blob: d5e991593145ee7a076c847ac411bc73f8788b43 [file] [log] [blame]
Bram Moolenaareb490412022-06-28 13:44:46 +01001*pattern.txt* For Vim version 9.0. Last change: 2022 Mar 04
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002
3
4 VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar
5
6
7Patterns and search commands *pattern-searches*
8
9The very basics can be found in section |03.9| of the user manual. A few more
10explanations are in chapter 27 |usr_27.txt|.
11
121. Search commands |search-commands|
132. The definition of a pattern |search-pattern|
143. Magic |/magic|
154. Overview of pattern items |pattern-overview|
165. Multi items |pattern-multi-items|
176. Ordinary atoms |pattern-atoms|
187. Ignoring case in a pattern |/ignorecase|
Bram Moolenaar362e1a32006-03-06 23:29:24 +0000198. Composing characters |patterns-composing|
209. Compare with Perl patterns |perl-patterns|
2110. Highlighting matches |match-highlight|
Bram Moolenaar1588bc82022-03-08 21:35:07 +00002211. Fuzzy matching |fuzzy-matching|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000023
24==============================================================================
Bram Moolenaar15146672011-10-20 22:22:38 +0200251. Search commands *search-commands*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000026
27 */*
28/{pattern}[/]<CR> Search forward for the [count]'th occurrence of
29 {pattern} |exclusive|.
30
31/{pattern}/{offset}<CR> Search forward for the [count]'th occurrence of
32 {pattern} and go |{offset}| lines up or down.
33 |linewise|.
34
35 */<CR>*
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +010036/<CR> Search forward for the [count]'th occurrence of the
37 latest used pattern |last-pattern| with latest used
38 |{offset}|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000039
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +010040//{offset}<CR> Search forward for the [count]'th occurrence of the
41 latest used pattern |last-pattern| with new
42 |{offset}|. If {offset} is empty no offset is used.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000043
44 *?*
45?{pattern}[?]<CR> Search backward for the [count]'th previous
46 occurrence of {pattern} |exclusive|.
47
48?{pattern}?{offset}<CR> Search backward for the [count]'th previous
49 occurrence of {pattern} and go |{offset}| lines up or
50 down |linewise|.
51
52 *?<CR>*
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +010053?<CR> Search backward for the [count]'th occurrence of the
54 latest used pattern |last-pattern| with latest used
55 |{offset}|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000056
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +010057??{offset}<CR> Search backward for the [count]'th occurrence of the
58 latest used pattern |last-pattern| with new
59 |{offset}|. If {offset} is empty no offset is used.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000060
61 *n*
62n Repeat the latest "/" or "?" [count] times.
Bram Moolenaar2b8388b2015-02-28 13:11:45 +010063 If the cursor doesn't move the search is repeated with
64 count + 1.
Bram Moolenaar68e65602019-05-26 21:33:31 +020065 |last-pattern|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000066
67 *N*
68N Repeat the latest "/" or "?" [count] times in
Bram Moolenaar68e65602019-05-26 21:33:31 +020069 opposite direction. |last-pattern|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000070
71 *star* *E348* *E349*
72* Search forward for the [count]'th occurrence of the
73 word nearest to the cursor. The word used for the
74 search is the first of:
75 1. the keyword under the cursor |'iskeyword'|
76 2. the first keyword after the cursor, in the
77 current line
78 3. the non-blank word under the cursor
79 4. the first non-blank word after the cursor,
80 in the current line
81 Only whole keywords are searched for, like with the
Bram Moolenaar664f3cf2019-12-07 16:03:51 +010082 command "/\<keyword\>". |exclusive|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000083 'ignorecase' is used, 'smartcase' is not.
84
85 *#*
86# Same as "*", but search backward. The pound sign
87 (character 163) also works. If the "#" key works as
88 backspace, try using "stty erase <BS>" before starting
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +020089 Vim (<BS> is CTRL-H or a real backspace).
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000090
91 *gstar*
92g* Like "*", but don't put "\<" and "\>" around the word.
93 This makes the search also find matches that are not a
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +020094 whole word.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000095
96 *g#*
97g# Like "#", but don't put "\<" and "\>" around the word.
98 This makes the search also find matches that are not a
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +020099 whole word.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000100
101 *gd*
102gd Goto local Declaration. When the cursor is on a local
103 variable, this command will jump to its declaration.
104 First Vim searches for the start of the current
105 function, just like "[[". If it is not found the
106 search stops in line 1. If it is found, Vim goes back
107 until a blank line is found. From this position Vim
108 searches for the keyword under the cursor, like with
109 "*", but lines that look like a comment are ignored
110 (see 'comments' option).
111 Note that this is not guaranteed to work, Vim does not
112 really check the syntax, it only searches for a match
113 with the keyword. If included files also need to be
114 searched use the commands listed in |include-search|.
115 After this command |n| searches forward for the next
116 match (not backward).
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000117
118 *gD*
119gD Goto global Declaration. When the cursor is on a
120 global variable that is defined in the file, this
121 command will jump to its declaration. This works just
122 like "gd", except that the search for the keyword
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +0200123 always starts in line 1.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000124
Bram Moolenaarf75a9632005-09-13 21:20:47 +0000125 *1gd*
1261gd Like "gd", but ignore matches inside a {} block that
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +0200127 ends before the cursor position.
Bram Moolenaarf75a9632005-09-13 21:20:47 +0000128
129 *1gD*
1301gD Like "gD", but ignore matches inside a {} block that
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +0200131 ends before the cursor position.
Bram Moolenaarf75a9632005-09-13 21:20:47 +0000132
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000133 *CTRL-C*
134CTRL-C Interrupt current (search) command. Use CTRL-Break on
Bram Moolenaar5666fcd2019-12-26 14:35:26 +0100135 MS-Windows |dos-CTRL-Break|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000136 In Normal mode, any pending command is aborted.
137
138 *:noh* *:nohlsearch*
139:noh[lsearch] Stop the highlighting for the 'hlsearch' option. It
140 is automatically turned back on when using a search
141 command, or setting the 'hlsearch' option.
142 This command doesn't work in an autocommand, because
143 the highlighting state is saved and restored when
144 executing autocommands |autocmd-searchpat|.
Bram Moolenaar3577c6f2008-06-24 21:16:56 +0000145 Same thing for when invoking a user function.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000146
147While typing the search pattern the current match will be shown if the
148'incsearch' option is on. Remember that you still have to finish the search
149command with <CR> to actually position the cursor at the displayed match. Or
150use <Esc> to abandon the search.
151
152All matches for the last used search pattern will be highlighted if you set
153the 'hlsearch' option. This can be suspended with the |:nohlsearch| command.
154
Bram Moolenaar9dfa3132019-05-04 21:08:40 +0200155When 'shortmess' does not include the "S" flag, Vim will automatically show an
156index, on which the cursor is. This can look like this: >
157
158 [1/5] Cursor is on first of 5 matches.
159 [1/>99] Cursor is on first of more than 99 matches.
160 [>99/>99] Cursor is after 99 match of more than 99 matches.
161 [?/??] Unknown how many matches exists, generating the
162 statistics was aborted because of search timeout.
163
164Note: the count does not take offset into account.
165
Bram Moolenaar15146672011-10-20 22:22:38 +0200166When no match is found you get the error: *E486* Pattern not found
Bram Moolenaar1588bc82022-03-08 21:35:07 +0000167Note that for the `:global` command, when used in legacy script, you get a
168normal message "Pattern not found", for Vi compatibility.
169In |Vim9| script you get E486 for "pattern not found" or *E538* when the pattern
170matches in every line with `:vglobal`.
171For the |:s| command the "e" flag can be used to avoid the error message
172|:s_flags|.
Bram Moolenaar15146672011-10-20 22:22:38 +0200173
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000174 *search-offset* *{offset}*
175These commands search for the specified pattern. With "/" and "?" an
176additional offset may be given. There are two types of offsets: line offsets
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +0200177and character offsets.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000178
179The offset gives the cursor position relative to the found match:
180 [num] [num] lines downwards, in column 1
181 +[num] [num] lines downwards, in column 1
182 -[num] [num] lines upwards, in column 1
183 e[+num] [num] characters to the right of the end of the match
184 e[-num] [num] characters to the left of the end of the match
185 s[+num] [num] characters to the right of the start of the match
186 s[-num] [num] characters to the left of the start of the match
187 b[+num] [num] identical to s[+num] above (mnemonic: begin)
188 b[-num] [num] identical to s[-num] above (mnemonic: begin)
Bram Moolenaar1d2ba7f2006-02-14 22:29:30 +0000189 ;{pattern} perform another search, see |//;|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000190
191If a '-' or '+' is given but [num] is omitted, a count of one will be used.
192When including an offset with 'e', the search becomes inclusive (the
193character the cursor lands on is included in operations).
194
195Examples:
196
197pattern cursor position ~
198/test/+1 one line below "test", in column 1
199/test/e on the last t of "test"
200/test/s+2 on the 's' of "test"
201/test/b-3 three characters before "test"
202
203If one of these commands is used after an operator, the characters between
204the cursor position before and after the search is affected. However, if a
205line offset is given, the whole lines between the two cursor positions are
206affected.
207
208An example of how to search for matches with a pattern and change the match
209with another word: >
210 /foo<CR> find "foo"
Bram Moolenaar92dff182014-02-11 19:15:50 +0100211 c//e<CR> change until end of match
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000212 bar<Esc> type replacement
213 //<CR> go to start of next match
Bram Moolenaar92dff182014-02-11 19:15:50 +0100214 c//e<CR> change until end of match
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000215 beep<Esc> type another replacement
216 etc.
217<
218 *//;* *E386*
219A very special offset is ';' followed by another search command. For example: >
220
221 /test 1/;/test
222 /test.*/+1;?ing?
223
224The first one first finds the next occurrence of "test 1", and then the first
225occurrence of "test" after that.
226
227This is like executing two search commands after each other, except that:
228- It can be used as a single motion command after an operator.
229- The direction for a following "n" or "N" command comes from the first
230 search command.
231- When an error occurs the cursor is not moved at all.
232
233 *last-pattern*
234The last used pattern and offset are remembered. They can be used to repeat
235the search, possibly in another direction or with another count. Note that
Bram Moolenaar9faec4e2021-02-27 16:38:07 +0100236two patterns are remembered: One for "normal" search commands and one for the
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000237substitute command ":s". Each time an empty pattern is given, the previously
Bram Moolenaar662db672011-03-22 14:05:35 +0100238used pattern is used. However, if there is no previous search command, a
239previous substitute pattern is used, if possible.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000240
241The 'magic' option sticks with the last used pattern. If you change 'magic',
242this will not change how the last used pattern will be interpreted.
243The 'ignorecase' option does not do this. When 'ignorecase' is changed, it
244will result in the pattern to match other text.
245
246All matches for the last used search pattern will be highlighted if you set
247the 'hlsearch' option.
248
249To clear the last used search pattern: >
250 :let @/ = ""
251This will not set the pattern to an empty string, because that would match
252everywhere. The pattern is really cleared, like when starting Vim.
253
Bram Moolenaar8f999f12005-01-25 22:12:55 +0000254The search usually skips matches that don't move the cursor. Whether the next
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000255match is found at the next character or after the skipped match depends on the
256'c' flag in 'cpoptions'. See |cpo-c|.
257 with 'c' flag: "/..." advances 1 to 3 characters
258 without 'c' flag: "/..." advances 1 character
259The unpredictability with the 'c' flag is caused by starting the search in the
260first column, skipping matches until one is found past the cursor position.
261
Bram Moolenaar8f999f12005-01-25 22:12:55 +0000262When searching backwards, searching starts at the start of the line, using the
263'c' flag in 'cpoptions' as described above. Then the last match before the
264cursor position is used.
265
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000266In Vi the ":tag" command sets the last search pattern when the tag is searched
267for. In Vim this is not done, the previous search pattern is still remembered,
268unless the 't' flag is present in 'cpoptions'. The search pattern is always
269put in the search history.
270
271If the 'wrapscan' option is on (which is the default), searches wrap around
272the end of the buffer. If 'wrapscan' is not set, the backward search stops
273at the beginning and the forward search stops at the end of the buffer. If
274'wrapscan' is set and the pattern was not found the error message "pattern
275not found" is given, and the cursor will not be moved. If 'wrapscan' is not
276set the message becomes "search hit BOTTOM without match" when searching
277forward, or "search hit TOP without match" when searching backward. If
278wrapscan is set and the search wraps around the end of the file the message
279"search hit TOP, continuing at BOTTOM" or "search hit BOTTOM, continuing at
280TOP" is given when searching backwards or forwards respectively. This can be
281switched off by setting the 's' flag in the 'shortmess' option. The highlight
282method 'w' is used for this message (default: standout).
283
284 *search-range*
Bram Moolenaar4770d092006-01-12 23:22:24 +0000285You can limit the search command "/" to a certain range of lines by including
286\%>l items. For example, to match the word "limit" below line 199 and above
287line 300: >
288 /\%>199l\%<300llimit
289Also see |/\%>l|.
290
291Another way is to use the ":substitute" command with the 'c' flag. Example: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000292 :.,300s/Pattern//gc
293This command will search from the cursor position until line 300 for
294"Pattern". At the match, you will be asked to type a character. Type 'q' to
295stop at this match, type 'n' to find the next match.
296
297The "*", "#", "g*" and "g#" commands look for a word near the cursor in this
298order, the first one that is found is used:
299- The keyword currently under the cursor.
300- The first keyword to the right of the cursor, in the same line.
301- The WORD currently under the cursor.
302- The first WORD to the right of the cursor, in the same line.
303The keyword may only contain letters and characters in 'iskeyword'.
304The WORD may contain any non-blanks (<Tab>s and/or <Space>s).
305Note that if you type with ten fingers, the characters are easy to remember:
306the "#" is under your left hand middle finger (search to the left and up) and
307the "*" is under your right hand middle finger (search to the right and down).
308(this depends on your keyboard layout though).
309
Bram Moolenaara9604e62018-07-21 05:56:22 +0200310 *E956*
311In very rare cases a regular expression is used recursively. This can happen
Bram Moolenaarf0d58ef2018-11-16 16:13:44 +0100312when executing a pattern takes a long time and when checking for messages on
Bram Moolenaara9604e62018-07-21 05:56:22 +0200313channels a callback is invoked that also uses a pattern or an autocommand is
314triggered. In most cases this should be fine, but if a pattern is in use when
315it's used again it fails. Usually this means there is something wrong with
316the pattern.
317
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000318==============================================================================
3192. The definition of a pattern *search-pattern* *pattern* *[pattern]*
320 *regular-expression* *regexp* *Pattern*
Bram Moolenaar2f0936c2022-01-08 21:51:59 +0000321 *E383* *E476*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000322
323For starters, read chapter 27 of the user manual |usr_27.txt|.
324
325 */bar* */\bar* */pattern*
3261. A pattern is one or more branches, separated by "\|". It matches anything
327 that matches one of the branches. Example: "foo\|beep" matches "foo" and
328 matches "beep". If more than one branch matches, the first one is used.
329
330 pattern ::= branch
331 or branch \| branch
332 or branch \| branch \| branch
333 etc.
334
335 */branch* */\&*
3362. A branch is one or more concats, separated by "\&". It matches the last
337 concat, but only if all the preceding concats also match at the same
338 position. Examples:
339 "foobeep\&..." matches "foo" in "foobeep".
340 ".*Peter\&.*Bob" matches in a line containing both "Peter" and "Bob"
341
342 branch ::= concat
343 or concat \& concat
344 or concat \& concat \& concat
345 etc.
346
347 */concat*
3483. A concat is one or more pieces, concatenated. It matches a match for the
349 first piece, followed by a match for the second piece, etc. Example:
350 "f[0-9]b", first matches "f", then a digit and then "b".
351
352 concat ::= piece
353 or piece piece
354 or piece piece piece
355 etc.
356
357 */piece*
3584. A piece is an atom, possibly followed by a multi, an indication of how many
359 times the atom can be matched. Example: "a*" matches any sequence of "a"
360 characters: "", "a", "aa", etc. See |/multi|.
361
362 piece ::= atom
363 or atom multi
364
365 */atom*
3665. An atom can be one of a long list of items. Many atoms match one character
367 in the text. It is often an ordinary character or a character class.
Bram Moolenaar1b884a02020-12-10 21:11:27 +0100368 Parentheses can be used to make a pattern into an atom. The "\z(\)"
369 construct is only for syntax highlighting.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000370
371 atom ::= ordinary-atom |/ordinary-atom|
372 or \( pattern \) |/\(|
373 or \%( pattern \) |/\%(|
374 or \z( pattern \) |/\z(|
375
376
Bram Moolenaar913df812013-07-06 15:44:11 +0200377 */\%#=* *two-engines* *NFA*
Bram Moolenaarfbc0d2e2013-05-19 19:40:29 +0200378Vim includes two regexp engines:
3791. An old, backtracking engine that supports everything.
Bram Moolenaar220adb12016-09-12 12:17:26 +02003802. A new, NFA engine that works much faster on some patterns, possibly slower
381 on some patterns.
Christian Brabandt360da402022-05-18 15:04:02 +0100382 *E1281*
Bram Moolenaarfbc0d2e2013-05-19 19:40:29 +0200383Vim will automatically select the right engine for you. However, if you run
384into a problem or want to specifically select one engine or the other, you can
385prepend one of the following to the pattern:
386
387 \%#=0 Force automatic selection. Only has an effect when
388 'regexpengine' has been set to a non-zero value.
389 \%#=1 Force using the old engine.
390 \%#=2 Force using the NFA engine.
391
392You can also use the 'regexpengine' option to change the default.
393
394 *E864* *E868* *E874* *E875* *E876* *E877* *E878*
395If selecting the NFA engine and it runs into something that is not implemented
396the pattern will not match. This is only useful when debugging Vim.
397
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000398==============================================================================
Bram Moolenaareb3593b2006-04-22 22:33:57 +00003993. Magic */magic*
400
Bram Moolenaar7e6a5152021-01-02 16:39:53 +0100401Some characters in the pattern, such as letters, are taken literally. They
402match exactly the same character in the text. When preceded with a backslash
403however, these characters may get a special meaning. For example, "a" matches
404the letter "a", while "\a" matches any alphabetic character.
Bram Moolenaareb3593b2006-04-22 22:33:57 +0000405
406Other characters have a special meaning without a backslash. They need to be
Bram Moolenaar7e6a5152021-01-02 16:39:53 +0100407preceded with a backslash to match literally. For example "." matches any
408character while "\." matches a dot.
Bram Moolenaareb3593b2006-04-22 22:33:57 +0000409
410If a character is taken literally or not depends on the 'magic' option and the
Bram Moolenaar7e6a5152021-01-02 16:39:53 +0100411items in the pattern mentioned next. The 'magic' option should always be set,
412but it can be switched off for Vi compatibility. We mention the effect of
413'nomagic' here for completeness, but we recommend against using that.
Bram Moolenaareb3593b2006-04-22 22:33:57 +0000414 */\m* */\M*
415Use of "\m" makes the pattern after it be interpreted as if 'magic' is set,
416ignoring the actual value of the 'magic' option.
417Use of "\M" makes the pattern after it be interpreted as if 'nomagic' is used.
418 */\v* */\V*
Bram Moolenaarc8c88492018-12-27 23:59:26 +0100419Use of "\v" means that after it, all ASCII characters except '0'-'9', 'a'-'z',
420'A'-'Z' and '_' have special meaning: "very magic"
Bram Moolenaareb3593b2006-04-22 22:33:57 +0000421
Bram Moolenaar7e6a5152021-01-02 16:39:53 +0100422Use of "\V" means that after it, only a backslash and the terminating
423character (usually / or ?) have special meaning: "very nomagic"
Bram Moolenaareb3593b2006-04-22 22:33:57 +0000424
425Examples:
426after: \v \m \M \V matches ~
427 'magic' 'nomagic'
Bram Moolenaar7e6a5152021-01-02 16:39:53 +0100428 a a a a literal 'a'
429 \a \a \a \a any alphabetic character
430 . . \. \. any character
431 \. \. . . literal dot
432 $ $ $ \$ end-of-line
Bram Moolenaareb3593b2006-04-22 22:33:57 +0000433 * * \* \* any number of the previous atom
Bram Moolenaar256972a2015-12-29 19:10:25 +0100434 ~ ~ \~ \~ latest substitute string
Bram Moolenaar7e6a5152021-01-02 16:39:53 +0100435 () \(\) \(\) \(\) group as an atom
436 | \| \| \| nothing: separates alternatives
Bram Moolenaareb3593b2006-04-22 22:33:57 +0000437 \\ \\ \\ \\ literal backslash
Bram Moolenaar7e6a5152021-01-02 16:39:53 +0100438 \{ { { { literal curly brace
Bram Moolenaareb3593b2006-04-22 22:33:57 +0000439
440{only Vim supports \m, \M, \v and \V}
441
Bram Moolenaar7e6a5152021-01-02 16:39:53 +0100442If you want to you can make a pattern immune to the 'magic' option being set
443or not by putting "\m" or "\M" at the start of the pattern.
Bram Moolenaareb3593b2006-04-22 22:33:57 +0000444
445==============================================================================
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004464. Overview of pattern items *pattern-overview*
Bram Moolenaarfbc0d2e2013-05-19 19:40:29 +0200447 *E865* *E866* *E867* *E869*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000448
449Overview of multi items. */multi* *E61* *E62*
Bram Moolenaarfbc0d2e2013-05-19 19:40:29 +0200450More explanation and examples below, follow the links. *E64* *E871*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000451
452 multi ~
453 'magic' 'nomagic' matches of the preceding atom ~
454|/star| * \* 0 or more as many as possible
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +0200455|/\+| \+ \+ 1 or more as many as possible
456|/\=| \= \= 0 or 1 as many as possible
457|/\?| \? \? 0 or 1 as many as possible
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000458
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +0200459|/\{| \{n,m} \{n,m} n to m as many as possible
460 \{n} \{n} n exactly
461 \{n,} \{n,} at least n as many as possible
462 \{,m} \{,m} 0 to m as many as possible
463 \{} \{} 0 or more as many as possible (same as *)
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000464
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +0200465|/\{-| \{-n,m} \{-n,m} n to m as few as possible
466 \{-n} \{-n} n exactly
467 \{-n,} \{-n,} at least n as few as possible
468 \{-,m} \{-,m} 0 to m as few as possible
469 \{-} \{-} 0 or more as few as possible
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000470
471 *E59*
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +0200472|/\@>| \@> \@> 1, like matching a whole pattern
473|/\@=| \@= \@= nothing, requires a match |/zero-width|
474|/\@!| \@! \@! nothing, requires NO match |/zero-width|
475|/\@<=| \@<= \@<= nothing, requires a match behind |/zero-width|
476|/\@<!| \@<! \@<! nothing, requires NO match behind |/zero-width|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000477
478
479Overview of ordinary atoms. */ordinary-atom*
480More explanation and examples below, follow the links.
481
482 ordinary atom ~
483 magic nomagic matches ~
484|/^| ^ ^ start-of-line (at start of pattern) |/zero-width|
485|/\^| \^ \^ literal '^'
486|/\_^| \_^ \_^ start-of-line (used anywhere) |/zero-width|
487|/$| $ $ end-of-line (at end of pattern) |/zero-width|
488|/\$| \$ \$ literal '$'
489|/\_$| \_$ \_$ end-of-line (used anywhere) |/zero-width|
490|/.| . \. any single character (not an end-of-line)
491|/\_.| \_. \_. any single character or end-of-line
492|/\<| \< \< beginning of a word |/zero-width|
493|/\>| \> \> end of a word |/zero-width|
494|/\zs| \zs \zs anything, sets start of match
495|/\ze| \ze \ze anything, sets end of match
496|/\%^| \%^ \%^ beginning of file |/zero-width| *E71*
497|/\%$| \%$ \%$ end of file |/zero-width|
Bram Moolenaar33aec762006-01-22 23:30:12 +0000498|/\%V| \%V \%V inside Visual area |/zero-width|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000499|/\%#| \%# \%# cursor position |/zero-width|
Bram Moolenaar33aec762006-01-22 23:30:12 +0000500|/\%'m| \%'m \%'m mark m position |/zero-width|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000501|/\%l| \%23l \%23l in line 23 |/zero-width|
502|/\%c| \%23c \%23c in column 23 |/zero-width|
503|/\%v| \%23v \%23v in virtual column 23 |/zero-width|
504
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +0200505Character classes: */character-classes*
Bram Moolenaar256972a2015-12-29 19:10:25 +0100506 magic nomagic matches ~
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000507|/\i| \i \i identifier character (see 'isident' option)
508|/\I| \I \I like "\i", but excluding digits
509|/\k| \k \k keyword character (see 'iskeyword' option)
510|/\K| \K \K like "\k", but excluding digits
511|/\f| \f \f file name character (see 'isfname' option)
512|/\F| \F \F like "\f", but excluding digits
513|/\p| \p \p printable character (see 'isprint' option)
514|/\P| \P \P like "\p", but excluding digits
515|/\s| \s \s whitespace character: <Space> and <Tab>
516|/\S| \S \S non-whitespace character; opposite of \s
517|/\d| \d \d digit: [0-9]
518|/\D| \D \D non-digit: [^0-9]
519|/\x| \x \x hex digit: [0-9A-Fa-f]
520|/\X| \X \X non-hex digit: [^0-9A-Fa-f]
521|/\o| \o \o octal digit: [0-7]
522|/\O| \O \O non-octal digit: [^0-7]
523|/\w| \w \w word character: [0-9A-Za-z_]
524|/\W| \W \W non-word character: [^0-9A-Za-z_]
525|/\h| \h \h head of word character: [A-Za-z_]
526|/\H| \H \H non-head of word character: [^A-Za-z_]
527|/\a| \a \a alphabetic character: [A-Za-z]
528|/\A| \A \A non-alphabetic character: [^A-Za-z]
529|/\l| \l \l lowercase character: [a-z]
530|/\L| \L \L non-lowercase character: [^a-z]
531|/\u| \u \u uppercase character: [A-Z]
532|/\U| \U \U non-uppercase character [^A-Z]
533|/\_| \_x \_x where x is any of the characters above: character
534 class with end-of-line included
535(end of character classes)
536
Bram Moolenaar256972a2015-12-29 19:10:25 +0100537 magic nomagic matches ~
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000538|/\e| \e \e <Esc>
539|/\t| \t \t <Tab>
540|/\r| \r \r <CR>
541|/\b| \b \b <BS>
542|/\n| \n \n end-of-line
543|/~| ~ \~ last given substitute string
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +0200544|/\1| \1 \1 same string as matched by first \(\)
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000545|/\2| \2 \2 Like "\1", but uses second \(\)
546 ...
547|/\9| \9 \9 Like "\1", but uses ninth \(\)
548 *E68*
549|/\z1| \z1 \z1 only for syntax highlighting, see |:syn-ext-match|
550 ...
551|/\z1| \z9 \z9 only for syntax highlighting, see |:syn-ext-match|
552
553 x x a character with no special meaning matches itself
554
555|/[]| [] \[] any character specified inside the []
Bram Moolenaar00154502013-02-13 16:15:55 +0100556|/\%[]| \%[] \%[] a sequence of optionally matched atoms
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000557
Bram Moolenaar3577c6f2008-06-24 21:16:56 +0000558|/\c| \c \c ignore case, do not use the 'ignorecase' option
559|/\C| \C \C match case, do not use the 'ignorecase' option
Bram Moolenaarfbc0d2e2013-05-19 19:40:29 +0200560|/\Z| \Z \Z ignore differences in Unicode "combining characters".
561 Useful when searching voweled Hebrew or Arabic text.
562
Bram Moolenaar256972a2015-12-29 19:10:25 +0100563 magic nomagic matches ~
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000564|/\m| \m \m 'magic' on for the following chars in the pattern
565|/\M| \M \M 'magic' off for the following chars in the pattern
566|/\v| \v \v the following chars in the pattern are "very magic"
567|/\V| \V \V the following chars in the pattern are "very nomagic"
Bram Moolenaarfbc0d2e2013-05-19 19:40:29 +0200568|/\%#=| \%#=1 \%#=1 select regexp engine |/zero-width|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000569
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +0100570|/\%d| \%d \%d match specified decimal character (eg \%d123)
Bram Moolenaarc0197e22004-09-13 20:26:32 +0000571|/\%x| \%x \%x match specified hex character (eg \%x2a)
572|/\%o| \%o \%o match specified octal character (eg \%o040)
573|/\%u| \%u \%u match specified multibyte character (eg \%u20ac)
574|/\%U| \%U \%U match specified large multibyte character (eg
575 \%U12345678)
Bram Moolenaar8df5acf2014-05-13 19:37:29 +0200576|/\%C| \%C \%C match any composing characters
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000577
578Example matches ~
579\<\I\i* or
580\<\h\w*
581\<[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z0-9_]*
582 An identifier (e.g., in a C program).
583
584\(\.$\|\. \) A period followed by <EOL> or a space.
585
586[.!?][])"']*\($\|[ ]\) A search pattern that finds the end of a sentence,
587 with almost the same definition as the ")" command.
588
589cat\Z Both "cat" and "càt" ("a" followed by 0x0300)
590 Does not match "càt" (character 0x00e0), even
591 though it may look the same.
592
593
594==============================================================================
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005955. Multi items *pattern-multi-items*
596
597An atom can be followed by an indication of how many times the atom can be
598matched and in what way. This is called a multi. See |/multi| for an
599overview.
600
Bram Moolenaaraa3b15d2016-04-21 08:53:19 +0200601 */star* */\star*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000602* (use \* when 'magic' is not set)
603 Matches 0 or more of the preceding atom, as many as possible.
604 Example 'nomagic' matches ~
605 a* a\* "", "a", "aa", "aaa", etc.
606 .* \.\* anything, also an empty string, no end-of-line
607 \_.* \_.\* everything up to the end of the buffer
608 \_.*END \_.\*END everything up to and including the last "END"
609 in the buffer
610
611 Exception: When "*" is used at the start of the pattern or just after
612 "^" it matches the star character.
613
614 Be aware that repeating "\_." can match a lot of text and take a long
615 time. For example, "\_.*END" matches all text from the current
616 position to the last occurrence of "END" in the file. Since the "*"
617 will match as many as possible, this first skips over all lines until
618 the end of the file and then tries matching "END", backing up one
619 character at a time.
620
Bram Moolenaaraa3b15d2016-04-21 08:53:19 +0200621 */\+*
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +0200622\+ Matches 1 or more of the preceding atom, as many as possible.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000623 Example matches ~
624 ^.\+$ any non-empty line
625 \s\+ white space of at least one character
626
627 */\=*
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +0200628\= Matches 0 or 1 of the preceding atom, as many as possible.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000629 Example matches ~
630 foo\= "fo" and "foo"
631
632 */\?*
633\? Just like \=. Cannot be used when searching backwards with the "?"
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +0200634 command.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000635
Bram Moolenaaraa3b15d2016-04-21 08:53:19 +0200636 */\{* *E60* *E554* *E870*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000637\{n,m} Matches n to m of the preceding atom, as many as possible
638\{n} Matches n of the preceding atom
639\{n,} Matches at least n of the preceding atom, as many as possible
640\{,m} Matches 0 to m of the preceding atom, as many as possible
641\{} Matches 0 or more of the preceding atom, as many as possible (like *)
642 */\{-*
643\{-n,m} matches n to m of the preceding atom, as few as possible
644\{-n} matches n of the preceding atom
645\{-n,} matches at least n of the preceding atom, as few as possible
646\{-,m} matches 0 to m of the preceding atom, as few as possible
647\{-} matches 0 or more of the preceding atom, as few as possible
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000648
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +0000649 n and m are positive decimal numbers or zero
Bram Moolenaarc81e5e72007-05-05 18:24:42 +0000650 *non-greedy*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000651 If a "-" appears immediately after the "{", then a shortest match
652 first algorithm is used (see example below). In particular, "\{-}" is
653 the same as "*" but uses the shortest match first algorithm. BUT: A
654 match that starts earlier is preferred over a shorter match: "a\{-}b"
655 matches "aaab" in "xaaab".
656
657 Example matches ~
658 ab\{2,3}c "abbc" or "abbbc"
Bram Moolenaar3577c6f2008-06-24 21:16:56 +0000659 a\{5} "aaaaa"
660 ab\{2,}c "abbc", "abbbc", "abbbbc", etc.
661 ab\{,3}c "ac", "abc", "abbc" or "abbbc"
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000662 a[bc]\{3}d "abbbd", "abbcd", "acbcd", "acccd", etc.
663 a\(bc\)\{1,2}d "abcd" or "abcbcd"
664 a[bc]\{-}[cd] "abc" in "abcd"
665 a[bc]*[cd] "abcd" in "abcd"
666
667 The } may optionally be preceded with a backslash: \{n,m\}.
668
669 */\@=*
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +0200670\@= Matches the preceding atom with zero width.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000671 Like "(?=pattern)" in Perl.
672 Example matches ~
673 foo\(bar\)\@= "foo" in "foobar"
674 foo\(bar\)\@=foo nothing
675 */zero-width*
676 When using "\@=" (or "^", "$", "\<", "\>") no characters are included
677 in the match. These items are only used to check if a match can be
678 made. This can be tricky, because a match with following items will
679 be done in the same position. The last example above will not match
680 "foobarfoo", because it tries match "foo" in the same position where
681 "bar" matched.
682
683 Note that using "\&" works the same as using "\@=": "foo\&.." is the
684 same as "\(foo\)\@=..". But using "\&" is easier, you don't need the
Bram Moolenaar1b884a02020-12-10 21:11:27 +0100685 parentheses.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000686
687
688 */\@!*
689\@! Matches with zero width if the preceding atom does NOT match at the
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +0200690 current position. |/zero-width|
Bram Moolenaar1aeaf8c2012-05-18 13:46:39 +0200691 Like "(?!pattern)" in Perl.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000692 Example matches ~
693 foo\(bar\)\@! any "foo" not followed by "bar"
Bram Moolenaar1aeaf8c2012-05-18 13:46:39 +0200694 a.\{-}p\@! "a", "ap", "app", "appp", etc. not immediately
Bram Moolenaar251e1912011-06-19 05:09:16 +0200695 followed by a "p"
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000696 if \(\(then\)\@!.\)*$ "if " not followed by "then"
697
698 Using "\@!" is tricky, because there are many places where a pattern
699 does not match. "a.*p\@!" will match from an "a" to the end of the
700 line, because ".*" can match all characters in the line and the "p"
701 doesn't match at the end of the line. "a.\{-}p\@!" will match any
Bram Moolenaar1aeaf8c2012-05-18 13:46:39 +0200702 "a", "ap", "app", etc. that isn't followed by a "p", because the "."
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000703 can match a "p" and "p\@!" doesn't match after that.
704
705 You can't use "\@!" to look for a non-match before the matching
706 position: "\(foo\)\@!bar" will match "bar" in "foobar", because at the
707 position where "bar" matches, "foo" does not match. To avoid matching
708 "foobar" you could use "\(foo\)\@!...bar", but that doesn't match a
Bram Moolenaar13fcaaf2005-04-15 21:13:42 +0000709 bar at the start of a line. Use "\(foo\)\@<!bar".
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000710
Bram Moolenaar8e5af3e2011-04-28 19:02:44 +0200711 Useful example: to find "foo" in a line that does not contain "bar": >
712 /^\%(.*bar\)\@!.*\zsfoo
713< This pattern first checks that there is not a single position in the
714 line where "bar" matches. If ".*bar" matches somewhere the \@! will
715 reject the pattern. When there is no match any "foo" will be found.
716 The "\zs" is to have the match start just before "foo".
717
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000718 */\@<=*
719\@<= Matches with zero width if the preceding atom matches just before what
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +0200720 follows. |/zero-width|
Bram Moolenaar1aeaf8c2012-05-18 13:46:39 +0200721 Like "(?<=pattern)" in Perl, but Vim allows non-fixed-width patterns.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000722 Example matches ~
723 \(an\_s\+\)\@<=file "file" after "an" and white space or an
724 end-of-line
725 For speed it's often much better to avoid this multi. Try using "\zs"
726 instead |/\zs|. To match the same as the above example:
727 an\_s\+\zsfile
Bram Moolenaar543b7ef2013-06-01 14:50:56 +0200728 At least set a limit for the look-behind, see below.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000729
730 "\@<=" and "\@<!" check for matches just before what follows.
731 Theoretically these matches could start anywhere before this position.
732 But to limit the time needed, only the line where what follows matches
733 is searched, and one line before that (if there is one). This should
734 be sufficient to match most things and not be too slow.
Bram Moolenaarfb539272014-08-22 19:21:47 +0200735
736 In the old regexp engine the part of the pattern after "\@<=" and
737 "\@<!" are checked for a match first, thus things like "\1" don't work
738 to reference \(\) inside the preceding atom. It does work the other
739 way around:
740 Bad example matches ~
741 \%#=1\1\@<=,\([a-z]\+\) ",abc" in "abc,abc"
742
743 However, the new regexp engine works differently, it is better to not
744 rely on this behavior, do not use \@<= if it can be avoided:
745 Example matches ~
746 \([a-z]\+\)\zs,\1 ",abc" in "abc,abc"
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000747
Bram Moolenaar543b7ef2013-06-01 14:50:56 +0200748\@123<=
749 Like "\@<=" but only look back 123 bytes. This avoids trying lots
750 of matches that are known to fail and make executing the pattern very
751 slow. Example, check if there is a "<" just before "span":
752 /<\@1<=span
753 This will try matching "<" only one byte before "span", which is the
754 only place that works anyway.
755 After crossing a line boundary, the limit is relative to the end of
756 the line. Thus the characters at the start of the line with the match
757 are not counted (this is just to keep it simple).
758 The number zero is the same as no limit.
759
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000760 */\@<!*
761\@<! Matches with zero width if the preceding atom does NOT match just
762 before what follows. Thus this matches if there is no position in the
763 current or previous line where the atom matches such that it ends just
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +0200764 before what follows. |/zero-width|
Bram Moolenaar1aeaf8c2012-05-18 13:46:39 +0200765 Like "(?<!pattern)" in Perl, but Vim allows non-fixed-width patterns.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000766 The match with the preceding atom is made to end just before the match
767 with what follows, thus an atom that ends in ".*" will work.
768 Warning: This can be slow (because many positions need to be checked
Bram Moolenaar543b7ef2013-06-01 14:50:56 +0200769 for a match). Use a limit if you can, see below.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000770 Example matches ~
771 \(foo\)\@<!bar any "bar" that's not in "foobar"
Bram Moolenaar3577c6f2008-06-24 21:16:56 +0000772 \(\/\/.*\)\@<!in "in" which is not after "//"
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000773
Bram Moolenaar543b7ef2013-06-01 14:50:56 +0200774\@123<!
775 Like "\@<!" but only look back 123 bytes. This avoids trying lots of
776 matches that are known to fail and make executing the pattern very
777 slow.
778
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000779 */\@>*
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +0200780\@> Matches the preceding atom like matching a whole pattern.
Bram Moolenaar3577c6f2008-06-24 21:16:56 +0000781 Like "(?>pattern)" in Perl.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000782 Example matches ~
783 \(a*\)\@>a nothing (the "a*" takes all the "a"'s, there can't be
784 another one following)
785
786 This matches the preceding atom as if it was a pattern by itself. If
787 it doesn't match, there is no retry with shorter sub-matches or
788 anything. Observe this difference: "a*b" and "a*ab" both match
789 "aaab", but in the second case the "a*" matches only the first two
790 "a"s. "\(a*\)\@>ab" will not match "aaab", because the "a*" matches
791 the "aaa" (as many "a"s as possible), thus the "ab" can't match.
792
793
794==============================================================================
7956. Ordinary atoms *pattern-atoms*
796
797An ordinary atom can be:
798
799 */^*
800^ At beginning of pattern or after "\|", "\(", "\%(" or "\n": matches
801 start-of-line; at other positions, matches literal '^'. |/zero-width|
802 Example matches ~
803 ^beep( the start of the C function "beep" (probably).
804
805 */\^*
Bram Moolenaar1c6737b2020-09-07 22:18:52 +0200806\^ Matches literal '^'. Can be used at any position in the pattern, but
807 not inside [].
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000808
809 */\_^*
810\_^ Matches start-of-line. |/zero-width| Can be used at any position in
Bram Moolenaar1c6737b2020-09-07 22:18:52 +0200811 the pattern, but not inside [].
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000812 Example matches ~
813 \_s*\_^foo white space and blank lines and then "foo" at
814 start-of-line
815
816 */$*
Bram Moolenaar3577c6f2008-06-24 21:16:56 +0000817$ At end of pattern or in front of "\|", "\)" or "\n" ('magic' on):
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000818 matches end-of-line <EOL>; at other positions, matches literal '$'.
819 |/zero-width|
820
821 */\$*
Bram Moolenaar1c6737b2020-09-07 22:18:52 +0200822\$ Matches literal '$'. Can be used at any position in the pattern, but
823 not inside [].
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000824
825 */\_$*
826\_$ Matches end-of-line. |/zero-width| Can be used at any position in the
Bram Moolenaar1c6737b2020-09-07 22:18:52 +0200827 pattern, but not inside []. Note that "a\_$b" never matches, since
828 "b" cannot match an end-of-line. Use "a\nb" instead |/\n|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000829 Example matches ~
830 foo\_$\_s* "foo" at end-of-line and following white space and
831 blank lines
832
833. (with 'nomagic': \.) */.* */\.*
834 Matches any single character, but not an end-of-line.
835
836 */\_.*
837\_. Matches any single character or end-of-line.
838 Careful: "\_.*" matches all text to the end of the buffer!
839
840 */\<*
841\< Matches the beginning of a word: The next char is the first char of a
842 word. The 'iskeyword' option specifies what is a word character.
843 |/zero-width|
844
845 */\>*
846\> Matches the end of a word: The previous char is the last char of a
Bram Moolenaar13fcaaf2005-04-15 21:13:42 +0000847 word. The 'iskeyword' option specifies what is a word character.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000848 |/zero-width|
849
850 */\zs*
Bram Moolenaar1c6737b2020-09-07 22:18:52 +0200851\zs Matches at any position, but not inside [], and sets the start of the
852 match there: The next char is the first char of the whole match.
853 |/zero-width|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000854 Example: >
855 /^\s*\zsif
856< matches an "if" at the start of a line, ignoring white space.
857 Can be used multiple times, the last one encountered in a matching
Bram Moolenaar13fcaaf2005-04-15 21:13:42 +0000858 branch is used. Example: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000859 /\(.\{-}\zsFab\)\{3}
860< Finds the third occurrence of "Fab".
Bram Moolenaar34401cc2014-08-29 15:12:19 +0200861 This cannot be followed by a multi. *E888*
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +0200862 {not available when compiled without the |+syntax| feature}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000863 */\ze*
Bram Moolenaar1c6737b2020-09-07 22:18:52 +0200864\ze Matches at any position, but not inside [], and sets the end of the
865 match there: The previous char is the last char of the whole match.
866 |/zero-width|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000867 Can be used multiple times, the last one encountered in a matching
868 branch is used.
869 Example: "end\ze\(if\|for\)" matches the "end" in "endif" and
870 "endfor".
Bram Moolenaar6e932462014-09-09 18:48:09 +0200871 This cannot be followed by a multi. |E888|
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +0200872 {not available when compiled without the |+syntax| feature}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000873
874 */\%^* *start-of-file*
875\%^ Matches start of the file. When matching with a string, matches the
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +0200876 start of the string.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000877 For example, to find the first "VIM" in a file: >
878 /\%^\_.\{-}\zsVIM
879<
880 */\%$* *end-of-file*
881\%$ Matches end of the file. When matching with a string, matches the
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +0200882 end of the string.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000883 Note that this does NOT find the last "VIM" in a file: >
884 /VIM\_.\{-}\%$
885< It will find the next VIM, because the part after it will always
886 match. This one will find the last "VIM" in the file: >
887 /VIM\ze\(\(VIM\)\@!\_.\)*\%$
888< This uses |/\@!| to ascertain that "VIM" does NOT match in any
889 position after the first "VIM".
890 Searching from the end of the file backwards is easier!
891
Bram Moolenaar33aec762006-01-22 23:30:12 +0000892 */\%V*
893\%V Match inside the Visual area. When Visual mode has already been
894 stopped match in the area that |gv| would reselect.
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +0100895 This is a |/zero-width| match. To make sure the whole pattern is
Bram Moolenaar214641f2017-03-05 17:04:09 +0100896 inside the Visual area put it at the start and just before the end of
897 the pattern, e.g.: >
898 /\%Vfoo.*ba\%Vr
Bram Moolenaar036986f2017-03-16 17:41:02 +0100899< This also works if only "foo bar" was Visually selected. This: >
900 /\%Vfoo.*bar\%V
Bram Moolenaar214641f2017-03-05 17:04:09 +0100901< would match "foo bar" if the Visual selection continues after the "r".
902 Only works for the current buffer.
Bram Moolenaar33aec762006-01-22 23:30:12 +0000903
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000904 */\%#* *cursor-position*
905\%# Matches with the cursor position. Only works when matching in a
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +0200906 buffer displayed in a window.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000907 WARNING: When the cursor is moved after the pattern was used, the
908 result becomes invalid. Vim doesn't automatically update the matches.
909 This is especially relevant for syntax highlighting and 'hlsearch'.
910 In other words: When the cursor moves the display isn't updated for
911 this change. An update is done for lines which are changed (the whole
912 line is updated) or when using the |CTRL-L| command (the whole screen
913 is updated). Example, to highlight the word under the cursor: >
914 /\k*\%#\k*
915< When 'hlsearch' is set and you move the cursor around and make changes
916 this will clearly show when the match is updated or not.
917
Bram Moolenaar33aec762006-01-22 23:30:12 +0000918 */\%'m* */\%<'m* */\%>'m*
919\%'m Matches with the position of mark m.
920\%<'m Matches before the position of mark m.
921\%>'m Matches after the position of mark m.
922 Example, to highlight the text from mark 's to 'e: >
923 /.\%>'s.*\%<'e..
924< Note that two dots are required to include mark 'e in the match. That
925 is because "\%<'e" matches at the character before the 'e mark, and
926 since it's a |/zero-width| match it doesn't include that character.
Bram Moolenaar33aec762006-01-22 23:30:12 +0000927 WARNING: When the mark is moved after the pattern was used, the result
928 becomes invalid. Vim doesn't automatically update the matches.
Bram Moolenaar1ef15e32006-02-01 21:56:25 +0000929 Similar to moving the cursor for "\%#" |/\%#|.
Bram Moolenaar33aec762006-01-22 23:30:12 +0000930
Bram Moolenaara2baa732022-02-04 16:09:54 +0000931 */\%l* */\%>l* */\%<l* *E951* *E1204*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000932\%23l Matches in a specific line.
Bram Moolenaar4770d092006-01-12 23:22:24 +0000933\%<23l Matches above a specific line (lower line number).
934\%>23l Matches below a specific line (higher line number).
Bram Moolenaar2f0936c2022-01-08 21:51:59 +0000935\%.l Matches at the cursor line.
936\%<.l Matches above the cursor line.
937\%>.l Matches below the cursor line.
Bram Moolenaar22863042021-10-16 15:23:36 +0100938 These six can be used to match specific lines in a buffer. The "23"
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +0200939 can be any line number. The first line is 1.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000940 WARNING: When inserting or deleting lines Vim does not automatically
941 update the matches. This means Syntax highlighting quickly becomes
Bram Moolenaar53f7fcc2021-07-28 20:10:16 +0200942 wrong. Also when referring to the cursor position (".") and
Bram Moolenaar04db26b2021-07-05 20:15:23 +0200943 the cursor moves the display isn't updated for this change. An update
944 is done when using the |CTRL-L| command (the whole screen is updated).
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000945 Example, to highlight the line where the cursor currently is: >
Bram Moolenaar04db26b2021-07-05 20:15:23 +0200946 :exe '/\%' . line(".") . 'l'
947< Alternatively use: >
948 /\%.l
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000949< When 'hlsearch' is set and you move the cursor around and make changes
950 this will clearly show when the match is updated or not.
951
952 */\%c* */\%>c* */\%<c*
953\%23c Matches in a specific column.
954\%<23c Matches before a specific column.
955\%>23c Matches after a specific column.
Bram Moolenaar2f0936c2022-01-08 21:51:59 +0000956\%.c Matches at the cursor column.
957\%<.c Matches before the cursor column.
958\%>.c Matches after the cursor column.
Bram Moolenaar22863042021-10-16 15:23:36 +0100959 These six can be used to match specific columns in a buffer or string.
960 The "23" can be any column number. The first column is 1. Actually,
961 the column is the byte number (thus it's not exactly right for
962 multibyte characters).
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000963 WARNING: When inserting or deleting text Vim does not automatically
964 update the matches. This means Syntax highlighting quickly becomes
Bram Moolenaar53f7fcc2021-07-28 20:10:16 +0200965 wrong. Also when referring to the cursor position (".") and
Bram Moolenaar04db26b2021-07-05 20:15:23 +0200966 the cursor moves the display isn't updated for this change. An update
967 is done when using the |CTRL-L| command (the whole screen is updated).
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000968 Example, to highlight the column where the cursor currently is: >
Bram Moolenaarc51cf032022-02-26 12:25:45 +0000969 :exe '/\%' .. col(".") .. 'c'
Bram Moolenaar04db26b2021-07-05 20:15:23 +0200970< Alternatively use: >
971 /\%.c
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000972< When 'hlsearch' is set and you move the cursor around and make changes
973 this will clearly show when the match is updated or not.
974 Example for matching a single byte in column 44: >
975 /\%>43c.\%<46c
976< Note that "\%<46c" matches in column 45 when the "." matches a byte in
977 column 44.
978 */\%v* */\%>v* */\%<v*
979\%23v Matches in a specific virtual column.
980\%<23v Matches before a specific virtual column.
981\%>23v Matches after a specific virtual column.
Bram Moolenaar2f0936c2022-01-08 21:51:59 +0000982\%.v Matches at the current virtual column.
983\%<.v Matches before the current virtual column.
984\%>.v Matches after the current virtual column.
Bram Moolenaar22863042021-10-16 15:23:36 +0100985 These six can be used to match specific virtual columns in a buffer or
986 string. When not matching with a buffer in a window, the option
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000987 values of the current window are used (e.g., 'tabstop').
988 The "23" can be any column number. The first column is 1.
989 Note that some virtual column positions will never match, because they
Bram Moolenaar69c2f172007-05-12 14:57:31 +0000990 are halfway through a tab or other character that occupies more than
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +0200991 one screen character.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000992 WARNING: When inserting or deleting text Vim does not automatically
Bram Moolenaarde934d72005-05-22 22:09:40 +0000993 update highlighted matches. This means Syntax highlighting quickly
Bram Moolenaar53f7fcc2021-07-28 20:10:16 +0200994 becomes wrong. Also when referring to the cursor position (".") and
Bram Moolenaar04db26b2021-07-05 20:15:23 +0200995 the cursor moves the display isn't updated for this change. An update
996 is done when using the |CTRL-L| command (the whole screen is updated).
Bram Moolenaar3577c6f2008-06-24 21:16:56 +0000997 Example, to highlight all the characters after virtual column 72: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000998 /\%>72v.*
999< When 'hlsearch' is set and you move the cursor around and make changes
1000 this will clearly show when the match is updated or not.
1001 To match the text up to column 17: >
Bram Moolenaarc95a3022016-06-12 23:01:46 +02001002 /^.*\%17v
Bram Moolenaar04db26b2021-07-05 20:15:23 +02001003< To match all characters after the current virtual column (where the
1004 cursor is): >
1005 /\%>.v.*
Bram Moolenaarc95a3022016-06-12 23:01:46 +02001006< Column 17 is not included, because this is a |/zero-width| match. To
1007 include the column use: >
1008 /^.*\%17v.
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01001009< This command does the same thing, but also matches when there is no
1010 character in column 17: >
Bram Moolenaarc95a3022016-06-12 23:01:46 +02001011 /^.*\%<18v.
1012< Note that without the "^" to anchor the match in the first column,
1013 this will also highlight column 17: >
1014 /.*\%17v
1015< Column 17 is highlighted by 'hlsearch' because there is another match
1016 where ".*" matches zero characters.
Bram Moolenaar22863042021-10-16 15:23:36 +01001017
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001018
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +02001019Character classes:
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001020\i identifier character (see 'isident' option) */\i*
1021\I like "\i", but excluding digits */\I*
1022\k keyword character (see 'iskeyword' option) */\k*
1023\K like "\k", but excluding digits */\K*
1024\f file name character (see 'isfname' option) */\f*
1025\F like "\f", but excluding digits */\F*
1026\p printable character (see 'isprint' option) */\p*
1027\P like "\p", but excluding digits */\P*
1028
Bram Moolenaar207f0092020-08-30 17:20:20 +02001029NOTE: the above also work for multibyte characters. The ones below only
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001030match ASCII characters, as indicated by the range.
1031
1032 *whitespace* *white-space*
1033\s whitespace character: <Space> and <Tab> */\s*
1034\S non-whitespace character; opposite of \s */\S*
1035\d digit: [0-9] */\d*
1036\D non-digit: [^0-9] */\D*
1037\x hex digit: [0-9A-Fa-f] */\x*
1038\X non-hex digit: [^0-9A-Fa-f] */\X*
1039\o octal digit: [0-7] */\o*
1040\O non-octal digit: [^0-7] */\O*
1041\w word character: [0-9A-Za-z_] */\w*
1042\W non-word character: [^0-9A-Za-z_] */\W*
1043\h head of word character: [A-Za-z_] */\h*
1044\H non-head of word character: [^A-Za-z_] */\H*
1045\a alphabetic character: [A-Za-z] */\a*
1046\A non-alphabetic character: [^A-Za-z] */\A*
1047\l lowercase character: [a-z] */\l*
1048\L non-lowercase character: [^a-z] */\L*
1049\u uppercase character: [A-Z] */\u*
Bram Moolenaarf1568ec2011-12-14 21:17:39 +01001050\U non-uppercase character: [^A-Z] */\U*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001051
1052 NOTE: Using the atom is faster than the [] form.
1053
1054 NOTE: 'ignorecase', "\c" and "\C" are not used by character classes.
1055
1056 */\_* *E63* */\_i* */\_I* */\_k* */\_K* */\_f* */\_F*
1057 */\_p* */\_P* */\_s* */\_S* */\_d* */\_D* */\_x* */\_X*
1058 */\_o* */\_O* */\_w* */\_W* */\_h* */\_H* */\_a* */\_A*
1059 */\_l* */\_L* */\_u* */\_U*
1060\_x Where "x" is any of the characters above: The character class with
1061 end-of-line added
1062(end of character classes)
1063
1064\e matches <Esc> */\e*
1065\t matches <Tab> */\t*
1066\r matches <CR> */\r*
1067\b matches <BS> */\b*
1068\n matches an end-of-line */\n*
1069 When matching in a string instead of buffer text a literal newline
1070 character is matched.
1071
1072~ matches the last given substitute string */~* */\~*
1073
1074\(\) A pattern enclosed by escaped parentheses. */\(* */\(\)* */\)*
Bram Moolenaarfbc0d2e2013-05-19 19:40:29 +02001075 E.g., "\(^a\)" matches 'a' at the start of a line.
Bram Moolenaar2f0936c2022-01-08 21:51:59 +00001076 There can only be ten of these. You can use "\%(" to add more, but
1077 not counting it as a sub-expression.
Bram Moolenaarfbc0d2e2013-05-19 19:40:29 +02001078 *E51* *E54* *E55* *E872* *E873*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001079
1080\1 Matches the same string that was matched by */\1* *E65*
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +02001081 the first sub-expression in \( and \).
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001082 Example: "\([a-z]\).\1" matches "ata", "ehe", "tot", etc.
1083\2 Like "\1", but uses second sub-expression, */\2*
1084 ... */\3*
1085\9 Like "\1", but uses ninth sub-expression. */\9*
1086 Note: The numbering of groups is done based on which "\(" comes first
1087 in the pattern (going left to right), NOT based on what is matched
1088 first.
1089
1090\%(\) A pattern enclosed by escaped parentheses. */\%(\)* */\%(* *E53*
1091 Just like \(\), but without counting it as a sub-expression. This
1092 allows using more groups and it's a little bit faster.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001093
1094x A single character, with no special meaning, matches itself
1095
1096 */\* */\\*
1097\x A backslash followed by a single character, with no special meaning,
1098 is reserved for future expansions
1099
Bram Moolenaar2f0936c2022-01-08 21:51:59 +00001100[] (with 'nomagic': \[]) */[]* */\[]* */\_[]* */collection* *E76*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001101\_[]
Bram Moolenaar1b884a02020-12-10 21:11:27 +01001102 A collection. This is a sequence of characters enclosed in square
1103 brackets. It matches any single character in the collection.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001104 Example matches ~
1105 [xyz] any 'x', 'y' or 'z'
1106 [a-zA-Z]$ any alphabetic character at the end of a line
1107 \c[a-z]$ same
Bram Moolenaara3e6bc92013-01-30 14:18:00 +01001108 [А-яЁё] Russian alphabet (with utf-8 and cp1251)
1109
Bram Moolenaarc81e5e72007-05-05 18:24:42 +00001110 */[\n]*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001111 With "\_" prepended the collection also includes the end-of-line.
1112 The same can be done by including "\n" in the collection. The
1113 end-of-line is also matched when the collection starts with "^"! Thus
1114 "\_[^ab]" matches the end-of-line and any character but "a" and "b".
1115 This makes it Vi compatible: Without the "\_" or "\n" the collection
1116 does not match an end-of-line.
Bram Moolenaar8aff23a2005-08-19 20:40:30 +00001117 *E769*
Bram Moolenaarae5bce12005-08-15 21:41:48 +00001118 When the ']' is not there Vim will not give an error message but
Bram Moolenaar8aff23a2005-08-19 20:40:30 +00001119 assume no collection is used. Useful to search for '['. However, you
Bram Moolenaar5837f1f2015-03-21 18:06:14 +01001120 do get E769 for internal searching. And be aware that in a
1121 `:substitute` command the whole command becomes the pattern. E.g.
1122 ":s/[/x/" searches for "[/x" and replaces it with nothing. It does
1123 not search for "[" and replaces it with "x"!
Bram Moolenaarae5bce12005-08-15 21:41:48 +00001124
Bram Moolenaar3ec574f2017-06-13 18:12:01 +02001125 *E944* *E945*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001126 If the sequence begins with "^", it matches any single character NOT
1127 in the collection: "[^xyz]" matches anything but 'x', 'y' and 'z'.
1128 - If two characters in the sequence are separated by '-', this is
1129 shorthand for the full list of ASCII characters between them. E.g.,
Bram Moolenaar3ec574f2017-06-13 18:12:01 +02001130 "[0-9]" matches any decimal digit. If the starting character exceeds
1131 the ending character, e.g. [c-a], E944 occurs. Non-ASCII characters
1132 can be used, but the character values must not be more than 256 apart
1133 in the old regexp engine. For example, searching by [\u3000-\u4000]
1134 after setting re=1 emits a E945 error. Prepending \%#=2 will fix it.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001135 - A character class expression is evaluated to the set of characters
1136 belonging to that character class. The following character classes
1137 are supported:
Bram Moolenaar0c078fc2017-03-29 15:31:20 +02001138 Name Func Contents ~
1139*[:alnum:]* [:alnum:] isalnum ASCII letters and digits
1140*[:alpha:]* [:alpha:] isalpha ASCII letters
1141*[:blank:]* [:blank:] space and tab
1142*[:cntrl:]* [:cntrl:] iscntrl ASCII control characters
1143*[:digit:]* [:digit:] decimal digits '0' to '9'
1144*[:graph:]* [:graph:] isgraph ASCII printable characters excluding
1145 space
1146*[:lower:]* [:lower:] (1) lowercase letters (all letters when
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001147 'ignorecase' is used)
Bram Moolenaar0c078fc2017-03-29 15:31:20 +02001148*[:print:]* [:print:] (2) printable characters including space
1149*[:punct:]* [:punct:] ispunct ASCII punctuation characters
1150*[:space:]* [:space:] whitespace characters: space, tab, CR,
1151 NL, vertical tab, form feed
1152*[:upper:]* [:upper:] (3) uppercase letters (all letters when
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001153 'ignorecase' is used)
Bram Moolenaar0c078fc2017-03-29 15:31:20 +02001154*[:xdigit:]* [:xdigit:] hexadecimal digits: 0-9, a-f, A-F
1155*[:return:]* [:return:] the <CR> character
1156*[:tab:]* [:tab:] the <Tab> character
1157*[:escape:]* [:escape:] the <Esc> character
1158*[:backspace:]* [:backspace:] the <BS> character
Bram Moolenaar221cd9f2019-01-31 15:34:40 +01001159*[:ident:]* [:ident:] identifier character (same as "\i")
1160*[:keyword:]* [:keyword:] keyword character (same as "\k")
1161*[:fname:]* [:fname:] file name character (same as "\f")
Bram Moolenaar1b884a02020-12-10 21:11:27 +01001162 The square brackets in character class expressions are additional to
1163 the square brackets delimiting a collection. For example, the
1164 following is a plausible pattern for a UNIX filename:
1165 "[-./[:alnum:]_~]\+". That is, a list of at least one character,
1166 each of which is either '-', '.', '/', alphabetic, numeric, '_' or
1167 '~'.
Bram Moolenaarfa735342016-01-03 22:14:44 +01001168 These items only work for 8-bit characters, except [:lower:] and
Bram Moolenaar207f0092020-08-30 17:20:20 +02001169 [:upper:] also work for multibyte characters when using the new
Bram Moolenaar03413f42016-04-12 21:07:15 +02001170 regexp engine. See |two-engines|. In the future these items may
Bram Moolenaar207f0092020-08-30 17:20:20 +02001171 work for multibyte characters. For now, to get all "alpha"
Bram Moolenaar06481422016-04-30 15:13:38 +02001172 characters you can use: [[:lower:][:upper:]].
Bram Moolenaar0c078fc2017-03-29 15:31:20 +02001173
1174 The "Func" column shows what library function is used. The
1175 implementation depends on the system. Otherwise:
1176 (1) Uses islower() for ASCII and Vim builtin rules for other
Bram Moolenaar4c92e752019-02-17 21:18:32 +01001177 characters.
Bram Moolenaar0c078fc2017-03-29 15:31:20 +02001178 (2) Uses Vim builtin rules
1179 (3) As with (1) but using isupper()
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +00001180 */[[=* *[==]*
1181 - An equivalence class. This means that characters are matched that
Bram Moolenaar522f9ae2011-07-20 17:58:20 +02001182 have almost the same meaning, e.g., when ignoring accents. This
1183 only works for Unicode, latin1 and latin9. The form is:
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +00001184 [=a=]
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +00001185 */[[.* *[..]*
1186 - A collation element. This currently simply accepts a single
1187 character in the form:
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +00001188 [.a.]
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001189 */\]*
1190 - To include a literal ']', '^', '-' or '\' in the collection, put a
1191 backslash before it: "[xyz\]]", "[\^xyz]", "[xy\-z]" and "[xyz\\]".
1192 (Note: POSIX does not support the use of a backslash this way). For
1193 ']' you can also make it the first character (following a possible
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +02001194 "^"): "[]xyz]" or "[^]xyz]".
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001195 For '-' you can also make it the first or last character: "[-xyz]",
1196 "[^-xyz]" or "[xyz-]". For '\' you can also let it be followed by
Bram Moolenaar0bc380a2010-07-10 13:52:13 +02001197 any character that's not in "^]-\bdertnoUux". "[\xyz]" matches '\',
1198 'x', 'y' and 'z'. It's better to use "\\" though, future expansions
1199 may use other characters after '\'.
Bram Moolenaarff034192013-04-24 18:51:19 +02001200 - Omitting the trailing ] is not considered an error. "[]" works like
1201 "[]]", it matches the ']' character.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001202 - The following translations are accepted when the 'l' flag is not
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +02001203 included in 'cpoptions':
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001204 \e <Esc>
1205 \t <Tab>
1206 \r <CR> (NOT end-of-line!)
1207 \b <BS>
Bram Moolenaarc81e5e72007-05-05 18:24:42 +00001208 \n line break, see above |/[\n]|
Bram Moolenaarc0197e22004-09-13 20:26:32 +00001209 \d123 decimal number of character
Bram Moolenaar82be4842021-01-11 19:40:15 +01001210 \o40 octal number of character up to 0o377
Bram Moolenaarc0197e22004-09-13 20:26:32 +00001211 \x20 hexadecimal number of character up to 0xff
1212 \u20AC hex. number of multibyte character up to 0xffff
1213 \U1234 hex. number of multibyte character up to 0xffffffff
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001214 NOTE: The other backslash codes mentioned above do not work inside
1215 []!
1216 - Matching with a collection can be slow, because each character in
1217 the text has to be compared with each character in the collection.
1218 Use one of the other atoms above when possible. Example: "\d" is
Bram Moolenaar98ef2332018-03-18 14:44:37 +01001219 much faster than "[0-9]" and matches the same characters. However,
1220 the new |NFA| regexp engine deals with this better than the old one.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001221
1222 */\%[]* *E69* *E70* *E369*
Bram Moolenaarc0197e22004-09-13 20:26:32 +00001223\%[] A sequence of optionally matched atoms. This always matches.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001224 It matches as much of the list of atoms it contains as possible. Thus
1225 it stops at the first atom that doesn't match. For example: >
1226 /r\%[ead]
1227< matches "r", "re", "rea" or "read". The longest that matches is used.
1228 To match the Ex command "function", where "fu" is required and
1229 "nction" is optional, this would work: >
1230 /\<fu\%[nction]\>
1231< The end-of-word atom "\>" is used to avoid matching "fu" in "full".
1232 It gets more complicated when the atoms are not ordinary characters.
1233 You don't often have to use it, but it is possible. Example: >
1234 /\<r\%[[eo]ad]\>
1235< Matches the words "r", "re", "ro", "rea", "roa", "read" and "road".
Bram Moolenaarc81e5e72007-05-05 18:24:42 +00001236 There can be no \(\), \%(\) or \z(\) items inside the [] and \%[] does
1237 not nest.
Bram Moolenaar3577c6f2008-06-24 21:16:56 +00001238 To include a "[" use "[[]" and for "]" use []]", e.g.,: >
1239 /index\%[[[]0[]]]
1240< matches "index" "index[", "index[0" and "index[0]".
Bram Moolenaardb84e452010-08-15 13:50:43 +02001241 {not available when compiled without the |+syntax| feature}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001242
Bram Moolenaar677ee682005-01-27 14:41:15 +00001243 */\%d* */\%x* */\%o* */\%u* */\%U* *E678*
Bram Moolenaarc0197e22004-09-13 20:26:32 +00001244
1245\%d123 Matches the character specified with a decimal number. Must be
1246 followed by a non-digit.
Bram Moolenaar2346a632021-06-13 19:02:49 +02001247\%o40 Matches the character specified with an octal number up to 0o377.
Bram Moolenaar82be4842021-01-11 19:40:15 +01001248 Numbers below 0o40 must be followed by a non-octal digit or a
1249 non-digit.
Bram Moolenaarc0197e22004-09-13 20:26:32 +00001250\%x2a Matches the character specified with up to two hexadecimal characters.
1251\%u20AC Matches the character specified with up to four hexadecimal
1252 characters.
1253\%U1234abcd Matches the character specified with up to eight hexadecimal
Bram Moolenaarf6b40102019-02-22 15:24:03 +01001254 characters, up to 0x7fffffff
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001255
1256==============================================================================
12577. Ignoring case in a pattern */ignorecase*
1258
1259If the 'ignorecase' option is on, the case of normal letters is ignored.
1260'smartcase' can be set to ignore case when the pattern contains lowercase
1261letters only.
1262 */\c* */\C*
1263When "\c" appears anywhere in the pattern, the whole pattern is handled like
1264'ignorecase' is on. The actual value of 'ignorecase' and 'smartcase' is
1265ignored. "\C" does the opposite: Force matching case for the whole pattern.
1266{only Vim supports \c and \C}
1267Note that 'ignorecase', "\c" and "\C" are not used for the character classes.
1268
1269Examples:
1270 pattern 'ignorecase' 'smartcase' matches ~
1271 foo off - foo
1272 foo on - foo Foo FOO
1273 Foo on off foo Foo FOO
1274 Foo on on Foo
1275 \cfoo - - foo Foo FOO
1276 foo\C - - foo
1277
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001278Technical detail: *NL-used-for-Nul*
1279<Nul> characters in the file are stored as <NL> in memory. In the display
1280they are shown as "^@". The translation is done when reading and writing
1281files. To match a <Nul> with a search pattern you can just enter CTRL-@ or
1282"CTRL-V 000". This is probably just what you expect. Internally the
1283character is replaced with a <NL> in the search pattern. What is unusual is
1284that typing CTRL-V CTRL-J also inserts a <NL>, thus also searches for a <Nul>
Bram Moolenaar25c9c682019-05-05 18:13:34 +02001285in the file.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001286
1287 *CR-used-for-NL*
1288When 'fileformat' is "mac", <NL> characters in the file are stored as <CR>
Bram Moolenaare37d50a2008-08-06 17:06:04 +00001289characters internally. In the text they are shown as "^J". Otherwise this
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001290works similar to the usage of <NL> for a <Nul>.
1291
1292When working with expression evaluation, a <NL> character in the pattern
1293matches a <NL> in the string. The use of "\n" (backslash n) to match a <NL>
1294doesn't work there, it only works to match text in the buffer.
1295
Bram Moolenaar207f0092020-08-30 17:20:20 +02001296 *pattern-multi-byte* *pattern-multibyte*
1297Patterns will also work with multibyte characters, mostly as you would
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001298expect. But invalid bytes may cause trouble, a pattern with an invalid byte
1299will probably never match.
1300
1301==============================================================================
Bram Moolenaar362e1a32006-03-06 23:29:24 +000013028. Composing characters *patterns-composing*
1303
1304 */\Z*
Bram Moolenaar8df5acf2014-05-13 19:37:29 +02001305When "\Z" appears anywhere in the pattern, all composing characters are
1306ignored. Thus only the base characters need to match, the composing
1307characters may be different and the number of composing characters may differ.
1308Only relevant when 'encoding' is "utf-8".
Bram Moolenaar543b7ef2013-06-01 14:50:56 +02001309Exception: If the pattern starts with one or more composing characters, these
1310must match.
Bram Moolenaar8df5acf2014-05-13 19:37:29 +02001311 */\%C*
1312Use "\%C" to skip any composing characters. For example, the pattern "a" does
1313not match in "càt" (where the a has the composing character 0x0300), but
1314"a\%C" does. Note that this does not match "cát" (where the á is character
13150xe1, it does not have a compositing character). It does match "cat" (where
1316the a is just an a).
Bram Moolenaar362e1a32006-03-06 23:29:24 +00001317
Bram Moolenaar7ff78462020-07-10 22:00:53 +02001318When a composing character appears at the start of the pattern or after an
Bram Moolenaar362e1a32006-03-06 23:29:24 +00001319item that doesn't include the composing character, a match is found at any
1320character that includes this composing character.
1321
1322When using a dot and a composing character, this works the same as the
1323composing character by itself, except that it doesn't matter what comes before
1324this.
1325
Bram Moolenaar543b7ef2013-06-01 14:50:56 +02001326The order of composing characters does not matter. Also, the text may have
1327more composing characters than the pattern, it still matches. But all
1328composing characters in the pattern must be found in the text.
1329
1330Suppose B is a base character and x and y are composing characters:
1331 pattern text match ~
1332 Bxy Bxy yes (perfect match)
1333 Bxy Byx yes (order ignored)
1334 Bxy By no (x missing)
1335 Bxy Bx no (y missing)
Bram Moolenaar203d04d2013-06-06 21:36:40 +02001336 Bx Bx yes (perfect match)
Bram Moolenaar543b7ef2013-06-01 14:50:56 +02001337 Bx By no (x missing)
1338 Bx Bxy yes (extra y ignored)
1339 Bx Byx yes (extra y ignored)
Bram Moolenaar362e1a32006-03-06 23:29:24 +00001340
1341==============================================================================
13429. Compare with Perl patterns *perl-patterns*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001343
1344Vim's regexes are most similar to Perl's, in terms of what you can do. The
1345difference between them is mostly just notation; here's a summary of where
1346they differ:
1347
1348Capability in Vimspeak in Perlspeak ~
1349----------------------------------------------------------------
1350force case insensitivity \c (?i)
1351force case sensitivity \C (?-i)
Bram Moolenaar362e1a32006-03-06 23:29:24 +00001352backref-less grouping \%(atom\) (?:atom)
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001353conservative quantifiers \{-n,m} *?, +?, ??, {}?
13540-width match atom\@= (?=atom)
13550-width non-match atom\@! (?!atom)
13560-width preceding match atom\@<= (?<=atom)
13570-width preceding non-match atom\@<! (?<!atom)
1358match without retry atom\@> (?>atom)
1359
1360Vim and Perl handle newline characters inside a string a bit differently:
1361
1362In Perl, ^ and $ only match at the very beginning and end of the text,
1363by default, but you can set the 'm' flag, which lets them match at
1364embedded newlines as well. You can also set the 's' flag, which causes
1365a . to match newlines as well. (Both these flags can be changed inside
1366a pattern using the same syntax used for the i flag above, BTW.)
1367
1368On the other hand, Vim's ^ and $ always match at embedded newlines, and
1369you get two separate atoms, \%^ and \%$, which only match at the very
1370start and end of the text, respectively. Vim solves the second problem
1371by giving you the \_ "modifier": put it in front of a . or a character
1372class, and they will match newlines as well.
1373
1374Finally, these constructs are unique to Perl:
1375- execution of arbitrary code in the regex: (?{perl code})
1376- conditional expressions: (?(condition)true-expr|false-expr)
1377
1378...and these are unique to Vim:
1379- changing the magic-ness of a pattern: \v \V \m \M
1380 (very useful for avoiding backslashitis)
1381- sequence of optionally matching atoms: \%[atoms]
1382- \& (which is to \| what "and" is to "or"; it forces several branches
1383 to match at one spot)
1384- matching lines/columns by number: \%5l \%5c \%5v
Bram Moolenaar362e1a32006-03-06 23:29:24 +00001385- setting the start and end of the match: \zs \ze
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001386
1387==============================================================================
Bram Moolenaar362e1a32006-03-06 23:29:24 +0000138810. Highlighting matches *match-highlight*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001389
1390 *:mat* *:match*
1391:mat[ch] {group} /{pattern}/
1392 Define a pattern to highlight in the current window. It will
1393 be highlighted with {group}. Example: >
1394 :highlight MyGroup ctermbg=green guibg=green
1395 :match MyGroup /TODO/
1396< Instead of // any character can be used to mark the start and
1397 end of the {pattern}. Watch out for using special characters,
1398 such as '"' and '|'.
Bram Moolenaarfd2ac762006-03-01 22:09:21 +00001399
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001400 {group} must exist at the moment this command is executed.
Bram Moolenaarfd2ac762006-03-01 22:09:21 +00001401
1402 The {group} highlighting still applies when a character is
Bram Moolenaar6ee10162007-07-26 20:58:42 +00001403 to be highlighted for 'hlsearch', as the highlighting for
1404 matches is given higher priority than that of 'hlsearch'.
1405 Syntax highlighting (see 'syntax') is also overruled by
1406 matches.
Bram Moolenaarfd2ac762006-03-01 22:09:21 +00001407
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001408 Note that highlighting the last used search pattern with
1409 'hlsearch' is used in all windows, while the pattern defined
1410 with ":match" only exists in the current window. It is kept
1411 when switching to another buffer.
Bram Moolenaarfd2ac762006-03-01 22:09:21 +00001412
Bram Moolenaarfd2ac762006-03-01 22:09:21 +00001413 'ignorecase' does not apply, use |/\c| in the pattern to
1414 ignore case. Otherwise case is not ignored.
1415
Bram Moolenaar3577c6f2008-06-24 21:16:56 +00001416 'redrawtime' defines the maximum time searched for pattern
1417 matches.
1418
Bram Moolenaarc81e5e72007-05-05 18:24:42 +00001419 When matching end-of-line and Vim redraws only part of the
1420 display you may get unexpected results. That is because Vim
1421 looks for a match in the line where redrawing starts.
1422
Bram Moolenaar3577c6f2008-06-24 21:16:56 +00001423 Also see |matcharg()| and |getmatches()|. The former returns
Bram Moolenaar6ee10162007-07-26 20:58:42 +00001424 the highlight group and pattern of a previous |:match|
1425 command. The latter returns a list with highlight groups and
1426 patterns defined by both |matchadd()| and |:match|.
1427
1428 Highlighting matches using |:match| are limited to three
Bram Moolenaar822ff862014-06-12 21:46:14 +02001429 matches (aside from |:match|, |:2match| and |:3match| are
Bram Moolenaar6ee10162007-07-26 20:58:42 +00001430 available). |matchadd()| does not have this limitation and in
1431 addition makes it possible to prioritize matches.
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +00001432
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001433 Another example, which highlights all characters in virtual
1434 column 72 and more: >
1435 :highlight rightMargin term=bold ctermfg=blue guifg=blue
1436 :match rightMargin /.\%>72v/
1437< To highlight all character that are in virtual column 7: >
1438 :highlight col8 ctermbg=grey guibg=grey
1439 :match col8 /\%<8v.\%>7v/
1440< Note the use of two items to also match a character that
1441 occupies more than one virtual column, such as a TAB.
1442
1443:mat[ch]
1444:mat[ch] none
1445 Clear a previously defined match pattern.
1446
Bram Moolenaarfd2ac762006-03-01 22:09:21 +00001447
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +00001448:2mat[ch] {group} /{pattern}/ *:2match*
Bram Moolenaarfd2ac762006-03-01 22:09:21 +00001449:2mat[ch]
1450:2mat[ch] none
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +00001451:3mat[ch] {group} /{pattern}/ *:3match*
Bram Moolenaarfd2ac762006-03-01 22:09:21 +00001452:3mat[ch]
1453:3mat[ch] none
1454 Just like |:match| above, but set a separate match. Thus
1455 there can be three matches active at the same time. The match
1456 with the lowest number has priority if several match at the
1457 same position.
1458 The ":3match" command is used by the |matchparen| plugin. You
1459 are suggested to use ":match" for manual matching and
1460 ":2match" for another plugin.
1461
Bram Moolenaar3ec32172021-05-16 12:39:47 +02001462==============================================================================
Bram Moolenaar1588bc82022-03-08 21:35:07 +0000146311. Fuzzy matching *fuzzy-matching*
Bram Moolenaar3ec32172021-05-16 12:39:47 +02001464
1465Fuzzy matching refers to matching strings using a non-exact search string.
1466Fuzzy matching will match a string, if all the characters in the search string
1467are present anywhere in the string in the same order. Case is ignored. In a
1468matched string, other characters can be present between two consecutive
1469characters in the search string. If the search string has multiple words, then
1470each word is matched separately. So the words in the search string can be
1471present in any order in a string.
1472
1473Fuzzy matching assigns a score for each matched string based on the following
1474criteria:
1475 - The number of sequentially matching characters.
1476 - The number of characters (distance) between two consecutive matching
1477 characters.
1478 - Matches at the beginning of a word
Bram Moolenaar53f7fcc2021-07-28 20:10:16 +02001479 - Matches at a camel case character (e.g. Case in CamelCase)
1480 - Matches after a path separator or a hyphen.
Bram Moolenaar3ec32172021-05-16 12:39:47 +02001481 - The number of unmatched characters in a string.
1482The matching string with the highest score is returned first.
1483
1484For example, when you search for the "get pat" string using fuzzy matching, it
1485will match the strings "GetPattern", "PatternGet", "getPattern", "patGetter",
1486"getSomePattern", "MatchpatternGet" etc.
1487
1488The functions |matchfuzzy()| and |matchfuzzypos()| can be used to fuzzy search
1489a string in a List of strings. The matchfuzzy() function returns a List of
1490matching strings. The matchfuzzypos() functions returns the List of matches,
1491the matching positions and the fuzzy match scores.
1492
1493The "f" flag of `:vimgrep` enables fuzzy matching.
1494
1495
Bram Moolenaar91f84f62018-07-29 15:07:52 +02001496 vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl: