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Bram Moolenaar2b644402007-05-10 17:56:19 +00001*usr_25.txt* For Vim version 7.1b. Last change: 2006 Jun 21
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002
3 VIM USER MANUAL - by Bram Moolenaar
4
5 Editing formatted text
6
7
8Text hardly ever comes in one sentence per line. This chapter is about
9breaking sentences to make them fit on a page and other formatting.
10Vim also has useful features for editing single-line paragraphs and tables.
11
12|25.1| Breaking lines
13|25.2| Aligning text
14|25.3| Indents and tabs
15|25.4| Dealing with long lines
16|25.5| Editing tables
17
18 Next chapter: |usr_26.txt| Repeating
19 Previous chapter: |usr_24.txt| Inserting quickly
20Table of contents: |usr_toc.txt|
21
22==============================================================================
23*25.1* Breaking lines
24
25Vim has a number of functions that make dealing with text easier. By default,
26the editor does not perform automatic line breaks. In other words, you have
27to press <Enter> yourself. This is useful when you are writing programs where
28you want to decide where the line ends. It is not so good when you are
29creating documentation and want the text to be at most 70 character wide.
30 If you set the 'textwidth' option, Vim automatically inserts line breaks.
31Suppose, for example, that you want a very narrow column of only 30
32characters. You need to execute the following command: >
33
34 :set textwidth=30
35
36Now you start typing (ruler added):
37
38 1 2 3
39 12345678901234567890123456789012345
40 I taught programming for a whi ~
41
42If you type "l" next, this makes the line longer than the 30-character limit.
43When Vim sees this, it inserts a line break and you get the following:
44
45 1 2 3
46 12345678901234567890123456789012345
47 I taught programming for a ~
48 whil ~
49
50Continuing on, you can type in the rest of the paragraph:
51
52 1 2 3
53 12345678901234567890123456789012345
54 I taught programming for a ~
55 while. One time, I was stopped ~
56 by the Fort Worth police, ~
57 because my homework was too ~
58 hard. True story. ~
59
60You do not have to type newlines; Vim puts them in automatically.
61
62 Note:
63 The 'wrap' option makes Vim display lines with a line break, but this
64 doesn't insert a line break in the file.
65
66
67REFORMATTING
68
69The Vim editor is not a word processor. In a word processor, if you delete
70something at the beginning of the paragraph, the line breaks are reworked. In
71Vim they are not; so if you delete the word "programming" from the first line,
72all you get is a short line:
73
74 1 2 3
75 12345678901234567890123456789012345
76 I taught for a ~
77 while. One time, I was stopped ~
78 by the Fort Worth police, ~
79 because my homework was too ~
80 hard. True story. ~
81
82This does not look good. To get the paragraph into shape you use the "gq"
83operator.
84 Let's first use this with a Visual selection. Starting from the first
85line, type: >
86
87 v4jgq
88
89"v" to start Visual mode, "4j' to move to the end of the paragraph and then
90the "gq" operator. The result is:
91
92 1 2 3
93 12345678901234567890123456789012345
94 I taught for a while. One ~
95 time, I was stopped by the ~
96 Fort Worth police, because my ~
97 homework was too hard. True ~
98 story. ~
99
100Note: there is a way to do automatic formatting for specific types of text
101layouts, see |auto-format|.
102
103Since "gq" is an operator, you can use one of the three ways to select the
104text it works on: With Visual mode, with a movement and with a text object.
105 The example above could also be done with "gq4j". That's less typing, but
106you have to know the line count. A more useful motion command is "}". This
107moves to the end of a paragraph. Thus "gq}" formats from the cursor to the
108end of the current paragraph.
109 A very useful text object to use with "gq" is the paragraph. Try this: >
110
111 gqap
112
113"ap" stands for "a-paragraph". This formats the text of one paragraph
114(separated by empty lines). Also the part before the cursor.
115 If you have your paragraphs separated by empty lines, you can format the
116whole file by typing this: >
117
118 gggqG
119
120"gg" to move to the first line, "gqG" to format until the last line.
121 Warning: If your paragraphs are not properly separated, they will be joined
122together. A common mistake is to have a line with a space or Tab. That's a
123blank line, but not an empty line.
124
Bram Moolenaar9964e462007-05-05 17:54:07 +0000125Vim is able to format more than just plain text. See |fo-table| for how to
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000126change this. See the 'joinspaces' option to change the number of spaces used
127after a full stop.
128 It is possible to use an external program for formatting. This is useful
129if your text can't be properly formatted with Vim's builtin command. See the
130'formatprg' option.
131
132==============================================================================
133*25.2* Aligning text
134
135To center a range of lines, use the following command: >
136
137 :{range}center [width]
138
139{range} is the usual command-line range. [width] is an optional line width to
140use for centering. If [width] is not specified, it defaults to the value of
141'textwidth'. (If 'textwidth' is 0, the default is 80.)
142 For example: >
143
144 :1,5center 40
145
146results in the following:
147
148 I taught for a while. One ~
149 time, I was stopped by the ~
150 Fort Worth police, because my ~
151 homework was too hard. True ~
152 story. ~
153
154
155RIGHT ALIGNMENT
156
157Similarly, the ":right" command right-justifies the text: >
158
159 :1,5right 37
160
161gives this result:
162
163 I taught for a while. One ~
164 time, I was stopped by the ~
165 Fort Worth police, because my ~
166 homework was too hard. True ~
167 story. ~
168
169LEFT ALIGNMENT
170
171Finally there is this command: >
172
173 :{range}left [margin]
174
175Unlike ":center" and ":right", however, the argument to ":left" is not the
176length of the line. Instead it is the left margin. If it is omitted, the
177text will be put against the left side of the screen (using a zero margin
178would do the same). If it is 5, the text will be indented 5 spaces. For
179example, use these commands: >
180
181 :1left 5
182 :2,5left
183
184This results in the following:
185
186 I taught for a while. One ~
187 time, I was stopped by the ~
188 Fort Worth police, because my ~
189 homework was too hard. True ~
190 story. ~
191
192
193JUSTIFYING TEXT
194
195Vim has no built-in way of justifying text. However, there is a neat macro
196package that does the job. To use this package, execute the following
197command: >
198
199 :runtime macros/justify.vim
200
Bram Moolenaar402d2fe2005-04-15 21:00:38 +0000201This Vim script file defines a new visual command "_j". To justify a block of
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000202text, highlight the text in Visual mode and then execute "_j".
203 Look in the file for more explanations. To go there, do "gf" on this name:
204$VIMRUNTIME/macros/justify.vim.
205
206An alternative is to filter the text through an external program. Example: >
207
208 :%!fmt
209
210==============================================================================
211*25.3* Indents and tabs
212
213Indents can be used to make text stand out from the rest. The example texts
214in this manual, for example, are indented by eight spaces or a tab. You would
215normally enter this by typing a tab at the start of each line. Take this
216text:
217 the first line ~
218 the second line ~
219
220This is entered by typing a tab, some text, <Enter>, tab and more text.
221 The 'autoindent' option inserts indents automatically: >
222
223 :set autoindent
224
225When a new line is started it gets the same indent as the previous line. In
226the above example, the tab after the <Enter> is not needed anymore.
227
228
229INCREASING INDENT
230
231To increase the amount of indent in a line, use the ">" operator. Often this
232is used as ">>", which adds indent to the current line.
233 The amount of indent added is specified with the 'shiftwidth' option. The
234default value is 8. To make ">>" insert four spaces worth of indent, for
235example, type this: >
236
237 :set shiftwidth=4
238
239When used on the second line of the example text, this is what you get:
240
241 the first line ~
242 the second line ~
243
244"4>>" will increase the indent of four lines.
245
246
247TABSTOP
248
249If you want to make indents a multiple of 4, you set 'shiftwidth' to 4. But
250when pressing a Tab you still get 8 spaces worth of indent. To change this,
251set the 'softtabstop' option: >
252
253 :set softtabstop=4
254
255This will make the <Tab> key insert 4 spaces worth of indent. If there are
256already four spaces, a <Tab> character is used (saving seven characters in the
257file). (If you always want spaces and no tab characters, set the 'expandtab'
258option.)
259
260 Note:
261 You could set the 'tabstop' option to 4. However, if you edit the
262 file another time, with 'tabstop' set to the default value of 8, it
263 will look wrong. In other programs and when printing the indent will
264 also be wrong. Therefore it is recommended to keep 'tabstop' at eight
265 all the time. That's the standard value everywhere.
266
267
268CHANGING TABS
269
270You edit a file which was written with a tabstop of 3. In Vim it looks ugly,
271because it uses the normal tabstop value of 8. You can fix this by setting
272'tabstop' to 3. But you have to do this every time you edit this file.
273 Vim can change the use of tabstops in your file. First, set 'tabstop' to
274make the indents look good, then use the ":retab" command: >
275
276 :set tabstop=3
277 :retab 8
278
279The ":retab" command will change 'tabstop' to 8, while changing the text such
280that it looks the same. It changes spans of white space into tabs and spaces
281for this. You can now write the file. Next time you edit it the indents will
282be right without setting an option.
283 Warning: When using ":retab" on a program, it may change white space inside
284a string constant. Therefore it's a good habit to use "\t" instead of a
285real tab.
286
287==============================================================================
288*25.4* Dealing with long lines
289
290Sometimes you will be editing a file that is wider than the number of columns
291in the window. When that occurs, Vim wraps the lines so that everything fits
292on the screen.
293 If you switch the 'wrap' option off, each line in the file shows up as one
294line on the screen. Then the ends of the long lines disappear off the screen
295to the right.
296 When you move the cursor to a character that can't be seen, Vim will scroll
297the text to show it. This is like moving a viewport over the text in the
298horizontal direction.
299 By default, Vim does not display a horizontal scrollbar in the GUI. If you
300want to enable one, use the following command: >
301
302 :set guioptions+=b
303
304One horizontal scrollbar will appear at the bottom of the Vim window.
305
306If you don't have a scrollbar or don't want to use it, use these commands to
307scroll the text. The cursor will stay in the same place, but it's move back
308into the visible text if necessary.
309
310 zh scroll right
311 4zh scroll four characters right
312 zH scroll half a window width right
313 ze scroll right to put the cursor at the end
314 zl scroll left
315 4zl scroll four characters left
316 zL scroll half a window width left
317 zs scroll left to put the cursor at the start
318
319Let's attempt to show this with one line of text. The cursor is on the "w" of
320"which". The "current window" above the line indicates the text that is
321currently visible. The "window"s below the text indicate the text that is
322visible after the command left of it.
323
324 |<-- current window -->|
325 some long text, part of which is visible in the window ~
326 ze |<-- window -->|
327 zH |<-- window -->|
328 4zh |<-- window -->|
329 zh |<-- window -->|
330 zl |<-- window -->|
331 4zl |<-- window -->|
332 zL |<-- window -->|
333 zs |<-- window -->|
334
335
336MOVING WITH WRAP OFF
337
338When 'wrap' is off and the text has scrolled horizontally, you can use the
339following commands to move the cursor to a character you can see. Thus text
340left and right of the window is ignored. These never cause the text to
341scroll:
342
343 g0 to first visible character in this line
344 g^ to first non-blank visible character in this line
345 gm to middle of this line
346 g$ to last visible character in this line
347
348 |<-- window -->|
349 some long text, part of which is visible ~
350 g0 g^ gm g$
351
352
353BREAKING AT WORDS *edit-no-break*
354
355When preparing text for use by another program, you might have to make
356paragraphs without a line break. A disadvantage of using 'nowrap' is that you
357can't see the whole sentence you are working on. When 'wrap' is on, words are
358broken halfway, which makes them hard to read.
359 A good solution for editing this kind of paragraph is setting the
360'linebreak' option. Vim then breaks lines at an appropriate place when
361displaying the line. The text in the file remains unchanged.
362 Without 'linebreak' text might look like this:
363
364 +---------------------------------+
365 |letter generation program for a b|
366 |ank. They wanted to send out a s|
367 |pecial, personalized letter to th|
368 |eir richest 1000 customers. Unfo|
369 |rtunately for the programmer, he |
370 +---------------------------------+
371After: >
372
373 :set linebreak
374
375it looks like this:
376
377 +---------------------------------+
378 |letter generation program for a |
379 |bank. They wanted to send out a |
380 |special, personalized letter to |
381 |their richest 1000 customers. |
382 |Unfortunately for the programmer,|
383 +---------------------------------+
384
385Related options:
386'breakat' specifies the characters where a break can be inserted.
387'showbreak' specifies a string to show at the start of broken line.
388Set 'textwidth' to zero to avoid a paragraph to be split.
389
390
391MOVING BY VISIBLE LINES
392
393The "j" and "k" commands move to the next and previous lines. When used on
394a long line, this means moving a lot of screen lines at once.
395 To move only one screen line, use the "gj" and "gk" commands. When a line
396doesn't wrap they do the same as "j" and "k". When the line does wrap, they
397move to a character displayed one line below or above.
398 You might like to use these mappings, which bind these movement commands to
399the cursor keys: >
400
401 :map <Up> gk
402 :map <Down> gj
403
404
405TURNING A PARAGRAPH INTO ONE LINE
406
407If you want to import text into a program like MS-Word, each paragraph should
408be a single line. If your paragraphs are currently separated with empty
409lines, this is how you turn each paragraph into a single line: >
410
411 :g/./,/^$/join
412
413That looks complicated. Let's break it up in pieces:
414
415 :g/./ A ":global" command that finds all lines that contain
416 at least one character.
417 ,/^$/ A range, starting from the current line (the non-empty
418 line) until an empty line.
419 join The ":join" command joins the range of lines together
420 into one line.
421
422Starting with this text, containing eight lines broken at column 30:
423
424 +----------------------------------+
425 |A letter generation program |
426 |for a bank. They wanted to |
427 |send out a special, |
428 |personalized letter. |
429 | |
430 |To their richest 1000 |
431 |customers. Unfortunately for |
432 |the programmer, |
433 +----------------------------------+
434
435You end up with two lines:
436
437 +----------------------------------+
438 |A letter generation program for a |
439 |bank. They wanted to send out a s|
440 |pecial, personalized letter. |
441 |To their richest 1000 customers. |
442 |Unfortunately for the programmer, |
443 +----------------------------------+
444
445Note that this doesn't work when the separating line is blank but not empty;
446when it contains spaces and/or tabs. This command does work with blank lines:
447>
448 :g/\S/,/^\s*$/join
449
450This still requires a blank or empty line at the end of the file for the last
451paragraph to be joined.
452
453==============================================================================
454*25.5* Editing tables
455
456Suppose you are editing a table with four columns:
457
458 nice table test 1 test 2 test 3 ~
459 input A 0.534 ~
460 input B 0.913 ~
461
462You need to enter numbers in the third column. You could move to the second
463line, use "A", enter a lot of spaces and type the text.
464 For this kind of editing there is a special option: >
465
466 set virtualedit=all
467
468Now you can move the cursor to positions where there isn't any text. This is
469called "virtual space". Editing a table is a lot easier this way.
470 Move the cursor by searching for the header of the last column: >
471
472 /test 3
473
474Now press "j" and you are right where you can enter the value for "input A".
475Typing "0.693" results in:
476
477 nice table test 1 test 2 test 3 ~
478 input A 0.534 0.693 ~
479 input B 0.913 ~
480
481Vim has automatically filled the gap in front of the new text for you. Now,
482to enter the next field in this column use "Bj". "B" moves back to the start
483of a white space separated word. Then "j" moves to the place where the next
484field can be entered.
485
486 Note:
487 You can move the cursor anywhere in the display, also beyond the end
488 of a line. But Vim will not insert spaces there, until you insert a
489 character in that position.
490
491
492COPYING A COLUMN
493
494You want to add a column, which should be a copy of the third column and
495placed before the "test 1" column. Do this in seven steps:
4961. Move the cursor to the left upper corner of this column, e.g., with
497 "/test 3".
4982. Press CTRL-V to start blockwise Visual mode.
4993. Move the cursor down two lines with "2j". You are now in "virtual space":
500 the "input B" line of the "test 3" column.
5014. Move the cursor right, to include the whole column in the selection, plus
502 the space that you want between the columns. "9l" should do it.
5035. Yank the selected rectangle with "y".
5046. Move the cursor to "test 1", where the new column must be placed.
5057. Press "P".
506
507The result should be:
508
509 nice table test 3 test 1 test 2 test 3 ~
510 input A 0.693 0.534 0.693 ~
511 input B 0.913 ~
512
513Notice that the whole "test 1" column was shifted right, also the line where
514the "test 3" column didn't have text.
515
516Go back to non-virtual cursor movements with: >
517
518 :set virtualedit=
519
520
521VIRTUAL REPLACE MODE
522
523The disadvantage of using 'virtualedit' is that it "feels" different. You
524can't recognize tabs or spaces beyond the end of line when moving the cursor
525around. Another method can be used: Virtual Replace mode.
526 Suppose you have a line in a table that contains both tabs and other
527characters. Use "rx" on the first tab:
528
529 inp 0.693 0.534 0.693 ~
530
531 |
532 rx |
533 V
534
535 inpx0.693 0.534 0.693 ~
536
537The layout is messed up. To avoid that, use the "gr" command:
538
539 inp 0.693 0.534 0.693 ~
540
541 |
542 grx |
543 V
544
545 inpx 0.693 0.534 0.693 ~
546
547What happens is that the "gr" command makes sure the new character takes the
548right amount of screen space. Extra spaces or tabs are inserted to fill the
549gap. Thus what actually happens is that a tab is replaced by "x" and then
550blanks added to make the text after it keep it's place. In this case a
551tab is inserted.
552 When you need to replace more than one character, you use the "R" command
553to go to Replace mode (see |04.9|). This messes up the layout and replaces
554the wrong characters:
555
556 inp 0 0.534 0.693 ~
557
558 |
559 R0.786 |
560 V
561
562 inp 0.78634 0.693 ~
563
564The "gR" command uses Virtual Replace mode. This preserves the layout:
565
566 inp 0 0.534 0.693 ~
567
568 |
569 gR0.786 |
570 V
571
572 inp 0.786 0.534 0.693 ~
573
574==============================================================================
575
576Next chapter: |usr_26.txt| Repeating
577
578Copyright: see |manual-copyright| vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl: