| < When the code does not exist yet it will be created as |
| a terminal key code, there is no error. |
| |
| :let &{option-name} .= {expr1} |
| For a string option: Append {expr1} to the value. |
| Does not insert a comma like |:set+=|. |
| |
| :let &{option-name} += {expr1} |
| :let &{option-name} -= {expr1} |
| For a number or boolean option: Add or subtract |
| {expr1}. |
| |
| :let &l:{option-name} = {expr1} |
| :let &l:{option-name} .= {expr1} |
| :let &l:{option-name} += {expr1} |
| :let &l:{option-name} -= {expr1} |
| Like above, but only set the local value of an option |
| (if there is one). Works like |:setlocal|. |
| |
| :let &g:{option-name} = {expr1} |
| :let &g:{option-name} .= {expr1} |
| :let &g:{option-name} += {expr1} |
| :let &g:{option-name} -= {expr1} |
| Like above, but only set the global value of an option |
| (if there is one). Works like |:setglobal|. |
| *E1093* *E1537* *E1538* *E1535* |
| :let [{name1}, {name2}, ...] = {expr1} *:let-unpack* *E687* *E688* |
| {expr1} must evaluate to a |List| or a |Tuple|. The |
| first item in the list or tuple is assigned to |
| {name1}, the second item to {name2}, etc. |
| The number of names must match the number of items in |
| the |List| or |Tuple|. |
| Each name can be one of the items of the ":let" |
| command as mentioned above. |
| Example: > |
| :let [s, item] = GetItem(s) |
| < Detail: {expr1} is evaluated first, then the |
| assignments are done in sequence. This matters if |
| {name2} depends on {name1}. Example: > |
| :let x = [0, 1] |
| :let i = 0 |
| :let [i, x[i]] = [1, 2] |
| :echo x |
| < The result is [0, 2]. |
| |
| :let [{name1}, {name2}, ...] .= {expr1} |
| :let [{name1}, {name2}, ...] += {expr1} |
| :let [{name1}, {name2}, ...] -= {expr1} |
| :let [{name1}, {name2}, ...] *= {expr1} |
| :let [{name1}, {name2}, ...] /= {expr1} |
| :let [{name1}, {name2}, ...] %= {expr1} |
| Like above, but append, add, subtract, multiply, |
| divide, or modulo the value for each |List| or |Tuple| |
| item. |
| |
| :let [{name}, ..., ; {lastname}] = {expr1} *E452* |
| Like |:let-unpack| above, but the |List| or |Tuple| |
| may have more items than there are names. A list or a |
| tuple of the remaining items is assigned to |
| {lastname}. If there are no remaining items, |
| {lastname} is set to an empty list or tuple. |
| Example: > |
| :let [a, b; rest] = ["aval", "bval", 3, 4] |
| :let [a, b; rest] = ("aval", "bval", 3, 4) |
| < |
| :let [{name}, ..., ; {lastname}] .= {expr1} |
| :let [{name}, ..., ; {lastname}] += {expr1} |
| :let [{name}, ..., ; {lastname}] -= {expr1} |
| Like above, but append/add/subtract the value for each |
| |List| item. |
| |
| *:let=<<* *:let-heredoc* |
| *E990* *E991* *E172* *E221* *E1145* |
| :let {var-name} =<< [trim] [eval] {endmarker} |
| text... |
| text... |
| {endmarker} |
| Set internal variable {var-name} to a |List| |
| containing the lines of text bounded by the string |
| {endmarker}. |
| |
| If "eval" is not specified, then each line of text is |
| used as a |literal-string|, except that single quotes |
| does not need to be doubled. |
| If "eval" is specified, then any Vim expression in the |
| form {expr} is evaluated and the result replaces the |
| expression, like with |interpolated-string|. |
| Example where $HOME is expanded: > |
| let lines =<< trim eval END |
| some text |
| See the file {$HOME}/.vimrc |
| more text |
| END |
| < There can be multiple Vim expressions in a single line |
| but an expression cannot span multiple lines. If any |
| expression evaluation fails, then the assignment fails. |
| |
| {endmarker} must not contain white space. |
| {endmarker} cannot start with a lower case character. |
| The last line should end only with the {endmarker} |
| string without any other character. Watch out for |
| white space after {endmarker}! |
| |
| Without "trim" any white space characters in the lines |
| of text are preserved. If "trim" is specified before |
| {endmarker}, then indentation is stripped so you can |
| do: > |
| let text =<< trim END |
| if ok |
| echo 'done' |
| endif |
| END |
| < Results in: ["if ok", " echo 'done'", "endif"] |
| The marker must line up with "let" and the indentation |
| of the first line is removed from all the text lines. |
| Specifically: all the leading indentation exactly |
| matching the leading indentation of the first |
| non-empty text line is stripped from the input lines. |
| All leading indentation exactly matching the leading |
| indentation before `let` is stripped from the line |
| containing {endmarker}. Note that the difference |
| between space and tab matters here. |
| |
| If {var-name} didn't exist yet, it is created. |
| Cannot be followed by another command, but can be |
| followed by a comment. |
| |
| To avoid line continuation to be applied, consider |
| adding 'C' to 'cpoptions': > |
| set cpo+=C |
| let var =<< END |
| \ leading backslash |
| END |
| set cpo-=C |
| < |
| Examples: > |
| let var1 =<< END |
| Sample text 1 |
| Sample text 2 |
| Sample text 3 |
| END |
| |
| let data =<< trim DATA |
| 1 2 3 4 |
| 5 6 7 8 |
| DATA |
| |
| let code =<< trim eval CODE |
| let v = {10 + 20} |
| let h = "{$HOME}" |
| let s = "{Str1()} abc {Str2()}" |
| let n = {MyFunc(3, 4)} |
| CODE |
| < |
| *E121* |
| :let {var-name} .. List the value of variable {var-name}. Multiple |
| variable names may be given. Special names recognized |
| here: *E738* |
| g: global variables |
| b: local buffer variables |
| w: local window variables |
| t: local tab page variables |
| s: script-local variables |
| l: local function variables |
| v: Vim variables. |
| This does not work in Vim9 script. |vim9-declaration| |
| |
| :let List the values of all variables. The type of the |
| variable is indicated before the value: |
| <nothing> String |
| # Number |
| * Funcref |
| This does not work in Vim9 script. |vim9-declaration| |
| |
| :unl[et][!] {name} ... *:unlet* *:unl* *E108* *E795* *E1081* |
| Remove the internal variable {name}. Several variable |
| names can be given, they are all removed. The name |
| may also be a |List| or |Dictionary| item. |
| With [!] no error message is given for non-existing |
| variables. |
| One or more items from a |List| can be removed: > |
| :unlet list[3] " remove fourth item |
| :unlet list[3:] " remove fourth item to last |
| < One item from a |Dictionary| can be removed at a time: > |
| :unlet dict['two'] |
| :unlet dict.two |
| < This is especially useful to clean up used global |
| variables and script-local variables (these are not |
| deleted when the script ends). Function-local |
| variables are automatically deleted when the function |
| ends. |
| In |Vim9| script variables declared in a function or |
| script cannot be removed. |
| |
| :unl[et] ${env-name} ... *:unlet-environment* *:unlet-$* |
| Remove environment variable {env-name}. |
| Can mix {name} and ${env-name} in one :unlet command. |
| No error message is given for a non-existing |
| variable, also without !. |
| If the system does not support deleting an environment |
| variable, it is made empty. |
| |
| *:cons* *:const* *E1018* |
| :cons[t] {var-name} = {expr1} |
| :cons[t] [{name1}, {name2}, ...] = {expr1} |
| :cons[t] [{name}, ..., ; {lastname}] = {expr1} |
| :cons[t] {var-name} =<< [trim] [eval] {marker} |
| text... |
| text... |
| {marker} |
| Similar to |:let|, but additionally lock the variable |
| after setting the value. This is the same as locking |
| the variable with |:lockvar| just after |:let|, thus: > |
| :const x = 1 |
| < is equivalent to: > |
| :let x = 1 |
| :lockvar! x |
| < NOTE: in Vim9 script `:const` works differently, see |
| |vim9-const| |
| This is useful if you want to make sure the variable |
| is not modified. If the value is a List or Dictionary |
| literal then the items also cannot be changed: > |
| const ll = [1, 2, 3] |
| let ll[1] = 5 " Error! |
| < Nested references are not locked: > |
| let lvar = ['a'] |
| const lconst = [0, lvar] |
| let lconst[0] = 2 " Error! |
| let lconst[1][0] = 'b' " OK |
| < *E995* |
| It is an error to specify an existing variable with |
| |:const|. > |
| :let x = 1 |
| :const x = 1 " Error! |
| < *E996* |
| Note that environment variables, option values and |
| register values cannot be used here, since they cannot |
| be locked. |
| |
| :cons[t] |
| :cons[t] {var-name} |
| If no argument is given or only {var-name} is given, |
| the behavior is the same as |:let|. |
| |
| :lockv[ar][!] [depth] {name} ... *:lockvar* *:lockv* |
| Lock the internal variable {name}. Locking means that |
| it can no longer be changed (until it is unlocked). |
| A locked variable can be deleted: > |
| :lockvar v |
| :let v = 'asdf' " fails! |
| :unlet v " works |
| < *E741* *E940* *E1118* *E1119* *E1120* *E1121* *E1122* |
| If you try to change a locked variable you get an |
| error message: "E741: Value is locked: {name}". |
| If you try to lock or unlock a built-in variable you |
| get an error message: "E940: Cannot lock or unlock |
| variable {name}". |
| |
| [depth] is relevant when locking a |List|, a |Tuple| |
| or a |Dictionary|. It specifies how deep the locking |
| goes: |
| 0 Lock the variable {name} but not its |
| value. |
| 1 Lock the |List| or |Tuple| or |
| |Dictionary| itself, cannot add or |
| remove items, but can still change |
| their values. |
| 2 Also lock the values, cannot change |
| the items. If an item is a |List| or |
| |Tuple| or |Dictionary|, cannot add or |
| remove items, but can still change the |
| values. |
| 3 Like 2 but for the |List| / |Tuple| / |
| |Dictionary| in the |List| / |Tuple| / |
| |Dictionary|, one level deeper. |
| The default [depth] is 2, thus when {name} is a |
| |List|, a |Tuple| or a |Dictionary| the values cannot |
| be changed. |
| |
| Example with [depth] 0: > |
| let mylist = [1, 2, 3] |
| lockvar 0 mylist |
| let mylist[0] = 77 " OK |
| call add(mylist, 4) " OK |
| let mylist = [7, 8, 9] " Error! |
| < *E743* |
| For unlimited depth use [!] and omit [depth]. |
| However, there is a maximum depth of 100 to catch |
| loops. |
| |
| Note that when two variables refer to the same |List| |
| and you lock one of them, the |List| will also be |
| locked when used through the other variable. |
| Example: > |
| :let l = [0, 1, 2, 3] |
| :let cl = l |
| :lockvar l |
| :let cl[1] = 99 " won't work! |
| < You may want to make a copy of a list to avoid this. |
| See |deepcopy()|. |
| |
| *E1391* *E1392* |
| Locking and unlocking object and class variables is |
| currently NOT supported. |
| |
| |
| :unlo[ckvar][!] [depth] {name} ... *:unlockvar* *:unlo* *E1246* |
| Unlock the internal variable {name}. Does the |
| opposite of |:lockvar|. |
| |
| If {name} does not exist: |
| - In |Vim9| script an error is given. |
| - In legacy script this is silently ignored. |
| |
| :if {expr1} *:if* *:end* *:endif* *:en* *E171* *E579* *E580* |
| :en[dif] Execute the commands until the next matching `:else` |
| or `:endif` if {expr1} evaluates to non-zero. |
| Although the short forms work, it is recommended to |
| always use `:endif` to avoid confusion and to make |
| auto-indenting work properly. |
| |
| From Vim version 4.5 until 5.0, every Ex command in |
| between the `:if` and `:endif` is ignored. These two |
| commands were just to allow for future expansions in a |
| backward compatible way. Nesting was allowed. Note |
| that any `:else` or `:elseif` was ignored, the `else` |
| part was not executed either. |
| |
| You can use this to remain compatible with older |
| versions: > |
| :if version >= 500 |
| : version-5-specific-commands |
| :endif |
| < The commands still need to be parsed to find the |
| `endif`. Sometimes an older Vim has a problem with a |
| new command. For example, `:silent` is recognized as |
| a `:substitute` command. In that case `:execute` can |
| avoid problems: > |
| :if version >= 600 |
| : execute "silent 1,$delete" |
| :endif |
| < |
| In |Vim9| script `:endif` cannot be shortened, to |
| improve script readability. |
| NOTE: The `:append` and `:insert` commands don't work |
| properly in between `:if` and `:endif`. |
| |
| *:else* *:el* *E581* *E583* |
| :el[se] Execute the commands until the next matching `:else` |
| or `:endif` if they previously were not being |
| executed. |
| In |Vim9| script `:else` cannot be shortened, to |
| improve script readability. |
| |
| *:elseif* *:elsei* *E582* *E584* |
| :elsei[f] {expr1} Short for `:else` `:if`, with the addition that there |
| is no extra `:endif`. |
| In |Vim9| script `:elseif` cannot be shortened, to |
| improve script readability. |
| |
| :wh[ile] {expr1} *:while* *:endwhile* *:wh* *:endw* |
| *E170* *E585* *E588* *E733* |
| :endw[hile] Repeat the commands between `:while` and `:endwhile`, |
| as long as {expr1} evaluates to non-zero. |
| When an error is detected from a command inside the |
| loop, execution continues after the `endwhile`. |
| Example: > |
| :let lnum = 1 |
| :while lnum <= line("$") |
| :call FixLine(lnum) |
| :let lnum = lnum + 1 |
| :endwhile |
| < |
| In |Vim9| script `:while` and `:endwhile` cannot be |
| shortened, to improve script readability. |
| NOTE: The `:append` and `:insert` commands don't work |
| properly inside a `:while` and `:for` loop. |
| |
| :for {var} in {object} *:for* *E690* *E732* |
| :endfo[r] *:endfo* *:endfor* |
| Repeat the commands between `:for` and `:endfor` for |
| each item in {object}. {object} can be a |List|, |
| a |Tuple|, a |Blob| or a |String|. *E1177* |
| |
| Variable {var} is set to the value of each item. |
| In |Vim9| script the loop variable must not have been |
| declared yet, unless when it is a |
| global/window/tab/buffer variable. |
| |
| When an error is detected for a command inside the |
| loop, execution continues after the `endfor`. |
| Changing {object} inside the loop affects what items |
| are used. Make a copy if this is unwanted: > |
| :for item in copy(mylist) |
| < |
| When {object} is a |List| and not making a copy, in |
| legacy script Vim stores a reference to the next item |
| in the |List| before executing the commands with the |
| current item. Thus the current item can be removed |
| without effect. Removing any later item means it will |
| not be found. Thus the following example works (an |
| inefficient way to make a |List| empty): > |
| for item in mylist |
| call remove(mylist, 0) |
| endfor |
| < Note that reordering the |List| (e.g., with sort() or |
| reverse()) may have unexpected effects. |
| In |Vim9| script the index is used. If an item before |
| the current one is deleted the next item will be |
| skipped. |
| |
| When {object} is a |Blob|, Vim always makes a copy to |
| iterate over. Unlike with |List|, modifying the |
| |Blob| does not affect the iteration. |
| |
| When {object} is a |String| each item is a string with |
| one character, plus any combining characters. |
| |
| In |Vim9| script `:endfor` cannot be shortened, to |
| improve script readability. |
| |
| :for [{var1}, {var2}, ...] in {listlist} |
| :endfo[r] *E1140* |
| Like `:for` above, but each item in {listlist} must be |
| a list, of which each item is assigned to {var1}, |
| {var2}, etc. Example: > |
| :for [lnum, col] in [[1, 3], [2, 5], [3, 8]] |
| :echo getline(lnum)[col] |
| :endfor |
| < |
| *:continue* *:con* *E586* |
| :con[tinue] When used inside a `:while` or `:for` loop, jumps back |
| to the start of the loop. |
| If it is used after a `:try` inside the loop but |
| before the matching `:finally` (if present), the |
| commands following the `:finally` up to the matching |
| `:endtry` are executed first. This process applies to |
| all nested `:try`s inside the loop. The outermost |
| `:endtry` then jumps back to the start of the loop. |
| |
| In |Vim9| script `:cont` is the shortest form, to |
| improve script readability. |
| *:break* *:brea* *E587* |
| :brea[k] When used inside a `:while` or `:for` loop, skips to |
| the command after the matching `:endwhile` or |
| `:endfor`. |
| If it is used after a `:try` inside the loop but |
| before the matching `:finally` (if present), the |
| commands following the `:finally` up to the matching |
| `:endtry` are executed first. This process applies to |
| all nested `:try`s inside the loop. The outermost |
| `:endtry` then jumps to the command after the loop. |
| |
| In |Vim9| script `:break` cannot be shortened, to |
| improve script readability. |
| |
| :try *:try* *:endt* *:endtry* |
| *E600* *E601* *E602* *E1032* |
| :endt[ry] Change the error handling for the commands between |
| `:try` and `:endtry` including everything being |
| executed across `:source` commands, function calls, |
| or autocommand invocations. |
| |
| When an error or interrupt is detected and there is |
| a `:finally` command following, execution continues |
| after the `:finally`. Otherwise, or when the |
| `:endtry` is reached thereafter, the next |
| (dynamically) surrounding `:try` is checked for |
| a corresponding `:finally` etc. Then the script |
| processing is terminated. Whether a function |
| definition has an "abort" argument does not matter. |
| Example: > |
| try | call Unknown() | finally | echomsg "cleanup" | endtry |
| echomsg "not reached" |
| < |
| Moreover, an error or interrupt (dynamically) inside |
| `:try` and `:endtry` is converted to an exception. It |
| can be caught as if it were thrown by a `:throw` |
| command (see `:catch`). In this case, the script |
| processing is not terminated. |
| |
| The value "Vim:Interrupt" is used for an interrupt |
| exception. An error in a Vim command is converted |
| to a value of the form "Vim({command}):{errmsg}", |
| other errors are converted to a value of the form |
| "Vim:{errmsg}". {command} is the full command name, |
| and {errmsg} is the message that is displayed if the |
| error exception is not caught, always beginning with |
| the error number. |
| Examples: > |
| try | sleep 100 | catch /^Vim:Interrupt$/ | endtry |
| try | edit | catch /^Vim(edit):E\d\+/ | echo "error" | endtry |
| < |
| In |Vim9| script `:endtry` cannot be shortened, to |
| improve script readability. |
| |
| *:cat* *:catch* |
| *E603* *E604* *E605* *E654* *E1033* |
| :cat[ch] /{pattern}/ The following commands until the next `:catch`, |
| `:finally`, or `:endtry` that belongs to the same |
| `:try` as the `:catch` are executed when an exception |
| matching {pattern} is being thrown and has not yet |
| been caught by a previous `:catch`. Otherwise, these |
| commands are skipped. |
| When {pattern} is omitted all errors are caught. |
| Examples: > |
| :catch /^Vim:Interrupt$/ " catch interrupts (CTRL-C) |
| :catch /^Vim\%((\a\+)\)\=:E/ " catch all Vim errors |
| :catch /^Vim\%((\a\+)\)\=:/ " catch errors and interrupts |
| :catch /^Vim(write):/ " catch all errors in :write |
| :catch /^Vim\%((\a\+)\)\=:E123:/ " catch error E123 |
| :catch /my-exception/ " catch user exception |
| :catch /.*/ " catch everything |
| :catch " same as /.*/ |
| < |
| Another character can be used instead of / around the |
| {pattern}, so long as it does not have a special |
| meaning (e.g., '|' or '"') and doesn't occur inside |
| {pattern}. *E1067* |
| Information about the exception is available in |
| |v:exception|. Also see |throw-variables|. |
| NOTE: It is not reliable to ":catch" the TEXT of |
| an error message because it may vary in different |
| locales. |
| In |Vim9| script `:catch` cannot be shortened, to |
| improve script readability. |
| |
| *:fina* *:finally* *E606* *E607* |
| :fina[lly] The following commands until the matching `:endtry` |
| are executed whenever the part between the matching |
| `:try` and the `:finally` is left: either by falling |
| through to the `:finally` or by a `:continue`, |
| `:break`, `:finish`, or `:return`, or by an error or |
| interrupt or exception (see `:throw`). |
| |
| In |Vim9| script `:finally` cannot be shortened, to |
| improve script readability and avoid confusion with |
| `:final`. |
| |
| *:th* *:throw* *E608* *E1129* |
| :th[row] {expr1} The {expr1} is evaluated and thrown as an exception. |
| If the ":throw" is used after a `:try` but before the |
| first corresponding `:catch`, commands are skipped |
| until the first `:catch` matching {expr1} is reached. |
| If there is no such `:catch` or if the ":throw" is |
| used after a `:catch` but before the `:finally`, the |
| commands following the `:finally` (if present) up to |
| the matching `:endtry` are executed. If the `:throw` |
| is after the `:finally`, commands up to the `:endtry` |
| are skipped. At the ":endtry", this process applies |
| again for the next dynamically surrounding `:try` |
| (which may be found in a calling function or sourcing |
| script), until a matching `:catch` has been found. |
| If the exception is not caught, the command processing |
| is terminated. |
| Example: > |
| :try | throw "oops" | catch /^oo/ | echo "caught" | endtry |
| < Note that "catch" may need to be on a separate line |
| for when an error causes the parsing to skip the whole |
| line and not see the "|" that separates the commands. |
| |
| In |Vim9| script `:throw` cannot be shortened, to |
| improve script readability. |
| |
| *:ec* *:echo* |
| :ec[ho] {expr1} .. Echoes each {expr1}, with a space in between. The |
| first {expr1} starts on a new line. |
| Also see |:comment|. |
| Use "\n" to start a new line. Use "\r" to move the |
| cursor to the first column. |
| Uses the highlighting set by the `:echohl` command. |
| Cannot be followed by a comment. |
| Example: > |
| :echo "the value of 'shell' is" &shell |
| < *:echo-redraw* |
| A later redraw may make the message disappear again. |
| And since Vim mostly postpones redrawing until it's |
| finished with a sequence of commands this happens |
| quite often. To avoid that a command from before the |
| `:echo` causes a redraw afterwards (redraws are often |
| postponed until you type something), force a redraw |
| with the `:redraw` command. Example: > |
| :new | redraw | echo "there is a new window" |
| < |
| *:echon* |
| :echon {expr1} .. Echoes each {expr1}, without anything added. Also see |
| |:comment|. |
| Uses the highlighting set by the `:echohl` command. |
| Cannot be followed by a comment. |
| Example: > |
| :echon "the value of 'shell' is " &shell |
| < |
| Note the difference between using `:echo`, which is a |
| Vim command, and `:!echo`, which is an external shell |
| command: > |
| :!echo % --> filename |
| < The arguments of ":!" are expanded, see |:_%|. > |
| :!echo "%" --> filename or "filename" |
| < Like the previous example. Whether you see the double |
| quotes or not depends on your 'shell'. > |
| :echo % --> nothing |
| < The '%' is an illegal character in an expression. > |
| :echo "%" --> % |
| < This just echoes the '%' character. > |
| :echo expand("%") --> filename |
| < This calls the expand() function to expand the '%'. |
| |
| *:echoh* *:echohl* |
| :echoh[l] {name} Use the highlight group {name} for the following |
| `:echo`, `:echon` and `:echomsg` commands. Also used |
| for the `input()` prompt. Example: > |
| :echohl WarningMsg | echo "Don't panic!" | echohl None |
| < Don't forget to set the group back to "None", |
| otherwise all following echo's will be highlighted. |
| |
| *:echom* *:echomsg* |
| :echom[sg] {expr1} .. Echo the expression(s) as a true message, saving the |
| message in the |message-history|. |
| Spaces are placed between the arguments as with the |
| `:echo` command. But unprintable characters are |
| displayed, not interpreted. |
| The parsing works slightly different from `:echo`, |
| more like `:execute`. All the expressions are first |
| evaluated and concatenated before echoing anything. |
| If expressions does not evaluate to a Number or |
| String, string() is used to turn it into a string. |
| Uses the highlighting set by the `:echohl` command. |
| Example: > |
| :echomsg "It's a Zizzer Zazzer Zuzz, as you can plainly see." |
| < See |:echo-redraw| to avoid the message disappearing |
| when the screen is redrawn. |
| |
| *:echow* *:echowin* *:echowindow* |
| :[N]echow[indow] {expr1} .. |
| Like |:echomsg| but when the messages popup window is |
| available the message is displayed there. This means |
| it will show for three seconds and avoid a |
| |hit-enter| prompt. If you want to hide it before |
| that, press Esc in Normal mode (when it would |
| otherwise beep). If it disappears too soon you can |
| use `:messages` to see the text. |
| When [N] is given then the window will show up for |
| this number of seconds. The last `:echowindow` with a |
| count matters, it is used once only. |
| The message window is available when Vim was compiled |
| with the +timer and the +popupwin features. |
| |
| *:echoe* *:echoerr* |
| :echoe[rr] {expr1} .. Echo the expression(s) as an error message, saving the |
| message in the |message-history|. When used in a |
| script or function the line number will be added. |
| Spaces are placed between the arguments as with the |
| `:echomsg` command. When used inside a try conditional, |
| the message is raised as an error exception instead |
| (see |try-echoerr|). |
| Example: > |
| :echoerr "This script just failed!" |
| < If you just want a highlighted message use `:echohl`. |
| And to get a beep: > |
| :exe "normal \<Esc>" |
| |
| :echoc[onsole] {expr1} .. *:echoc* *:echoconsole* |
| Intended for testing: works like `:echomsg` but when |
| running in the GUI and started from a terminal write |
| the text to stdout. |
| |
| *:eval* |
| :eval {expr} Evaluate {expr} and discard the result. Example: > |
| :eval Getlist()->Filter()->append('$') |
| |
| < The expression is supposed to have a side effect, |
| since the resulting value is not used. In the example |
| the `append()` call appends the List with text to the |
| buffer. This is similar to `:call` but works with any |
| expression. |
| In |Vim9| script an expression without an effect will |
| result in error *E1207* . This should help noticing |
| mistakes. |
| |
| The command can be shortened to `:ev` or `:eva`, but |
| these are hard to recognize and therefore not to be |
| used. |
| |
| The command cannot be followed by "|" and another |
| command, since "|" is seen as part of the expression. |
| |
| |
| *:exe* *:execute* |
| :exe[cute] {expr1} .. Executes the string that results from the evaluation |
| of {expr1} as an Ex command. |
| Multiple arguments are concatenated, with a space in |
| between. To avoid the extra space use the ".." |
| operator to concatenate strings into one argument. |
| {expr1} is used as the processed command, command line |
| editing keys are not recognized. |
| Cannot be followed by a comment. |
| Examples: > |
| :execute "buffer" nextbuf |
| :execute "normal" count .. "w" |
| < |
| ":execute" can be used to append a command to commands |
| that don't accept a '|'. Example: > |
| :execute '!ls' | echo "theend" |
| |
| < ":execute" is also a nice way to avoid having to type |
| control characters in a Vim script for a ":normal" |
| command: > |
| :execute "normal ixxx\<Esc>" |
| < This has an <Esc> character, see |expr-string|. |
| |
| Be careful to correctly escape special characters in |
| file names. The |fnameescape()| function can be used |
| for Vim commands, |shellescape()| for |:!| commands. |
| Examples: > |
| :execute "e " .. fnameescape(filename) |
| :execute "!ls " .. shellescape(filename, 1) |
| < |
| Note: The executed string may be any command-line, but |
| starting or ending "if", "while" and "for" does not |
| always work, because when commands are skipped the |
| ":execute" is not evaluated and Vim loses track of |
| where blocks start and end. Also "break" and |
| "continue" should not be inside ":execute". |
| This example does not work, because the ":execute" is |
| not evaluated and Vim does not see the "while", and |
| gives an error for finding an ":endwhile": > |
| :if 0 |
| : execute 'while i > 5' |
| : echo "test" |
| : endwhile |
| :endif |
| < |
| It is allowed to have a "while" or "if" command |
| completely in the executed string: > |
| :execute 'while i < 5 | echo i | let i = i + 1 | endwhile' |
| < |
| |
| *:exe-comment* |
| ":execute", ":echo" and ":echon" cannot be followed by |
| a comment directly, because they see the '"' as the |
| start of a string. But, you can use '|' followed by a |
| comment. Example: > |
| :echo "foo" | "this is a comment |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 8. Exception handling *exception-handling* |
| |
| The Vim script language comprises an exception handling feature. This section |
| explains how it can be used in a Vim script. |
| |
| Exceptions may be raised by Vim on an error or on interrupt, see |
| |catch-errors| and |catch-interrupt|. You can also explicitly throw an |
| exception by using the ":throw" command, see |throw-catch|. |
| |
| |
| TRY CONDITIONALS *try-conditionals* |
| |
| Exceptions can be caught or can cause cleanup code to be executed. You can |
| use a try conditional to specify catch clauses (that catch exceptions) and/or |
| a finally clause (to be executed for cleanup). |
| A try conditional begins with a |:try| command and ends at the matching |
| |:endtry| command. In between, you can use a |:catch| command to start |
| a catch clause, or a |:finally| command to start a finally clause. There may |
| be none or multiple catch clauses, but there is at most one finally clause, |
| which must not be followed by any catch clauses. The lines before the catch |
| clauses and the finally clause is called a try block. > |
| |
| :try |
| : ... |
| : ... TRY BLOCK |
| : ... |
| :catch /{pattern}/ |
| : ... |
| : ... CATCH CLAUSE |
| : ... |
| :catch /{pattern}/ |
| : ... |
| : ... CATCH CLAUSE |
| : ... |
| :finally |
| : ... |
| : ... FINALLY CLAUSE |
| : ... |
| :endtry |
| |
| The try conditional allows to watch code for exceptions and to take the |
| appropriate actions. Exceptions from the try block may be caught. Exceptions |
| from the try block and also the catch clauses may cause cleanup actions. |
| When no exception is thrown during execution of the try block, the control |
| is transferred to the finally clause, if present. After its execution, the |
| script continues with the line following the ":endtry". |
| When an exception occurs during execution of the try block, the remaining |
| lines in the try block are skipped. The exception is matched against the |
| patterns specified as arguments to the ":catch" commands. The catch clause |
| after the first matching ":catch" is taken, other catch clauses are not |
| executed. The catch clause ends when the next ":catch", ":finally", or |
| ":endtry" command is reached - whatever is first. Then, the finally clause |
| (if present) is executed. When the ":endtry" is reached, the script execution |
| continues in the following line as usual. |
| When an exception that does not match any of the patterns specified by the |
| ":catch" commands is thrown in the try block, the exception is not caught by |
| that try conditional and none of the catch clauses is executed. Only the |
| finally clause, if present, is taken. The exception pends during execution of |
| the finally clause. It is resumed at the ":endtry", so that commands after |
| the ":endtry" are not executed and the exception might be caught elsewhere, |
| see |try-nesting|. |
| When during execution of a catch clause another exception is thrown, the |
| remaining lines in that catch clause are not executed. The new exception is |
| not matched against the patterns in any of the ":catch" commands of the same |
| try conditional and none of its catch clauses is taken. If there is, however, |
| a finally clause, it is executed, and the exception pends during its |
| execution. The commands following the ":endtry" are not executed. The new |
| exception might, however, be caught elsewhere, see |try-nesting|. |
| When during execution of the finally clause (if present) an exception is |
| thrown, the remaining lines in the finally clause are skipped. If the finally |
| clause has been taken because of an exception from the try block or one of the |
| catch clauses, the original (pending) exception is discarded. The commands |
| following the ":endtry" are not executed, and the exception from the finally |
| clause is propagated and can be caught elsewhere, see |try-nesting|. |
| |
| The finally clause is also executed, when a ":break" or ":continue" for |
| a ":while" loop enclosing the complete try conditional is executed from the |
| try block or a catch clause. Or when a ":return" or ":finish" is executed |
| from the try block or a catch clause of a try conditional in a function or |
| sourced script, respectively. The ":break", ":continue", ":return", or |
| ":finish" pends during execution of the finally clause and is resumed when the |
| ":endtry" is reached. It is, however, discarded when an exception is thrown |
| from the finally clause. |
| When a ":break" or ":continue" for a ":while" loop enclosing the complete |
| try conditional or when a ":return" or ":finish" is encountered in the finally |
| clause, the rest of the finally clause is skipped, and the ":break", |
| ":continue", ":return" or ":finish" is executed as usual. If the finally |
| clause has been taken because of an exception or an earlier ":break", |
| ":continue", ":return", or ":finish" from the try block or a catch clause, |
| this pending exception or command is discarded. |
| |
| For examples see |throw-catch| and |try-finally|. |
| |
| |
| NESTING OF TRY CONDITIONALS *try-nesting* |
| |
| Try conditionals can be nested arbitrarily. That is, a complete try |
| conditional can be put into the try block, a catch clause, or the finally |
| clause of another try conditional. If the inner try conditional does not |
| catch an exception thrown in its try block or throws a new exception from one |
| of its catch clauses or its finally clause, the outer try conditional is |
| checked according to the rules above. If the inner try conditional is in the |
| try block of the outer try conditional, its catch clauses are checked, but |
| otherwise only the finally clause is executed. It does not matter for |
| nesting, whether the inner try conditional is directly contained in the outer |
| one, or whether the outer one sources a script or calls a function containing |
| the inner try conditional. |
| |
| When none of the active try conditionals catches an exception, just their |
| finally clauses are executed. Thereafter, the script processing terminates. |
| An error message is displayed in case of an uncaught exception explicitly |
| thrown by a ":throw" command. For uncaught error and interrupt exceptions |
| implicitly raised by Vim, the error message(s) or interrupt message are shown |
| as usual. |
| |
| For examples see |throw-catch|. |
| |
| |
| EXAMINING EXCEPTION HANDLING CODE *except-examine* |
| |
| Exception handling code can get tricky. If you are in doubt what happens, set |
| 'verbose' to 13 or use the ":13verbose" command modifier when sourcing your |
| script file. Then you see when an exception is thrown, discarded, caught, or |
| finished. When using a verbosity level of at least 14, things pending in |
| a finally clause are also shown. This information is also given in debug mode |
| (see |debug-scripts|). |
| |
| |
| THROWING AND CATCHING EXCEPTIONS *throw-catch* |
| |
| You can throw any number or string as an exception. Use the |:throw| command |
| and pass the value to be thrown as argument: > |
| :throw 4711 |
| :throw "string" |
| < *throw-expression* |
| You can also specify an expression argument. The expression is then evaluated |
| first, and the result is thrown: > |
| :throw 4705 + strlen("string") |
| :throw strpart("strings", 0, 6) |
| |
| An exception might be thrown during evaluation of the argument of the ":throw" |
| command. Unless it is caught there, the expression evaluation is abandoned. |
| The ":throw" command then does not throw a new exception. |
| Example: > |
| |
| :function! Foo(arg) |
| : try |
| : throw a:arg |
| : catch /foo/ |
| : endtry |
| : return 1 |
| :endfunction |
| : |
| :function! Bar() |
| : echo "in Bar" |
| : return 4710 |
| :endfunction |
| : |
| :throw Foo("arrgh") + Bar() |
| |
| This throws "arrgh", and "in Bar" is not displayed since Bar() is not |
| executed. > |
| :throw Foo("foo") + Bar() |
| however displays "in Bar" and throws 4711. |
| |
| Any other command that takes an expression as argument might also be |
| abandoned by an (uncaught) exception during the expression evaluation. The |
| exception is then propagated to the caller of the command. |
| Example: > |
| |
| :if Foo("arrgh") |
| : echo "then" |
| :else |
| : echo "else" |
| :endif |
| |
| Here neither of "then" or "else" is displayed. |
| |
| *catch-order* |
| Exceptions can be caught by a try conditional with one or more |:catch| |
| commands, see |try-conditionals|. The values to be caught by each ":catch" |
| command can be specified as a pattern argument. The subsequent catch clause |
| gets executed when a matching exception is caught. |
| Example: > |
| |
| :function! Foo(value) |
| : try |
| : throw a:value |
| : catch /^\d\+$/ |
| : echo "Number thrown" |
| : catch /.*/ |
| : echo "String thrown" |
| : endtry |
| :endfunction |
| : |
| :call Foo(0x1267) |
| :call Foo('string') |
| |
| The first call to Foo() displays "Number thrown", the second "String thrown". |
| An exception is matched against the ":catch" commands in the order they are |
| specified. Only the first match counts. So you should place the more |
| specific ":catch" first. The following order does not make sense: > |
| |
| : catch /.*/ |
| : echo "String thrown" |
| : catch /^\d\+$/ |
| : echo "Number thrown" |
| |
| The first ":catch" here matches always, so that the second catch clause is |
| never taken. |
| |
| *throw-variables* |
| If you catch an exception by a general pattern, you may access the exact value |
| in the variable |v:exception|: > |
| |
| : catch /^\d\+$/ |
| : echo "Number thrown. Value is" v:exception |
| |
| You may also be interested where an exception was thrown. This is stored in |
| |v:throwpoint|. And you can obtain the stack trace from |v:stacktrace|. |
| Note that "v:exception", "v:stacktrace" and "v:throwpoint" are valid for the |
| exception most recently caught as long it is not finished. |
| Example: > |
| |
| :function! Caught() |
| : if v:exception != "" |
| : echo 'Caught "' . v:exception .. '" in ' .. v:throwpoint |
| : else |
| : echo 'Nothing caught' |
| : endif |
| :endfunction |
| : |
| :function! Foo() |
| : try |
| : try |
| : try |
| : throw 4711 |
| : finally |
| : call Caught() |
| : endtry |
| : catch /.*/ |
| : call Caught() |
| : throw "oops" |
| : endtry |
| : catch /.*/ |
| : call Caught() |
| : finally |
| : call Caught() |
| : endtry |
| :endfunction |
| : |
| :call Foo() |
| |
| This displays > |
| |
| Nothing caught |
| Caught "4711" in function Foo, line 4 |
| Caught "oops" in function Foo, line 10 |
| Nothing caught |
| |
| A practical example: The following command ":LineNumber" displays the line |
| number in the script or function where it has been used: > |
| |
| :function! LineNumber() |
| : return substitute(v:throwpoint, '.*\D\(\d\+\).*', '\1', "") |
| :endfunction |
| :command! LineNumber try | throw "" | catch | echo LineNumber() | endtry |
| < |
| *try-nested* |
| An exception that is not caught by a try conditional can be caught by |
| a surrounding try conditional: > |
| |
| :try |
| : try |
| : throw "foo" |
| : catch /foobar/ |
| : echo "foobar" |
| : finally |
| : echo "inner finally" |
| : endtry |
| :catch /foo/ |
| : echo "foo" |
| :endtry |
| |
| The inner try conditional does not catch the exception, just its finally |
| clause is executed. The exception is then caught by the outer try |
| conditional. The example displays "inner finally" and then "foo". |
| |
| *throw-from-catch* |
| You can catch an exception and throw a new one to be caught elsewhere from the |
| catch clause: > |
| |
| :function! Foo() |
| : throw "foo" |
| :endfunction |
| : |
| :function! Bar() |
| : try |
| : call Foo() |
| : catch /foo/ |
| : echo "Caught foo, throw bar" |
| : throw "bar" |
| : endtry |
| :endfunction |
| : |
| :try |
| : call Bar() |
| :catch /.*/ |
| : echo "Caught" v:exception |
| :endtry |
| |
| This displays "Caught foo, throw bar" and then "Caught bar". |
| |
| *rethrow* |
| There is no real rethrow in the Vim script language, but you may throw |
| "v:exception" instead: > |
| |
| :function! Bar() |
| : try |
| : call Foo() |
| : catch /.*/ |
| : echo "Rethrow" v:exception |
| : throw v:exception |
| : endtry |
| :endfunction |
| < *try-echoerr* |
| Note that this method cannot be used to "rethrow" Vim error or interrupt |
| exceptions, because it is not possible to fake Vim internal exceptions. |
| Trying so causes an error exception. You should throw your own exception |
| denoting the situation. If you want to cause a Vim error exception containing |
| the original error exception value, you can use the |:echoerr| command: > |
| |
| :try |
| : try |
| : asdf |
| : catch /.*/ |
| : echoerr v:exception |
| : endtry |
| :catch /.*/ |
| : echo v:exception |
| :endtry |
| |
| This code displays |
| |
| Vim(echoerr):Vim:E492: Not an editor command: asdf ~ |
| |
| |
| CLEANUP CODE *try-finally* |
| |
| Scripts often change global settings and restore them at their end. If the |
| user however interrupts the script by pressing CTRL-C, the settings remain in |
| an inconsistent state. The same may happen to you in the development phase of |
| a script when an error occurs or you explicitly throw an exception without |
| catching it. You can solve these problems by using a try conditional with |
| a finally clause for restoring the settings. Its execution is guaranteed on |
| normal control flow, on error, on an explicit ":throw", and on interrupt. |
| (Note that errors and interrupts from inside the try conditional are converted |
| to exceptions. When not caught, they terminate the script after the finally |
| clause has been executed.) |
| Example: > |
| |
| :try |
| : let s:saved_ts = &ts |
| : set ts=17 |
| : |
| : " Do the hard work here. |
| : |
| :finally |
| : let &ts = s:saved_ts |
| : unlet s:saved_ts |
| :endtry |
| |
| This method should be used locally whenever a function or part of a script |
| changes global settings which need to be restored on failure or normal exit of |
| that function or script part. |
| |
| *break-finally* |
| Cleanup code works also when the try block or a catch clause is left by |
| a ":continue", ":break", ":return", or ":finish". |
| Example: > |
| |
| :let first = 1 |
| :while 1 |
| : try |
| : if first |
| : echo "first" |
| : let first = 0 |
| : continue |
| : else |
| : throw "second" |
| : endif |
| : catch /.*/ |
| : echo v:exception |
| : break |
| : finally |
| : echo "cleanup" |
| : endtry |
| : echo "still in while" |
| :endwhile |
| :echo "end" |
| |
| This displays "first", "cleanup", "second", "cleanup", and "end". > |
| |
| :function! Foo() |
| : try |
| : return 4711 |
| : finally |
| : echo "cleanup\n" |
| : endtry |
| : echo "Foo still active" |
| :endfunction |
| : |
| :echo Foo() "returned by Foo" |
| |
| This displays "cleanup" and "4711 returned by Foo". You don't need to add an |
| extra ":return" in the finally clause. (Above all, this would override the |
| return value.) |
| |
| *except-from-finally* |
| Using either of ":continue", ":break", ":return", ":finish", or ":throw" in |
| a finally clause is possible, but not recommended since it abandons the |
| cleanup actions for the try conditional. But, of course, interrupt and error |
| exceptions might get raised from a finally clause. |
| Example where an error in the finally clause stops an interrupt from |
| working correctly: > |
| |
| :try |
| : try |
| : echo "Press CTRL-C for interrupt" |
| : while 1 |
| : endwhile |
| : finally |
| : unlet novar |
| : endtry |
| :catch /novar/ |
| :endtry |
| :echo "Script still running" |
| :sleep 1 |
| |
| If you need to put commands that could fail into a finally clause, you should |
| think about catching or ignoring the errors in these commands, see |
| |catch-errors| and |ignore-errors|. |
| |
| |
| CATCHING ERRORS *catch-errors* |
| |
| If you want to catch specific errors, you just have to put the code to be |
| watched in a try block and add a catch clause for the error message. The |
| presence of the try conditional causes all errors to be converted to an |
| exception. No message is displayed and |v:errmsg| is not set then. To find |
| the right pattern for the ":catch" command, you have to know how the format of |
| the error exception is. |
| Error exceptions have the following format: > |
| |
| Vim({cmdname}):{errmsg} |
| or > |
| Vim:{errmsg} |
| |
| {cmdname} is the name of the command that failed; the second form is used when |
| the command name is not known. {errmsg} is the error message usually produced |
| when the error occurs outside try conditionals. It always begins with |
| a capital "E", followed by a two or three-digit error number, a colon, and |
| a space. |
| |
| Examples: |
| |
| The command > |
| :unlet novar |
| normally produces the error message > |
| E108: No such variable: "novar" |
| which is converted inside try conditionals to an exception > |
| Vim(unlet):E108: No such variable: "novar" |
| |
| The command > |
| :dwim |
| normally produces the error message > |
| E492: Not an editor command: dwim |
| which is converted inside try conditionals to an exception > |
| Vim:E492: Not an editor command: dwim |
| |
| You can catch all ":unlet" errors by a > |
| :catch /^Vim(unlet):/ |
| or all errors for misspelled command names by a > |
| :catch /^Vim:E492:/ |
| |
| Some error messages may be produced by different commands: > |
| :function nofunc |
| and > |
| :delfunction nofunc |
| both produce the error message > |
| E128: Function name must start with a capital: nofunc |
| which is converted inside try conditionals to an exception > |
| Vim(function):E128: Function name must start with a capital: nofunc |
| or > |
| Vim(delfunction):E128: Function name must start with a capital: nofunc |
| respectively. You can catch the error by its number independently on the |
| command that caused it if you use the following pattern: > |
| :catch /^Vim(\a\+):E128:/ |
| |
| Some commands like > |
| :let x = novar |
| produce multiple error messages, here: > |
| E121: Undefined variable: novar |
| E15: Invalid expression: novar |
| Only the first is used for the exception value, since it is the most specific |
| one (see |except-several-errors|). So you can catch it by > |
| :catch /^Vim(\a\+):E121:/ |
| |
| You can catch all errors related to the name "nofunc" by > |
| :catch /\<nofunc\>/ |
| |
| You can catch all Vim errors in the ":write" and ":read" commands by > |
| :catch /^Vim(\(write\|read\)):E\d\+:/ |
| |
| You can catch all Vim errors by the pattern > |
| :catch /^Vim\((\a\+)\)\=:E\d\+:/ |
| < |
| *catch-text* |
| NOTE: You should never catch the error message text itself: > |
| :catch /No such variable/ |
| only works in the English locale, but not when the user has selected |
| a different language by the |:language| command. It is however helpful to |
| cite the message text in a comment: > |
| :catch /^Vim(\a\+):E108:/ " No such variable |
| |
| |
| IGNORING ERRORS *ignore-errors* |
| |
| You can ignore errors in a specific Vim command by catching them locally: > |
| |
| :try |
| : write |
| :catch |
| :endtry |
| |
| But you are strongly recommended NOT to use this simple form, since it could |
| catch more than you want. With the ":write" command, some autocommands could |
| be executed and cause errors not related to writing, for instance: > |
| |
| :au BufWritePre * unlet novar |
| |
| There could even be such errors you are not responsible for as a script |
| writer: a user of your script might have defined such autocommands. You would |
| then hide the error from the user. |
| It is much better to use > |
| |
| :try |
| : write |
| :catch /^Vim(write):/ |
| :endtry |
| |
| which only catches real write errors. So catch only what you'd like to ignore |
| intentionally. |
| |
| For a single command that does not cause execution of autocommands, you could |
| even suppress the conversion of errors to exceptions by the ":silent!" |
| command: > |
| :silent! nunmap k |
| This works also when a try conditional is active. |
| |
| |
| CATCHING INTERRUPTS *catch-interrupt* |
| |
| When there are active try conditionals, an interrupt (CTRL-C) is converted to |
| the exception "Vim:Interrupt". You can catch it like every exception. The |
| script is not terminated, then. |
| Example: > |
| |
| :function! TASK1() |
| : sleep 10 |
| :endfunction |
| |
| :function! TASK2() |
| : sleep 20 |
| :endfunction |
| |
| :while 1 |
| : let command = input("Type a command: ") |
| : try |
| : if command == "" |
| : continue |
| : elseif command == "END" |
| : break |
| : elseif command == "TASK1" |
| : call TASK1() |
| : elseif command == "TASK2" |
| : call TASK2() |
| : else |
| : echo "\nIllegal command:" command |
| : continue |
| : endif |
| : catch /^Vim:Interrupt$/ |
| : echo "\nCommand interrupted" |
| : " Caught the interrupt. Continue with next prompt. |
| : endtry |
| :endwhile |
| |
| You can interrupt a task here by pressing CTRL-C; the script then asks for |
| a new command. If you press CTRL-C at the prompt, the script is terminated. |
| |
| For testing what happens when CTRL-C would be pressed on a specific line in |
| your script, use the debug mode and execute the |>quit| or |>interrupt| |
| command on that line. See |debug-scripts|. |
| |
| |
| CATCHING ALL *catch-all* |
| |
| The commands > |
| |
| :catch /.*/ |
| :catch // |
| :catch |
| |
| catch everything, error exceptions, interrupt exceptions and exceptions |
| explicitly thrown by the |:throw| command. This is useful at the top level of |
| a script in order to catch unexpected things. |
| Example: > |
| |
| :try |
| : |
| : " do the hard work here |
| : |
| :catch /MyException/ |
| : |
| : " handle known problem |
| : |
| :catch /^Vim:Interrupt$/ |
| : echo "Script interrupted" |
| :catch /.*/ |
| : echo "Internal error (" .. v:exception .. ")" |
| : echo " - occurred at " .. v:throwpoint |
| :endtry |
| :" end of script |
| |
| Note: Catching all might catch more things than you want. Thus, you are |
| strongly encouraged to catch only for problems that you can really handle by |
| specifying a pattern argument to the ":catch". |
| Example: Catching all could make it nearly impossible to interrupt a script |
| by pressing CTRL-C: > |
| |
| :while 1 |
| : try |
| : sleep 1 |
| : catch |
| : endtry |
| :endwhile |
| |
| |
| EXCEPTIONS AND AUTOCOMMANDS *except-autocmd* |
| |
| Exceptions may be used during execution of autocommands. Example: > |
| |
| :autocmd User x try |
| :autocmd User x throw "Oops!" |
| :autocmd User x catch |
| :autocmd User x echo v:exception |
| :autocmd User x endtry |
| :autocmd User x throw "Arrgh!" |
| :autocmd User x echo "Should not be displayed" |
| : |
| :try |
| : doautocmd User x |
| :catch |
| : echo v:exception |
| :endtry |
| |
| This displays "Oops!" and "Arrgh!". |
| |
| *except-autocmd-Pre* |
| For some commands, autocommands get executed before the main action of the |
| command takes place. If an exception is thrown and not caught in the sequence |
| of autocommands, the sequence and the command that caused its execution are |
| abandoned and the exception is propagated to the caller of the command. |
| Example: > |
| |
| :autocmd BufWritePre * throw "FAIL" |
| :autocmd BufWritePre * echo "Should not be displayed" |
| : |
| :try |
| : write |
| :catch |
| : echo "Caught:" v:exception "from" v:throwpoint |
| :endtry |
| |
| Here, the ":write" command does not write the file currently being edited (as |
| you can see by checking 'modified'), since the exception from the BufWritePre |
| autocommand abandons the ":write". The exception is then caught and the |
| script displays: > |
| |
| Caught: FAIL from BufWrite Auto commands for "*" |
| < |
| *except-autocmd-Post* |
| For some commands, autocommands get executed after the main action of the |
| command has taken place. If this main action fails and the command is inside |
| an active try conditional, the autocommands are skipped and an error exception |
| is thrown that can be caught by the caller of the command. |
| Example: > |
| |
| :autocmd BufWritePost * echo "File successfully written!" |
| : |
| :try |
| : write /i/m/p/o/s/s/i/b/l/e |
| :catch |
| : echo v:exception |
| :endtry |
| |
| This just displays: > |
| |
| Vim(write):E212: Can't open file for writing (/i/m/p/o/s/s/i/b/l/e) |
| |
| If you really need to execute the autocommands even when the main action |
| fails, trigger the event from the catch clause. |
| Example: > |
| |
| :autocmd BufWritePre * set noreadonly |
| :autocmd BufWritePost * set readonly |
| : |
| :try |
| : write /i/m/p/o/s/s/i/b/l/e |
| :catch |
| : doautocmd BufWritePost /i/m/p/o/s/s/i/b/l/e |
| :endtry |
| < |
| You can also use ":silent!": > |
| |
| :let x = "ok" |
| :let v:errmsg = "" |
| :autocmd BufWritePost * if v:errmsg != "" |
| :autocmd BufWritePost * let x = "after fail" |
| :autocmd BufWritePost * endif |
| :try |
| : silent! write /i/m/p/o/s/s/i/b/l/e |
| :catch |
| :endtry |
| :echo x |
| |
| This displays "after fail". |
| |
| If the main action of the command does not fail, exceptions from the |
| autocommands will be catchable by the caller of the command: > |
| |
| :autocmd BufWritePost * throw ":-(" |
| :autocmd BufWritePost * echo "Should not be displayed" |
| : |
| :try |
| : write |
| :catch |
| : echo v:exception |
| :endtry |
| < |
| *except-autocmd-Cmd* |
| For some commands, the normal action can be replaced by a sequence of |
| autocommands. Exceptions from that sequence will be catchable by the caller |
| of the command. |
| Example: For the ":write" command, the caller cannot know whether the file |
| had actually been written when the exception occurred. You need to tell it in |
| some way. > |
| |
| :if !exists("cnt") |
| : let cnt = 0 |
| : |
| : autocmd BufWriteCmd * if &modified |
| : autocmd BufWriteCmd * let cnt = cnt + 1 |
| : autocmd BufWriteCmd * if cnt % 3 == 2 |
| : autocmd BufWriteCmd * throw "BufWriteCmdError" |
| : autocmd BufWriteCmd * endif |
| : autocmd BufWriteCmd * write | set nomodified |
| : autocmd BufWriteCmd * if cnt % 3 == 0 |
| : autocmd BufWriteCmd * throw "BufWriteCmdError" |
| : autocmd BufWriteCmd * endif |
| : autocmd BufWriteCmd * echo "File successfully written!" |
| : autocmd BufWriteCmd * endif |
| :endif |
| : |
| :try |
| : write |
| :catch /^BufWriteCmdError$/ |
| : if &modified |
| : echo "Error on writing (file contents not changed)" |
| : else |
| : echo "Error after writing" |
| : endif |
| :catch /^Vim(write):/ |
| : echo "Error on writing" |
| :endtry |
| |
| When this script is sourced several times after making changes, it displays |
| first > |
| File successfully written! |
| then > |
| Error on writing (file contents not changed) |
| then > |
| Error after writing |
| etc. |
| |
| *except-autocmd-ill* |
| You cannot spread a try conditional over autocommands for different events. |
| The following code is ill-formed: > |
| |
| :autocmd BufWritePre * try |
| : |
| :autocmd BufWritePost * catch |
| :autocmd BufWritePost * echo v:exception |
| :autocmd BufWritePost * endtry |
| : |
| :write |
| |
| |
| EXCEPTION HIERARCHIES AND PARAMETERIZED EXCEPTIONS *except-hier-param* |
| |
| Some programming languages allow to use hierarchies of exception classes or to |
| pass additional information with the object of an exception class. You can do |
| similar things in Vim. |
| In order to throw an exception from a hierarchy, just throw the complete |
| class name with the components separated by a colon, for instance throw the |
| string "EXCEPT:MATHERR:OVERFLOW" for an overflow in a mathematical library. |
| When you want to pass additional information with your exception class, add |
| it in parentheses, for instance throw the string "EXCEPT:IO:WRITEERR(myfile)" |
| for an error when writing "myfile". |
| With the appropriate patterns in the ":catch" command, you can catch for |
| base classes or derived classes of your hierarchy. Additional information in |
| parentheses can be cut out from |v:exception| with the ":substitute" command. |
| Example: > |
| |
| :function! CheckRange(a, func) |
| : if a:a < 0 |
| : throw "EXCEPT:MATHERR:RANGE(" .. a:func .. ")" |
| : endif |
| :endfunction |
| : |
| :function! Add(a, b) |
| : call CheckRange(a:a, "Add") |
| : call CheckRange(a:b, "Add") |
| : let c = a:a + a:b |
| : if c < 0 |
| : throw "EXCEPT:MATHERR:OVERFLOW" |
| : endif |
| : return c |
| :endfunction |
| : |
| :function! Div(a, b) |
| : call CheckRange(a:a, "Div") |
| : call CheckRange(a:b, "Div") |
| : if (a:b == 0) |
| : throw "EXCEPT:MATHERR:ZERODIV" |
| : endif |
| : return a:a / a:b |
| :endfunction |
| : |
| :function! Write(file) |
| : try |
| : execute "write" fnameescape(a:file) |
| : catch /^Vim(write):/ |
| : throw "EXCEPT:IO(" .. getcwd() .. ", " .. a:file .. "):WRITEERR" |
| : endtry |
| :endfunction |
| : |
| :try |
| : |
| : " something with arithmetic and I/O |
| : |
| :catch /^EXCEPT:MATHERR:RANGE/ |
| : let function = substitute(v:exception, '.*(\(\a\+\)).*', '\1', "") |
| : echo "Range error in" function |
| : |
| :catch /^EXCEPT:MATHERR/ " catches OVERFLOW and ZERODIV |
| : echo "Math error" |
| : |
| :catch /^EXCEPT:IO/ |
| : let dir = substitute(v:exception, '.*(\(.\+\),\s*.\+).*', '\1', "") |
| : let file = substitute(v:exception, '.*(.\+,\s*\(.\+\)).*', '\1', "") |
| : if file !~ '^/' |
| : let file = dir .. "/" .. file |
| : endif |
| : echo 'I/O error for "' .. file .. '"' |
| : |
| :catch /^EXCEPT/ |
| : echo "Unspecified error" |
| : |
| :endtry |
| |
| The exceptions raised by Vim itself (on error or when pressing CTRL-C) use |
| a flat hierarchy: they are all in the "Vim" class. You cannot throw yourself |
| exceptions with the "Vim" prefix; they are reserved for Vim. |
| Vim error exceptions are parameterized with the name of the command that |
| failed, if known. See |catch-errors|. |
| |
| |
| PECULIARITIES |
| *except-compat* |
| The exception handling concept requires that the command sequence causing the |
| exception is aborted immediately and control is transferred to finally clauses |
| and/or a catch clause. |
| |
| In the Vim script language there are cases where scripts and functions |
| continue after an error: in functions without the "abort" flag or in a command |
| after ":silent!", control flow goes to the following line, and outside |
| functions, control flow goes to the line following the outermost ":endwhile" |
| or ":endif". On the other hand, errors should be catchable as exceptions |
| (thus, requiring the immediate abortion). |
| |
| This problem has been solved by converting errors to exceptions and using |
| immediate abortion (if not suppressed by ":silent!") only when a try |
| conditional is active. This is no restriction since an (error) exception can |
| be caught only from an active try conditional. If you want an immediate |
| termination without catching the error, just use a try conditional without |
| catch clause. (You can cause cleanup code being executed before termination |
| by specifying a finally clause.) |
| |
| When no try conditional is active, the usual abortion and continuation |
| behavior is used instead of immediate abortion. This ensures compatibility of |
| scripts written for Vim 6.1 and earlier. |
| |
| However, when sourcing an existing script that does not use exception handling |
| commands (or when calling one of its functions) from inside an active try |
| conditional of a new script, you might change the control flow of the existing |
| script on error. You get the immediate abortion on error and can catch the |
| error in the new script. If however the sourced script suppresses error |
| messages by using the ":silent!" command (checking for errors by testing |
| |v:errmsg| if appropriate), its execution path is not changed. The error is |
| not converted to an exception. (See |:silent|.) So the only remaining cause |
| where this happens is for scripts that don't care about errors and produce |
| error messages. You probably won't want to use such code from your new |
| scripts. |
| |
| *except-syntax-err* |
| Syntax errors in the exception handling commands are never caught by any of |
| the ":catch" commands of the try conditional they belong to. Its finally |
| clauses, however, is executed. |
| Example: > |
| |
| :try |
| : try |
| : throw 4711 |
| : catch /\(/ |
| : echo "in catch with syntax error" |
| : catch |
| : echo "inner catch-all" |
| : finally |
| : echo "inner finally" |
| : endtry |
| :catch |
| : echo 'outer catch-all caught "' .. v:exception .. '"' |
| : finally |
| : echo "outer finally" |
| :endtry |
| |
| This displays: > |
| inner finally |
| outer catch-all caught "Vim(catch):E54: Unmatched \(" |
| outer finally |
| The original exception is discarded and an error exception is raised, instead. |
| |
| *except-single-line* |
| The ":try", ":catch", ":finally", and ":endtry" commands can be put on |
| a single line, but then syntax errors may make it difficult to recognize the |
| "catch" line, thus you better avoid this. |
| Example: > |
| :try | unlet! foo # | catch | endtry |
| raises an error exception for the trailing characters after the ":unlet!" |
| argument, but does not see the ":catch" and ":endtry" commands, so that the |
| error exception is discarded and the "E488: Trailing characters" message gets |
| displayed. |
| |
| *except-several-errors* |
| When several errors appear in a single command, the first error message is |
| usually the most specific one and therefore converted to the error exception. |
| Example: > |
| echo novar |
| causes > |
| E121: Undefined variable: novar |
| E15: Invalid expression: novar |
| The value of the error exception inside try conditionals is: > |
| Vim(echo):E121: Undefined variable: novar |
| < *except-syntax-error* |
| But when a syntax error is detected after a normal error in the same command, |
| the syntax error is used for the exception being thrown. |
| Example: > |
| unlet novar # |
| causes > |
| E108: No such variable: "novar" |
| E488: Trailing characters |
| The value of the error exception inside try conditionals is: > |
| Vim(unlet):E488: Trailing characters |
| This is done because the syntax error might change the execution path in a way |
| not intended by the user. Example: > |
| try |
| try | unlet novar # | catch | echo v:exception | endtry |
| catch /.*/ |
| echo "outer catch:" v:exception |
| endtry |
| This displays "outer catch: Vim(unlet):E488: Trailing characters", and then |
| a "E600: Missing :endtry" error message is given, see |except-single-line|. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 9. Examples *eval-examples* |
| |
| Printing in Binary ~ |
| > |
| :" The function Nr2Bin() returns the binary string representation of a number. |
| :func Nr2Bin(nr) |
| : let n = a:nr |
| : let r = "" |
| : while n |
| : let r = '01'[n % 2] .. r |
| : let n = n / 2 |
| : endwhile |
| : return r |
| :endfunc |
| |
| :" The function String2Bin() converts each character in a string to a |
| :" binary string, separated with dashes. |
| :func String2Bin(str) |
| : let out = '' |
| : for ix in range(strlen(a:str)) |
| : let out = out .. '-' .. Nr2Bin(char2nr(a:str[ix])) |
| : endfor |
| : return out[1:] |
| :endfunc |
| |
| Example of its use: > |
| :echo Nr2Bin(32) |
| result: "100000" > |
| :echo String2Bin("32") |
| result: "110011-110010" |
| |
| |
| Sorting lines ~ |
| |
| This example sorts lines with a specific compare function. > |
| |
| :func SortBuffer() |
| : let lines = getline(1, '$') |
| : call sort(lines, function("Strcmp")) |
| : call setline(1, lines) |
| :endfunction |
| |
| As a one-liner: > |
| :call setline(1, sort(getline(1, '$'), function("Strcmp"))) |
| |
| |
| scanf() replacement ~ |
| *sscanf* |
| There is no sscanf() function in Vim. If you need to extract parts from a |
| line, you can use matchstr() and substitute() to do it. This example shows |
| how to get the file name, line number and column number out of a line like |
| "foobar.txt, 123, 45". > |
| :" Set up the match bit |
| :let mx='\(\f\+\),\s*\(\d\+\),\s*\(\d\+\)' |
| :"get the part matching the whole expression |
| :let l = matchstr(line, mx) |
| :"get each item out of the match |
| :let file = substitute(l, mx, '\1', '') |
| :let lnum = substitute(l, mx, '\2', '') |
| :let col = substitute(l, mx, '\3', '') |
| |
| The input is in the variable "line", the results in the variables "file", |
| "lnum" and "col". (idea from Michael Geddes) |
| |
| |
| getting the scriptnames in a Dictionary ~ |
| *scriptnames-dictionary* |
| The `:scriptnames` command can be used to get a list of all script files that |
| have been sourced. There is also the `getscriptinfo()` function, but the |
| information returned is not exactly the same. In case you need to manipulate |
| the list, this code can be used as a base: > |
| |
| # Create or update scripts dictionary, indexed by SNR, and return it. |
| def Scripts(scripts: dict<string> = {}): dict<string> |
| for info in getscriptinfo() |
| if scripts->has_key(info.sid) |
| continue |
| endif |
| scripts[info.sid] = info.name |
| endfor |
| return scripts |
| enddef |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 10. Vim script versions *vimscript-version* *vimscript-versions* |
| *scriptversion* |
| Over time many features have been added to Vim script. This includes Ex |
| commands, functions, variable types, etc. Each individual feature can be |
| checked with the |has()| and |exists()| functions. |
| |
| Sometimes old syntax of functionality gets in the way of making Vim better. |
| When support is taken away this will break older Vim scripts. To make this |
| explicit the |:scriptversion| command can be used. When a Vim script is not |
| compatible with older versions of Vim this will give an explicit error, |
| instead of failing in mysterious ways. |
| |
| When using a legacy function, defined with `:function`, in |Vim9| script then |
| scriptversion 4 is used. |
| |
| *scriptversion-1* > |
| :scriptversion 1 |
| < This is the original Vim script, same as not using a |:scriptversion| |
| command. Can be used to go back to old syntax for a range of lines. |
| Test for support with: > |
| has('vimscript-1') |
| |
| < *scriptversion-2* > |
| :scriptversion 2 |
| < String concatenation with "." is not supported, use ".." instead. |
| This avoids the ambiguity using "." for Dict member access and |
| floating point numbers. Now ".5" means the number 0.5. |
| |
| *scriptversion-3* > |
| :scriptversion 3 |
| < All |vim-variable|s must be prefixed by "v:". E.g. "version" doesn't |
| work as |v:version| anymore, it can be used as a normal variable. |
| Same for some obvious names as "count" and others. |
| |
| Test for support with: > |
| has('vimscript-3') |
| < |
| *scriptversion-4* > |
| :scriptversion 4 |
| < Numbers with a leading zero are not recognized as octal. "0o" or "0O" |
| is still recognized as octal. With the |
| previous version you get: > |
| echo 017 " displays 15 (octal) |
| echo 0o17 " displays 15 (octal) |
| echo 018 " displays 18 (decimal) |
| < with script version 4: > |
| echo 017 " displays 17 (decimal) |
| echo 0o17 " displays 15 (octal) |
| echo 018 " displays 18 (decimal) |
| < Also, it is possible to use single quotes inside numbers to make them |
| easier to read: > |
| echo 1'000'000 |
| < The quotes must be surrounded by digits. |
| |
| Test for support with: > |
| has('vimscript-4') |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 11. No +eval feature *no-eval-feature* |
| |
| When the |+eval| feature was disabled at compile time, none of the expression |
| evaluation commands are available. To prevent this from causing Vim scripts |
| to generate all kinds of errors, the ":if" and ":endif" commands are still |
| recognized, though the argument of the ":if" and everything between the ":if" |
| and the matching ":endif" is ignored. Nesting of ":if" blocks is allowed, but |
| only if the commands are at the start of the line. The ":else" command is not |
| recognized. |
| |
| Example of how to avoid executing commands when the |+eval| feature is |
| missing: > |
| |
| :if 1 |
| : echo "Expression evaluation is compiled in" |
| :else |
| : echo "You will _never_ see this message" |
| :endif |
| |
| To execute a command only when the |+eval| feature is disabled can be done in |
| two ways. The simplest is to exit the script (or Vim) prematurely: > |
| if 1 |
| echo "commands executed with +eval" |
| finish |
| endif |
| args " command executed without +eval |
| |
| If you do not want to abort loading the script you can use a trick, as this |
| example shows: > |
| |
| silent! while 0 |
| set history=111 |
| silent! endwhile |
| |
| When the |+eval| feature is available the command is skipped because of the |
| "while 0". Without the |+eval| feature the "while 0" is an error, which is |
| silently ignored, and the command is executed. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 12. The sandbox *eval-sandbox* *sandbox* |
| |
| The 'foldexpr', 'formatexpr', 'includeexpr', 'indentexpr', 'statusline' and |
| 'foldtext' options may be evaluated in a sandbox. This means that you are |
| protected from these expressions having nasty side effects. This gives some |
| safety for when these options are set from a modeline. It is also used when |
| the command from a tags file is executed and for CTRL-R = in the command line. |
| The sandbox is also used for the |:sandbox| command. |
| *E48* |
| These items are not allowed in the sandbox: |
| - changing the buffer text |
| - defining or changing mapping, autocommands, user commands |
| - setting certain options (see |option-summary|) |
| - setting certain v: variables (see |v:var|) *E794* |
| - executing a shell command |
| - reading or writing a file |
| - jumping to another buffer or editing a file |
| - executing Python, Perl, etc. commands |
| This is not guaranteed 100% secure, but it should block most attacks. |
| |
| *:san* *:sandbox* |
| :san[dbox] {cmd} Execute {cmd} in the sandbox. Useful to evaluate an |
| option that may have been set from a modeline, e.g. |
| 'foldexpr'. |
| |
| *sandbox-option* |
| A few options contain an expression. When this expression is evaluated it may |
| have to be done in the sandbox to avoid a security risk. But the sandbox is |
| restrictive, thus this only happens when the option was set from an insecure |
| location. Insecure in this context are: |
| - sourcing a .vimrc or .exrc in the current directory |
| - while executing in the sandbox |
| - value coming from a modeline |
| - executing a function that was defined in the sandbox |
| |
| Note that when in the sandbox and saving an option value and restoring it, the |
| option will still be marked as it was set in the sandbox. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 13. Textlock *textlock* |
| |
| In a few situations it is not allowed to change the text in the buffer, jump |
| to another window and some other things that might confuse or break what Vim |
| is currently doing. This mostly applies to things that happen when Vim is |
| actually doing something else. For example, evaluating the 'balloonexpr' may |
| happen any moment the mouse cursor is resting at some position. |
| |
| This is not allowed when the textlock is active: |
| - changing the buffer text |
| - jumping to another buffer or window |
| - editing another file |
| - closing a window or quitting Vim |
| - etc. |
| |
| ============================================================================== |
| 14. Vim script library *vim-script-library* |
| |
| Vim comes bundled with a Vim script library, that can be used by runtime, |
| script authors. Currently, it only includes very few functions, but it may |
| grow over time. |
| |
| The functions are available as |Vim9-script| as well as using legacy Vim |
| script (to be used for non Vim 9.0 versions and Neovim). |
| |
| *dist#vim* *dist#vim9* |
| The functions make use of the autoloaded prefix "dist#vim" (for legacy Vim |
| script and Neovim) and "dist#vim9" for Vim9 script. |
| |
| The following functions are available: |
| |
| dist#vim#IsSafeExecutable(filetype, executable) ~ |
| dist#vim9#IsSafeExecutable(filetype:string, executable:string): bool ~ |
| |
| This function takes a filetype and an executable and checks whether it is safe |
| to execute the given executable. For security reasons users may not want to |
| have Vim execute random executables or may have forbidden to do so for |
| specific filetypes by setting the "<filetype>_exec" variable (|plugin_exec|). |
| |
| It returns |true| or |false| to indicate whether the plugin should run the given |
| executable. It takes the following arguments: |
| |
| argument type ~ |
| |
| filetype string |
| executable string |
| |
| *package-open* |
| The |:Open| and |:Launch| command are provided by the included plugin |
| $VIMRUNTIME/plugin/openPlugin.vim |
| |
| *dist#vim9#Open()* *:Open* *:URLOpen* |
| *g:Openprg* *gx* |
| dist#vim9#Open(file: string) ~ |
| |
| Opens `path` with the system default handler (macOS `open`, Windows |
| `explorer.exe`, Linux `xdg-open`, …). If the variable |g:Openprg| exists the |
| string specified in the variable is used instead. |
| |
| The |:Open| user command uses file completion for its argument. |
| |
| The |:URLOpen| user command works the same but does not perform file |
| completion and therefore does not expand special characters |cmdline-special|. |
| |
| This function is by default called using the gx mapping. In visual mode |
| tries to open the visually selected text. |
| |
| Associated setting variables: |
| `g:gx_word`: control how gx picks up the text under the cursor. Uses |
| `g:netrw_gx` as a fallback for backward compatibility. |
| (default: `<cfile>`) |
| |
| `g:nogx`: disables the gx mapping. Uses `g:netrw_nogx` as a fallback for |
| backward compatibility. (default: `unset`) |
| |
| |
| NOTE: Escaping of the path is automatically applied. |
| |
| Usage: >vim |
| :call dist#vim9#Open(<path>) |
| :Open <path> |
| :URLOpen <path> |
| < |
| *dist#vim9#Launch()* *:Launch* |
| dist#vim9#Launch(file: string) ~ |
| |
| Launches <args> with the appropriate system programs. Intended for launching |
| GUI programs within Vim. |
| |
| The |:Launch| user command uses shell completion for its first argument. |
| |
| NOTE: escaping of <args> is left to the user |
| |
| Examples: >vim |
| vim9script |
| |
| import autoload 'dist/vim9.vim' |
| # Execute 'makeprg' into another xterm window |
| vim9.Launch('xterm ' .. expandcmd(&makeprg)) |
| < |
| |
| Usage: >vim |
| :call dist#vim9#Launch(<args>) |
| :Launch <app> <args>. |
| < |
| |
| vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl: |