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Bram Moolenaar13d5aee2016-01-21 23:36:05 +01001*eval.txt* For Vim version 7.4. Last change: 2016 Jan 21
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002
3
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004 VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005
6
7Expression evaluation *expression* *expr* *E15* *eval*
8
9Using expressions is introduced in chapter 41 of the user manual |usr_41.txt|.
10
11Note: Expression evaluation can be disabled at compile time. If this has been
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +000012done, the features in this document are not available. See |+eval| and
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +000013|no-eval-feature|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000014
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000151. Variables |variables|
16 1.1 Variable types
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +000017 1.2 Function references |Funcref|
Bram Moolenaar7c626922005-02-07 22:01:03 +000018 1.3 Lists |Lists|
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +000019 1.4 Dictionaries |Dictionaries|
20 1.5 More about variables |more-variables|
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000212. Expression syntax |expression-syntax|
223. Internal variable |internal-variables|
234. Builtin Functions |functions|
245. Defining functions |user-functions|
256. Curly braces names |curly-braces-names|
267. Commands |expression-commands|
278. Exception handling |exception-handling|
289. Examples |eval-examples|
2910. No +eval feature |no-eval-feature|
3011. The sandbox |eval-sandbox|
Bram Moolenaarb71eaae2006-01-20 23:10:18 +00003112. Textlock |textlock|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000032
33{Vi does not have any of these commands}
34
35==============================================================================
361. Variables *variables*
37
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000381.1 Variable types ~
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +000039 *E712*
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +000040There are six types of variables:
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000041
Bram Moolenaar5302d9e2011-09-14 17:55:08 +020042Number A 32 or 64 bit signed number. |expr-number| *Number*
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +000043 Examples: -123 0x10 0177
44
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +000045Float A floating point number. |floating-point-format| *Float*
46 {only when compiled with the |+float| feature}
47 Examples: 123.456 1.15e-6 -1.1e3
48
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +000049String A NUL terminated string of 8-bit unsigned characters (bytes).
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +000050 |expr-string| Examples: "ab\txx\"--" 'x-z''a,c'
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +000051
52Funcref A reference to a function |Funcref|.
53 Example: function("strlen")
54
55List An ordered sequence of items |List|.
56 Example: [1, 2, ['a', 'b']]
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000057
Bram Moolenaar39a58ca2005-06-27 22:42:44 +000058Dictionary An associative, unordered array: Each entry has a key and a
59 value. |Dictionary|
60 Example: {'blue': "#0000ff", 'red': "#ff0000"}
61
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +000062The Number and String types are converted automatically, depending on how they
63are used.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000064
65Conversion from a Number to a String is by making the ASCII representation of
Bram Moolenaar24ea3ba2010-09-19 19:01:21 +020066the Number. Examples:
67 Number 123 --> String "123" ~
68 Number 0 --> String "0" ~
69 Number -1 --> String "-1" ~
Bram Moolenaar00a927d2010-05-14 23:24:24 +020070 *octal*
Bram Moolenaarfa735342016-01-03 22:14:44 +010071Conversion from a String to a Number is done by converting the first digits to
72a number. Hexadecimal "0xf9", Octal "017", and Binary "0b10" numbers are
73recognized. If the String doesn't start with digits, the result is zero.
74Examples:
Bram Moolenaar24ea3ba2010-09-19 19:01:21 +020075 String "456" --> Number 456 ~
76 String "6bar" --> Number 6 ~
77 String "foo" --> Number 0 ~
78 String "0xf1" --> Number 241 ~
79 String "0100" --> Number 64 ~
Bram Moolenaarfa735342016-01-03 22:14:44 +010080 String "0b101" --> Number 5 ~
Bram Moolenaar24ea3ba2010-09-19 19:01:21 +020081 String "-8" --> Number -8 ~
82 String "+8" --> Number 0 ~
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000083
84To force conversion from String to Number, add zero to it: >
85 :echo "0100" + 0
Bram Moolenaar97b2ad32006-03-18 21:40:56 +000086< 64 ~
87
88To avoid a leading zero to cause octal conversion, or for using a different
89base, use |str2nr()|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000090
91For boolean operators Numbers are used. Zero is FALSE, non-zero is TRUE.
92
93Note that in the command >
94 :if "foo"
95"foo" is converted to 0, which means FALSE. To test for a non-empty string,
Bram Moolenaar3a0d8092012-10-21 03:02:54 +020096use empty(): >
97 :if !empty("foo")
Bram Moolenaar748bf032005-02-02 23:04:36 +000098< *E745* *E728* *E703* *E729* *E730* *E731*
99List, Dictionary and Funcref types are not automatically converted.
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000100
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000101 *E805* *E806* *E808*
102When mixing Number and Float the Number is converted to Float. Otherwise
103there is no automatic conversion of Float. You can use str2float() for String
104to Float, printf() for Float to String and float2nr() for Float to Number.
105
Bram Moolenaar13d5aee2016-01-21 23:36:05 +0100106 *E891* *E892* *E893* *E894*
107When expecting a Float a Number can also be used, but nothing else.
108
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000109 *E706* *sticky-type-checking*
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000110You will get an error if you try to change the type of a variable. You need
111to |:unlet| it first to avoid this error. String and Number are considered
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000112equivalent though, as well are Float and Number. Consider this sequence of
113commands: >
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000114 :let l = "string"
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +0000115 :let l = 44 " changes type from String to Number
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000116 :let l = [1, 2, 3] " error! l is still a Number
117 :let l = 4.4 " changes type from Number to Float
118 :let l = "string" " error!
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000119
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000120
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +00001211.2 Function references ~
Bram Moolenaar748bf032005-02-02 23:04:36 +0000122 *Funcref* *E695* *E718*
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000123A Funcref variable is obtained with the |function()| function. It can be used
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000124in an expression in the place of a function name, before the parenthesis
125around the arguments, to invoke the function it refers to. Example: >
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000126
127 :let Fn = function("MyFunc")
128 :echo Fn()
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000129< *E704* *E705* *E707*
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +0000130A Funcref variable must start with a capital, "s:", "w:", "t:" or "b:". You
Bram Moolenaar7cba6c02013-09-05 22:13:31 +0200131can use "g:" but the following name must still start with a capital. You
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +0000132cannot have both a Funcref variable and a function with the same name.
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000133
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000134A special case is defining a function and directly assigning its Funcref to a
135Dictionary entry. Example: >
136 :function dict.init() dict
137 : let self.val = 0
138 :endfunction
139
140The key of the Dictionary can start with a lower case letter. The actual
141function name is not used here. Also see |numbered-function|.
142
143A Funcref can also be used with the |:call| command: >
144 :call Fn()
145 :call dict.init()
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000146
147The name of the referenced function can be obtained with |string()|. >
Bram Moolenaar383f9bc2005-01-19 22:18:32 +0000148 :let func = string(Fn)
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000149
150You can use |call()| to invoke a Funcref and use a list variable for the
151arguments: >
Bram Moolenaar383f9bc2005-01-19 22:18:32 +0000152 :let r = call(Fn, mylist)
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000153
154
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +00001551.3 Lists ~
Bram Moolenaar7e38ea22014-04-05 22:55:53 +0200156 *list* *List* *Lists* *E686*
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000157A List is an ordered sequence of items. An item can be of any type. Items
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000158can be accessed by their index number. Items can be added and removed at any
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000159position in the sequence.
160
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000161
162List creation ~
163 *E696* *E697*
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000164A List is created with a comma separated list of items in square brackets.
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000165Examples: >
166 :let mylist = [1, two, 3, "four"]
167 :let emptylist = []
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000168
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000169An item can be any expression. Using a List for an item creates a
Bram Moolenaarf9393ef2006-04-24 19:47:27 +0000170List of Lists: >
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000171 :let nestlist = [[11, 12], [21, 22], [31, 32]]
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000172
173An extra comma after the last item is ignored.
174
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000175
176List index ~
177 *list-index* *E684*
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000178An item in the List can be accessed by putting the index in square brackets
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000179after the List. Indexes are zero-based, thus the first item has index zero. >
180 :let item = mylist[0] " get the first item: 1
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000181 :let item = mylist[2] " get the third item: 3
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000182
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +0000183When the resulting item is a list this can be repeated: >
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000184 :let item = nestlist[0][1] " get the first list, second item: 12
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000185<
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000186A negative index is counted from the end. Index -1 refers to the last item in
187the List, -2 to the last but one item, etc. >
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000188 :let last = mylist[-1] " get the last item: "four"
189
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000190To avoid an error for an invalid index use the |get()| function. When an item
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +0000191is not available it returns zero or the default value you specify: >
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000192 :echo get(mylist, idx)
193 :echo get(mylist, idx, "NONE")
194
195
196List concatenation ~
197
198Two lists can be concatenated with the "+" operator: >
199 :let longlist = mylist + [5, 6]
Bram Moolenaar383f9bc2005-01-19 22:18:32 +0000200 :let mylist += [7, 8]
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000201
202To prepend or append an item turn the item into a list by putting [] around
203it. To change a list in-place see |list-modification| below.
204
205
206Sublist ~
207
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000208A part of the List can be obtained by specifying the first and last index,
209separated by a colon in square brackets: >
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000210 :let shortlist = mylist[2:-1] " get List [3, "four"]
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000211
212Omitting the first index is similar to zero. Omitting the last index is
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +0000213similar to -1. >
Bram Moolenaar540d6e32005-01-09 21:20:18 +0000214 :let endlist = mylist[2:] " from item 2 to the end: [3, "four"]
215 :let shortlist = mylist[2:2] " List with one item: [3]
216 :let otherlist = mylist[:] " make a copy of the List
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000217
Bram Moolenaarf9393ef2006-04-24 19:47:27 +0000218If the first index is beyond the last item of the List or the second item is
219before the first item, the result is an empty list. There is no error
220message.
221
222If the second index is equal to or greater than the length of the list the
223length minus one is used: >
Bram Moolenaar9e54a0e2006-04-14 20:42:25 +0000224 :let mylist = [0, 1, 2, 3]
225 :echo mylist[2:8] " result: [2, 3]
226
Bram Moolenaara7fc0102005-05-18 22:17:12 +0000227NOTE: mylist[s:e] means using the variable "s:e" as index. Watch out for
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000228using a single letter variable before the ":". Insert a space when needed:
Bram Moolenaara7fc0102005-05-18 22:17:12 +0000229mylist[s : e].
230
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000231
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000232List identity ~
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +0000233 *list-identity*
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000234When variable "aa" is a list and you assign it to another variable "bb", both
235variables refer to the same list. Thus changing the list "aa" will also
236change "bb": >
237 :let aa = [1, 2, 3]
238 :let bb = aa
239 :call add(aa, 4)
240 :echo bb
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000241< [1, 2, 3, 4]
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000242
243Making a copy of a list is done with the |copy()| function. Using [:] also
244works, as explained above. This creates a shallow copy of the list: Changing
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +0000245a list item in the list will also change the item in the copied list: >
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000246 :let aa = [[1, 'a'], 2, 3]
247 :let bb = copy(aa)
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000248 :call add(aa, 4)
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000249 :let aa[0][1] = 'aaa'
250 :echo aa
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000251< [[1, aaa], 2, 3, 4] >
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000252 :echo bb
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000253< [[1, aaa], 2, 3]
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000254
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +0000255To make a completely independent list use |deepcopy()|. This also makes a
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000256copy of the values in the list, recursively. Up to a hundred levels deep.
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000257
258The operator "is" can be used to check if two variables refer to the same
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000259List. "isnot" does the opposite. In contrast "==" compares if two lists have
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +0000260the same value. >
261 :let alist = [1, 2, 3]
262 :let blist = [1, 2, 3]
263 :echo alist is blist
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000264< 0 >
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +0000265 :echo alist == blist
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000266< 1
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000267
Bram Moolenaar9ba0eb82005-06-13 22:28:56 +0000268Note about comparing lists: Two lists are considered equal if they have the
269same length and all items compare equal, as with using "==". There is one
Bram Moolenaar7d1f5db2005-07-03 21:39:27 +0000270exception: When comparing a number with a string they are considered
271different. There is no automatic type conversion, as with using "==" on
272variables. Example: >
273 echo 4 == "4"
Bram Moolenaar9ba0eb82005-06-13 22:28:56 +0000274< 1 >
Bram Moolenaar7d1f5db2005-07-03 21:39:27 +0000275 echo [4] == ["4"]
Bram Moolenaar9ba0eb82005-06-13 22:28:56 +0000276< 0
277
Bram Moolenaar7d1f5db2005-07-03 21:39:27 +0000278Thus comparing Lists is more strict than comparing numbers and strings. You
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000279can compare simple values this way too by putting them in a list: >
Bram Moolenaar7d1f5db2005-07-03 21:39:27 +0000280
281 :let a = 5
282 :let b = "5"
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000283 :echo a == b
Bram Moolenaar7d1f5db2005-07-03 21:39:27 +0000284< 1 >
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000285 :echo [a] == [b]
Bram Moolenaar7d1f5db2005-07-03 21:39:27 +0000286< 0
Bram Moolenaar9ba0eb82005-06-13 22:28:56 +0000287
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000288
289List unpack ~
290
291To unpack the items in a list to individual variables, put the variables in
292square brackets, like list items: >
293 :let [var1, var2] = mylist
294
295When the number of variables does not match the number of items in the list
296this produces an error. To handle any extra items from the list append ";"
297and a variable name: >
298 :let [var1, var2; rest] = mylist
299
300This works like: >
301 :let var1 = mylist[0]
302 :let var2 = mylist[1]
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +0000303 :let rest = mylist[2:]
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000304
305Except that there is no error if there are only two items. "rest" will be an
306empty list then.
307
308
309List modification ~
310 *list-modification*
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +0000311To change a specific item of a list use |:let| this way: >
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000312 :let list[4] = "four"
313 :let listlist[0][3] = item
314
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +0000315To change part of a list you can specify the first and last item to be
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000316modified. The value must at least have the number of items in the range: >
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +0000317 :let list[3:5] = [3, 4, 5]
318
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000319Adding and removing items from a list is done with functions. Here are a few
320examples: >
321 :call insert(list, 'a') " prepend item 'a'
322 :call insert(list, 'a', 3) " insert item 'a' before list[3]
323 :call add(list, "new") " append String item
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000324 :call add(list, [1, 2]) " append a List as one new item
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000325 :call extend(list, [1, 2]) " extend the list with two more items
326 :let i = remove(list, 3) " remove item 3
Bram Moolenaar9cd15162005-01-16 22:02:49 +0000327 :unlet list[3] " idem
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000328 :let l = remove(list, 3, -1) " remove items 3 to last item
Bram Moolenaar9cd15162005-01-16 22:02:49 +0000329 :unlet list[3 : ] " idem
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000330 :call filter(list, 'v:val !~ "x"') " remove items with an 'x'
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000331
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000332Changing the order of items in a list: >
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +0000333 :call sort(list) " sort a list alphabetically
334 :call reverse(list) " reverse the order of items
Bram Moolenaar327aa022014-03-25 18:24:23 +0100335 :call uniq(sort(list)) " sort and remove duplicates
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +0000336
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000337
338For loop ~
339
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +0000340The |:for| loop executes commands for each item in a list. A variable is set
341to each item in the list in sequence. Example: >
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000342 :for item in mylist
343 : call Doit(item)
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000344 :endfor
345
346This works like: >
347 :let index = 0
348 :while index < len(mylist)
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000349 : let item = mylist[index]
350 : :call Doit(item)
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000351 : let index = index + 1
352 :endwhile
353
354Note that all items in the list should be of the same type, otherwise this
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000355results in error |E706|. To avoid this |:unlet| the variable at the end of
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +0000356the loop.
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000357
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +0000358If all you want to do is modify each item in the list then the |map()|
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000359function will be a simpler method than a for loop.
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +0000360
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000361Just like the |:let| command, |:for| also accepts a list of variables. This
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000362requires the argument to be a list of lists. >
363 :for [lnum, col] in [[1, 3], [2, 8], [3, 0]]
364 : call Doit(lnum, col)
365 :endfor
366
367This works like a |:let| command is done for each list item. Again, the types
368must remain the same to avoid an error.
369
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000370It is also possible to put remaining items in a List variable: >
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000371 :for [i, j; rest] in listlist
372 : call Doit(i, j)
373 : if !empty(rest)
374 : echo "remainder: " . string(rest)
375 : endif
376 :endfor
377
378
379List functions ~
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000380 *E714*
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000381Functions that are useful with a List: >
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +0000382 :let r = call(funcname, list) " call a function with an argument list
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000383 :if empty(list) " check if list is empty
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +0000384 :let l = len(list) " number of items in list
385 :let big = max(list) " maximum value in list
386 :let small = min(list) " minimum value in list
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +0000387 :let xs = count(list, 'x') " count nr of times 'x' appears in list
388 :let i = index(list, 'x') " index of first 'x' in list
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000389 :let lines = getline(1, 10) " get ten text lines from buffer
390 :call append('$', lines) " append text lines in buffer
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +0000391 :let list = split("a b c") " create list from items in a string
392 :let string = join(list, ', ') " create string from list items
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +0000393 :let s = string(list) " String representation of list
394 :call map(list, '">> " . v:val') " prepend ">> " to each item
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000395
Bram Moolenaar0cb032e2005-04-23 20:52:00 +0000396Don't forget that a combination of features can make things simple. For
397example, to add up all the numbers in a list: >
398 :exe 'let sum = ' . join(nrlist, '+')
399
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000400
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +00004011.4 Dictionaries ~
Bram Moolenaar7e38ea22014-04-05 22:55:53 +0200402 *dict* *Dictionaries* *Dictionary*
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +0000403A Dictionary is an associative array: Each entry has a key and a value. The
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000404entry can be located with the key. The entries are stored without a specific
405ordering.
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +0000406
407
408Dictionary creation ~
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000409 *E720* *E721* *E722* *E723*
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +0000410A Dictionary is created with a comma separated list of entries in curly
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000411braces. Each entry has a key and a value, separated by a colon. Each key can
412only appear once. Examples: >
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +0000413 :let mydict = {1: 'one', 2: 'two', 3: 'three'}
414 :let emptydict = {}
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000415< *E713* *E716* *E717*
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +0000416A key is always a String. You can use a Number, it will be converted to a
417String automatically. Thus the String '4' and the number 4 will find the same
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000418entry. Note that the String '04' and the Number 04 are different, since the
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000419Number will be converted to the String '4'.
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +0000420
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000421A value can be any expression. Using a Dictionary for a value creates a
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +0000422nested Dictionary: >
423 :let nestdict = {1: {11: 'a', 12: 'b'}, 2: {21: 'c'}}
424
425An extra comma after the last entry is ignored.
426
427
428Accessing entries ~
429
430The normal way to access an entry is by putting the key in square brackets: >
431 :let val = mydict["one"]
432 :let mydict["four"] = 4
433
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000434You can add new entries to an existing Dictionary this way, unlike Lists.
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +0000435
436For keys that consist entirely of letters, digits and underscore the following
437form can be used |expr-entry|: >
438 :let val = mydict.one
439 :let mydict.four = 4
440
441Since an entry can be any type, also a List and a Dictionary, the indexing and
442key lookup can be repeated: >
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000443 :echo dict.key[idx].key
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +0000444
445
446Dictionary to List conversion ~
447
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000448You may want to loop over the entries in a dictionary. For this you need to
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +0000449turn the Dictionary into a List and pass it to |:for|.
450
451Most often you want to loop over the keys, using the |keys()| function: >
452 :for key in keys(mydict)
453 : echo key . ': ' . mydict[key]
454 :endfor
455
456The List of keys is unsorted. You may want to sort them first: >
457 :for key in sort(keys(mydict))
458
459To loop over the values use the |values()| function: >
460 :for v in values(mydict)
461 : echo "value: " . v
462 :endfor
463
464If you want both the key and the value use the |items()| function. It returns
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000465a List in which each item is a List with two items, the key and the value: >
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +0000466 :for [key, value] in items(mydict)
467 : echo key . ': ' . value
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +0000468 :endfor
469
470
471Dictionary identity ~
Bram Moolenaar7c626922005-02-07 22:01:03 +0000472 *dict-identity*
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +0000473Just like Lists you need to use |copy()| and |deepcopy()| to make a copy of a
474Dictionary. Otherwise, assignment results in referring to the same
475Dictionary: >
476 :let onedict = {'a': 1, 'b': 2}
477 :let adict = onedict
478 :let adict['a'] = 11
479 :echo onedict['a']
480 11
481
Bram Moolenaarf3bd51a2005-06-14 22:11:18 +0000482Two Dictionaries compare equal if all the key-value pairs compare equal. For
483more info see |list-identity|.
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +0000484
485
486Dictionary modification ~
487 *dict-modification*
488To change an already existing entry of a Dictionary, or to add a new entry,
489use |:let| this way: >
490 :let dict[4] = "four"
491 :let dict['one'] = item
492
Bram Moolenaar9cd15162005-01-16 22:02:49 +0000493Removing an entry from a Dictionary is done with |remove()| or |:unlet|.
494Three ways to remove the entry with key "aaa" from dict: >
495 :let i = remove(dict, 'aaa')
496 :unlet dict.aaa
497 :unlet dict['aaa']
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +0000498
499Merging a Dictionary with another is done with |extend()|: >
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000500 :call extend(adict, bdict)
501This extends adict with all entries from bdict. Duplicate keys cause entries
502in adict to be overwritten. An optional third argument can change this.
Bram Moolenaar383f9bc2005-01-19 22:18:32 +0000503Note that the order of entries in a Dictionary is irrelevant, thus don't
504expect ":echo adict" to show the items from bdict after the older entries in
505adict.
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +0000506
507Weeding out entries from a Dictionary can be done with |filter()|: >
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +0000508 :call filter(dict, 'v:val =~ "x"')
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000509This removes all entries from "dict" with a value not matching 'x'.
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +0000510
511
512Dictionary function ~
Bram Moolenaar26402cb2013-02-20 21:26:00 +0100513 *Dictionary-function* *self* *E725* *E862*
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +0000514When a function is defined with the "dict" attribute it can be used in a
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000515special way with a dictionary. Example: >
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +0000516 :function Mylen() dict
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000517 : return len(self.data)
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +0000518 :endfunction
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000519 :let mydict = {'data': [0, 1, 2, 3], 'len': function("Mylen")}
520 :echo mydict.len()
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +0000521
522This is like a method in object oriented programming. The entry in the
523Dictionary is a |Funcref|. The local variable "self" refers to the dictionary
524the function was invoked from.
525
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000526It is also possible to add a function without the "dict" attribute as a
527Funcref to a Dictionary, but the "self" variable is not available then.
528
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +0000529 *numbered-function* *anonymous-function*
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +0000530To avoid the extra name for the function it can be defined and directly
531assigned to a Dictionary in this way: >
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000532 :let mydict = {'data': [0, 1, 2, 3]}
Bram Moolenaar5a5f4592015-04-13 12:43:06 +0200533 :function mydict.len()
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000534 : return len(self.data)
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +0000535 :endfunction
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000536 :echo mydict.len()
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +0000537
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000538The function will then get a number and the value of dict.len is a |Funcref|
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000539that references this function. The function can only be used through a
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000540|Funcref|. It will automatically be deleted when there is no |Funcref|
541remaining that refers to it.
542
543It is not necessary to use the "dict" attribute for a numbered function.
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +0000544
Bram Moolenaar1affd722010-08-04 17:49:30 +0200545If you get an error for a numbered function, you can find out what it is with
546a trick. Assuming the function is 42, the command is: >
547 :function {42}
548
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +0000549
550Functions for Dictionaries ~
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000551 *E715*
552Functions that can be used with a Dictionary: >
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +0000553 :if has_key(dict, 'foo') " TRUE if dict has entry with key "foo"
554 :if empty(dict) " TRUE if dict is empty
555 :let l = len(dict) " number of items in dict
556 :let big = max(dict) " maximum value in dict
557 :let small = min(dict) " minimum value in dict
558 :let xs = count(dict, 'x') " count nr of times 'x' appears in dict
559 :let s = string(dict) " String representation of dict
560 :call map(dict, '">> " . v:val') " prepend ">> " to each item
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +0000561
562
5631.5 More about variables ~
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000564 *more-variables*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000565If you need to know the type of a variable or expression, use the |type()|
566function.
567
568When the '!' flag is included in the 'viminfo' option, global variables that
569start with an uppercase letter, and don't contain a lowercase letter, are
570stored in the viminfo file |viminfo-file|.
571
572When the 'sessionoptions' option contains "global", global variables that
573start with an uppercase letter and contain at least one lowercase letter are
574stored in the session file |session-file|.
575
576variable name can be stored where ~
577my_var_6 not
578My_Var_6 session file
579MY_VAR_6 viminfo file
580
581
582It's possible to form a variable name with curly braces, see
583|curly-braces-names|.
584
585==============================================================================
5862. Expression syntax *expression-syntax*
587
588Expression syntax summary, from least to most significant:
589
590|expr1| expr2 ? expr1 : expr1 if-then-else
591
592|expr2| expr3 || expr3 .. logical OR
593
594|expr3| expr4 && expr4 .. logical AND
595
596|expr4| expr5 == expr5 equal
597 expr5 != expr5 not equal
598 expr5 > expr5 greater than
599 expr5 >= expr5 greater than or equal
600 expr5 < expr5 smaller than
601 expr5 <= expr5 smaller than or equal
602 expr5 =~ expr5 regexp matches
603 expr5 !~ expr5 regexp doesn't match
604
605 expr5 ==? expr5 equal, ignoring case
606 expr5 ==# expr5 equal, match case
607 etc. As above, append ? for ignoring case, # for
608 matching case
609
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +0000610 expr5 is expr5 same |List| instance
611 expr5 isnot expr5 different |List| instance
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +0000612
613|expr5| expr6 + expr6 .. number addition or list concatenation
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000614 expr6 - expr6 .. number subtraction
615 expr6 . expr6 .. string concatenation
616
617|expr6| expr7 * expr7 .. number multiplication
618 expr7 / expr7 .. number division
619 expr7 % expr7 .. number modulo
620
621|expr7| ! expr7 logical NOT
622 - expr7 unary minus
623 + expr7 unary plus
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000624
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +0000625|expr8| expr8[expr1] byte of a String or item of a |List|
626 expr8[expr1 : expr1] substring of a String or sublist of a |List|
627 expr8.name entry in a |Dictionary|
628 expr8(expr1, ...) function call with |Funcref| variable
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +0000629
630|expr9| number number constant
Bram Moolenaar3fdfa4a2004-10-07 21:02:47 +0000631 "string" string constant, backslash is special
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +0000632 'string' string constant, ' is doubled
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +0000633 [expr1, ...] |List|
634 {expr1: expr1, ...} |Dictionary|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000635 &option option value
636 (expr1) nested expression
637 variable internal variable
638 va{ria}ble internal variable with curly braces
639 $VAR environment variable
640 @r contents of register 'r'
641 function(expr1, ...) function call
642 func{ti}on(expr1, ...) function call with curly braces
643
644
645".." indicates that the operations in this level can be concatenated.
646Example: >
647 &nu || &list && &shell == "csh"
648
649All expressions within one level are parsed from left to right.
650
651
652expr1 *expr1* *E109*
653-----
654
655expr2 ? expr1 : expr1
656
657The expression before the '?' is evaluated to a number. If it evaluates to
658non-zero, the result is the value of the expression between the '?' and ':',
659otherwise the result is the value of the expression after the ':'.
660Example: >
661 :echo lnum == 1 ? "top" : lnum
662
663Since the first expression is an "expr2", it cannot contain another ?:. The
664other two expressions can, thus allow for recursive use of ?:.
665Example: >
666 :echo lnum == 1 ? "top" : lnum == 1000 ? "last" : lnum
667
668To keep this readable, using |line-continuation| is suggested: >
669 :echo lnum == 1
670 :\ ? "top"
671 :\ : lnum == 1000
672 :\ ? "last"
673 :\ : lnum
674
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +0000675You should always put a space before the ':', otherwise it can be mistaken for
676use in a variable such as "a:1".
677
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000678
679expr2 and expr3 *expr2* *expr3*
680---------------
681
682 *expr-barbar* *expr-&&*
683The "||" and "&&" operators take one argument on each side. The arguments
684are (converted to) Numbers. The result is:
685
686 input output ~
687n1 n2 n1 || n2 n1 && n2 ~
688zero zero zero zero
689zero non-zero non-zero zero
690non-zero zero non-zero zero
691non-zero non-zero non-zero non-zero
692
693The operators can be concatenated, for example: >
694
695 &nu || &list && &shell == "csh"
696
697Note that "&&" takes precedence over "||", so this has the meaning of: >
698
699 &nu || (&list && &shell == "csh")
700
701Once the result is known, the expression "short-circuits", that is, further
702arguments are not evaluated. This is like what happens in C. For example: >
703
704 let a = 1
705 echo a || b
706
707This is valid even if there is no variable called "b" because "a" is non-zero,
708so the result must be non-zero. Similarly below: >
709
710 echo exists("b") && b == "yes"
711
712This is valid whether "b" has been defined or not. The second clause will
713only be evaluated if "b" has been defined.
714
715
716expr4 *expr4*
717-----
718
719expr5 {cmp} expr5
720
721Compare two expr5 expressions, resulting in a 0 if it evaluates to false, or 1
722if it evaluates to true.
723
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000724 *expr-==* *expr-!=* *expr->* *expr->=*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000725 *expr-<* *expr-<=* *expr-=~* *expr-!~*
726 *expr-==#* *expr-!=#* *expr->#* *expr->=#*
727 *expr-<#* *expr-<=#* *expr-=~#* *expr-!~#*
728 *expr-==?* *expr-!=?* *expr->?* *expr->=?*
729 *expr-<?* *expr-<=?* *expr-=~?* *expr-!~?*
Bram Moolenaar251e1912011-06-19 05:09:16 +0200730 *expr-is* *expr-isnot* *expr-is#* *expr-isnot#*
731 *expr-is?* *expr-isnot?*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000732 use 'ignorecase' match case ignore case ~
733equal == ==# ==?
734not equal != !=# !=?
735greater than > ># >?
736greater than or equal >= >=# >=?
737smaller than < <# <?
738smaller than or equal <= <=# <=?
739regexp matches =~ =~# =~?
740regexp doesn't match !~ !~# !~?
Bram Moolenaar251e1912011-06-19 05:09:16 +0200741same instance is is# is?
742different instance isnot isnot# isnot?
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000743
744Examples:
745"abc" ==# "Abc" evaluates to 0
746"abc" ==? "Abc" evaluates to 1
747"abc" == "Abc" evaluates to 1 if 'ignorecase' is set, 0 otherwise
748
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000749 *E691* *E692*
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +0000750A |List| can only be compared with a |List| and only "equal", "not equal" and
751"is" can be used. This compares the values of the list, recursively.
752Ignoring case means case is ignored when comparing item values.
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +0000753
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000754 *E735* *E736*
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +0000755A |Dictionary| can only be compared with a |Dictionary| and only "equal", "not
756equal" and "is" can be used. This compares the key/values of the |Dictionary|
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +0000757recursively. Ignoring case means case is ignored when comparing item values.
758
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +0000759 *E693* *E694*
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +0000760A |Funcref| can only be compared with a |Funcref| and only "equal" and "not
761equal" can be used. Case is never ignored.
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +0000762
Bram Moolenaar251e1912011-06-19 05:09:16 +0200763When using "is" or "isnot" with a |List| or a |Dictionary| this checks if the
764expressions are referring to the same |List| or |Dictionary| instance. A copy
765of a |List| is different from the original |List|. When using "is" without
766a |List| or a |Dictionary| it is equivalent to using "equal", using "isnot"
767equivalent to using "not equal". Except that a different type means the
768values are different: "4 == '4'" is true, "4 is '4'" is false and "0 is []" is
Bram Moolenaard09acef2012-09-21 14:54:30 +0200769false and not an error. "is#"/"isnot#" and "is?"/"isnot?" can be used to match
Bram Moolenaar251e1912011-06-19 05:09:16 +0200770and ignore case.
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +0000771
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000772When comparing a String with a Number, the String is converted to a Number,
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000773and the comparison is done on Numbers. This means that "0 == 'x'" is TRUE,
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000774because 'x' converted to a Number is zero.
775
776When comparing two Strings, this is done with strcmp() or stricmp(). This
777results in the mathematical difference (comparing byte values), not
778necessarily the alphabetical difference in the local language.
779
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000780When using the operators with a trailing '#', or the short version and
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +0000781'ignorecase' is off, the comparing is done with strcmp(): case matters.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000782
783When using the operators with a trailing '?', or the short version and
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +0000784'ignorecase' is set, the comparing is done with stricmp(): case is ignored.
785
786'smartcase' is not used.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000787
788The "=~" and "!~" operators match the lefthand argument with the righthand
789argument, which is used as a pattern. See |pattern| for what a pattern is.
790This matching is always done like 'magic' was set and 'cpoptions' is empty, no
791matter what the actual value of 'magic' or 'cpoptions' is. This makes scripts
792portable. To avoid backslashes in the regexp pattern to be doubled, use a
793single-quote string, see |literal-string|.
794Since a string is considered to be a single line, a multi-line pattern
795(containing \n, backslash-n) will not match. However, a literal NL character
796can be matched like an ordinary character. Examples:
797 "foo\nbar" =~ "\n" evaluates to 1
798 "foo\nbar" =~ "\\n" evaluates to 0
799
800
801expr5 and expr6 *expr5* *expr6*
802---------------
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +0000803expr6 + expr6 .. Number addition or |List| concatenation *expr-+*
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +0000804expr6 - expr6 .. Number subtraction *expr--*
805expr6 . expr6 .. String concatenation *expr-.*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000806
Bram Moolenaara23ccb82006-02-27 00:08:02 +0000807For |Lists| only "+" is possible and then both expr6 must be a list. The
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +0000808result is a new list with the two lists Concatenated.
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +0000809
Bram Moolenaard6e256c2011-12-14 15:32:50 +0100810expr7 * expr7 .. Number multiplication *expr-star*
811expr7 / expr7 .. Number division *expr-/*
812expr7 % expr7 .. Number modulo *expr-%*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000813
814For all, except ".", Strings are converted to Numbers.
Bram Moolenaard6e256c2011-12-14 15:32:50 +0100815For bitwise operators see |and()|, |or()| and |xor()|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000816
817Note the difference between "+" and ".":
818 "123" + "456" = 579
819 "123" . "456" = "123456"
820
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000821Since '.' has the same precedence as '+' and '-', you need to read: >
822 1 . 90 + 90.0
823As: >
824 (1 . 90) + 90.0
825That works, since the String "190" is automatically converted to the Number
826190, which can be added to the Float 90.0. However: >
827 1 . 90 * 90.0
828Should be read as: >
829 1 . (90 * 90.0)
830Since '.' has lower precedence than '*'. This does NOT work, since this
831attempts to concatenate a Float and a String.
832
833When dividing a Number by zero the result depends on the value:
834 0 / 0 = -0x80000000 (like NaN for Float)
835 >0 / 0 = 0x7fffffff (like positive infinity)
836 <0 / 0 = -0x7fffffff (like negative infinity)
837 (before Vim 7.2 it was always 0x7fffffff)
838
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000839When the righthand side of '%' is zero, the result is 0.
840
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +0000841None of these work for |Funcref|s.
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +0000842
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000843. and % do not work for Float. *E804*
844
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000845
846expr7 *expr7*
847-----
848! expr7 logical NOT *expr-!*
849- expr7 unary minus *expr-unary--*
850+ expr7 unary plus *expr-unary-+*
851
852For '!' non-zero becomes zero, zero becomes one.
853For '-' the sign of the number is changed.
854For '+' the number is unchanged.
855
856A String will be converted to a Number first.
857
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000858These three can be repeated and mixed. Examples:
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000859 !-1 == 0
860 !!8 == 1
861 --9 == 9
862
863
864expr8 *expr8*
865-----
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +0000866expr8[expr1] item of String or |List| *expr-[]* *E111*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000867
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +0000868If expr8 is a Number or String this results in a String that contains the
869expr1'th single byte from expr8. expr8 is used as a String, expr1 as a
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +0100870Number. This doesn't recognize multi-byte encodings, see |byteidx()| for
871an alternative.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000872
Bram Moolenaar256972a2015-12-29 19:10:25 +0100873Index zero gives the first byte. This is like it works in C. Careful:
874text column numbers start with one! Example, to get the byte under the
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000875cursor: >
Bram Moolenaar61660ea2006-04-07 21:40:07 +0000876 :let c = getline(".")[col(".") - 1]
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000877
878If the length of the String is less than the index, the result is an empty
Bram Moolenaar85084ef2016-01-17 22:26:33 +0100879String. A negative index always results in an empty string (reason: backward
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000880compatibility). Use [-1:] to get the last byte.
881
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +0000882If expr8 is a |List| then it results the item at index expr1. See |list-index|
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000883for possible index values. If the index is out of range this results in an
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000884error. Example: >
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000885 :let item = mylist[-1] " get last item
886
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +0000887Generally, if a |List| index is equal to or higher than the length of the
888|List|, or more negative than the length of the |List|, this results in an
889error.
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000890
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +0000891
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +0000892expr8[expr1a : expr1b] substring or sublist *expr-[:]*
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000893
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +0000894If expr8 is a Number or String this results in the substring with the bytes
895from expr1a to and including expr1b. expr8 is used as a String, expr1a and
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +0100896expr1b are used as a Number. This doesn't recognize multi-byte encodings, see
897|byteidx()| for computing the indexes.
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000898
899If expr1a is omitted zero is used. If expr1b is omitted the length of the
900string minus one is used.
901
902A negative number can be used to measure from the end of the string. -1 is
903the last character, -2 the last but one, etc.
904
905If an index goes out of range for the string characters are omitted. If
906expr1b is smaller than expr1a the result is an empty string.
907
908Examples: >
909 :let c = name[-1:] " last byte of a string
910 :let c = name[-2:-2] " last but one byte of a string
911 :let s = line(".")[4:] " from the fifth byte to the end
912 :let s = s[:-3] " remove last two bytes
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +0100913<
914 *sublist* *slice*
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +0000915If expr8 is a |List| this results in a new |List| with the items indicated by
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000916the indexes expr1a and expr1b. This works like with a String, as explained
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +0000917just above, except that indexes out of range cause an error. Examples: >
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +0000918 :let l = mylist[:3] " first four items
919 :let l = mylist[4:4] " List with one item
920 :let l = mylist[:] " shallow copy of a List
921
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +0000922Using expr8[expr1] or expr8[expr1a : expr1b] on a |Funcref| results in an
923error.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000924
Bram Moolenaarda440d22016-01-16 21:27:23 +0100925Watch out for confusion between a namespace and a variable followed by a colon
926for a sublist: >
927 mylist[n:] " uses variable n
928 mylist[s:] " uses namespace s:, error!
929
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +0000930
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +0000931expr8.name entry in a |Dictionary| *expr-entry*
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +0000932
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +0000933If expr8 is a |Dictionary| and it is followed by a dot, then the following
934name will be used as a key in the |Dictionary|. This is just like:
935expr8[name].
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +0000936
937The name must consist of alphanumeric characters, just like a variable name,
938but it may start with a number. Curly braces cannot be used.
939
940There must not be white space before or after the dot.
941
942Examples: >
943 :let dict = {"one": 1, 2: "two"}
944 :echo dict.one
945 :echo dict .2
946
947Note that the dot is also used for String concatenation. To avoid confusion
948always put spaces around the dot for String concatenation.
949
950
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +0000951expr8(expr1, ...) |Funcref| function call
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +0000952
953When expr8 is a |Funcref| type variable, invoke the function it refers to.
954
955
956
957 *expr9*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000958number
959------
Bram Moolenaarf1568ec2011-12-14 21:17:39 +0100960number number constant *expr-number*
961 *hex-number* *octal-number*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000962
963Decimal, Hexadecimal (starting with 0x or 0X), or Octal (starting with 0).
964
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000965 *floating-point-format*
966Floating point numbers can be written in two forms:
967
968 [-+]{N}.{M}
Bram Moolenaar8a94d872015-01-25 13:02:57 +0100969 [-+]{N}.{M}[eE][-+]{exp}
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000970
971{N} and {M} are numbers. Both {N} and {M} must be present and can only
972contain digits.
973[-+] means there is an optional plus or minus sign.
974{exp} is the exponent, power of 10.
975Only a decimal point is accepted, not a comma. No matter what the current
976locale is.
977{only when compiled with the |+float| feature}
978
979Examples:
980 123.456
981 +0.0001
982 55.0
983 -0.123
984 1.234e03
985 1.0E-6
986 -3.1416e+88
987
988These are INVALID:
989 3. empty {M}
990 1e40 missing .{M}
991
Bram Moolenaare37d50a2008-08-06 17:06:04 +0000992 *float-pi* *float-e*
993A few useful values to copy&paste: >
994 :let pi = 3.14159265359
995 :let e = 2.71828182846
996
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000997Rationale:
998Before floating point was introduced, the text "123.456" was interpreted as
999the two numbers "123" and "456", both converted to a string and concatenated,
1000resulting in the string "123456". Since this was considered pointless, and we
Bram Moolenaare37d50a2008-08-06 17:06:04 +00001001could not find it intentionally being used in Vim scripts, this backwards
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001002incompatibility was accepted in favor of being able to use the normal notation
1003for floating point numbers.
1004
1005 *floating-point-precision*
1006The precision and range of floating points numbers depends on what "double"
1007means in the library Vim was compiled with. There is no way to change this at
1008runtime.
1009
1010The default for displaying a |Float| is to use 6 decimal places, like using
1011printf("%g", f). You can select something else when using the |printf()|
1012function. Example: >
1013 :echo printf('%.15e', atan(1))
1014< 7.853981633974483e-01
1015
1016
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001017
Bram Moolenaar979243b2015-06-26 19:35:49 +02001018string *string* *String* *expr-string* *E114*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001019------
1020"string" string constant *expr-quote*
1021
1022Note that double quotes are used.
1023
1024A string constant accepts these special characters:
1025\... three-digit octal number (e.g., "\316")
1026\.. two-digit octal number (must be followed by non-digit)
1027\. one-digit octal number (must be followed by non-digit)
1028\x.. byte specified with two hex numbers (e.g., "\x1f")
1029\x. byte specified with one hex number (must be followed by non-hex char)
1030\X.. same as \x..
1031\X. same as \x.
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001032\u.... character specified with up to 4 hex numbers, stored according to the
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001033 current value of 'encoding' (e.g., "\u02a4")
Bram Moolenaar541f92d2015-06-19 13:27:23 +02001034\U.... same as \u but allows up to 8 hex numbers.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001035\b backspace <BS>
1036\e escape <Esc>
1037\f formfeed <FF>
1038\n newline <NL>
1039\r return <CR>
1040\t tab <Tab>
1041\\ backslash
1042\" double quote
Bram Moolenaar00a927d2010-05-14 23:24:24 +02001043\<xxx> Special key named "xxx". e.g. "\<C-W>" for CTRL-W. This is for use
1044 in mappings, the 0x80 byte is escaped. Don't use <Char-xxxx> to get a
1045 utf-8 character, use \uxxxx as mentioned above.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001046
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00001047Note that "\xff" is stored as the byte 255, which may be invalid in some
1048encodings. Use "\u00ff" to store character 255 according to the current value
1049of 'encoding'.
1050
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001051Note that "\000" and "\x00" force the end of the string.
1052
1053
1054literal-string *literal-string* *E115*
1055---------------
Bram Moolenaar3fdfa4a2004-10-07 21:02:47 +00001056'string' string constant *expr-'*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001057
1058Note that single quotes are used.
1059
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001060This string is taken as it is. No backslashes are removed or have a special
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +00001061meaning. The only exception is that two quotes stand for one quote.
Bram Moolenaar3fdfa4a2004-10-07 21:02:47 +00001062
1063Single quoted strings are useful for patterns, so that backslashes do not need
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001064to be doubled. These two commands are equivalent: >
Bram Moolenaar3fdfa4a2004-10-07 21:02:47 +00001065 if a =~ "\\s*"
1066 if a =~ '\s*'
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001067
1068
1069option *expr-option* *E112* *E113*
1070------
1071&option option value, local value if possible
1072&g:option global option value
1073&l:option local option value
1074
1075Examples: >
1076 echo "tabstop is " . &tabstop
1077 if &insertmode
1078
1079Any option name can be used here. See |options|. When using the local value
1080and there is no buffer-local or window-local value, the global value is used
1081anyway.
1082
1083
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00001084register *expr-register* *@r*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001085--------
1086@r contents of register 'r'
1087
1088The result is the contents of the named register, as a single string.
1089Newlines are inserted where required. To get the contents of the unnamed
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001090register use @" or @@. See |registers| for an explanation of the available
Bram Moolenaare7566042005-06-17 22:00:15 +00001091registers.
1092
1093When using the '=' register you get the expression itself, not what it
1094evaluates to. Use |eval()| to evaluate it.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001095
1096
1097nesting *expr-nesting* *E110*
1098-------
1099(expr1) nested expression
1100
1101
1102environment variable *expr-env*
1103--------------------
1104$VAR environment variable
1105
1106The String value of any environment variable. When it is not defined, the
1107result is an empty string.
1108 *expr-env-expand*
1109Note that there is a difference between using $VAR directly and using
1110expand("$VAR"). Using it directly will only expand environment variables that
1111are known inside the current Vim session. Using expand() will first try using
1112the environment variables known inside the current Vim session. If that
1113fails, a shell will be used to expand the variable. This can be slow, but it
1114does expand all variables that the shell knows about. Example: >
Bram Moolenaar34401cc2014-08-29 15:12:19 +02001115 :echo $shell
1116 :echo expand("$shell")
1117The first one probably doesn't echo anything, the second echoes the $shell
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001118variable (if your shell supports it).
1119
1120
1121internal variable *expr-variable*
1122-----------------
1123variable internal variable
1124See below |internal-variables|.
1125
1126
Bram Moolenaar05159a02005-02-26 23:04:13 +00001127function call *expr-function* *E116* *E118* *E119* *E120*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001128-------------
1129function(expr1, ...) function call
1130See below |functions|.
1131
1132
1133==============================================================================
Bram Moolenaar4a748032010-09-30 21:47:56 +020011343. Internal variable *internal-variables* *E461*
1135
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001136An internal variable name can be made up of letters, digits and '_'. But it
1137cannot start with a digit. It's also possible to use curly braces, see
1138|curly-braces-names|.
1139
1140An internal variable is created with the ":let" command |:let|.
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +00001141An internal variable is explicitly destroyed with the ":unlet" command
1142|:unlet|.
1143Using a name that is not an internal variable or refers to a variable that has
1144been destroyed results in an error.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001145
1146There are several name spaces for variables. Which one is to be used is
1147specified by what is prepended:
1148
1149 (nothing) In a function: local to a function; otherwise: global
1150|buffer-variable| b: Local to the current buffer.
1151|window-variable| w: Local to the current window.
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +00001152|tabpage-variable| t: Local to the current tab page.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001153|global-variable| g: Global.
1154|local-variable| l: Local to a function.
1155|script-variable| s: Local to a |:source|'ed Vim script.
1156|function-argument| a: Function argument (only inside a function).
Bram Moolenaar75b81562014-04-06 14:09:13 +02001157|vim-variable| v: Global, predefined by Vim.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001158
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00001159The scope name by itself can be used as a |Dictionary|. For example, to
1160delete all script-local variables: >
Bram Moolenaar8f999f12005-01-25 22:12:55 +00001161 :for k in keys(s:)
1162 : unlet s:[k]
1163 :endfor
1164<
Bram Moolenaar531da592013-05-06 05:58:55 +02001165 *buffer-variable* *b:var* *b:*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001166A variable name that is preceded with "b:" is local to the current buffer.
1167Thus you can have several "b:foo" variables, one for each buffer.
1168This kind of variable is deleted when the buffer is wiped out or deleted with
1169|:bdelete|.
1170
1171One local buffer variable is predefined:
Bram Moolenaarbf884932013-04-05 22:26:15 +02001172 *b:changedtick* *changetick*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001173b:changedtick The total number of changes to the current buffer. It is
1174 incremented for each change. An undo command is also a change
1175 in this case. This can be used to perform an action only when
1176 the buffer has changed. Example: >
1177 :if my_changedtick != b:changedtick
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001178 : let my_changedtick = b:changedtick
1179 : call My_Update()
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001180 :endif
1181<
Bram Moolenaar531da592013-05-06 05:58:55 +02001182 *window-variable* *w:var* *w:*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001183A variable name that is preceded with "w:" is local to the current window. It
1184is deleted when the window is closed.
1185
Bram Moolenaarad3b3662013-05-17 18:14:19 +02001186 *tabpage-variable* *t:var* *t:*
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +00001187A variable name that is preceded with "t:" is local to the current tab page,
1188It is deleted when the tab page is closed. {not available when compiled
Bram Moolenaardb84e452010-08-15 13:50:43 +02001189without the |+windows| feature}
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +00001190
Bram Moolenaar531da592013-05-06 05:58:55 +02001191 *global-variable* *g:var* *g:*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001192Inside functions global variables are accessed with "g:". Omitting this will
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001193access a variable local to a function. But "g:" can also be used in any other
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001194place if you like.
1195
Bram Moolenaar531da592013-05-06 05:58:55 +02001196 *local-variable* *l:var* *l:*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001197Inside functions local variables are accessed without prepending anything.
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00001198But you can also prepend "l:" if you like. However, without prepending "l:"
1199you may run into reserved variable names. For example "count". By itself it
1200refers to "v:count". Using "l:count" you can have a local variable with the
1201same name.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001202
1203 *script-variable* *s:var*
1204In a Vim script variables starting with "s:" can be used. They cannot be
1205accessed from outside of the scripts, thus are local to the script.
1206
1207They can be used in:
1208- commands executed while the script is sourced
1209- functions defined in the script
1210- autocommands defined in the script
1211- functions and autocommands defined in functions and autocommands which were
1212 defined in the script (recursively)
1213- user defined commands defined in the script
1214Thus not in:
1215- other scripts sourced from this one
1216- mappings
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01001217- menus
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001218- etc.
1219
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00001220Script variables can be used to avoid conflicts with global variable names.
1221Take this example: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001222
1223 let s:counter = 0
1224 function MyCounter()
1225 let s:counter = s:counter + 1
1226 echo s:counter
1227 endfunction
1228 command Tick call MyCounter()
1229
1230You can now invoke "Tick" from any script, and the "s:counter" variable in
1231that script will not be changed, only the "s:counter" in the script where
1232"Tick" was defined is used.
1233
1234Another example that does the same: >
1235
1236 let s:counter = 0
1237 command Tick let s:counter = s:counter + 1 | echo s:counter
1238
1239When calling a function and invoking a user-defined command, the context for
Bram Moolenaar69a7cb42004-06-20 12:51:53 +00001240script variables is set to the script where the function or command was
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001241defined.
1242
1243The script variables are also available when a function is defined inside a
1244function that is defined in a script. Example: >
1245
1246 let s:counter = 0
1247 function StartCounting(incr)
1248 if a:incr
1249 function MyCounter()
1250 let s:counter = s:counter + 1
1251 endfunction
1252 else
1253 function MyCounter()
1254 let s:counter = s:counter - 1
1255 endfunction
1256 endif
1257 endfunction
1258
1259This defines the MyCounter() function either for counting up or counting down
1260when calling StartCounting(). It doesn't matter from where StartCounting() is
1261called, the s:counter variable will be accessible in MyCounter().
1262
1263When the same script is sourced again it will use the same script variables.
1264They will remain valid as long as Vim is running. This can be used to
1265maintain a counter: >
1266
1267 if !exists("s:counter")
1268 let s:counter = 1
1269 echo "script executed for the first time"
1270 else
1271 let s:counter = s:counter + 1
1272 echo "script executed " . s:counter . " times now"
1273 endif
1274
1275Note that this means that filetype plugins don't get a different set of script
1276variables for each buffer. Use local buffer variables instead |b:var|.
1277
1278
Bram Moolenaar531da592013-05-06 05:58:55 +02001279Predefined Vim variables: *vim-variable* *v:var* *v:*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001280
Bram Moolenaare4efc3b2005-03-07 23:16:51 +00001281 *v:beval_col* *beval_col-variable*
1282v:beval_col The number of the column, over which the mouse pointer is.
1283 This is the byte index in the |v:beval_lnum| line.
1284 Only valid while evaluating the 'balloonexpr' option.
1285
1286 *v:beval_bufnr* *beval_bufnr-variable*
1287v:beval_bufnr The number of the buffer, over which the mouse pointer is. Only
1288 valid while evaluating the 'balloonexpr' option.
1289
1290 *v:beval_lnum* *beval_lnum-variable*
1291v:beval_lnum The number of the line, over which the mouse pointer is. Only
1292 valid while evaluating the 'balloonexpr' option.
1293
1294 *v:beval_text* *beval_text-variable*
Bram Moolenaar24bbcfe2005-06-28 23:32:02 +00001295v:beval_text The text under or after the mouse pointer. Usually a word as
1296 it is useful for debugging a C program. 'iskeyword' applies,
1297 but a dot and "->" before the position is included. When on a
1298 ']' the text before it is used, including the matching '[' and
Bram Moolenaare4efc3b2005-03-07 23:16:51 +00001299 word before it. When on a Visual area within one line the
1300 highlighted text is used.
1301 Only valid while evaluating the 'balloonexpr' option.
1302
1303 *v:beval_winnr* *beval_winnr-variable*
1304v:beval_winnr The number of the window, over which the mouse pointer is. Only
Bram Moolenaar00654022011-02-25 14:42:19 +01001305 valid while evaluating the 'balloonexpr' option. The first
1306 window has number zero (unlike most other places where a
1307 window gets a number).
Bram Moolenaare4efc3b2005-03-07 23:16:51 +00001308
Bram Moolenaarf193fff2006-04-27 00:02:13 +00001309 *v:char* *char-variable*
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01001310v:char Argument for evaluating 'formatexpr' and used for the typed
Bram Moolenaar945e2db2010-06-05 17:43:32 +02001311 character when using <expr> in an abbreviation |:map-<expr>|.
Bram Moolenaare6ae6222013-05-21 21:01:10 +02001312 It is also used by the |InsertCharPre| and |InsertEnter| events.
Bram Moolenaarf193fff2006-04-27 00:02:13 +00001313
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001314 *v:charconvert_from* *charconvert_from-variable*
1315v:charconvert_from
1316 The name of the character encoding of a file to be converted.
1317 Only valid while evaluating the 'charconvert' option.
1318
1319 *v:charconvert_to* *charconvert_to-variable*
1320v:charconvert_to
1321 The name of the character encoding of a file after conversion.
1322 Only valid while evaluating the 'charconvert' option.
1323
1324 *v:cmdarg* *cmdarg-variable*
1325v:cmdarg This variable is used for two purposes:
1326 1. The extra arguments given to a file read/write command.
1327 Currently these are "++enc=" and "++ff=". This variable is
1328 set before an autocommand event for a file read/write
1329 command is triggered. There is a leading space to make it
1330 possible to append this variable directly after the
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001331 read/write command. Note: The "+cmd" argument isn't
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001332 included here, because it will be executed anyway.
1333 2. When printing a PostScript file with ":hardcopy" this is
1334 the argument for the ":hardcopy" command. This can be used
1335 in 'printexpr'.
1336
1337 *v:cmdbang* *cmdbang-variable*
1338v:cmdbang Set like v:cmdarg for a file read/write command. When a "!"
1339 was used the value is 1, otherwise it is 0. Note that this
1340 can only be used in autocommands. For user commands |<bang>|
1341 can be used.
1342
Bram Moolenaar42a45122015-07-10 17:56:23 +02001343 *v:completed_item* *completed_item-variable*
1344v:completed_item
1345 |Dictionary| containing the |complete-items| for the most
1346 recently completed word after |CompleteDone|. The
1347 |Dictionary| is empty if the completion failed.
1348
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001349 *v:count* *count-variable*
1350v:count The count given for the last Normal mode command. Can be used
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001351 to get the count before a mapping. Read-only. Example: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001352 :map _x :<C-U>echo "the count is " . v:count<CR>
1353< Note: The <C-U> is required to remove the line range that you
1354 get when typing ':' after a count.
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01001355 When there are two counts, as in "3d2w", they are multiplied,
1356 just like what happens in the command, "d6w" for the example.
Bram Moolenaar1d2ba7f2006-02-14 22:29:30 +00001357 Also used for evaluating the 'formatexpr' option.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001358 "count" also works, for backwards compatibility.
1359
1360 *v:count1* *count1-variable*
1361v:count1 Just like "v:count", but defaults to one when no count is
1362 used.
1363
1364 *v:ctype* *ctype-variable*
1365v:ctype The current locale setting for characters of the runtime
1366 environment. This allows Vim scripts to be aware of the
1367 current locale encoding. Technical: it's the value of
1368 LC_CTYPE. When not using a locale the value is "C".
1369 This variable can not be set directly, use the |:language|
1370 command.
1371 See |multi-lang|.
1372
1373 *v:dying* *dying-variable*
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001374v:dying Normally zero. When a deadly signal is caught it's set to
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001375 one. When multiple signals are caught the number increases.
1376 Can be used in an autocommand to check if Vim didn't
1377 terminate normally. {only works on Unix}
1378 Example: >
1379 :au VimLeave * if v:dying | echo "\nAAAAaaaarrrggghhhh!!!\n" | endif
Bram Moolenaar0e1e25f2010-05-28 21:07:08 +02001380< Note: if another deadly signal is caught when v:dying is one,
1381 VimLeave autocommands will not be executed.
1382
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001383 *v:errmsg* *errmsg-variable*
1384v:errmsg Last given error message. It's allowed to set this variable.
1385 Example: >
1386 :let v:errmsg = ""
1387 :silent! next
1388 :if v:errmsg != ""
1389 : ... handle error
1390< "errmsg" also works, for backwards compatibility.
1391
Bram Moolenaar43345542015-11-29 17:35:35 +01001392 *v:errors* *errors-variable*
Bram Moolenaar683fa182015-11-30 21:38:24 +01001393v:errors Errors found by assert functions, such as |assert_true()|.
Bram Moolenaar43345542015-11-29 17:35:35 +01001394 This is a list of strings.
1395 The assert functions append an item when an assert fails.
1396 To remove old results make it empty: >
1397 :let v:errors = []
1398< If v:errors is set to anything but a list it is made an empty
1399 list by the assert function.
1400
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001401 *v:exception* *exception-variable*
1402v:exception The value of the exception most recently caught and not
1403 finished. See also |v:throwpoint| and |throw-variables|.
1404 Example: >
1405 :try
1406 : throw "oops"
1407 :catch /.*/
1408 : echo "caught" v:exception
1409 :endtry
1410< Output: "caught oops".
1411
Bram Moolenaar19a09a12005-03-04 23:39:37 +00001412 *v:fcs_reason* *fcs_reason-variable*
1413v:fcs_reason The reason why the |FileChangedShell| event was triggered.
1414 Can be used in an autocommand to decide what to do and/or what
1415 to set v:fcs_choice to. Possible values:
1416 deleted file no longer exists
1417 conflict file contents, mode or timestamp was
1418 changed and buffer is modified
1419 changed file contents has changed
1420 mode mode of file changed
1421 time only file timestamp changed
1422
1423 *v:fcs_choice* *fcs_choice-variable*
1424v:fcs_choice What should happen after a |FileChangedShell| event was
1425 triggered. Can be used in an autocommand to tell Vim what to
1426 do with the affected buffer:
1427 reload Reload the buffer (does not work if
1428 the file was deleted).
1429 ask Ask the user what to do, as if there
1430 was no autocommand. Except that when
1431 only the timestamp changed nothing
1432 will happen.
1433 <empty> Nothing, the autocommand should do
1434 everything that needs to be done.
1435 The default is empty. If another (invalid) value is used then
1436 Vim behaves like it is empty, there is no warning message.
1437
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001438 *v:fname_in* *fname_in-variable*
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +00001439v:fname_in The name of the input file. Valid while evaluating:
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001440 option used for ~
1441 'charconvert' file to be converted
1442 'diffexpr' original file
1443 'patchexpr' original file
1444 'printexpr' file to be printed
Bram Moolenaar2c7a29c2005-12-12 22:02:31 +00001445 And set to the swap file name for |SwapExists|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001446
1447 *v:fname_out* *fname_out-variable*
1448v:fname_out The name of the output file. Only valid while
1449 evaluating:
1450 option used for ~
1451 'charconvert' resulting converted file (*)
1452 'diffexpr' output of diff
1453 'patchexpr' resulting patched file
1454 (*) When doing conversion for a write command (e.g., ":w
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001455 file") it will be equal to v:fname_in. When doing conversion
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001456 for a read command (e.g., ":e file") it will be a temporary
1457 file and different from v:fname_in.
1458
1459 *v:fname_new* *fname_new-variable*
1460v:fname_new The name of the new version of the file. Only valid while
1461 evaluating 'diffexpr'.
1462
1463 *v:fname_diff* *fname_diff-variable*
1464v:fname_diff The name of the diff (patch) file. Only valid while
1465 evaluating 'patchexpr'.
1466
1467 *v:folddashes* *folddashes-variable*
1468v:folddashes Used for 'foldtext': dashes representing foldlevel of a closed
1469 fold.
Bram Moolenaar7b0294c2004-10-11 10:16:09 +00001470 Read-only in the |sandbox|. |fold-foldtext|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001471
1472 *v:foldlevel* *foldlevel-variable*
1473v:foldlevel Used for 'foldtext': foldlevel of closed fold.
Bram Moolenaar7b0294c2004-10-11 10:16:09 +00001474 Read-only in the |sandbox|. |fold-foldtext|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001475
1476 *v:foldend* *foldend-variable*
1477v:foldend Used for 'foldtext': last line of closed fold.
Bram Moolenaar7b0294c2004-10-11 10:16:09 +00001478 Read-only in the |sandbox|. |fold-foldtext|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001479
1480 *v:foldstart* *foldstart-variable*
1481v:foldstart Used for 'foldtext': first line of closed fold.
Bram Moolenaar7b0294c2004-10-11 10:16:09 +00001482 Read-only in the |sandbox|. |fold-foldtext|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001483
Bram Moolenaar817a8802013-11-09 01:44:43 +01001484 *v:hlsearch* *hlsearch-variable*
Bram Moolenaar76440e22014-11-27 19:14:49 +01001485v:hlsearch Variable that indicates whether search highlighting is on.
1486 Setting it makes sense only if 'hlsearch' is enabled which
1487 requires |+extra_search|. Setting this variable to zero acts
1488 the like |:nohlsearch| command, setting it to one acts like >
Bram Moolenaar817a8802013-11-09 01:44:43 +01001489 let &hlsearch = &hlsearch
Bram Moolenaar86ae7202015-07-10 19:31:35 +02001490< Note that the value is restored when returning from a
1491 function. |function-search-undo|.
1492
Bram Moolenaar843ee412004-06-30 16:16:41 +00001493 *v:insertmode* *insertmode-variable*
1494v:insertmode Used for the |InsertEnter| and |InsertChange| autocommand
1495 events. Values:
1496 i Insert mode
1497 r Replace mode
1498 v Virtual Replace mode
1499
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00001500 *v:key* *key-variable*
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00001501v:key Key of the current item of a |Dictionary|. Only valid while
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00001502 evaluating the expression used with |map()| and |filter()|.
1503 Read-only.
1504
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001505 *v:lang* *lang-variable*
1506v:lang The current locale setting for messages of the runtime
1507 environment. This allows Vim scripts to be aware of the
1508 current language. Technical: it's the value of LC_MESSAGES.
1509 The value is system dependent.
1510 This variable can not be set directly, use the |:language|
1511 command.
1512 It can be different from |v:ctype| when messages are desired
1513 in a different language than what is used for character
1514 encoding. See |multi-lang|.
1515
1516 *v:lc_time* *lc_time-variable*
1517v:lc_time The current locale setting for time messages of the runtime
1518 environment. This allows Vim scripts to be aware of the
1519 current language. Technical: it's the value of LC_TIME.
1520 This variable can not be set directly, use the |:language|
1521 command. See |multi-lang|.
1522
1523 *v:lnum* *lnum-variable*
Bram Moolenaar368373e2010-07-19 20:46:22 +02001524v:lnum Line number for the 'foldexpr' |fold-expr|, 'formatexpr' and
1525 'indentexpr' expressions, tab page number for 'guitablabel'
1526 and 'guitabtooltip'. Only valid while one of these
1527 expressions is being evaluated. Read-only when in the
1528 |sandbox|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001529
Bram Moolenaar219b8702006-11-01 14:32:36 +00001530 *v:mouse_win* *mouse_win-variable*
1531v:mouse_win Window number for a mouse click obtained with |getchar()|.
1532 First window has number 1, like with |winnr()|. The value is
1533 zero when there was no mouse button click.
1534
1535 *v:mouse_lnum* *mouse_lnum-variable*
1536v:mouse_lnum Line number for a mouse click obtained with |getchar()|.
1537 This is the text line number, not the screen line number. The
1538 value is zero when there was no mouse button click.
1539
1540 *v:mouse_col* *mouse_col-variable*
1541v:mouse_col Column number for a mouse click obtained with |getchar()|.
1542 This is the screen column number, like with |virtcol()|. The
1543 value is zero when there was no mouse button click.
1544
Bram Moolenaard812df62008-11-09 12:46:09 +00001545 *v:oldfiles* *oldfiles-variable*
1546v:oldfiles List of file names that is loaded from the |viminfo| file on
1547 startup. These are the files that Vim remembers marks for.
1548 The length of the List is limited by the ' argument of the
1549 'viminfo' option (default is 100).
Bram Moolenaar8d043172014-01-23 14:24:41 +01001550 When the |viminfo| file is not used the List is empty.
Bram Moolenaard812df62008-11-09 12:46:09 +00001551 Also see |:oldfiles| and |c_#<|.
1552 The List can be modified, but this has no effect on what is
1553 stored in the |viminfo| file later. If you use values other
1554 than String this will cause trouble.
Bram Moolenaardb84e452010-08-15 13:50:43 +02001555 {only when compiled with the |+viminfo| feature}
Bram Moolenaard812df62008-11-09 12:46:09 +00001556
Bram Moolenaar53744302015-07-17 17:38:22 +02001557 *v:option_new*
1558v:option_new New value of the option. Valid while executing an |OptionSet|
1559 autocommand.
1560 *v:option_old*
1561v:option_old Old value of the option. Valid while executing an |OptionSet|
1562 autocommand.
1563 *v:option_type*
1564v:option_type Scope of the set command. Valid while executing an
1565 |OptionSet| autocommand. Can be either "global" or "local"
Bram Moolenaar8af1fbf2008-01-05 12:35:21 +00001566 *v:operator* *operator-variable*
1567v:operator The last operator given in Normal mode. This is a single
1568 character except for commands starting with <g> or <z>,
1569 in which case it is two characters. Best used alongside
1570 |v:prevcount| and |v:register|. Useful if you want to cancel
1571 Operator-pending mode and then use the operator, e.g.: >
1572 :omap O <Esc>:call MyMotion(v:operator)<CR>
1573< The value remains set until another operator is entered, thus
1574 don't expect it to be empty.
1575 v:operator is not set for |:delete|, |:yank| or other Ex
1576 commands.
1577 Read-only.
1578
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001579 *v:prevcount* *prevcount-variable*
1580v:prevcount The count given for the last but one Normal mode command.
1581 This is the v:count value of the previous command. Useful if
Bram Moolenaar8af1fbf2008-01-05 12:35:21 +00001582 you want to cancel Visual or Operator-pending mode and then
1583 use the count, e.g.: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001584 :vmap % <Esc>:call MyFilter(v:prevcount)<CR>
1585< Read-only.
1586
Bram Moolenaar05159a02005-02-26 23:04:13 +00001587 *v:profiling* *profiling-variable*
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001588v:profiling Normally zero. Set to one after using ":profile start".
Bram Moolenaar05159a02005-02-26 23:04:13 +00001589 See |profiling|.
1590
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001591 *v:progname* *progname-variable*
1592v:progname Contains the name (with path removed) with which Vim was
Bram Moolenaard38b0552012-04-25 19:07:41 +02001593 invoked. Allows you to do special initialisations for |view|,
1594 |evim| etc., or any other name you might symlink to Vim.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001595 Read-only.
1596
Bram Moolenaara1706c92014-04-01 19:55:49 +02001597 *v:progpath* *progpath-variable*
1598v:progpath Contains the command with which Vim was invoked, including the
1599 path. Useful if you want to message a Vim server using a
1600 |--remote-expr|.
Bram Moolenaarc7f02552014-04-01 21:00:59 +02001601 To get the full path use: >
1602 echo exepath(v:progpath)
1603< NOTE: This does not work when the command is a relative path
1604 and the current directory has changed.
Bram Moolenaara1706c92014-04-01 19:55:49 +02001605 Read-only.
1606
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001607 *v:register* *register-variable*
Bram Moolenaard58e9292011-02-09 17:07:58 +01001608v:register The name of the register in effect for the current normal mode
Bram Moolenaard38b0552012-04-25 19:07:41 +02001609 command (regardless of whether that command actually used a
1610 register). Or for the currently executing normal mode mapping
1611 (use this in custom commands that take a register).
1612 If none is supplied it is the default register '"', unless
1613 'clipboard' contains "unnamed" or "unnamedplus", then it is
1614 '*' or '+'.
Bram Moolenaard58e9292011-02-09 17:07:58 +01001615 Also see |getreg()| and |setreg()|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001616
Bram Moolenaar1c7715d2005-10-03 22:02:18 +00001617 *v:scrollstart* *scrollstart-variable*
1618v:scrollstart String describing the script or function that caused the
1619 screen to scroll up. It's only set when it is empty, thus the
1620 first reason is remembered. It is set to "Unknown" for a
1621 typed command.
1622 This can be used to find out why your script causes the
1623 hit-enter prompt.
1624
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001625 *v:servername* *servername-variable*
1626v:servername The resulting registered |x11-clientserver| name if any.
1627 Read-only.
1628
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001629
1630v:searchforward *v:searchforward* *searchforward-variable*
1631 Search direction: 1 after a forward search, 0 after a
1632 backward search. It is reset to forward when directly setting
1633 the last search pattern, see |quote/|.
1634 Note that the value is restored when returning from a
1635 function. |function-search-undo|.
1636 Read-write.
1637
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001638 *v:shell_error* *shell_error-variable*
1639v:shell_error Result of the last shell command. When non-zero, the last
1640 shell command had an error. When zero, there was no problem.
1641 This only works when the shell returns the error code to Vim.
1642 The value -1 is often used when the command could not be
1643 executed. Read-only.
1644 Example: >
1645 :!mv foo bar
1646 :if v:shell_error
1647 : echo 'could not rename "foo" to "bar"!'
1648 :endif
1649< "shell_error" also works, for backwards compatibility.
1650
1651 *v:statusmsg* *statusmsg-variable*
1652v:statusmsg Last given status message. It's allowed to set this variable.
1653
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +00001654 *v:swapname* *swapname-variable*
1655v:swapname Only valid when executing |SwapExists| autocommands: Name of
1656 the swap file found. Read-only.
1657
1658 *v:swapchoice* *swapchoice-variable*
1659v:swapchoice |SwapExists| autocommands can set this to the selected choice
1660 for handling an existing swap file:
1661 'o' Open read-only
1662 'e' Edit anyway
1663 'r' Recover
1664 'd' Delete swapfile
1665 'q' Quit
1666 'a' Abort
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001667 The value should be a single-character string. An empty value
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +00001668 results in the user being asked, as would happen when there is
1669 no SwapExists autocommand. The default is empty.
1670
Bram Moolenaarb3480382005-12-11 21:33:32 +00001671 *v:swapcommand* *swapcommand-variable*
Bram Moolenaar4770d092006-01-12 23:22:24 +00001672v:swapcommand Normal mode command to be executed after a file has been
Bram Moolenaarb3480382005-12-11 21:33:32 +00001673 opened. Can be used for a |SwapExists| autocommand to have
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001674 another Vim open the file and jump to the right place. For
Bram Moolenaarb3480382005-12-11 21:33:32 +00001675 example, when jumping to a tag the value is ":tag tagname\r".
Bram Moolenaar1f35bf92006-03-07 22:38:47 +00001676 For ":edit +cmd file" the value is ":cmd\r".
Bram Moolenaarb3480382005-12-11 21:33:32 +00001677
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001678 *v:termresponse* *termresponse-variable*
1679v:termresponse The escape sequence returned by the terminal for the |t_RV|
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001680 termcap entry. It is set when Vim receives an escape sequence
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001681 that starts with ESC [ or CSI and ends in a 'c', with only
1682 digits, ';' and '.' in between.
1683 When this option is set, the TermResponse autocommand event is
1684 fired, so that you can react to the response from the
1685 terminal.
1686 The response from a new xterm is: "<Esc>[ Pp ; Pv ; Pc c". Pp
1687 is the terminal type: 0 for vt100 and 1 for vt220. Pv is the
1688 patch level (since this was introduced in patch 95, it's
1689 always 95 or bigger). Pc is always zero.
1690 {only when compiled with |+termresponse| feature}
1691
1692 *v:this_session* *this_session-variable*
1693v:this_session Full filename of the last loaded or saved session file. See
1694 |:mksession|. It is allowed to set this variable. When no
1695 session file has been saved, this variable is empty.
1696 "this_session" also works, for backwards compatibility.
1697
1698 *v:throwpoint* *throwpoint-variable*
1699v:throwpoint The point where the exception most recently caught and not
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001700 finished was thrown. Not set when commands are typed. See
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001701 also |v:exception| and |throw-variables|.
1702 Example: >
1703 :try
1704 : throw "oops"
1705 :catch /.*/
1706 : echo "Exception from" v:throwpoint
1707 :endtry
1708< Output: "Exception from test.vim, line 2"
1709
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00001710 *v:val* *val-variable*
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001711v:val Value of the current item of a |List| or |Dictionary|. Only
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00001712 valid while evaluating the expression used with |map()| and
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00001713 |filter()|. Read-only.
1714
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001715 *v:version* *version-variable*
1716v:version Version number of Vim: Major version number times 100 plus
1717 minor version number. Version 5.0 is 500. Version 5.1 (5.01)
1718 is 501. Read-only. "version" also works, for backwards
1719 compatibility.
1720 Use |has()| to check if a certain patch was included, e.g.: >
Bram Moolenaar6716d9a2014-04-02 12:12:08 +02001721 if has("patch-7.4.123")
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001722< Note that patch numbers are specific to the version, thus both
1723 version 5.0 and 5.1 may have a patch 123, but these are
1724 completely different.
1725
1726 *v:warningmsg* *warningmsg-variable*
1727v:warningmsg Last given warning message. It's allowed to set this variable.
1728
Bram Moolenaar727c8762010-10-20 19:17:48 +02001729 *v:windowid* *windowid-variable*
1730v:windowid When any X11 based GUI is running or when running in a
1731 terminal and Vim connects to the X server (|-X|) this will be
Bram Moolenaar264e9fd2010-10-27 12:33:17 +02001732 set to the window ID.
1733 When an MS-Windows GUI is running this will be set to the
1734 window handle.
1735 Otherwise the value is zero.
1736 Note: for windows inside Vim use |winnr()|.
Bram Moolenaar727c8762010-10-20 19:17:48 +02001737
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001738==============================================================================
17394. Builtin Functions *functions*
1740
1741See |function-list| for a list grouped by what the function is used for.
1742
Bram Moolenaar402d2fe2005-04-15 21:00:38 +00001743(Use CTRL-] on the function name to jump to the full explanation.)
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001744
1745USAGE RESULT DESCRIPTION ~
1746
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001747abs( {expr}) Float or Number absolute value of {expr}
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02001748acos( {expr}) Float arc cosine of {expr}
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00001749add( {list}, {item}) List append {item} to |List| {list}
Bram Moolenaaracb4f222016-01-10 15:59:26 +01001750alloc_fail( {id}, {countdown}, {repeat})
1751 none make memory allocation fail
Bram Moolenaard6e256c2011-12-14 15:32:50 +01001752and( {expr}, {expr}) Number bitwise AND
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00001753append( {lnum}, {string}) Number append {string} below line {lnum}
Bram Moolenaar7c626922005-02-07 22:01:03 +00001754append( {lnum}, {list}) Number append lines {list} below line {lnum}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001755argc() Number number of files in the argument list
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00001756argidx() Number current index in the argument list
Bram Moolenaar683fa182015-11-30 21:38:24 +01001757arglistid( [{winnr} [, {tabnr}]])
Bram Moolenaar2d1fe052014-05-28 18:22:57 +02001758 Number argument list id
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001759argv( {nr}) String {nr} entry of the argument list
Bram Moolenaare2f98b92006-03-29 21:18:24 +00001760argv( ) List the argument list
Bram Moolenaara803c7f2016-01-15 15:31:39 +01001761assert_equal( {exp}, {act} [, {msg}]) none assert {exp} equals {act}
1762assert_exception({error} [, {msg}]) none assert {error} is in v:exception
Bram Moolenaara260b872016-01-15 20:48:22 +01001763assert_fails( {cmd} [, {error}]) none assert {cmd} fails
Bram Moolenaara803c7f2016-01-15 15:31:39 +01001764assert_false( {actual} [, {msg}]) none assert {actual} is false
1765assert_true( {actual} [, {msg}]) none assert {actual} is true
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02001766asin( {expr}) Float arc sine of {expr}
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001767atan( {expr}) Float arc tangent of {expr}
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02001768atan2( {expr}, {expr}) Float arc tangent of {expr1} / {expr2}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001769browse( {save}, {title}, {initdir}, {default})
1770 String put up a file requester
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001771browsedir( {title}, {initdir}) String put up a directory requester
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001772bufexists( {expr}) Number TRUE if buffer {expr} exists
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00001773buflisted( {expr}) Number TRUE if buffer {expr} is listed
1774bufloaded( {expr}) Number TRUE if buffer {expr} is loaded
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001775bufname( {expr}) String Name of the buffer {expr}
Bram Moolenaar12969c02015-09-08 23:36:10 +02001776bufnr( {expr} [, {create}]) Number Number of the buffer {expr}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001777bufwinnr( {expr}) Number window number of buffer {expr}
1778byte2line( {byte}) Number line number at byte count {byte}
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00001779byteidx( {expr}, {nr}) Number byte index of {nr}'th char in {expr}
Bram Moolenaar0ffbbf92013-11-02 23:29:26 +01001780byteidxcomp( {expr}, {nr}) Number byte index of {nr}'th char in {expr}
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00001781call( {func}, {arglist} [, {dict}])
1782 any call {func} with arguments {arglist}
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001783ceil( {expr}) Float round {expr} up
1784changenr() Number current change number
Bram Moolenaard35d7842013-01-23 17:17:10 +01001785char2nr( {expr}[, {utf8}]) Number ASCII/UTF8 value of first char in {expr}
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00001786cindent( {lnum}) Number C indent for line {lnum}
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01001787clearmatches() none clear all matches
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001788col( {expr}) Number column nr of cursor or mark
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01001789complete( {startcol}, {matches}) none set Insert mode completion
Bram Moolenaar572cb562005-08-05 21:35:02 +00001790complete_add( {expr}) Number add completion match
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001791complete_check() Number check for key typed during completion
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001792confirm( {msg} [, {choices} [, {default} [, {type}]]])
1793 Number number of choice picked by user
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00001794copy( {expr}) any make a shallow copy of {expr}
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001795cos( {expr}) Float cosine of {expr}
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02001796cosh( {expr}) Float hyperbolic cosine of {expr}
Bram Moolenaar3a991dd2014-10-02 01:41:41 +02001797count( {list}, {expr} [, {ic} [, {start}]])
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00001798 Number count how many {expr} are in {list}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001799cscope_connection( [{num} , {dbpath} [, {prepend}]])
1800 Number checks existence of cscope connection
Bram Moolenaar2f3b5102014-11-19 18:54:17 +01001801cursor( {lnum}, {col} [, {off}])
1802 Number move cursor to {lnum}, {col}, {off}
Bram Moolenaar0b238792006-03-02 22:49:12 +00001803cursor( {list}) Number move cursor to position in {list}
Bram Moolenaar92dff182014-02-11 19:15:50 +01001804deepcopy( {expr} [, {noref}]) any make a full copy of {expr}
Bram Moolenaarda440d22016-01-16 21:27:23 +01001805delete( {fname} [, {flags}]) Number delete the file or directory {fname}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001806did_filetype() Number TRUE if FileType autocommand event used
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00001807diff_filler( {lnum}) Number diff filler lines about {lnum}
1808diff_hlID( {lnum}, {col}) Number diff highlighting at {lnum}/{col}
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +00001809empty( {expr}) Number TRUE if {expr} is empty
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001810escape( {string}, {chars}) String escape {chars} in {string} with '\'
Bram Moolenaare2cc9702005-03-15 22:43:58 +00001811eval( {string}) any evaluate {string} into its value
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00001812eventhandler( ) Number TRUE if inside an event handler
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001813executable( {expr}) Number 1 if executable {expr} exists
Bram Moolenaarc7f02552014-04-01 21:00:59 +02001814exepath( {expr}) String full path of the command {expr}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001815exists( {expr}) Number TRUE if {expr} exists
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01001816extend( {expr1}, {expr2} [, {expr3}])
Bram Moolenaarc6fe9192006-04-09 21:54:49 +00001817 List/Dict insert items of {expr2} into {expr1}
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02001818exp( {expr}) Float exponential of {expr}
Bram Moolenaar146e9c32012-03-07 19:18:23 +01001819expand( {expr} [, {nosuf} [, {list}]])
1820 any expand special keywords in {expr}
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001821feedkeys( {string} [, {mode}]) Number add key sequence to typeahead buffer
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001822filereadable( {file}) Number TRUE if {file} is a readable file
Bram Moolenaarc6fe9192006-04-09 21:54:49 +00001823filewritable( {file}) Number TRUE if {file} is a writable file
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00001824filter( {expr}, {string}) List/Dict remove items from {expr} where
1825 {string} is 0
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00001826finddir( {name}[, {path}[, {count}]])
Bram Moolenaarc6fe9192006-04-09 21:54:49 +00001827 String find directory {name} in {path}
Bram Moolenaar89cb5e02004-07-19 20:55:54 +00001828findfile( {name}[, {path}[, {count}]])
Bram Moolenaarc6fe9192006-04-09 21:54:49 +00001829 String find file {name} in {path}
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001830float2nr( {expr}) Number convert Float {expr} to a Number
1831floor( {expr}) Float round {expr} down
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02001832fmod( {expr1}, {expr2}) Float remainder of {expr1} / {expr2}
Bram Moolenaaraebaf892008-05-28 14:49:58 +00001833fnameescape( {fname}) String escape special characters in {fname}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001834fnamemodify( {fname}, {mods}) String modify file name
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00001835foldclosed( {lnum}) Number first line of fold at {lnum} if closed
1836foldclosedend( {lnum}) Number last line of fold at {lnum} if closed
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001837foldlevel( {lnum}) Number fold level at {lnum}
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00001838foldtext( ) String line displayed for closed fold
Bram Moolenaarc6fe9192006-04-09 21:54:49 +00001839foldtextresult( {lnum}) String text for closed fold at {lnum}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001840foreground( ) Number bring the Vim window to the foreground
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00001841function( {name}) Funcref reference to function {name}
Bram Moolenaarf1568ec2011-12-14 21:17:39 +01001842garbagecollect( [{atexit}]) none free memory, breaking cyclic references
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00001843get( {list}, {idx} [, {def}]) any get item {idx} from {list} or {def}
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00001844get( {dict}, {key} [, {def}]) any get item {key} from {dict} or {def}
Bram Moolenaar45360022005-07-21 21:08:21 +00001845getbufline( {expr}, {lnum} [, {end}])
1846 List lines {lnum} to {end} of buffer {expr}
Bram Moolenaar63dbda12013-02-20 21:12:10 +01001847getbufvar( {expr}, {varname} [, {def}])
1848 any variable {varname} in buffer {expr}
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00001849getchar( [expr]) Number get one character from the user
1850getcharmod( ) Number modifiers for the last typed character
Bram Moolenaarfc39ecf2015-08-11 20:34:49 +02001851getcharsearch() Dict last character search
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001852getcmdline() String return the current command-line
1853getcmdpos() Number return cursor position in command-line
Bram Moolenaarfb539272014-08-22 19:21:47 +02001854getcmdtype() String return current command-line type
1855getcmdwintype() String return current command-line window type
Bram Moolenaar6f6c0f82014-05-28 20:31:42 +02001856getcurpos() List position of the cursor
Bram Moolenaarc9703302016-01-17 21:49:33 +01001857getcwd( [{winnr} [, {tabnr}]]) String get the current working directory
Bram Moolenaar6f6c0f82014-05-28 20:31:42 +02001858getfontname( [{name}]) String name of font being used
Bram Moolenaar5eb86f92004-07-26 12:53:41 +00001859getfperm( {fname}) String file permissions of file {fname}
1860getfsize( {fname}) Number size in bytes of file {fname}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001861getftime( {fname}) Number last modification time of file
Bram Moolenaar5eb86f92004-07-26 12:53:41 +00001862getftype( {fname}) String description of type of file {fname}
Bram Moolenaar7c626922005-02-07 22:01:03 +00001863getline( {lnum}) String line {lnum} of current buffer
1864getline( {lnum}, {end}) List lines {lnum} to {end} of current buffer
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01001865getloclist( {nr}) List list of location list items
Bram Moolenaar6ee10162007-07-26 20:58:42 +00001866getmatches() List list of current matches
Bram Moolenaar18081e32008-02-20 19:11:07 +00001867getpid() Number process ID of Vim
Bram Moolenaar0b238792006-03-02 22:49:12 +00001868getpos( {expr}) List position of cursor, mark, etc.
Bram Moolenaar68b76a62005-03-25 21:53:48 +00001869getqflist() List list of quickfix items
Bram Moolenaarb7cb42b2014-04-02 19:55:10 +02001870getreg( [{regname} [, 1 [, {list}]]])
1871 String or List contents of register
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00001872getregtype( [{regname}]) String type of register
Bram Moolenaar63dbda12013-02-20 21:12:10 +01001873gettabvar( {nr}, {varname} [, {def}])
1874 any variable {varname} in tab {nr} or {def}
1875gettabwinvar( {tabnr}, {winnr}, {name} [, {def}])
Bram Moolenaarc6249bb2006-04-15 20:25:09 +00001876 any {name} in {winnr} in tab page {tabnr}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001877getwinposx() Number X coord in pixels of GUI Vim window
1878getwinposy() Number Y coord in pixels of GUI Vim window
Bram Moolenaar63dbda12013-02-20 21:12:10 +01001879getwinvar( {nr}, {varname} [, {def}])
1880 any variable {varname} in window {nr}
Bram Moolenaard8b77f72015-03-05 21:21:19 +01001881glob( {expr} [, {nosuf} [, {list} [, {alllinks}]]])
Bram Moolenaar146e9c32012-03-07 19:18:23 +01001882 any expand file wildcards in {expr}
Bram Moolenaar5837f1f2015-03-21 18:06:14 +01001883glob2regpat( {expr}) String convert a glob pat into a search pat
Bram Moolenaard8b77f72015-03-05 21:21:19 +01001884globpath( {path}, {expr} [, {nosuf} [, {list} [, {alllinks}]]])
Bram Moolenaarbb5ddda2008-11-28 10:01:10 +00001885 String do glob({expr}) for all dirs in {path}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001886has( {feature}) Number TRUE if feature {feature} supported
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00001887has_key( {dict}, {key}) Number TRUE if {dict} has entry {key}
Bram Moolenaarc9703302016-01-17 21:49:33 +01001888haslocaldir( [{winnr} [, {tabnr}]])
1889 Number TRUE if the window executed |:lcd|
Bram Moolenaar97b2ad32006-03-18 21:40:56 +00001890hasmapto( {what} [, {mode} [, {abbr}]])
1891 Number TRUE if mapping to {what} exists
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001892histadd( {history},{item}) String add an item to a history
1893histdel( {history} [, {item}]) String remove an item from a history
1894histget( {history} [, {index}]) String get the item {index} from a history
1895histnr( {history}) Number highest index of a history
1896hlexists( {name}) Number TRUE if highlight group {name} exists
1897hlID( {name}) Number syntax ID of highlight group {name}
1898hostname() String name of the machine Vim is running on
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00001899iconv( {expr}, {from}, {to}) String convert encoding of {expr}
1900indent( {lnum}) Number indent of line {lnum}
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00001901index( {list}, {expr} [, {start} [, {ic}]])
1902 Number index in {list} where {expr} appears
Bram Moolenaarbfd8fc02005-09-20 23:22:24 +00001903input( {prompt} [, {text} [, {completion}]])
1904 String get input from the user
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001905inputdialog( {p} [, {t} [, {c}]]) String like input() but in a GUI dialog
Bram Moolenaarc6fe9192006-04-09 21:54:49 +00001906inputlist( {textlist}) Number let the user pick from a choice list
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00001907inputrestore() Number restore typeahead
1908inputsave() Number save and clear typeahead
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001909inputsecret( {prompt} [, {text}]) String like input() but hiding the text
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00001910insert( {list}, {item} [, {idx}]) List insert {item} in {list} [before {idx}]
Bram Moolenaard6e256c2011-12-14 15:32:50 +01001911invert( {expr}) Number bitwise invert
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001912isdirectory( {directory}) Number TRUE if {directory} is a directory
Bram Moolenaar2ce06f62005-01-31 19:19:04 +00001913islocked( {expr}) Number TRUE if {expr} is locked
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00001914items( {dict}) List key-value pairs in {dict}
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00001915join( {list} [, {sep}]) String join {list} items into one String
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00001916keys( {dict}) List keys in {dict}
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00001917len( {expr}) Number the length of {expr}
1918libcall( {lib}, {func}, {arg}) String call {func} in library {lib} with {arg}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001919libcallnr( {lib}, {func}, {arg}) Number idem, but return a Number
1920line( {expr}) Number line nr of cursor, last line or mark
1921line2byte( {lnum}) Number byte count of line {lnum}
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00001922lispindent( {lnum}) Number Lisp indent for line {lnum}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001923localtime() Number current time
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02001924log( {expr}) Float natural logarithm (base e) of {expr}
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001925log10( {expr}) Float logarithm of Float {expr} to base 10
Bram Moolenaard38b0552012-04-25 19:07:41 +02001926luaeval( {expr}[, {expr}]) any evaluate |Lua| expression
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00001927map( {expr}, {string}) List/Dict change each item in {expr} to {expr}
Bram Moolenaarbd743252010-10-20 21:23:33 +02001928maparg( {name}[, {mode} [, {abbr} [, {dict}]]])
Bram Moolenaarf1568ec2011-12-14 21:17:39 +01001929 String or Dict
1930 rhs of mapping {name} in mode {mode}
Bram Moolenaar97b2ad32006-03-18 21:40:56 +00001931mapcheck( {name}[, {mode} [, {abbr}]])
1932 String check for mappings matching {name}
Bram Moolenaar89cb5e02004-07-19 20:55:54 +00001933match( {expr}, {pat}[, {start}[, {count}]])
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001934 Number position where {pat} matches in {expr}
Bram Moolenaar6ee10162007-07-26 20:58:42 +00001935matchadd( {group}, {pattern}[, {priority}[, {id}]])
1936 Number highlight {pattern} with {group}
Bram Moolenaarb3414592014-06-17 17:48:32 +02001937matchaddpos( {group}, {list}[, {priority}[, {id}]])
1938 Number highlight positions with {group}
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +00001939matcharg( {nr}) List arguments of |:match|
Bram Moolenaar6ee10162007-07-26 20:58:42 +00001940matchdelete( {id}) Number delete match identified by {id}
Bram Moolenaar89cb5e02004-07-19 20:55:54 +00001941matchend( {expr}, {pat}[, {start}[, {count}]])
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001942 Number position where {pat} ends in {expr}
Bram Moolenaar3a7c85b2005-02-05 21:39:53 +00001943matchlist( {expr}, {pat}[, {start}[, {count}]])
1944 List match and submatches of {pat} in {expr}
Bram Moolenaar89cb5e02004-07-19 20:55:54 +00001945matchstr( {expr}, {pat}[, {start}[, {count}]])
1946 String {count}'th match of {pat} in {expr}
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01001947max( {list}) Number maximum value of items in {list}
1948min( {list}) Number minimum value of items in {list}
1949mkdir( {name} [, {path} [, {prot}]])
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +00001950 Number create directory {name}
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001951mode( [expr]) String current editing mode
Bram Moolenaar7e506b62010-01-19 15:55:06 +01001952mzeval( {expr}) any evaluate |MzScheme| expression
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001953nextnonblank( {lnum}) Number line nr of non-blank line >= {lnum}
Bram Moolenaard35d7842013-01-23 17:17:10 +01001954nr2char( {expr}[, {utf8}]) String single char with ASCII/UTF8 value {expr}
Bram Moolenaard6e256c2011-12-14 15:32:50 +01001955or( {expr}, {expr}) Number bitwise OR
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +00001956pathshorten( {expr}) String shorten directory names in a path
Bram Moolenaare9b892e2016-01-17 21:15:58 +01001957perleval( {expr}) any evaluate |Perl| expression
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001958pow( {x}, {y}) Float {x} to the power of {y}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001959prevnonblank( {lnum}) Number line nr of non-blank line <= {lnum}
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001960printf( {fmt}, {expr1}...) String format text
1961pumvisible() Number whether popup menu is visible
Bram Moolenaar30b65812012-07-12 22:01:11 +02001962pyeval( {expr}) any evaluate |Python| expression
1963py3eval( {expr}) any evaluate |python3| expression
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +00001964range( {expr} [, {max} [, {stride}]])
1965 List items from {expr} to {max}
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01001966readfile( {fname} [, {binary} [, {max}]])
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +00001967 List get list of lines from file {fname}
Bram Moolenaar433f7c82006-03-21 21:29:36 +00001968reltime( [{start} [, {end}]]) List get time value
1969reltimestr( {time}) String turn time value into a String
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001970remote_expr( {server}, {string} [, {idvar}])
1971 String send expression
1972remote_foreground( {server}) Number bring Vim server to the foreground
1973remote_peek( {serverid} [, {retvar}])
1974 Number check for reply string
1975remote_read( {serverid}) String read reply string
1976remote_send( {server}, {string} [, {idvar}])
1977 String send key sequence
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +00001978remove( {list}, {idx} [, {end}]) any remove items {idx}-{end} from {list}
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +00001979remove( {dict}, {key}) any remove entry {key} from {dict}
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00001980rename( {from}, {to}) Number rename (move) file from {from} to {to}
1981repeat( {expr}, {count}) String repeat {expr} {count} times
1982resolve( {filename}) String get filename a shortcut points to
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00001983reverse( {list}) List reverse {list} in-place
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001984round( {expr}) Float round off {expr}
Bram Moolenaar9a773482013-06-11 18:40:13 +02001985screenattr( {row}, {col}) Number attribute at screen position
1986screenchar( {row}, {col}) Number character at screen position
Bram Moolenaar9750bb12012-12-05 16:10:42 +01001987screencol() Number current cursor column
1988screenrow() Number current cursor row
Bram Moolenaar76929292008-01-06 19:07:36 +00001989search( {pattern} [, {flags} [, {stopline} [, {timeout}]]])
1990 Number search for {pattern}
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01001991searchdecl( {name} [, {global} [, {thisblock}]])
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001992 Number search for variable declaration
Bram Moolenaar76929292008-01-06 19:07:36 +00001993searchpair( {start}, {middle}, {end} [, {flags} [, {skip} [...]]])
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00001994 Number search for other end of start/end pair
Bram Moolenaar76929292008-01-06 19:07:36 +00001995searchpairpos( {start}, {middle}, {end} [, {flags} [, {skip} [...]]])
Bram Moolenaar1d2ba7f2006-02-14 22:29:30 +00001996 List search for other end of start/end pair
Bram Moolenaar76929292008-01-06 19:07:36 +00001997searchpos( {pattern} [, {flags} [, {stopline} [, {timeout}]]])
Bram Moolenaar1d2ba7f2006-02-14 22:29:30 +00001998 List search for {pattern}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001999server2client( {clientid}, {string})
2000 Number send reply string
2001serverlist() String get a list of available servers
2002setbufvar( {expr}, {varname}, {val}) set {varname} in buffer {expr} to {val}
Bram Moolenaardbd24b52015-08-11 14:26:19 +02002003setcharsearch( {dict}) Dict set character search from {dict}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002004setcmdpos( {pos}) Number set cursor position in command-line
2005setline( {lnum}, {line}) Number set line {lnum} to {line}
Bram Moolenaar17c7c012006-01-26 22:25:15 +00002006setloclist( {nr}, {list}[, {action}])
2007 Number modify location list using {list}
Bram Moolenaar6ee10162007-07-26 20:58:42 +00002008setmatches( {list}) Number restore a list of matches
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01002009setpos( {expr}, {list}) Number set the {expr} position to {list}
Bram Moolenaar17c7c012006-01-26 22:25:15 +00002010setqflist( {list}[, {action}]) Number modify quickfix list using {list}
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00002011setreg( {n}, {v}[, {opt}]) Number set register to value and type
Bram Moolenaar06b5d512010-05-22 15:37:44 +02002012settabvar( {nr}, {varname}, {val}) set {varname} in tab page {nr} to {val}
Bram Moolenaarc6249bb2006-04-15 20:25:09 +00002013settabwinvar( {tabnr}, {winnr}, {varname}, {val}) set {varname} in window
2014 {winnr} in tab page {tabnr} to {val}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002015setwinvar( {nr}, {varname}, {val}) set {varname} in window {nr} to {val}
Bram Moolenaaraf9aeb92013-02-13 17:35:04 +01002016sha256( {string}) String SHA256 checksum of {string}
Bram Moolenaar05bb9532008-07-04 09:44:11 +00002017shellescape( {string} [, {special}])
2018 String escape {string} for use as shell
Bram Moolenaar60a495f2006-10-03 12:44:42 +00002019 command argument
Bram Moolenaar2d17fa32012-10-21 00:45:18 +02002020shiftwidth() Number effective value of 'shiftwidth'
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00002021simplify( {filename}) String simplify filename as much as possible
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002022sin( {expr}) Float sine of {expr}
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02002023sinh( {expr}) Float hyperbolic sine of {expr}
Bram Moolenaar5f894962011-06-19 02:55:37 +02002024sort( {list} [, {func} [, {dict}]])
2025 List sort {list}, using {func} to compare
Bram Moolenaar24bbcfe2005-06-28 23:32:02 +00002026soundfold( {word}) String sound-fold {word}
Bram Moolenaard857f0e2005-06-21 22:37:39 +00002027spellbadword() String badly spelled word at cursor
Bram Moolenaarc54b8a72005-09-30 21:20:29 +00002028spellsuggest( {word} [, {max} [, {capital}]])
2029 List spelling suggestions
Bram Moolenaar2389c3c2005-05-22 22:07:59 +00002030split( {expr} [, {pat} [, {keepempty}]])
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00002031 List make |List| from {pat} separated {expr}
Bram Moolenaard58e9292011-02-09 17:07:58 +01002032sqrt( {expr}) Float square root of {expr}
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002033str2float( {expr}) Float convert String to Float
2034str2nr( {expr} [, {base}]) Number convert String to Number
Bram Moolenaar641e48c2015-06-25 16:09:26 +02002035strchars( {expr} [, {skipcc}]) Number character length of the String {expr}
Bram Moolenaardc536092010-07-18 15:45:49 +02002036strdisplaywidth( {expr} [, {col}]) Number display length of the String {expr}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002037strftime( {format}[, {time}]) String time in specified format
Bram Moolenaar8f999f12005-01-25 22:12:55 +00002038stridx( {haystack}, {needle}[, {start}])
2039 Number index of {needle} in {haystack}
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00002040string( {expr}) String String representation of {expr} value
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002041strlen( {expr}) Number length of the String {expr}
2042strpart( {src}, {start}[, {len}])
2043 String {len} characters of {src} at {start}
Bram Moolenaar677ee682005-01-27 14:41:15 +00002044strridx( {haystack}, {needle} [, {start}])
2045 Number last index of {needle} in {haystack}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002046strtrans( {expr}) String translate string to make it printable
Bram Moolenaar72597a52010-07-18 15:31:08 +02002047strwidth( {expr}) Number display cell length of the String {expr}
Bram Moolenaar41571762014-04-02 19:00:58 +02002048submatch( {nr}[, {list}]) String or List
2049 specific match in ":s" or substitute()
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002050substitute( {expr}, {pat}, {sub}, {flags})
2051 String all {pat} in {expr} replaced with {sub}
Bram Moolenaar47136d72004-10-12 20:02:24 +00002052synID( {lnum}, {col}, {trans}) Number syntax ID at {lnum} and {col}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002053synIDattr( {synID}, {what} [, {mode}])
2054 String attribute {what} of syntax ID {synID}
2055synIDtrans( {synID}) Number translated syntax ID of {synID}
Bram Moolenaar483c5d82010-10-20 18:45:33 +02002056synconcealed( {lnum}, {col}) List info about concealing
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01002057synstack( {lnum}, {col}) List stack of syntax IDs at {lnum} and {col}
Bram Moolenaarc0197e22004-09-13 20:26:32 +00002058system( {expr} [, {input}]) String output of shell command/filter {expr}
Bram Moolenaar39c29ed2014-04-05 19:44:40 +02002059systemlist( {expr} [, {input}]) List output of shell command/filter {expr}
Bram Moolenaarfaa959a2006-02-20 21:37:40 +00002060tabpagebuflist( [{arg}]) List list of buffer numbers in tab page
2061tabpagenr( [{arg}]) Number number of current or last tab page
2062tabpagewinnr( {tabarg}[, {arg}])
2063 Number number of current window in tab page
2064taglist( {expr}) List list of tags matching {expr}
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002065tagfiles() List tags files used
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002066tempname() String name for a temporary file
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02002067tan( {expr}) Float tangent of {expr}
2068tanh( {expr}) Float hyperbolic tangent of {expr}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002069tolower( {expr}) String the String {expr} switched to lowercase
2070toupper( {expr}) String the String {expr} switched to uppercase
Bram Moolenaar8299df92004-07-10 09:47:34 +00002071tr( {src}, {fromstr}, {tostr}) String translate chars of {src} in {fromstr}
2072 to chars in {tostr}
Bram Moolenaard58e9292011-02-09 17:07:58 +01002073trunc( {expr}) Float truncate Float {expr}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002074type( {name}) Number type of variable {name}
Bram Moolenaara17d4c12010-05-30 18:30:36 +02002075undofile( {name}) String undo file name for {name}
Bram Moolenaara800b422010-06-27 01:15:55 +02002076undotree() List undo file tree
Bram Moolenaar327aa022014-03-25 18:24:23 +01002077uniq( {list} [, {func} [, {dict}]])
2078 List remove adjacent duplicates from a list
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00002079values( {dict}) List values in {dict}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002080virtcol( {expr}) Number screen column of cursor or mark
2081visualmode( [expr]) String last visual mode used
Bram Moolenaar8738fc12013-02-20 17:59:11 +01002082wildmenumode() Number whether 'wildmenu' mode is active
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002083winbufnr( {nr}) Number buffer number of window {nr}
2084wincol() Number window column of the cursor
2085winheight( {nr}) Number height of window {nr}
2086winline() Number window line of the cursor
Bram Moolenaar7e8fd632006-02-18 22:14:51 +00002087winnr( [{expr}]) Number number of current window
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00002088winrestcmd() String returns command to restore window sizes
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01002089winrestview( {dict}) none restore view of current window
Bram Moolenaar87b5ca52006-03-04 21:55:31 +00002090winsaveview() Dict save view of current window
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002091winwidth( {nr}) Number width of window {nr}
Bram Moolenaared767a22016-01-03 22:49:16 +01002092wordcount() Dict get byte/char/word statistics
Bram Moolenaar6b2e9382014-11-05 18:06:01 +01002093writefile( {list}, {fname} [, {flags}])
Bram Moolenaar3a7c85b2005-02-05 21:39:53 +00002094 Number write list of lines to file {fname}
Bram Moolenaard6e256c2011-12-14 15:32:50 +01002095xor( {expr}, {expr}) Number bitwise XOR
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002096
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002097abs({expr}) *abs()*
2098 Return the absolute value of {expr}. When {expr} evaluates to
2099 a |Float| abs() returns a |Float|. When {expr} can be
2100 converted to a |Number| abs() returns a |Number|. Otherwise
2101 abs() gives an error message and returns -1.
2102 Examples: >
2103 echo abs(1.456)
2104< 1.456 >
2105 echo abs(-5.456)
2106< 5.456 >
2107 echo abs(-4)
2108< 4
2109 {only available when compiled with the |+float| feature}
2110
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02002111
2112acos({expr}) *acos()*
2113 Return the arc cosine of {expr} measured in radians, as a
Bram Moolenaar9855d6b2010-07-18 14:34:51 +02002114 |Float| in the range of [0, pi].
2115 {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number| in the range
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02002116 [-1, 1].
2117 Examples: >
2118 :echo acos(0)
2119< 1.570796 >
2120 :echo acos(-0.5)
2121< 2.094395
Bram Moolenaardb84e452010-08-15 13:50:43 +02002122 {only available when compiled with the |+float| feature}
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02002123
2124
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00002125add({list}, {expr}) *add()*
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00002126 Append the item {expr} to |List| {list}. Returns the
2127 resulting |List|. Examples: >
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00002128 :let alist = add([1, 2, 3], item)
2129 :call add(mylist, "woodstock")
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00002130< Note that when {expr} is a |List| it is appended as a single
Bram Moolenaara23ccb82006-02-27 00:08:02 +00002131 item. Use |extend()| to concatenate |Lists|.
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +00002132 Use |insert()| to add an item at another position.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002133
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00002134
Bram Moolenaar75bdf6a2016-01-07 21:25:08 +01002135alloc_fail({id}, {countdown}, {repeat}) *alloc_fail()*
2136 This is for testing: If the memory allocation with {id} is
2137 called, then decrement {countdown}, and when it reaches zero
2138 let memory allocation fail {repeat} times. When {repeat} is
2139 smaller than one it fails one time.
2140
2141
Bram Moolenaard6e256c2011-12-14 15:32:50 +01002142and({expr}, {expr}) *and()*
2143 Bitwise AND on the two arguments. The arguments are converted
2144 to a number. A List, Dict or Float argument causes an error.
2145 Example: >
2146 :let flag = and(bits, 0x80)
2147
2148
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00002149append({lnum}, {expr}) *append()*
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00002150 When {expr} is a |List|: Append each item of the |List| as a
2151 text line below line {lnum} in the current buffer.
Bram Moolenaar748bf032005-02-02 23:04:36 +00002152 Otherwise append {expr} as one text line below line {lnum} in
2153 the current buffer.
2154 {lnum} can be zero to insert a line before the first one.
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00002155 Returns 1 for failure ({lnum} out of range or out of memory),
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002156 0 for success. Example: >
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00002157 :let failed = append(line('$'), "# THE END")
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00002158 :let failed = append(0, ["Chapter 1", "the beginning"])
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00002159<
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002160 *argc()*
2161argc() The result is the number of files in the argument list of the
2162 current window. See |arglist|.
2163
2164 *argidx()*
2165argidx() The result is the current index in the argument list. 0 is
2166 the first file. argc() - 1 is the last one. See |arglist|.
2167
Bram Moolenaar2d1fe052014-05-28 18:22:57 +02002168 *arglistid()*
2169arglistid([{winnr}, [ {tabnr} ]])
2170 Return the argument list ID. This is a number which
2171 identifies the argument list being used. Zero is used for the
Bram Moolenaarfb539272014-08-22 19:21:47 +02002172 global argument list. See |arglist|.
2173 Return -1 if the arguments are invalid.
Bram Moolenaar2d1fe052014-05-28 18:22:57 +02002174
2175 Without arguments use the current window.
2176 With {winnr} only use this window in the current tab page.
2177 With {winnr} and {tabnr} use the window in the specified tab
2178 page.
2179
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002180 *argv()*
Bram Moolenaare2f98b92006-03-29 21:18:24 +00002181argv([{nr}]) The result is the {nr}th file in the argument list of the
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002182 current window. See |arglist|. "argv(0)" is the first one.
2183 Example: >
2184 :let i = 0
2185 :while i < argc()
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002186 : let f = escape(fnameescape(argv(i)), '.')
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002187 : exe 'amenu Arg.' . f . ' :e ' . f . '<CR>'
2188 : let i = i + 1
2189 :endwhile
Bram Moolenaare2f98b92006-03-29 21:18:24 +00002190< Without the {nr} argument a |List| with the whole |arglist| is
2191 returned.
2192
Bram Moolenaar683fa182015-11-30 21:38:24 +01002193 *assert_equal()*
Bram Moolenaara803c7f2016-01-15 15:31:39 +01002194assert_equal({expected}, {actual} [, {msg}])
Bram Moolenaar43345542015-11-29 17:35:35 +01002195 When {expected} and {actual} are not equal an error message is
2196 added to |v:errors|.
2197 There is no automatic conversion, the String "4" is different
2198 from the Number 4. And the number 4 is different from the
2199 Float 4.0. The value of 'ignorecase' is not used here, case
2200 always matters.
Bram Moolenaar683fa182015-11-30 21:38:24 +01002201 When {msg} is omitted an error in the form "Expected
2202 {expected} but got {actual}" is produced.
Bram Moolenaar43345542015-11-29 17:35:35 +01002203 Example: >
Bram Moolenaar683fa182015-11-30 21:38:24 +01002204 assert_equal('foo', 'bar')
Bram Moolenaar43345542015-11-29 17:35:35 +01002205< Will result in a string to be added to |v:errors|:
2206 test.vim line 12: Expected 'foo' but got 'bar' ~
2207
Bram Moolenaara803c7f2016-01-15 15:31:39 +01002208assert_exception({error} [, {msg}]) *assert_exception()*
2209 When v:exception does not contain the string {error} an error
2210 message is added to |v:errors|.
2211 This can be used to assert that a command throws an exception.
2212 Using the error number, followed by a colon, avoids problems
2213 with translations: >
2214 try
2215 commandthatfails
2216 call assert_false(1, 'command should have failed')
2217 catch
2218 call assert_exception('E492:')
2219 endtry
2220
Bram Moolenaara260b872016-01-15 20:48:22 +01002221assert_fails({cmd} [, {error}]) *assert_fails()*
2222 Run {cmd} and add an error message to |v:errors| if it does
2223 NOT produce an error.
2224 When {error} is given it must match |v:errmsg|.
2225
Bram Moolenaara803c7f2016-01-15 15:31:39 +01002226assert_false({actual} [, {msg}]) *assert_false()*
Bram Moolenaar43345542015-11-29 17:35:35 +01002227 When {actual} is not false an error message is added to
Bram Moolenaara803c7f2016-01-15 15:31:39 +01002228 |v:errors|, like with |assert_equal()|.
Bram Moolenaar43345542015-11-29 17:35:35 +01002229 A value is false when it is zero. When "{actual}" is not a
2230 number the assert fails.
Bram Moolenaar683fa182015-11-30 21:38:24 +01002231 When {msg} is omitted an error in the form "Expected False but
2232 got {actual}" is produced.
Bram Moolenaar43345542015-11-29 17:35:35 +01002233
Bram Moolenaara803c7f2016-01-15 15:31:39 +01002234assert_true({actual} [, {msg}]) *assert_true()*
Bram Moolenaar43345542015-11-29 17:35:35 +01002235 When {actual} is not true an error message is added to
Bram Moolenaara803c7f2016-01-15 15:31:39 +01002236 |v:errors|, like with |assert_equal()|.
2237 A value is true when it is a non-zero number. When {actual}
Bram Moolenaar43345542015-11-29 17:35:35 +01002238 is not a number the assert fails.
Bram Moolenaar683fa182015-11-30 21:38:24 +01002239 When {msg} is omitted an error in the form "Expected True but
2240 got {actual}" is produced.
Bram Moolenaar43345542015-11-29 17:35:35 +01002241
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02002242asin({expr}) *asin()*
Bram Moolenaar9855d6b2010-07-18 14:34:51 +02002243 Return the arc sine of {expr} measured in radians, as a |Float|
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02002244 in the range of [-pi/2, pi/2].
Bram Moolenaar9855d6b2010-07-18 14:34:51 +02002245 {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number| in the range
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02002246 [-1, 1].
2247 Examples: >
2248 :echo asin(0.8)
2249< 0.927295 >
2250 :echo asin(-0.5)
2251< -0.523599
Bram Moolenaardb84e452010-08-15 13:50:43 +02002252 {only available when compiled with the |+float| feature}
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02002253
2254
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002255atan({expr}) *atan()*
2256 Return the principal value of the arc tangent of {expr}, in
2257 the range [-pi/2, +pi/2] radians, as a |Float|.
2258 {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|.
2259 Examples: >
2260 :echo atan(100)
2261< 1.560797 >
2262 :echo atan(-4.01)
2263< -1.326405
2264 {only available when compiled with the |+float| feature}
2265
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02002266
2267atan2({expr1}, {expr2}) *atan2()*
2268 Return the arc tangent of {expr1} / {expr2}, measured in
Bram Moolenaar9855d6b2010-07-18 14:34:51 +02002269 radians, as a |Float| in the range [-pi, pi].
2270 {expr1} and {expr2} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|.
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02002271 Examples: >
2272 :echo atan2(-1, 1)
2273< -0.785398 >
2274 :echo atan2(1, -1)
2275< 2.356194
Bram Moolenaardb84e452010-08-15 13:50:43 +02002276 {only available when compiled with the |+float| feature}
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02002277
2278
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002279 *browse()*
2280browse({save}, {title}, {initdir}, {default})
2281 Put up a file requester. This only works when "has("browse")"
2282 returns non-zero (only in some GUI versions).
2283 The input fields are:
2284 {save} when non-zero, select file to write
2285 {title} title for the requester
2286 {initdir} directory to start browsing in
2287 {default} default file name
2288 When the "Cancel" button is hit, something went wrong, or
2289 browsing is not possible, an empty string is returned.
2290
Bram Moolenaar7b0294c2004-10-11 10:16:09 +00002291 *browsedir()*
2292browsedir({title}, {initdir})
2293 Put up a directory requester. This only works when
2294 "has("browse")" returns non-zero (only in some GUI versions).
2295 On systems where a directory browser is not supported a file
2296 browser is used. In that case: select a file in the directory
2297 to be used.
2298 The input fields are:
2299 {title} title for the requester
2300 {initdir} directory to start browsing in
2301 When the "Cancel" button is hit, something went wrong, or
2302 browsing is not possible, an empty string is returned.
2303
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002304bufexists({expr}) *bufexists()*
2305 The result is a Number, which is non-zero if a buffer called
2306 {expr} exists.
Bram Moolenaar69a7cb42004-06-20 12:51:53 +00002307 If the {expr} argument is a number, buffer numbers are used.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002308 If the {expr} argument is a string it must match a buffer name
Bram Moolenaar69a7cb42004-06-20 12:51:53 +00002309 exactly. The name can be:
2310 - Relative to the current directory.
2311 - A full path.
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002312 - The name of a buffer with 'buftype' set to "nofile".
Bram Moolenaar69a7cb42004-06-20 12:51:53 +00002313 - A URL name.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002314 Unlisted buffers will be found.
2315 Note that help files are listed by their short name in the
2316 output of |:buffers|, but bufexists() requires using their
2317 long name to be able to find them.
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002318 bufexists() may report a buffer exists, but to use the name
2319 with a |:buffer| command you may need to use |expand()|. Esp
2320 for MS-Windows 8.3 names in the form "c:\DOCUME~1"
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002321 Use "bufexists(0)" to test for the existence of an alternate
2322 file name.
2323 *buffer_exists()*
2324 Obsolete name: buffer_exists().
2325
2326buflisted({expr}) *buflisted()*
2327 The result is a Number, which is non-zero if a buffer called
2328 {expr} exists and is listed (has the 'buflisted' option set).
Bram Moolenaar69a7cb42004-06-20 12:51:53 +00002329 The {expr} argument is used like with |bufexists()|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002330
2331bufloaded({expr}) *bufloaded()*
2332 The result is a Number, which is non-zero if a buffer called
2333 {expr} exists and is loaded (shown in a window or hidden).
Bram Moolenaar69a7cb42004-06-20 12:51:53 +00002334 The {expr} argument is used like with |bufexists()|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002335
2336bufname({expr}) *bufname()*
2337 The result is the name of a buffer, as it is displayed by the
2338 ":ls" command.
2339 If {expr} is a Number, that buffer number's name is given.
2340 Number zero is the alternate buffer for the current window.
2341 If {expr} is a String, it is used as a |file-pattern| to match
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002342 with the buffer names. This is always done like 'magic' is
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002343 set and 'cpoptions' is empty. When there is more than one
2344 match an empty string is returned.
2345 "" or "%" can be used for the current buffer, "#" for the
2346 alternate buffer.
2347 A full match is preferred, otherwise a match at the start, end
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00002348 or middle of the buffer name is accepted. If you only want a
2349 full match then put "^" at the start and "$" at the end of the
2350 pattern.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002351 Listed buffers are found first. If there is a single match
2352 with a listed buffer, that one is returned. Next unlisted
2353 buffers are searched for.
2354 If the {expr} is a String, but you want to use it as a buffer
2355 number, force it to be a Number by adding zero to it: >
2356 :echo bufname("3" + 0)
2357< If the buffer doesn't exist, or doesn't have a name, an empty
2358 string is returned. >
2359 bufname("#") alternate buffer name
2360 bufname(3) name of buffer 3
2361 bufname("%") name of current buffer
2362 bufname("file2") name of buffer where "file2" matches.
2363< *buffer_name()*
2364 Obsolete name: buffer_name().
2365
2366 *bufnr()*
Bram Moolenaar65c923a2006-03-03 22:56:30 +00002367bufnr({expr} [, {create}])
2368 The result is the number of a buffer, as it is displayed by
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002369 the ":ls" command. For the use of {expr}, see |bufname()|
Bram Moolenaar65c923a2006-03-03 22:56:30 +00002370 above.
2371 If the buffer doesn't exist, -1 is returned. Or, if the
2372 {create} argument is present and not zero, a new, unlisted,
2373 buffer is created and its number is returned.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002374 bufnr("$") is the last buffer: >
2375 :let last_buffer = bufnr("$")
2376< The result is a Number, which is the highest buffer number
2377 of existing buffers. Note that not all buffers with a smaller
2378 number necessarily exist, because ":bwipeout" may have removed
2379 them. Use bufexists() to test for the existence of a buffer.
2380 *buffer_number()*
2381 Obsolete name: buffer_number().
2382 *last_buffer_nr()*
2383 Obsolete name for bufnr("$"): last_buffer_nr().
2384
2385bufwinnr({expr}) *bufwinnr()*
2386 The result is a Number, which is the number of the first
2387 window associated with buffer {expr}. For the use of {expr},
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002388 see |bufname()| above. If buffer {expr} doesn't exist or
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002389 there is no such window, -1 is returned. Example: >
2390
2391 echo "A window containing buffer 1 is " . (bufwinnr(1))
2392
2393< The number can be used with |CTRL-W_w| and ":wincmd w"
2394 |:wincmd|.
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00002395 Only deals with the current tab page.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002396
2397
2398byte2line({byte}) *byte2line()*
2399 Return the line number that contains the character at byte
2400 count {byte} in the current buffer. This includes the
2401 end-of-line character, depending on the 'fileformat' option
2402 for the current buffer. The first character has byte count
2403 one.
2404 Also see |line2byte()|, |go| and |:goto|.
2405 {not available when compiled without the |+byte_offset|
2406 feature}
2407
Bram Moolenaarab79bcb2004-07-18 21:34:53 +00002408byteidx({expr}, {nr}) *byteidx()*
2409 Return byte index of the {nr}'th character in the string
2410 {expr}. Use zero for the first character, it returns zero.
2411 This function is only useful when there are multibyte
2412 characters, otherwise the returned value is equal to {nr}.
Bram Moolenaar0ffbbf92013-11-02 23:29:26 +01002413 Composing characters are not counted separately, their byte
2414 length is added to the preceding base character. See
2415 |byteidxcomp()| below for counting composing characters
2416 separately.
Bram Moolenaarab79bcb2004-07-18 21:34:53 +00002417 Example : >
2418 echo matchstr(str, ".", byteidx(str, 3))
2419< will display the fourth character. Another way to do the
2420 same: >
2421 let s = strpart(str, byteidx(str, 3))
2422 echo strpart(s, 0, byteidx(s, 1))
2423< If there are less than {nr} characters -1 is returned.
2424 If there are exactly {nr} characters the length of the string
Bram Moolenaar0ffbbf92013-11-02 23:29:26 +01002425 in bytes is returned.
2426
2427byteidxcomp({expr}, {nr}) *byteidxcomp()*
2428 Like byteidx(), except that a composing character is counted
2429 as a separate character. Example: >
2430 let s = 'e' . nr2char(0x301)
2431 echo byteidx(s, 1)
2432 echo byteidxcomp(s, 1)
2433 echo byteidxcomp(s, 2)
2434< The first and third echo result in 3 ('e' plus composing
2435 character is 3 bytes), the second echo results in 1 ('e' is
2436 one byte).
2437 Only works different from byteidx() when 'encoding' is set to
2438 a Unicode encoding.
Bram Moolenaarab79bcb2004-07-18 21:34:53 +00002439
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00002440call({func}, {arglist} [, {dict}]) *call()* *E699*
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00002441 Call function {func} with the items in |List| {arglist} as
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +00002442 arguments.
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00002443 {func} can either be a |Funcref| or the name of a function.
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +00002444 a:firstline and a:lastline are set to the cursor line.
2445 Returns the return value of the called function.
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00002446 {dict} is for functions with the "dict" attribute. It will be
2447 used to set the local variable "self". |Dictionary-function|
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +00002448
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002449ceil({expr}) *ceil()*
2450 Return the smallest integral value greater than or equal to
2451 {expr} as a |Float| (round up).
2452 {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|.
2453 Examples: >
2454 echo ceil(1.456)
2455< 2.0 >
2456 echo ceil(-5.456)
2457< -5.0 >
2458 echo ceil(4.0)
2459< 4.0
2460 {only available when compiled with the |+float| feature}
2461
Bram Moolenaarca003e12006-03-17 23:19:38 +00002462changenr() *changenr()*
2463 Return the number of the most recent change. This is the same
2464 number as what is displayed with |:undolist| and can be used
2465 with the |:undo| command.
2466 When a change was made it is the number of that change. After
2467 redo it is the number of the redone change. After undo it is
2468 one less than the number of the undone change.
2469
Bram Moolenaard35d7842013-01-23 17:17:10 +01002470char2nr({expr}[, {utf8}]) *char2nr()*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002471 Return number value of the first char in {expr}. Examples: >
2472 char2nr(" ") returns 32
2473 char2nr("ABC") returns 65
Bram Moolenaard35d7842013-01-23 17:17:10 +01002474< When {utf8} is omitted or zero, the current 'encoding' is used.
2475 Example for "utf-8": >
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00002476 char2nr("á") returns 225
2477 char2nr("á"[0]) returns 195
Bram Moolenaard35d7842013-01-23 17:17:10 +01002478< With {utf8} set to 1, always treat as utf-8 characters.
2479 A combining character is a separate character.
Bram Moolenaar97293012011-07-18 19:40:27 +02002480 |nr2char()| does the opposite.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002481
2482cindent({lnum}) *cindent()*
2483 Get the amount of indent for line {lnum} according the C
2484 indenting rules, as with 'cindent'.
2485 The indent is counted in spaces, the value of 'tabstop' is
2486 relevant. {lnum} is used just like in |getline()|.
2487 When {lnum} is invalid or Vim was not compiled the |+cindent|
2488 feature, -1 is returned.
Bram Moolenaard5cdbeb2005-10-10 20:59:28 +00002489 See |C-indenting|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002490
Bram Moolenaar6ee10162007-07-26 20:58:42 +00002491clearmatches() *clearmatches()*
2492 Clears all matches previously defined by |matchadd()| and the
2493 |:match| commands.
2494
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002495 *col()*
Bram Moolenaarc0197e22004-09-13 20:26:32 +00002496col({expr}) The result is a Number, which is the byte index of the column
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002497 position given with {expr}. The accepted positions are:
2498 . the cursor position
2499 $ the end of the cursor line (the result is the
Bram Moolenaar1aeaf8c2012-05-18 13:46:39 +02002500 number of bytes in the cursor line plus one)
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002501 'x position of mark x (if the mark is not set, 0 is
2502 returned)
Bram Moolenaare3faf442014-12-14 01:27:49 +01002503 v In Visual mode: the start of the Visual area (the
2504 cursor is the end). When not in Visual mode
2505 returns the cursor position. Differs from |'<| in
2506 that it's updated right away.
Bram Moolenaar477933c2007-07-17 14:32:23 +00002507 Additionally {expr} can be [lnum, col]: a |List| with the line
2508 and column number. Most useful when the column is "$", to get
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002509 the last column of a specific line. When "lnum" or "col" is
Bram Moolenaar477933c2007-07-17 14:32:23 +00002510 out of range then col() returns zero.
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00002511 To get the line number use |line()|. To get both use
Bram Moolenaar0b238792006-03-02 22:49:12 +00002512 |getpos()|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002513 For the screen column position use |virtcol()|.
2514 Note that only marks in the current file can be used.
2515 Examples: >
2516 col(".") column of cursor
2517 col("$") length of cursor line plus one
2518 col("'t") column of mark t
2519 col("'" . markname) column of mark markname
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002520< The first column is 1. 0 is returned for an error.
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00002521 For an uppercase mark the column may actually be in another
2522 buffer.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002523 For the cursor position, when 'virtualedit' is active, the
2524 column is one higher if the cursor is after the end of the
2525 line. This can be used to obtain the column in Insert mode: >
2526 :imap <F2> <C-O>:let save_ve = &ve<CR>
2527 \<C-O>:set ve=all<CR>
2528 \<C-O>:echo col(".") . "\n" <Bar>
2529 \let &ve = save_ve<CR>
2530<
Bram Moolenaar572cb562005-08-05 21:35:02 +00002531
Bram Moolenaara94bc432006-03-10 21:42:59 +00002532complete({startcol}, {matches}) *complete()* *E785*
2533 Set the matches for Insert mode completion.
2534 Can only be used in Insert mode. You need to use a mapping
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00002535 with CTRL-R = |i_CTRL-R|. It does not work after CTRL-O or
2536 with an expression mapping.
Bram Moolenaara94bc432006-03-10 21:42:59 +00002537 {startcol} is the byte offset in the line where the completed
2538 text start. The text up to the cursor is the original text
2539 that will be replaced by the matches. Use col('.') for an
2540 empty string. "col('.') - 1" will replace one character by a
2541 match.
2542 {matches} must be a |List|. Each |List| item is one match.
2543 See |complete-items| for the kind of items that are possible.
2544 Note that the after calling this function you need to avoid
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01002545 inserting anything that would cause completion to stop.
Bram Moolenaara94bc432006-03-10 21:42:59 +00002546 The match can be selected with CTRL-N and CTRL-P as usual with
2547 Insert mode completion. The popup menu will appear if
2548 specified, see |ins-completion-menu|.
2549 Example: >
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00002550 inoremap <F5> <C-R>=ListMonths()<CR>
Bram Moolenaara94bc432006-03-10 21:42:59 +00002551
2552 func! ListMonths()
2553 call complete(col('.'), ['January', 'February', 'March',
2554 \ 'April', 'May', 'June', 'July', 'August', 'September',
2555 \ 'October', 'November', 'December'])
2556 return ''
2557 endfunc
2558< This isn't very useful, but it shows how it works. Note that
2559 an empty string is returned to avoid a zero being inserted.
2560
Bram Moolenaar572cb562005-08-05 21:35:02 +00002561complete_add({expr}) *complete_add()*
2562 Add {expr} to the list of matches. Only to be used by the
2563 function specified with the 'completefunc' option.
2564 Returns 0 for failure (empty string or out of memory),
2565 1 when the match was added, 2 when the match was already in
2566 the list.
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002567 See |complete-functions| for an explanation of {expr}. It is
Bram Moolenaar39f05632006-03-19 22:15:26 +00002568 the same as one item in the list that 'omnifunc' would return.
Bram Moolenaar572cb562005-08-05 21:35:02 +00002569
2570complete_check() *complete_check()*
2571 Check for a key typed while looking for completion matches.
2572 This is to be used when looking for matches takes some time.
2573 Returns non-zero when searching for matches is to be aborted,
2574 zero otherwise.
2575 Only to be used by the function specified with the
2576 'completefunc' option.
2577
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002578 *confirm()*
2579confirm({msg} [, {choices} [, {default} [, {type}]]])
2580 Confirm() offers the user a dialog, from which a choice can be
2581 made. It returns the number of the choice. For the first
2582 choice this is 1.
2583 Note: confirm() is only supported when compiled with dialog
2584 support, see |+dialog_con| and |+dialog_gui|.
Bram Moolenaara800b422010-06-27 01:15:55 +02002585
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002586 {msg} is displayed in a |dialog| with {choices} as the
2587 alternatives. When {choices} is missing or empty, "&OK" is
2588 used (and translated).
2589 {msg} is a String, use '\n' to include a newline. Only on
2590 some systems the string is wrapped when it doesn't fit.
Bram Moolenaara800b422010-06-27 01:15:55 +02002591
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002592 {choices} is a String, with the individual choices separated
2593 by '\n', e.g. >
2594 confirm("Save changes?", "&Yes\n&No\n&Cancel")
2595< The letter after the '&' is the shortcut key for that choice.
2596 Thus you can type 'c' to select "Cancel". The shortcut does
2597 not need to be the first letter: >
2598 confirm("file has been modified", "&Save\nSave &All")
2599< For the console, the first letter of each choice is used as
2600 the default shortcut key.
Bram Moolenaara800b422010-06-27 01:15:55 +02002601
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002602 The optional {default} argument is the number of the choice
2603 that is made if the user hits <CR>. Use 1 to make the first
2604 choice the default one. Use 0 to not set a default. If
2605 {default} is omitted, 1 is used.
Bram Moolenaara800b422010-06-27 01:15:55 +02002606
2607 The optional {type} argument gives the type of dialog. This
2608 is only used for the icon of the GTK, Mac, Motif and Win32
2609 GUI. It can be one of these values: "Error", "Question",
2610 "Info", "Warning" or "Generic". Only the first character is
2611 relevant. When {type} is omitted, "Generic" is used.
2612
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002613 If the user aborts the dialog by pressing <Esc>, CTRL-C,
2614 or another valid interrupt key, confirm() returns 0.
2615
2616 An example: >
2617 :let choice = confirm("What do you want?", "&Apples\n&Oranges\n&Bananas", 2)
2618 :if choice == 0
2619 : echo "make up your mind!"
2620 :elseif choice == 3
2621 : echo "tasteful"
2622 :else
2623 : echo "I prefer bananas myself."
2624 :endif
2625< In a GUI dialog, buttons are used. The layout of the buttons
2626 depends on the 'v' flag in 'guioptions'. If it is included,
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002627 the buttons are always put vertically. Otherwise, confirm()
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002628 tries to put the buttons in one horizontal line. If they
2629 don't fit, a vertical layout is used anyway. For some systems
2630 the horizontal layout is always used.
2631
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00002632 *copy()*
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002633copy({expr}) Make a copy of {expr}. For Numbers and Strings this isn't
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00002634 different from using {expr} directly.
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00002635 When {expr} is a |List| a shallow copy is created. This means
2636 that the original |List| can be changed without changing the
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002637 copy, and vice versa. But the items are identical, thus
2638 changing an item changes the contents of both |Lists|. Also
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00002639 see |deepcopy()|.
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00002640
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002641cos({expr}) *cos()*
2642 Return the cosine of {expr}, measured in radians, as a |Float|.
2643 {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|.
2644 Examples: >
2645 :echo cos(100)
2646< 0.862319 >
2647 :echo cos(-4.01)
2648< -0.646043
2649 {only available when compiled with the |+float| feature}
2650
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02002651
2652cosh({expr}) *cosh()*
Bram Moolenaar9855d6b2010-07-18 14:34:51 +02002653 Return the hyperbolic cosine of {expr} as a |Float| in the range
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02002654 [1, inf].
Bram Moolenaar9855d6b2010-07-18 14:34:51 +02002655 {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|.
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02002656 Examples: >
2657 :echo cosh(0.5)
2658< 1.127626 >
2659 :echo cosh(-0.5)
2660< -1.127626
Bram Moolenaardb84e452010-08-15 13:50:43 +02002661 {only available when compiled with the |+float| feature}
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02002662
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002663
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00002664count({comp}, {expr} [, {ic} [, {start}]]) *count()*
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +00002665 Return the number of times an item with value {expr} appears
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00002666 in |List| or |Dictionary| {comp}.
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00002667 If {start} is given then start with the item with this index.
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00002668 {start} can only be used with a |List|.
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +00002669 When {ic} is given and it's non-zero then case is ignored.
2670
2671
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002672 *cscope_connection()*
2673cscope_connection([{num} , {dbpath} [, {prepend}]])
2674 Checks for the existence of a |cscope| connection. If no
2675 parameters are specified, then the function returns:
2676 0, if cscope was not available (not compiled in), or
2677 if there are no cscope connections;
2678 1, if there is at least one cscope connection.
2679
2680 If parameters are specified, then the value of {num}
2681 determines how existence of a cscope connection is checked:
2682
2683 {num} Description of existence check
2684 ----- ------------------------------
2685 0 Same as no parameters (e.g., "cscope_connection()").
2686 1 Ignore {prepend}, and use partial string matches for
2687 {dbpath}.
2688 2 Ignore {prepend}, and use exact string matches for
2689 {dbpath}.
2690 3 Use {prepend}, use partial string matches for both
2691 {dbpath} and {prepend}.
2692 4 Use {prepend}, use exact string matches for both
2693 {dbpath} and {prepend}.
2694
2695 Note: All string comparisons are case sensitive!
2696
2697 Examples. Suppose we had the following (from ":cs show"): >
2698
2699 # pid database name prepend path
2700 0 27664 cscope.out /usr/local
2701<
2702 Invocation Return Val ~
2703 ---------- ---------- >
2704 cscope_connection() 1
2705 cscope_connection(1, "out") 1
2706 cscope_connection(2, "out") 0
2707 cscope_connection(3, "out") 0
2708 cscope_connection(3, "out", "local") 1
2709 cscope_connection(4, "out") 0
2710 cscope_connection(4, "out", "local") 0
2711 cscope_connection(4, "cscope.out", "/usr/local") 1
2712<
Bram Moolenaar0b238792006-03-02 22:49:12 +00002713cursor({lnum}, {col} [, {off}]) *cursor()*
2714cursor({list})
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00002715 Positions the cursor at the column (byte count) {col} in the
2716 line {lnum}. The first column is one.
Bram Moolenaar493c1782014-05-28 14:34:46 +02002717
Bram Moolenaar0b238792006-03-02 22:49:12 +00002718 When there is one argument {list} this is used as a |List|
Bram Moolenaar493c1782014-05-28 14:34:46 +02002719 with two, three or four item:
2720 [{lnum}, {col}, {off}]
2721 [{lnum}, {col}, {off}, {curswant}]
Bram Moolenaar946e27a2014-06-25 18:50:27 +02002722 This is like the return value of |getpos()| or |getcurpos()|,
Bram Moolenaar6f6c0f82014-05-28 20:31:42 +02002723 but without the first item.
Bram Moolenaar493c1782014-05-28 14:34:46 +02002724
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002725 Does not change the jumplist.
2726 If {lnum} is greater than the number of lines in the buffer,
2727 the cursor will be positioned at the last line in the buffer.
2728 If {lnum} is zero, the cursor will stay in the current line.
Bram Moolenaar6f16eb82005-08-23 21:02:42 +00002729 If {col} is greater than the number of bytes in the line,
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002730 the cursor will be positioned at the last character in the
2731 line.
2732 If {col} is zero, the cursor will stay in the current column.
Bram Moolenaar6f6c0f82014-05-28 20:31:42 +02002733 If {curswant} is given it is used to set the preferred column
Bram Moolenaar34401cc2014-08-29 15:12:19 +02002734 for vertical movement. Otherwise {col} is used.
Bram Moolenaar2f3b5102014-11-19 18:54:17 +01002735
Bram Moolenaar0b238792006-03-02 22:49:12 +00002736 When 'virtualedit' is used {off} specifies the offset in
2737 screen columns from the start of the character. E.g., a
Bram Moolenaard46bbc72007-05-12 14:38:41 +00002738 position within a <Tab> or after the last character.
Bram Moolenaar798b30b2009-04-22 10:56:16 +00002739 Returns 0 when the position could be set, -1 otherwise.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002740
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00002741
Bram Moolenaar4399ef42005-02-12 14:29:27 +00002742deepcopy({expr}[, {noref}]) *deepcopy()* *E698*
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002743 Make a copy of {expr}. For Numbers and Strings this isn't
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00002744 different from using {expr} directly.
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00002745 When {expr} is a |List| a full copy is created. This means
2746 that the original |List| can be changed without changing the
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002747 copy, and vice versa. When an item is a |List|, a copy for it
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00002748 is made, recursively. Thus changing an item in the copy does
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00002749 not change the contents of the original |List|.
2750 When {noref} is omitted or zero a contained |List| or
2751 |Dictionary| is only copied once. All references point to
2752 this single copy. With {noref} set to 1 every occurrence of a
2753 |List| or |Dictionary| results in a new copy. This also means
2754 that a cyclic reference causes deepcopy() to fail.
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +00002755 *E724*
2756 Nesting is possible up to 100 levels. When there is an item
Bram Moolenaar4399ef42005-02-12 14:29:27 +00002757 that refers back to a higher level making a deep copy with
2758 {noref} set to 1 will fail.
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00002759 Also see |copy()|.
2760
Bram Moolenaarda440d22016-01-16 21:27:23 +01002761delete({fname} [, {flags}]) *delete()*
2762 Without {flags} or with {flags} empty: Deletes the file by the
Bram Moolenaar43a34f92016-01-17 15:56:34 +01002763 name {fname}. This also works when {fname} is a symbolic link.
Bram Moolenaarda440d22016-01-16 21:27:23 +01002764
2765 When {flags} is "d": Deletes the directory by the name
Bram Moolenaar43a34f92016-01-17 15:56:34 +01002766 {fname}. This fails when directory {fname} is not empty.
Bram Moolenaarda440d22016-01-16 21:27:23 +01002767
2768 When {flags} is "rf": Deletes the directory by the name
Bram Moolenaar43a34f92016-01-17 15:56:34 +01002769 {fname} and everything in it, recursively. BE CAREFUL!
2770 A symbolic link itself is deleted, not what it points to.
Bram Moolenaarda440d22016-01-16 21:27:23 +01002771
2772 The result is a Number, which is 0 if the delete operation was
2773 successful and -1 when the deletion failed or partly failed.
2774
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00002775 Use |remove()| to delete an item from a |List|.
Bram Moolenaarac7bd632013-03-19 11:35:58 +01002776 To delete a line from the buffer use |:delete|. Use |:exe|
2777 when the line number is in a variable.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002778
2779 *did_filetype()*
2780did_filetype() Returns non-zero when autocommands are being executed and the
2781 FileType event has been triggered at least once. Can be used
2782 to avoid triggering the FileType event again in the scripts
2783 that detect the file type. |FileType|
2784 When editing another file, the counter is reset, thus this
2785 really checks if the FileType event has been triggered for the
2786 current buffer. This allows an autocommand that starts
2787 editing another buffer to set 'filetype' and load a syntax
2788 file.
2789
Bram Moolenaar47136d72004-10-12 20:02:24 +00002790diff_filler({lnum}) *diff_filler()*
2791 Returns the number of filler lines above line {lnum}.
2792 These are the lines that were inserted at this point in
2793 another diff'ed window. These filler lines are shown in the
2794 display but don't exist in the buffer.
2795 {lnum} is used like with |getline()|. Thus "." is the current
2796 line, "'m" mark m, etc.
2797 Returns 0 if the current window is not in diff mode.
2798
2799diff_hlID({lnum}, {col}) *diff_hlID()*
2800 Returns the highlight ID for diff mode at line {lnum} column
2801 {col} (byte index). When the current line does not have a
2802 diff change zero is returned.
2803 {lnum} is used like with |getline()|. Thus "." is the current
2804 line, "'m" mark m, etc.
2805 {col} is 1 for the leftmost column, {lnum} is 1 for the first
2806 line.
2807 The highlight ID can be used with |synIDattr()| to obtain
2808 syntax information about the highlighting.
2809
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +00002810empty({expr}) *empty()*
2811 Return the Number 1 if {expr} is empty, zero otherwise.
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00002812 A |List| or |Dictionary| is empty when it does not have any
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002813 items. A Number is empty when its value is zero.
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01002814 For a long |List| this is much faster than comparing the
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00002815 length with zero.
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +00002816
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002817escape({string}, {chars}) *escape()*
2818 Escape the characters in {chars} that occur in {string} with a
2819 backslash. Example: >
2820 :echo escape('c:\program files\vim', ' \')
2821< results in: >
2822 c:\\program\ files\\vim
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002823< Also see |shellescape()|.
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00002824
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002825 *eval()*
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00002826eval({string}) Evaluate {string} and return the result. Especially useful to
2827 turn the result of |string()| back into the original value.
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002828 This works for Numbers, Floats, Strings and composites of
2829 them. Also works for |Funcref|s that refer to existing
2830 functions.
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00002831
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002832eventhandler() *eventhandler()*
2833 Returns 1 when inside an event handler. That is that Vim got
2834 interrupted while waiting for the user to type a character,
2835 e.g., when dropping a file on Vim. This means interactive
2836 commands cannot be used. Otherwise zero is returned.
2837
2838executable({expr}) *executable()*
2839 This function checks if an executable with the name {expr}
2840 exists. {expr} must be the name of the program without any
Bram Moolenaarf4b8e572004-06-24 15:53:16 +00002841 arguments.
2842 executable() uses the value of $PATH and/or the normal
2843 searchpath for programs. *PATHEXT*
2844 On MS-DOS and MS-Windows the ".exe", ".bat", etc. can
2845 optionally be included. Then the extensions in $PATHEXT are
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002846 tried. Thus if "foo.exe" does not exist, "foo.exe.bat" can be
2847 found. If $PATHEXT is not set then ".exe;.com;.bat;.cmd" is
Bram Moolenaarf4b8e572004-06-24 15:53:16 +00002848 used. A dot by itself can be used in $PATHEXT to try using
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002849 the name without an extension. When 'shell' looks like a
Bram Moolenaarf4b8e572004-06-24 15:53:16 +00002850 Unix shell, then the name is also tried without adding an
2851 extension.
2852 On MS-DOS and MS-Windows it only checks if the file exists and
2853 is not a directory, not if it's really executable.
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +00002854 On MS-Windows an executable in the same directory as Vim is
2855 always found. Since this directory is added to $PATH it
2856 should also work to execute it |win32-PATH|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002857 The result is a Number:
2858 1 exists
2859 0 does not exist
2860 -1 not implemented on this system
2861
Bram Moolenaarc7f02552014-04-01 21:00:59 +02002862exepath({expr}) *exepath()*
2863 If {expr} is an executable and is either an absolute path, a
2864 relative path or found in $PATH, return the full path.
2865 Note that the current directory is used when {expr} starts
2866 with "./", which may be a problem for Vim: >
2867 echo exepath(v:progpath)
Bram Moolenaar7e38ea22014-04-05 22:55:53 +02002868< If {expr} cannot be found in $PATH or is not executable then
Bram Moolenaarc7f02552014-04-01 21:00:59 +02002869 an empty string is returned.
2870
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002871 *exists()*
2872exists({expr}) The result is a Number, which is non-zero if {expr} is
2873 defined, zero otherwise. The {expr} argument is a string,
2874 which contains one of these:
2875 &option-name Vim option (only checks if it exists,
2876 not if it really works)
2877 +option-name Vim option that works.
2878 $ENVNAME environment variable (could also be
2879 done by comparing with an empty
2880 string)
2881 *funcname built-in function (see |functions|)
2882 or user defined function (see
Bram Moolenaarbcb98982014-05-01 14:08:19 +02002883 |user-functions|). Also works for a
2884 variable that is a Funcref.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002885 varname internal variable (see
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002886 |internal-variables|). Also works
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00002887 for |curly-braces-names|, |Dictionary|
2888 entries, |List| items, etc. Beware
Bram Moolenaarc236c162008-07-13 17:41:49 +00002889 that evaluating an index may cause an
2890 error message for an invalid
2891 expression. E.g.: >
2892 :let l = [1, 2, 3]
2893 :echo exists("l[5]")
2894< 0 >
2895 :echo exists("l[xx]")
2896< E121: Undefined variable: xx
2897 0
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002898 :cmdname Ex command: built-in command, user
2899 command or command modifier |:command|.
2900 Returns:
2901 1 for match with start of a command
2902 2 full match with a command
2903 3 matches several user commands
2904 To check for a supported command
2905 always check the return value to be 2.
Bram Moolenaar14716812006-05-04 21:54:08 +00002906 :2match The |:2match| command.
2907 :3match The |:3match| command.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002908 #event autocommand defined for this event
2909 #event#pattern autocommand defined for this event and
2910 pattern (the pattern is taken
2911 literally and compared to the
2912 autocommand patterns character by
2913 character)
Bram Moolenaara9b1e742005-12-19 22:14:58 +00002914 #group autocommand group exists
2915 #group#event autocommand defined for this group and
2916 event.
2917 #group#event#pattern
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +00002918 autocommand defined for this group,
Bram Moolenaara9b1e742005-12-19 22:14:58 +00002919 event and pattern.
Bram Moolenaarf4cd3e82005-12-22 22:47:02 +00002920 ##event autocommand for this event is
2921 supported.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002922 For checking for a supported feature use |has()|.
2923
2924 Examples: >
2925 exists("&shortname")
2926 exists("$HOSTNAME")
2927 exists("*strftime")
2928 exists("*s:MyFunc")
2929 exists("bufcount")
2930 exists(":Make")
Bram Moolenaara9b1e742005-12-19 22:14:58 +00002931 exists("#CursorHold")
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002932 exists("#BufReadPre#*.gz")
Bram Moolenaara9b1e742005-12-19 22:14:58 +00002933 exists("#filetypeindent")
2934 exists("#filetypeindent#FileType")
2935 exists("#filetypeindent#FileType#*")
Bram Moolenaarf4cd3e82005-12-22 22:47:02 +00002936 exists("##ColorScheme")
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002937< There must be no space between the symbol (&/$/*/#) and the
2938 name.
Bram Moolenaar91170f82006-05-05 21:15:17 +00002939 There must be no extra characters after the name, although in
2940 a few cases this is ignored. That may become more strict in
2941 the future, thus don't count on it!
2942 Working example: >
2943 exists(":make")
2944< NOT working example: >
2945 exists(":make install")
Bram Moolenaar9c102382006-05-03 21:26:49 +00002946
2947< Note that the argument must be a string, not the name of the
2948 variable itself. For example: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002949 exists(bufcount)
2950< This doesn't check for existence of the "bufcount" variable,
Bram Moolenaar06a89a52006-04-29 22:01:03 +00002951 but gets the value of "bufcount", and checks if that exists.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002952
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02002953exp({expr}) *exp()*
Bram Moolenaar9855d6b2010-07-18 14:34:51 +02002954 Return the exponential of {expr} as a |Float| in the range
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02002955 [0, inf].
Bram Moolenaar9855d6b2010-07-18 14:34:51 +02002956 {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|.
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02002957 Examples: >
2958 :echo exp(2)
2959< 7.389056 >
2960 :echo exp(-1)
2961< 0.367879
Bram Moolenaardb84e452010-08-15 13:50:43 +02002962 {only available when compiled with the |+float| feature}
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02002963
2964
Bram Moolenaar84f72352012-03-11 15:57:40 +01002965expand({expr} [, {nosuf} [, {list}]]) *expand()*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002966 Expand wildcards and the following special keywords in {expr}.
Bram Moolenaar84f72352012-03-11 15:57:40 +01002967 'wildignorecase' applies.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002968
Bram Moolenaar84f72352012-03-11 15:57:40 +01002969 If {list} is given and it is non-zero, a List will be returned.
2970 Otherwise the result is a String and when there are several
2971 matches, they are separated by <NL> characters. [Note: in
2972 version 5.0 a space was used, which caused problems when a
2973 file name contains a space]
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002974
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00002975 If the expansion fails, the result is an empty string. A name
Bram Moolenaarec7944a2013-06-12 21:29:15 +02002976 for a non-existing file is not included, unless {expr} does
2977 not start with '%', '#' or '<', see below.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002978
2979 When {expr} starts with '%', '#' or '<', the expansion is done
2980 like for the |cmdline-special| variables with their associated
2981 modifiers. Here is a short overview:
2982
2983 % current file name
2984 # alternate file name
2985 #n alternate file name n
2986 <cfile> file name under the cursor
2987 <afile> autocmd file name
2988 <abuf> autocmd buffer number (as a String!)
2989 <amatch> autocmd matched name
Bram Moolenaara6878372014-03-22 21:02:50 +01002990 <sfile> sourced script file or function name
Bram Moolenaar81af9252010-12-10 20:35:50 +01002991 <slnum> sourced script file line number
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002992 <cword> word under the cursor
2993 <cWORD> WORD under the cursor
2994 <client> the {clientid} of the last received
2995 message |server2client()|
2996 Modifiers:
2997 :p expand to full path
2998 :h head (last path component removed)
2999 :t tail (last path component only)
3000 :r root (one extension removed)
3001 :e extension only
3002
3003 Example: >
3004 :let &tags = expand("%:p:h") . "/tags"
3005< Note that when expanding a string that starts with '%', '#' or
3006 '<', any following text is ignored. This does NOT work: >
3007 :let doesntwork = expand("%:h.bak")
3008< Use this: >
3009 :let doeswork = expand("%:h") . ".bak"
3010< Also note that expanding "<cfile>" and others only returns the
3011 referenced file name without further expansion. If "<cfile>"
3012 is "~/.cshrc", you need to do another expand() to have the
3013 "~/" expanded into the path of the home directory: >
3014 :echo expand(expand("<cfile>"))
3015<
3016 There cannot be white space between the variables and the
3017 following modifier. The |fnamemodify()| function can be used
3018 to modify normal file names.
3019
3020 When using '%' or '#', and the current or alternate file name
3021 is not defined, an empty string is used. Using "%:p" in a
3022 buffer with no name, results in the current directory, with a
3023 '/' added.
3024
3025 When {expr} does not start with '%', '#' or '<', it is
3026 expanded like a file name is expanded on the command line.
3027 'suffixes' and 'wildignore' are used, unless the optional
Bram Moolenaar146e9c32012-03-07 19:18:23 +01003028 {nosuf} argument is given and it is non-zero.
3029 Names for non-existing files are included. The "**" item can
3030 be used to search in a directory tree. For example, to find
3031 all "README" files in the current directory and below: >
Bram Moolenaar02743632005-07-25 20:42:36 +00003032 :echo expand("**/README")
3033<
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003034 Expand() can also be used to expand variables and environment
3035 variables that are only known in a shell. But this can be
Bram Moolenaar34401cc2014-08-29 15:12:19 +02003036 slow, because a shell may be used to do the expansion. See
3037 |expr-env-expand|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003038 The expanded variable is still handled like a list of file
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00003039 names. When an environment variable cannot be expanded, it is
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003040 left unchanged. Thus ":echo expand('$FOOBAR')" results in
3041 "$FOOBAR".
3042
3043 See |glob()| for finding existing files. See |system()| for
3044 getting the raw output of an external command.
3045
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00003046extend({expr1}, {expr2} [, {expr3}]) *extend()*
Bram Moolenaara23ccb82006-02-27 00:08:02 +00003047 {expr1} and {expr2} must be both |Lists| or both
3048 |Dictionaries|.
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00003049
Bram Moolenaara23ccb82006-02-27 00:08:02 +00003050 If they are |Lists|: Append {expr2} to {expr1}.
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00003051 If {expr3} is given insert the items of {expr2} before item
3052 {expr3} in {expr1}. When {expr3} is zero insert before the
3053 first item. When {expr3} is equal to len({expr1}) then
3054 {expr2} is appended.
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +00003055 Examples: >
3056 :echo sort(extend(mylist, [7, 5]))
3057 :call extend(mylist, [2, 3], 1)
Bram Moolenaardc9cf9c2008-08-08 10:36:31 +00003058< When {expr1} is the same List as {expr2} then the number of
3059 items copied is equal to the original length of the List.
3060 E.g., when {expr3} is 1 you get N new copies of the first item
3061 (where N is the original length of the List).
3062 Use |add()| to concatenate one item to a list. To concatenate
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00003063 two lists into a new list use the + operator: >
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +00003064 :let newlist = [1, 2, 3] + [4, 5]
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00003065<
Bram Moolenaara23ccb82006-02-27 00:08:02 +00003066 If they are |Dictionaries|:
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00003067 Add all entries from {expr2} to {expr1}.
3068 If a key exists in both {expr1} and {expr2} then {expr3} is
3069 used to decide what to do:
3070 {expr3} = "keep": keep the value of {expr1}
3071 {expr3} = "force": use the value of {expr2}
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +00003072 {expr3} = "error": give an error message *E737*
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00003073 When {expr3} is omitted then "force" is assumed.
3074
3075 {expr1} is changed when {expr2} is not empty. If necessary
3076 make a copy of {expr1} first.
3077 {expr2} remains unchanged.
Bram Moolenaarf2571c62015-06-09 19:44:55 +02003078 When {expr1} is locked and {expr2} is not empty the operation
3079 fails.
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00003080 Returns {expr1}.
3081
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +00003082
Bram Moolenaarf9393ef2006-04-24 19:47:27 +00003083feedkeys({string} [, {mode}]) *feedkeys()*
3084 Characters in {string} are queued for processing as if they
Bram Moolenaar0a988df2015-01-27 15:19:24 +01003085 come from a mapping or were typed by the user.
3086 By default the string is added to the end of the typeahead
3087 buffer, thus if a mapping is still being executed the
3088 characters come after them. Use the 'i' flag to insert before
3089 other characters, they will be executed next, before any
3090 characters from a mapping.
Bram Moolenaarf9393ef2006-04-24 19:47:27 +00003091 The function does not wait for processing of keys contained in
3092 {string}.
3093 To include special keys into {string}, use double-quotes
3094 and "\..." notation |expr-quote|. For example,
Bram Moolenaar79166c42007-05-10 18:29:51 +00003095 feedkeys("\<CR>") simulates pressing of the <Enter> key. But
Bram Moolenaarf9393ef2006-04-24 19:47:27 +00003096 feedkeys('\<CR>') pushes 5 characters.
3097 If {mode} is absent, keys are remapped.
3098 {mode} is a String, which can contain these character flags:
Bram Moolenaar551dbcc2006-04-25 22:13:59 +00003099 'm' Remap keys. This is default.
3100 'n' Do not remap keys.
3101 't' Handle keys as if typed; otherwise they are handled as
3102 if coming from a mapping. This matters for undo,
3103 opening folds, etc.
Bram Moolenaar0a988df2015-01-27 15:19:24 +01003104 'i' Insert the string instead of appending (see above).
Bram Moolenaar25281632016-01-21 23:32:32 +01003105 'x' Execute commands until typeahead is empty. This is
3106 similar to using ":normal!". You can call feedkeys()
3107 several times without 'x' and then one time with 'x'
3108 (possibly with an empty {string}) to execute all the
3109 typeahead.
Bram Moolenaarf9393ef2006-04-24 19:47:27 +00003110 Return value is always 0.
3111
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003112filereadable({file}) *filereadable()*
3113 The result is a Number, which is TRUE when a file with the
3114 name {file} exists, and can be read. If {file} doesn't exist,
3115 or is a directory, the result is FALSE. {file} is any
3116 expression, which is used as a String.
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00003117 If you don't care about the file being readable you can use
3118 |glob()|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003119 *file_readable()*
3120 Obsolete name: file_readable().
3121
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00003122
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00003123filewritable({file}) *filewritable()*
3124 The result is a Number, which is 1 when a file with the
3125 name {file} exists, and can be written. If {file} doesn't
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00003126 exist, or is not writable, the result is 0. If {file} is a
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00003127 directory, and we can write to it, the result is 2.
3128
3129
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00003130filter({expr}, {string}) *filter()*
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00003131 {expr} must be a |List| or a |Dictionary|.
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00003132 For each item in {expr} evaluate {string} and when the result
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00003133 is zero remove the item from the |List| or |Dictionary|.
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00003134 Inside {string} |v:val| has the value of the current item.
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00003135 For a |Dictionary| |v:key| has the key of the current item.
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00003136 Examples: >
3137 :call filter(mylist, 'v:val !~ "OLD"')
3138< Removes the items where "OLD" appears. >
3139 :call filter(mydict, 'v:key >= 8')
3140< Removes the items with a key below 8. >
3141 :call filter(var, 0)
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00003142< Removes all the items, thus clears the |List| or |Dictionary|.
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +00003143
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00003144 Note that {string} is the result of expression and is then
3145 used as an expression again. Often it is good to use a
3146 |literal-string| to avoid having to double backslashes.
3147
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00003148 The operation is done in-place. If you want a |List| or
3149 |Dictionary| to remain unmodified make a copy first: >
Bram Moolenaarafeb4fa2006-02-01 21:51:12 +00003150 :let l = filter(copy(mylist), 'v:val =~ "KEEP"')
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00003151
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00003152< Returns {expr}, the |List| or |Dictionary| that was filtered.
Bram Moolenaar280f1262006-01-30 00:14:18 +00003153 When an error is encountered while evaluating {string} no
3154 further items in {expr} are processed.
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00003155
3156
Bram Moolenaar89cb5e02004-07-19 20:55:54 +00003157finddir({name}[, {path}[, {count}]]) *finddir()*
Bram Moolenaar5b6b1ca2007-03-27 08:19:43 +00003158 Find directory {name} in {path}. Supports both downwards and
3159 upwards recursive directory searches. See |file-searching|
3160 for the syntax of {path}.
3161 Returns the path of the first found match. When the found
3162 directory is below the current directory a relative path is
3163 returned. Otherwise a full path is returned.
Bram Moolenaar89cb5e02004-07-19 20:55:54 +00003164 If {path} is omitted or empty then 'path' is used.
3165 If the optional {count} is given, find {count}'s occurrence of
Bram Moolenaar433f7c82006-03-21 21:29:36 +00003166 {name} in {path} instead of the first one.
Bram Moolenaar899dddf2006-03-26 21:06:50 +00003167 When {count} is negative return all the matches in a |List|.
Bram Moolenaar89cb5e02004-07-19 20:55:54 +00003168 This is quite similar to the ex-command |:find|.
Bram Moolenaardb84e452010-08-15 13:50:43 +02003169 {only available when compiled with the |+file_in_path|
3170 feature}
Bram Moolenaar89cb5e02004-07-19 20:55:54 +00003171
3172findfile({name}[, {path}[, {count}]]) *findfile()*
3173 Just like |finddir()|, but find a file instead of a directory.
Bram Moolenaar433f7c82006-03-21 21:29:36 +00003174 Uses 'suffixesadd'.
3175 Example: >
3176 :echo findfile("tags.vim", ".;")
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00003177< Searches from the directory of the current file upwards until
3178 it finds the file "tags.vim".
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003179
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00003180float2nr({expr}) *float2nr()*
3181 Convert {expr} to a Number by omitting the part after the
3182 decimal point.
3183 {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a Number.
3184 When the value of {expr} is out of range for a |Number| the
3185 result is truncated to 0x7fffffff or -0x7fffffff. NaN results
3186 in -0x80000000.
3187 Examples: >
3188 echo float2nr(3.95)
3189< 3 >
3190 echo float2nr(-23.45)
3191< -23 >
3192 echo float2nr(1.0e100)
3193< 2147483647 >
3194 echo float2nr(-1.0e150)
3195< -2147483647 >
3196 echo float2nr(1.0e-100)
3197< 0
3198 {only available when compiled with the |+float| feature}
3199
3200
3201floor({expr}) *floor()*
3202 Return the largest integral value less than or equal to
3203 {expr} as a |Float| (round down).
3204 {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|.
3205 Examples: >
3206 echo floor(1.856)
3207< 1.0 >
3208 echo floor(-5.456)
3209< -6.0 >
3210 echo floor(4.0)
3211< 4.0
3212 {only available when compiled with the |+float| feature}
3213
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02003214
3215fmod({expr1}, {expr2}) *fmod()*
3216 Return the remainder of {expr1} / {expr2}, even if the
3217 division is not representable. Returns {expr1} - i * {expr2}
3218 for some integer i such that if {expr2} is non-zero, the
3219 result has the same sign as {expr1} and magnitude less than
3220 the magnitude of {expr2}. If {expr2} is zero, the value
Bram Moolenaar9855d6b2010-07-18 14:34:51 +02003221 returned is zero. The value returned is a |Float|.
3222 {expr1} and {expr2} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|.
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02003223 Examples: >
3224 :echo fmod(12.33, 1.22)
3225< 0.13 >
3226 :echo fmod(-12.33, 1.22)
3227< -0.13
Bram Moolenaardb84e452010-08-15 13:50:43 +02003228 {only available when compiled with |+float| feature}
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02003229
3230
Bram Moolenaaraebaf892008-05-28 14:49:58 +00003231fnameescape({string}) *fnameescape()*
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00003232 Escape {string} for use as file name command argument. All
Bram Moolenaaraebaf892008-05-28 14:49:58 +00003233 characters that have a special meaning, such as '%' and '|'
3234 are escaped with a backslash.
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00003235 For most systems the characters escaped are
3236 " \t\n*?[{`$\\%#'\"|!<". For systems where a backslash
3237 appears in a filename, it depends on the value of 'isfname'.
Bram Moolenaar1b24e4b2008-08-08 10:59:17 +00003238 A leading '+' and '>' is also escaped (special after |:edit|
3239 and |:write|). And a "-" by itself (special after |:cd|).
Bram Moolenaaraebaf892008-05-28 14:49:58 +00003240 Example: >
Bram Moolenaar1b24e4b2008-08-08 10:59:17 +00003241 :let fname = '+some str%nge|name'
Bram Moolenaaraebaf892008-05-28 14:49:58 +00003242 :exe "edit " . fnameescape(fname)
3243< results in executing: >
Bram Moolenaar1b24e4b2008-08-08 10:59:17 +00003244 edit \+some\ str\%nge\|name
Bram Moolenaaraebaf892008-05-28 14:49:58 +00003245
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003246fnamemodify({fname}, {mods}) *fnamemodify()*
3247 Modify file name {fname} according to {mods}. {mods} is a
3248 string of characters like it is used for file names on the
3249 command line. See |filename-modifiers|.
3250 Example: >
3251 :echo fnamemodify("main.c", ":p:h")
3252< results in: >
3253 /home/mool/vim/vim/src
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00003254< Note: Environment variables don't work in {fname}, use
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003255 |expand()| first then.
3256
3257foldclosed({lnum}) *foldclosed()*
3258 The result is a Number. If the line {lnum} is in a closed
3259 fold, the result is the number of the first line in that fold.
3260 If the line {lnum} is not in a closed fold, -1 is returned.
3261
3262foldclosedend({lnum}) *foldclosedend()*
3263 The result is a Number. If the line {lnum} is in a closed
3264 fold, the result is the number of the last line in that fold.
3265 If the line {lnum} is not in a closed fold, -1 is returned.
3266
3267foldlevel({lnum}) *foldlevel()*
3268 The result is a Number, which is the foldlevel of line {lnum}
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00003269 in the current buffer. For nested folds the deepest level is
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003270 returned. If there is no fold at line {lnum}, zero is
3271 returned. It doesn't matter if the folds are open or closed.
3272 When used while updating folds (from 'foldexpr') -1 is
3273 returned for lines where folds are still to be updated and the
3274 foldlevel is unknown. As a special case the level of the
3275 previous line is usually available.
3276
3277 *foldtext()*
3278foldtext() Returns a String, to be displayed for a closed fold. This is
3279 the default function used for the 'foldtext' option and should
3280 only be called from evaluating 'foldtext'. It uses the
3281 |v:foldstart|, |v:foldend| and |v:folddashes| variables.
3282 The returned string looks like this: >
3283 +-- 45 lines: abcdef
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00003284< The number of dashes depends on the foldlevel. The "45" is
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003285 the number of lines in the fold. "abcdef" is the text in the
3286 first non-blank line of the fold. Leading white space, "//"
3287 or "/*" and the text from the 'foldmarker' and 'commentstring'
3288 options is removed.
3289 {not available when compiled without the |+folding| feature}
3290
Bram Moolenaar7b0294c2004-10-11 10:16:09 +00003291foldtextresult({lnum}) *foldtextresult()*
3292 Returns the text that is displayed for the closed fold at line
3293 {lnum}. Evaluates 'foldtext' in the appropriate context.
3294 When there is no closed fold at {lnum} an empty string is
3295 returned.
3296 {lnum} is used like with |getline()|. Thus "." is the current
3297 line, "'m" mark m, etc.
3298 Useful when exporting folded text, e.g., to HTML.
3299 {not available when compiled without the |+folding| feature}
3300
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003301 *foreground()*
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00003302foreground() Move the Vim window to the foreground. Useful when sent from
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003303 a client to a Vim server. |remote_send()|
3304 On Win32 systems this might not work, the OS does not always
3305 allow a window to bring itself to the foreground. Use
3306 |remote_foreground()| instead.
3307 {only in the Win32, Athena, Motif and GTK GUI versions and the
3308 Win32 console version}
3309
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00003310
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +00003311function({name}) *function()* *E700*
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00003312 Return a |Funcref| variable that refers to function {name}.
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00003313 {name} can be a user defined function or an internal function.
3314
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00003315
Bram Moolenaarf1568ec2011-12-14 21:17:39 +01003316garbagecollect([{atexit}]) *garbagecollect()*
Bram Moolenaara23ccb82006-02-27 00:08:02 +00003317 Cleanup unused |Lists| and |Dictionaries| that have circular
Bram Moolenaar39a58ca2005-06-27 22:42:44 +00003318 references. There is hardly ever a need to invoke this
3319 function, as it is automatically done when Vim runs out of
3320 memory or is waiting for the user to press a key after
3321 'updatetime'. Items without circular references are always
3322 freed when they become unused.
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00003323 This is useful if you have deleted a very big |List| and/or
3324 |Dictionary| with circular references in a script that runs
3325 for a long time.
Bram Moolenaarf1568ec2011-12-14 21:17:39 +01003326 When the optional {atexit} argument is one, garbage
Bram Moolenaar9d2c8c12007-09-25 16:00:00 +00003327 collection will also be done when exiting Vim, if it wasn't
3328 done before. This is useful when checking for memory leaks.
Bram Moolenaar39a58ca2005-06-27 22:42:44 +00003329
Bram Moolenaar677ee682005-01-27 14:41:15 +00003330get({list}, {idx} [, {default}]) *get()*
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00003331 Get item {idx} from |List| {list}. When this item is not
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00003332 available return {default}. Return zero when {default} is
3333 omitted.
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00003334get({dict}, {key} [, {default}])
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00003335 Get item with key {key} from |Dictionary| {dict}. When this
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00003336 item is not available return {default}. Return zero when
3337 {default} is omitted.
3338
Bram Moolenaar45360022005-07-21 21:08:21 +00003339 *getbufline()*
3340getbufline({expr}, {lnum} [, {end}])
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00003341 Return a |List| with the lines starting from {lnum} to {end}
3342 (inclusive) in the buffer {expr}. If {end} is omitted, a
3343 |List| with only the line {lnum} is returned.
Bram Moolenaar45360022005-07-21 21:08:21 +00003344
3345 For the use of {expr}, see |bufname()| above.
3346
Bram Moolenaar661b1822005-07-28 22:36:45 +00003347 For {lnum} and {end} "$" can be used for the last line of the
3348 buffer. Otherwise a number must be used.
Bram Moolenaar45360022005-07-21 21:08:21 +00003349
3350 When {lnum} is smaller than 1 or bigger than the number of
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00003351 lines in the buffer, an empty |List| is returned.
Bram Moolenaar45360022005-07-21 21:08:21 +00003352
3353 When {end} is greater than the number of lines in the buffer,
3354 it is treated as {end} is set to the number of lines in the
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00003355 buffer. When {end} is before {lnum} an empty |List| is
Bram Moolenaar45360022005-07-21 21:08:21 +00003356 returned.
3357
Bram Moolenaar661b1822005-07-28 22:36:45 +00003358 This function works only for loaded buffers. For unloaded and
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00003359 non-existing buffers, an empty |List| is returned.
Bram Moolenaar45360022005-07-21 21:08:21 +00003360
3361 Example: >
3362 :let lines = getbufline(bufnr("myfile"), 1, "$")
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00003363
Bram Moolenaar63dbda12013-02-20 21:12:10 +01003364getbufvar({expr}, {varname} [, {def}]) *getbufvar()*
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00003365 The result is the value of option or local buffer variable
3366 {varname} in buffer {expr}. Note that the name without "b:"
3367 must be used.
Bram Moolenaarc236c162008-07-13 17:41:49 +00003368 When {varname} is empty returns a dictionary with all the
3369 buffer-local variables.
Bram Moolenaar4317d9b2005-03-18 20:25:31 +00003370 This also works for a global or buffer-local option, but it
3371 doesn't work for a global variable, window-local variable or
3372 window-local option.
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00003373 For the use of {expr}, see |bufname()| above.
Bram Moolenaar63dbda12013-02-20 21:12:10 +01003374 When the buffer or variable doesn't exist {def} or an empty
3375 string is returned, there is no error message.
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00003376 Examples: >
3377 :let bufmodified = getbufvar(1, "&mod")
3378 :echo "todo myvar = " . getbufvar("todo", "myvar")
3379<
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003380getchar([expr]) *getchar()*
Bram Moolenaar91170f82006-05-05 21:15:17 +00003381 Get a single character from the user or input stream.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003382 If [expr] is omitted, wait until a character is available.
3383 If [expr] is 0, only get a character when one is available.
Bram Moolenaar91170f82006-05-05 21:15:17 +00003384 Return zero otherwise.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003385 If [expr] is 1, only check if a character is available, it is
Bram Moolenaar91170f82006-05-05 21:15:17 +00003386 not consumed. Return zero if no character available.
3387
Bram Moolenaardfb18412013-12-11 18:53:29 +01003388 Without [expr] and when [expr] is 0 a whole character or
Bram Moolenaar91170f82006-05-05 21:15:17 +00003389 special key is returned. If it is an 8-bit character, the
3390 result is a number. Use nr2char() to convert it to a String.
3391 Otherwise a String is returned with the encoded character.
3392 For a special key it's a sequence of bytes starting with 0x80
Bram Moolenaar56a907a2006-05-06 21:44:30 +00003393 (decimal: 128). This is the same value as the string
3394 "\<Key>", e.g., "\<Left>". The returned value is also a
3395 String when a modifier (shift, control, alt) was used that is
3396 not included in the character.
Bram Moolenaar91170f82006-05-05 21:15:17 +00003397
Bram Moolenaar822ff862014-06-12 21:46:14 +02003398 When [expr] is 0 and Esc is typed, there will be a short delay
3399 while Vim waits to see if this is the start of an escape
3400 sequence.
3401
Bram Moolenaardfb18412013-12-11 18:53:29 +01003402 When [expr] is 1 only the first byte is returned. For a
Bram Moolenaar56a907a2006-05-06 21:44:30 +00003403 one-byte character it is the character itself as a number.
3404 Use nr2char() to convert it to a String.
Bram Moolenaar91170f82006-05-05 21:15:17 +00003405
Bram Moolenaarf1568ec2011-12-14 21:17:39 +01003406 Use getcharmod() to obtain any additional modifiers.
3407
Bram Moolenaar219b8702006-11-01 14:32:36 +00003408 When the user clicks a mouse button, the mouse event will be
3409 returned. The position can then be found in |v:mouse_col|,
3410 |v:mouse_lnum| and |v:mouse_win|. This example positions the
3411 mouse as it would normally happen: >
3412 let c = getchar()
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00003413 if c == "\<LeftMouse>" && v:mouse_win > 0
Bram Moolenaar219b8702006-11-01 14:32:36 +00003414 exe v:mouse_win . "wincmd w"
3415 exe v:mouse_lnum
3416 exe "normal " . v:mouse_col . "|"
3417 endif
3418<
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003419 There is no prompt, you will somehow have to make clear to the
3420 user that a character has to be typed.
3421 There is no mapping for the character.
3422 Key codes are replaced, thus when the user presses the <Del>
3423 key you get the code for the <Del> key, not the raw character
3424 sequence. Examples: >
3425 getchar() == "\<Del>"
3426 getchar() == "\<S-Left>"
3427< This example redefines "f" to ignore case: >
3428 :nmap f :call FindChar()<CR>
3429 :function FindChar()
3430 : let c = nr2char(getchar())
3431 : while col('.') < col('$') - 1
3432 : normal l
3433 : if getline('.')[col('.') - 1] ==? c
3434 : break
3435 : endif
3436 : endwhile
3437 :endfunction
Bram Moolenaared32d942014-12-06 23:33:00 +01003438<
Bram Moolenaar2b8388b2015-02-28 13:11:45 +01003439 You may also receive synthetic characters, such as
Bram Moolenaared32d942014-12-06 23:33:00 +01003440 |<CursorHold>|. Often you will want to ignore this and get
3441 another character: >
3442 :function GetKey()
3443 : let c = getchar()
3444 : while c == "\<CursorHold>"
3445 : let c = getchar()
3446 : endwhile
3447 : return c
3448 :endfunction
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003449
3450getcharmod() *getcharmod()*
3451 The result is a Number which is the state of the modifiers for
3452 the last obtained character with getchar() or in another way.
3453 These values are added together:
3454 2 shift
3455 4 control
3456 8 alt (meta)
Bram Moolenaarf1568ec2011-12-14 21:17:39 +01003457 16 meta (when it's different from ALT)
3458 32 mouse double click
3459 64 mouse triple click
3460 96 mouse quadruple click (== 32 + 64)
3461 128 command (Macintosh only)
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003462 Only the modifiers that have not been included in the
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00003463 character itself are obtained. Thus Shift-a results in "A"
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01003464 without a modifier.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003465
Bram Moolenaardbd24b52015-08-11 14:26:19 +02003466getcharsearch() *getcharsearch()*
3467 Return the current character search information as a {dict}
3468 with the following entries:
3469
3470 char character previously used for a character
3471 search (|t|, |f|, |T|, or |F|); empty string
3472 if no character search has been performed
3473 forward direction of character search; 1 for forward,
3474 0 for backward
3475 until type of character search; 1 for a |t| or |T|
3476 character search, 0 for an |f| or |F|
3477 character search
3478
3479 This can be useful to always have |;| and |,| search
3480 forward/backward regardless of the direction of the previous
3481 character search: >
3482 :nnoremap <expr> ; getcharsearch().forward ? ';' : ','
3483 :nnoremap <expr> , getcharsearch().forward ? ',' : ';'
3484< Also see |setcharsearch()|.
3485
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003486getcmdline() *getcmdline()*
3487 Return the current command-line. Only works when the command
3488 line is being edited, thus requires use of |c_CTRL-\_e| or
3489 |c_CTRL-R_=|.
3490 Example: >
3491 :cmap <F7> <C-\>eescape(getcmdline(), ' \')<CR>
Bram Moolenaarbfd8fc02005-09-20 23:22:24 +00003492< Also see |getcmdtype()|, |getcmdpos()| and |setcmdpos()|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003493
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00003494getcmdpos() *getcmdpos()*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003495 Return the position of the cursor in the command line as a
3496 byte count. The first column is 1.
3497 Only works when editing the command line, thus requires use of
Bram Moolenaar5b435d62012-04-05 17:33:26 +02003498 |c_CTRL-\_e| or |c_CTRL-R_=| or an expression mapping.
3499 Returns 0 otherwise.
Bram Moolenaarbfd8fc02005-09-20 23:22:24 +00003500 Also see |getcmdtype()|, |setcmdpos()| and |getcmdline()|.
3501
3502getcmdtype() *getcmdtype()*
3503 Return the current command-line type. Possible return values
3504 are:
Bram Moolenaar1e015462005-09-25 22:16:38 +00003505 : normal Ex command
3506 > debug mode command |debug-mode|
3507 / forward search command
3508 ? backward search command
3509 @ |input()| command
3510 - |:insert| or |:append| command
Bram Moolenaar6e932462014-09-09 18:48:09 +02003511 = |i_CTRL-R_=|
Bram Moolenaarbfd8fc02005-09-20 23:22:24 +00003512 Only works when editing the command line, thus requires use of
Bram Moolenaar5b435d62012-04-05 17:33:26 +02003513 |c_CTRL-\_e| or |c_CTRL-R_=| or an expression mapping.
3514 Returns an empty string otherwise.
Bram Moolenaarbfd8fc02005-09-20 23:22:24 +00003515 Also see |getcmdpos()|, |setcmdpos()| and |getcmdline()|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003516
Bram Moolenaarfb539272014-08-22 19:21:47 +02003517getcmdwintype() *getcmdwintype()*
3518 Return the current |command-line-window| type. Possible return
3519 values are the same as |getcmdtype()|. Returns an empty string
3520 when not in the command-line window.
3521
Bram Moolenaar6f6c0f82014-05-28 20:31:42 +02003522 *getcurpos()*
3523getcurpos() Get the position of the cursor. This is like getpos('.'), but
3524 includes an extra item in the list:
Bram Moolenaar345efa02016-01-15 20:57:49 +01003525 [bufnum, lnum, col, off, curswant] ~
Bram Moolenaar6f6c0f82014-05-28 20:31:42 +02003526 The "curswant" number is the preferred column when moving the
3527 cursor vertically.
3528 This can be used to save and restore the cursor position: >
3529 let save_cursor = getcurpos()
3530 MoveTheCursorAround
3531 call setpos('.', save_cursor)
Bram Moolenaarfb539272014-08-22 19:21:47 +02003532<
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003533 *getcwd()*
Bram Moolenaarc9703302016-01-17 21:49:33 +01003534getcwd([{winnr} [, {tabnr}]])
3535 The result is a String, which is the name of the current
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003536 working directory.
Bram Moolenaarc9703302016-01-17 21:49:33 +01003537 Without arguments, for the current window.
3538
3539 With {winnr} return the local current directory of this window
3540 in the current tab page.
3541 With {winnr} and {tabnr} return the local current directory of
3542 the window in the specified tab page.
3543 Return an empty string if the arguments are invalid.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003544
3545getfsize({fname}) *getfsize()*
3546 The result is a Number, which is the size in bytes of the
3547 given file {fname}.
3548 If {fname} is a directory, 0 is returned.
3549 If the file {fname} can't be found, -1 is returned.
Bram Moolenaard827ada2007-06-19 15:19:55 +00003550 If the size of {fname} is too big to fit in a Number then -2
3551 is returned.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003552
Bram Moolenaard8b0cf12004-12-12 11:33:30 +00003553getfontname([{name}]) *getfontname()*
3554 Without an argument returns the name of the normal font being
3555 used. Like what is used for the Normal highlight group
3556 |hl-Normal|.
3557 With an argument a check is done whether {name} is a valid
3558 font name. If not then an empty string is returned.
3559 Otherwise the actual font name is returned, or {name} if the
3560 GUI does not support obtaining the real name.
Bram Moolenaarc6fe9192006-04-09 21:54:49 +00003561 Only works when the GUI is running, thus not in your vimrc or
Bram Moolenaard8b0cf12004-12-12 11:33:30 +00003562 gvimrc file. Use the |GUIEnter| autocommand to use this
3563 function just after the GUI has started.
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +00003564 Note that the GTK 2 GUI accepts any font name, thus checking
3565 for a valid name does not work.
Bram Moolenaard8b0cf12004-12-12 11:33:30 +00003566
Bram Moolenaar5eb86f92004-07-26 12:53:41 +00003567getfperm({fname}) *getfperm()*
3568 The result is a String, which is the read, write, and execute
3569 permissions of the given file {fname}.
3570 If {fname} does not exist or its directory cannot be read, an
3571 empty string is returned.
3572 The result is of the form "rwxrwxrwx", where each group of
3573 "rwx" flags represent, in turn, the permissions of the owner
3574 of the file, the group the file belongs to, and other users.
3575 If a user does not have a given permission the flag for this
Bram Moolenaar9b451252012-08-15 17:43:31 +02003576 is replaced with the string "-". Examples: >
Bram Moolenaar5eb86f92004-07-26 12:53:41 +00003577 :echo getfperm("/etc/passwd")
Bram Moolenaar9b451252012-08-15 17:43:31 +02003578 :echo getfperm(expand("~/.vimrc"))
Bram Moolenaar5eb86f92004-07-26 12:53:41 +00003579< This will hopefully (from a security point of view) display
3580 the string "rw-r--r--" or even "rw-------".
Bram Moolenaare2cc9702005-03-15 22:43:58 +00003581
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003582getftime({fname}) *getftime()*
3583 The result is a Number, which is the last modification time of
3584 the given file {fname}. The value is measured as seconds
3585 since 1st Jan 1970, and may be passed to strftime(). See also
3586 |localtime()| and |strftime()|.
3587 If the file {fname} can't be found -1 is returned.
3588
Bram Moolenaar5eb86f92004-07-26 12:53:41 +00003589getftype({fname}) *getftype()*
3590 The result is a String, which is a description of the kind of
3591 file of the given file {fname}.
3592 If {fname} does not exist an empty string is returned.
3593 Here is a table over different kinds of files and their
3594 results:
3595 Normal file "file"
3596 Directory "dir"
3597 Symbolic link "link"
3598 Block device "bdev"
3599 Character device "cdev"
3600 Socket "socket"
3601 FIFO "fifo"
3602 All other "other"
3603 Example: >
3604 getftype("/home")
3605< Note that a type such as "link" will only be returned on
3606 systems that support it. On some systems only "dir" and
Bram Moolenaar13d5aee2016-01-21 23:36:05 +01003607 "file" are returned. On MS-Windows a symbolic link to a
3608 directory returns "dir" instead of "link".
Bram Moolenaar5eb86f92004-07-26 12:53:41 +00003609
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003610 *getline()*
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00003611getline({lnum} [, {end}])
3612 Without {end} the result is a String, which is line {lnum}
3613 from the current buffer. Example: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003614 getline(1)
3615< When {lnum} is a String that doesn't start with a
3616 digit, line() is called to translate the String into a Number.
3617 To get the line under the cursor: >
3618 getline(".")
3619< When {lnum} is smaller than 1 or bigger than the number of
3620 lines in the buffer, an empty string is returned.
3621
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00003622 When {end} is given the result is a |List| where each item is
3623 a line from the current buffer in the range {lnum} to {end},
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00003624 including line {end}.
3625 {end} is used in the same way as {lnum}.
3626 Non-existing lines are silently omitted.
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00003627 When {end} is before {lnum} an empty |List| is returned.
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00003628 Example: >
3629 :let start = line('.')
3630 :let end = search("^$") - 1
3631 :let lines = getline(start, end)
3632
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00003633< To get lines from another buffer see |getbufline()|
3634
Bram Moolenaar17c7c012006-01-26 22:25:15 +00003635getloclist({nr}) *getloclist()*
3636 Returns a list with all the entries in the location list for
3637 window {nr}. When {nr} is zero the current window is used.
3638 For a location list window, the displayed location list is
Bram Moolenaar280f1262006-01-30 00:14:18 +00003639 returned. For an invalid window number {nr}, an empty list is
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01003640 returned. Otherwise, same as |getqflist()|.
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00003641
Bram Moolenaar6ee10162007-07-26 20:58:42 +00003642getmatches() *getmatches()*
3643 Returns a |List| with all matches previously defined by
3644 |matchadd()| and the |:match| commands. |getmatches()| is
3645 useful in combination with |setmatches()|, as |setmatches()|
3646 can restore a list of matches saved by |getmatches()|.
3647 Example: >
3648 :echo getmatches()
3649< [{'group': 'MyGroup1', 'pattern': 'TODO',
3650 'priority': 10, 'id': 1}, {'group': 'MyGroup2',
3651 'pattern': 'FIXME', 'priority': 10, 'id': 2}] >
3652 :let m = getmatches()
3653 :call clearmatches()
3654 :echo getmatches()
3655< [] >
3656 :call setmatches(m)
3657 :echo getmatches()
3658< [{'group': 'MyGroup1', 'pattern': 'TODO',
3659 'priority': 10, 'id': 1}, {'group': 'MyGroup2',
3660 'pattern': 'FIXME', 'priority': 10, 'id': 2}] >
3661 :unlet m
3662<
Bram Moolenaar822ff862014-06-12 21:46:14 +02003663 *getpid()*
3664getpid() Return a Number which is the process ID of the Vim process.
3665 On Unix and MS-Windows this is a unique number, until Vim
3666 exits. On MS-DOS it's always zero.
3667
3668 *getpos()*
3669getpos({expr}) Get the position for {expr}. For possible values of {expr}
3670 see |line()|. For getting the cursor position see
3671 |getcurpos()|.
3672 The result is a |List| with four numbers:
3673 [bufnum, lnum, col, off]
3674 "bufnum" is zero, unless a mark like '0 or 'A is used, then it
3675 is the buffer number of the mark.
3676 "lnum" and "col" are the position in the buffer. The first
3677 column is 1.
3678 The "off" number is zero, unless 'virtualedit' is used. Then
3679 it is the offset in screen columns from the start of the
3680 character. E.g., a position within a <Tab> or after the last
3681 character.
3682 Note that for '< and '> Visual mode matters: when it is "V"
3683 (visual line mode) the column of '< is zero and the column of
3684 '> is a large number.
3685 This can be used to save and restore the position of a mark: >
3686 let save_a_mark = getpos("'a")
3687 ...
Bram Moolenaared32d942014-12-06 23:33:00 +01003688 call setpos("'a", save_a_mark)
Bram Moolenaar822ff862014-06-12 21:46:14 +02003689< Also see |getcurpos()| and |setpos()|.
3690
Bram Moolenaar6ee10162007-07-26 20:58:42 +00003691
Bram Moolenaar68b76a62005-03-25 21:53:48 +00003692getqflist() *getqflist()*
3693 Returns a list with all the current quickfix errors. Each
3694 list item is a dictionary with these entries:
3695 bufnr number of buffer that has the file name, use
3696 bufname() to get the name
3697 lnum line number in the buffer (first line is 1)
3698 col column number (first column is 1)
Bram Moolenaar582fd852005-03-28 20:58:01 +00003699 vcol non-zero: "col" is visual column
3700 zero: "col" is byte index
Bram Moolenaar68b76a62005-03-25 21:53:48 +00003701 nr error number
Bram Moolenaar48b66fb2007-02-04 01:58:18 +00003702 pattern search pattern used to locate the error
Bram Moolenaar68b76a62005-03-25 21:53:48 +00003703 text description of the error
3704 type type of the error, 'E', '1', etc.
3705 valid non-zero: recognized error message
3706
Bram Moolenaare7eb9df2005-09-09 19:49:30 +00003707 When there is no error list or it's empty an empty list is
Bram Moolenaar48b66fb2007-02-04 01:58:18 +00003708 returned. Quickfix list entries with non-existing buffer
3709 number are returned with "bufnr" set to zero.
Bram Moolenaare7eb9df2005-09-09 19:49:30 +00003710
Bram Moolenaar68b76a62005-03-25 21:53:48 +00003711 Useful application: Find pattern matches in multiple files and
3712 do something with them: >
3713 :vimgrep /theword/jg *.c
3714 :for d in getqflist()
3715 : echo bufname(d.bufnr) ':' d.lnum '=' d.text
3716 :endfor
3717
3718
Bram Moolenaarb7cb42b2014-04-02 19:55:10 +02003719getreg([{regname} [, 1 [, {list}]]]) *getreg()*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003720 The result is a String, which is the contents of register
Bram Moolenaar402d2fe2005-04-15 21:00:38 +00003721 {regname}. Example: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003722 :let cliptext = getreg('*')
3723< getreg('=') returns the last evaluated value of the expression
Bram Moolenaar402d2fe2005-04-15 21:00:38 +00003724 register. (For use in maps.)
Bram Moolenaar2389c3c2005-05-22 22:07:59 +00003725 getreg('=', 1) returns the expression itself, so that it can
3726 be restored with |setreg()|. For other registers the extra
3727 argument is ignored, thus you can always give it.
Bram Moolenaarb7cb42b2014-04-02 19:55:10 +02003728 If {list} is present and non-zero result type is changed to
3729 |List|. Each list item is one text line. Use it if you care
3730 about zero bytes possibly present inside register: without
3731 third argument both NLs and zero bytes are represented as NLs
3732 (see |NL-used-for-Nul|).
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003733 If {regname} is not specified, |v:register| is used.
3734
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00003735
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003736getregtype([{regname}]) *getregtype()*
3737 The result is a String, which is type of register {regname}.
3738 The value will be one of:
3739 "v" for |characterwise| text
3740 "V" for |linewise| text
3741 "<CTRL-V>{width}" for |blockwise-visual| text
Bram Moolenaar32b92012014-01-14 12:33:36 +01003742 "" for an empty or unknown register
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003743 <CTRL-V> is one character with value 0x16.
3744 If {regname} is not specified, |v:register| is used.
3745
Bram Moolenaar63dbda12013-02-20 21:12:10 +01003746gettabvar({tabnr}, {varname} [, {def}]) *gettabvar()*
Bram Moolenaar06b5d512010-05-22 15:37:44 +02003747 Get the value of a tab-local variable {varname} in tab page
3748 {tabnr}. |t:var|
3749 Tabs are numbered starting with one.
Bram Moolenaar0e2ea1b2014-09-09 16:13:08 +02003750 When {varname} is empty a dictionary with all tab-local
3751 variables is returned.
Bram Moolenaar06b5d512010-05-22 15:37:44 +02003752 Note that the name without "t:" must be used.
Bram Moolenaar63dbda12013-02-20 21:12:10 +01003753 When the tab or variable doesn't exist {def} or an empty
3754 string is returned, there is no error message.
Bram Moolenaar06b5d512010-05-22 15:37:44 +02003755
Bram Moolenaar63dbda12013-02-20 21:12:10 +01003756gettabwinvar({tabnr}, {winnr}, {varname} [, {def}]) *gettabwinvar()*
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00003757 Get the value of window-local variable {varname} in window
3758 {winnr} in tab page {tabnr}.
3759 When {varname} starts with "&" get the value of a window-local
3760 option.
Bram Moolenaar63dbda12013-02-20 21:12:10 +01003761 When {varname} is empty a dictionary with all window-local
3762 variables is returned.
3763 Note that {varname} must be the name without "w:".
Bram Moolenaarc6249bb2006-04-15 20:25:09 +00003764 Tabs are numbered starting with one. For the current tabpage
3765 use |getwinvar()|.
3766 When {winnr} is zero the current window is used.
3767 This also works for a global option, buffer-local option and
3768 window-local option, but it doesn't work for a global variable
3769 or buffer-local variable.
Bram Moolenaar63dbda12013-02-20 21:12:10 +01003770 When the tab, window or variable doesn't exist {def} or an
3771 empty string is returned, there is no error message.
Bram Moolenaarc6249bb2006-04-15 20:25:09 +00003772 Examples: >
3773 :let list_is_on = gettabwinvar(1, 2, '&list')
3774 :echo "myvar = " . gettabwinvar(3, 1, 'myvar')
Bram Moolenaard46bbc72007-05-12 14:38:41 +00003775<
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003776 *getwinposx()*
3777getwinposx() The result is a Number, which is the X coordinate in pixels of
3778 the left hand side of the GUI Vim window. The result will be
3779 -1 if the information is not available.
3780
3781 *getwinposy()*
3782getwinposy() The result is a Number, which is the Y coordinate in pixels of
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00003783 the top of the GUI Vim window. The result will be -1 if the
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003784 information is not available.
3785
Bram Moolenaar63dbda12013-02-20 21:12:10 +01003786getwinvar({winnr}, {varname} [, {def}]) *getwinvar()*
Bram Moolenaarc6249bb2006-04-15 20:25:09 +00003787 Like |gettabwinvar()| for the current tabpage.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003788 Examples: >
3789 :let list_is_on = getwinvar(2, '&list')
3790 :echo "myvar = " . getwinvar(1, 'myvar')
3791<
Bram Moolenaard8b77f72015-03-05 21:21:19 +01003792glob({expr} [, {nosuf} [, {list} [, {alllinks}]]]) *glob()*
Bram Moolenaarbb5ddda2008-11-28 10:01:10 +00003793 Expand the file wildcards in {expr}. See |wildcards| for the
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00003794 use of special characters.
Bram Moolenaar84f72352012-03-11 15:57:40 +01003795
3796 Unless the optional {nosuf} argument is given and is non-zero,
Bram Moolenaarbb5ddda2008-11-28 10:01:10 +00003797 the 'suffixes' and 'wildignore' options apply: Names matching
3798 one of the patterns in 'wildignore' will be skipped and
3799 'suffixes' affect the ordering of matches.
Bram Moolenaar81af9252010-12-10 20:35:50 +01003800 'wildignorecase' always applies.
Bram Moolenaar84f72352012-03-11 15:57:40 +01003801
3802 When {list} is present and it is non-zero the result is a List
3803 with all matching files. The advantage of using a List is,
3804 you also get filenames containing newlines correctly.
3805 Otherwise the result is a String and when there are several
3806 matches, they are separated by <NL> characters.
3807
3808 If the expansion fails, the result is an empty String or List.
Bram Moolenaard8b77f72015-03-05 21:21:19 +01003809
Bram Moolenaar61d35bd2012-03-28 20:51:51 +02003810 A name for a non-existing file is not included. A symbolic
3811 link is only included if it points to an existing file.
Bram Moolenaard8b77f72015-03-05 21:21:19 +01003812 However, when the {alllinks} argument is present and it is
3813 non-zero then all symbolic links are included.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003814
3815 For most systems backticks can be used to get files names from
3816 any external command. Example: >
3817 :let tagfiles = glob("`find . -name tags -print`")
3818 :let &tags = substitute(tagfiles, "\n", ",", "g")
3819< The result of the program inside the backticks should be one
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00003820 item per line. Spaces inside an item are allowed.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003821
3822 See |expand()| for expanding special Vim variables. See
3823 |system()| for getting the raw output of an external command.
3824
Bram Moolenaar5837f1f2015-03-21 18:06:14 +01003825glob2regpat({expr}) *glob2regpat()*
3826 Convert a file pattern, as used by glob(), into a search
3827 pattern. The result can be used to match with a string that
3828 is a file name. E.g. >
3829 if filename =~ glob2regpat('Make*.mak')
3830< This is equivalent to: >
3831 if filename =~ '^Make.*\.mak$'
3832<
Bram Moolenaard8b77f72015-03-05 21:21:19 +01003833 *globpath()*
3834globpath({path}, {expr} [, {nosuf} [, {list} [, {allinks}]]])
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003835 Perform glob() on all directories in {path} and concatenate
3836 the results. Example: >
3837 :echo globpath(&rtp, "syntax/c.vim")
Bram Moolenaar1b1063a2014-05-07 18:35:30 +02003838<
3839 {path} is a comma-separated list of directory names. Each
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003840 directory name is prepended to {expr} and expanded like with
Bram Moolenaarbb5ddda2008-11-28 10:01:10 +00003841 |glob()|. A path separator is inserted when needed.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003842 To add a comma inside a directory name escape it with a
3843 backslash. Note that on MS-Windows a directory may have a
3844 trailing backslash, remove it if you put a comma after it.
3845 If the expansion fails for one of the directories, there is no
3846 error message.
Bram Moolenaar1b1063a2014-05-07 18:35:30 +02003847
3848 Unless the optional {nosuf} argument is given and is non-zero,
Bram Moolenaarbb5ddda2008-11-28 10:01:10 +00003849 the 'suffixes' and 'wildignore' options apply: Names matching
3850 one of the patterns in 'wildignore' will be skipped and
3851 'suffixes' affect the ordering of matches.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003852
Bram Moolenaar1b1063a2014-05-07 18:35:30 +02003853 When {list} is present and it is non-zero the result is a List
3854 with all matching files. The advantage of using a List is, you
3855 also get filenames containing newlines correctly. Otherwise
3856 the result is a String and when there are several matches,
3857 they are separated by <NL> characters. Example: >
3858 :echo globpath(&rtp, "syntax/c.vim", 0, 1)
3859<
Bram Moolenaard8b77f72015-03-05 21:21:19 +01003860 {allinks} is used as with |glob()|.
3861
Bram Moolenaar02743632005-07-25 20:42:36 +00003862 The "**" item can be used to search in a directory tree.
3863 For example, to find all "README.txt" files in the directories
3864 in 'runtimepath' and below: >
3865 :echo globpath(&rtp, "**/README.txt")
Bram Moolenaarc236c162008-07-13 17:41:49 +00003866< Upwards search and limiting the depth of "**" is not
3867 supported, thus using 'path' will not always work properly.
3868
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003869 *has()*
3870has({feature}) The result is a Number, which is 1 if the feature {feature} is
3871 supported, zero otherwise. The {feature} argument is a
3872 string. See |feature-list| below.
3873 Also see |exists()|.
3874
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00003875
3876has_key({dict}, {key}) *has_key()*
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00003877 The result is a Number, which is 1 if |Dictionary| {dict} has
3878 an entry with key {key}. Zero otherwise.
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00003879
Bram Moolenaarc9703302016-01-17 21:49:33 +01003880haslocaldir([{winnr} [, {tabnr}]]) *haslocaldir()*
3881 The result is a Number, which is 1 when the window has set a
3882 local path via |:lcd|, and 0 otherwise.
3883
3884 Without arguments use the current window.
3885 With {winnr} use this window in the current tab page.
3886 With {winnr} and {tabnr} use the window in the specified tab
3887 page.
3888 Return 0 if the arguments are invalid.
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00003889
Bram Moolenaar97b2ad32006-03-18 21:40:56 +00003890hasmapto({what} [, {mode} [, {abbr}]]) *hasmapto()*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003891 The result is a Number, which is 1 if there is a mapping that
3892 contains {what} in somewhere in the rhs (what it is mapped to)
3893 and this mapping exists in one of the modes indicated by
3894 {mode}.
Bram Moolenaar97b2ad32006-03-18 21:40:56 +00003895 When {abbr} is there and it is non-zero use abbreviations
Bram Moolenaar39f05632006-03-19 22:15:26 +00003896 instead of mappings. Don't forget to specify Insert and/or
3897 Command-line mode.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003898 Both the global mappings and the mappings local to the current
3899 buffer are checked for a match.
3900 If no matching mapping is found 0 is returned.
3901 The following characters are recognized in {mode}:
3902 n Normal mode
3903 v Visual mode
3904 o Operator-pending mode
3905 i Insert mode
3906 l Language-Argument ("r", "f", "t", etc.)
3907 c Command-line mode
3908 When {mode} is omitted, "nvo" is used.
3909
3910 This function is useful to check if a mapping already exists
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00003911 to a function in a Vim script. Example: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003912 :if !hasmapto('\ABCdoit')
3913 : map <Leader>d \ABCdoit
3914 :endif
3915< This installs the mapping to "\ABCdoit" only if there isn't
3916 already a mapping to "\ABCdoit".
3917
3918histadd({history}, {item}) *histadd()*
3919 Add the String {item} to the history {history} which can be
3920 one of: *hist-names*
3921 "cmd" or ":" command line history
3922 "search" or "/" search pattern history
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00003923 "expr" or "=" typed expression history
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003924 "input" or "@" input line history
Bram Moolenaar30b65812012-07-12 22:01:11 +02003925 "debug" or ">" debug command history
3926 The {history} string does not need to be the whole name, one
3927 character is sufficient.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003928 If {item} does already exist in the history, it will be
3929 shifted to become the newest entry.
3930 The result is a Number: 1 if the operation was successful,
3931 otherwise 0 is returned.
3932
3933 Example: >
3934 :call histadd("input", strftime("%Y %b %d"))
3935 :let date=input("Enter date: ")
3936< This function is not available in the |sandbox|.
3937
3938histdel({history} [, {item}]) *histdel()*
Bram Moolenaar402d2fe2005-04-15 21:00:38 +00003939 Clear {history}, i.e. delete all its entries. See |hist-names|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003940 for the possible values of {history}.
3941
Bram Moolenaarc236c162008-07-13 17:41:49 +00003942 If the parameter {item} evaluates to a String, it is used as a
3943 regular expression. All entries matching that expression will
3944 be removed from the history (if there are any).
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003945 Upper/lowercase must match, unless "\c" is used |/\c|.
Bram Moolenaarc236c162008-07-13 17:41:49 +00003946 If {item} evaluates to a Number, it will be interpreted as
3947 an index, see |:history-indexing|. The respective entry will
3948 be removed if it exists.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003949
3950 The result is a Number: 1 for a successful operation,
3951 otherwise 0 is returned.
3952
3953 Examples:
3954 Clear expression register history: >
3955 :call histdel("expr")
3956<
3957 Remove all entries starting with "*" from the search history: >
3958 :call histdel("/", '^\*')
3959<
3960 The following three are equivalent: >
3961 :call histdel("search", histnr("search"))
3962 :call histdel("search", -1)
3963 :call histdel("search", '^'.histget("search", -1).'$')
3964<
3965 To delete the last search pattern and use the last-but-one for
3966 the "n" command and 'hlsearch': >
3967 :call histdel("search", -1)
3968 :let @/ = histget("search", -1)
3969
3970histget({history} [, {index}]) *histget()*
3971 The result is a String, the entry with Number {index} from
3972 {history}. See |hist-names| for the possible values of
3973 {history}, and |:history-indexing| for {index}. If there is
3974 no such entry, an empty String is returned. When {index} is
3975 omitted, the most recent item from the history is used.
3976
3977 Examples:
3978 Redo the second last search from history. >
3979 :execute '/' . histget("search", -2)
3980
3981< Define an Ex command ":H {num}" that supports re-execution of
3982 the {num}th entry from the output of |:history|. >
3983 :command -nargs=1 H execute histget("cmd", 0+<args>)
3984<
3985histnr({history}) *histnr()*
3986 The result is the Number of the current entry in {history}.
3987 See |hist-names| for the possible values of {history}.
3988 If an error occurred, -1 is returned.
3989
3990 Example: >
3991 :let inp_index = histnr("expr")
3992<
3993hlexists({name}) *hlexists()*
3994 The result is a Number, which is non-zero if a highlight group
3995 called {name} exists. This is when the group has been
3996 defined in some way. Not necessarily when highlighting has
3997 been defined for it, it may also have been used for a syntax
3998 item.
3999 *highlight_exists()*
4000 Obsolete name: highlight_exists().
4001
4002 *hlID()*
4003hlID({name}) The result is a Number, which is the ID of the highlight group
4004 with name {name}. When the highlight group doesn't exist,
4005 zero is returned.
4006 This can be used to retrieve information about the highlight
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004007 group. For example, to get the background color of the
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004008 "Comment" group: >
4009 :echo synIDattr(synIDtrans(hlID("Comment")), "bg")
4010< *highlightID()*
4011 Obsolete name: highlightID().
4012
4013hostname() *hostname()*
4014 The result is a String, which is the name of the machine on
Bram Moolenaar402d2fe2005-04-15 21:00:38 +00004015 which Vim is currently running. Machine names greater than
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004016 256 characters long are truncated.
4017
4018iconv({expr}, {from}, {to}) *iconv()*
4019 The result is a String, which is the text {expr} converted
4020 from encoding {from} to encoding {to}.
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01004021 When the conversion completely fails an empty string is
4022 returned. When some characters could not be converted they
4023 are replaced with "?".
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004024 The encoding names are whatever the iconv() library function
4025 can accept, see ":!man 3 iconv".
4026 Most conversions require Vim to be compiled with the |+iconv|
4027 feature. Otherwise only UTF-8 to latin1 conversion and back
4028 can be done.
4029 This can be used to display messages with special characters,
4030 no matter what 'encoding' is set to. Write the message in
4031 UTF-8 and use: >
4032 echo iconv(utf8_str, "utf-8", &enc)
4033< Note that Vim uses UTF-8 for all Unicode encodings, conversion
4034 from/to UCS-2 is automatically changed to use UTF-8. You
4035 cannot use UCS-2 in a string anyway, because of the NUL bytes.
Bram Moolenaardb84e452010-08-15 13:50:43 +02004036 {only available when compiled with the |+multi_byte| feature}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004037
4038 *indent()*
4039indent({lnum}) The result is a Number, which is indent of line {lnum} in the
4040 current buffer. The indent is counted in spaces, the value
4041 of 'tabstop' is relevant. {lnum} is used just like in
4042 |getline()|.
4043 When {lnum} is invalid -1 is returned.
4044
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +00004045
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00004046index({list}, {expr} [, {start} [, {ic}]]) *index()*
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00004047 Return the lowest index in |List| {list} where the item has a
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01004048 value equal to {expr}. There is no automatic conversion, so
4049 the String "4" is different from the Number 4. And the number
4050 4 is different from the Float 4.0. The value of 'ignorecase'
4051 is not used here, case always matters.
Bram Moolenaar748bf032005-02-02 23:04:36 +00004052 If {start} is given then start looking at the item with index
4053 {start} (may be negative for an item relative to the end).
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +00004054 When {ic} is given and it is non-zero, ignore case. Otherwise
4055 case must match.
4056 -1 is returned when {expr} is not found in {list}.
4057 Example: >
4058 :let idx = index(words, "the")
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +00004059 :if index(numbers, 123) >= 0
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +00004060
4061
Bram Moolenaarbfd8fc02005-09-20 23:22:24 +00004062input({prompt} [, {text} [, {completion}]]) *input()*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004063 The result is a String, which is whatever the user typed on
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01004064 the command-line. The {prompt} argument is either a prompt
4065 string, or a blank string (for no prompt). A '\n' can be used
4066 in the prompt to start a new line.
Bram Moolenaarbfd8fc02005-09-20 23:22:24 +00004067 The highlighting set with |:echohl| is used for the prompt.
4068 The input is entered just like a command-line, with the same
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004069 editing commands and mappings. There is a separate history
Bram Moolenaarbfd8fc02005-09-20 23:22:24 +00004070 for lines typed for input().
4071 Example: >
4072 :if input("Coffee or beer? ") == "beer"
4073 : echo "Cheers!"
4074 :endif
4075<
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01004076 If the optional {text} argument is present and not empty, this
4077 is used for the default reply, as if the user typed this.
4078 Example: >
Bram Moolenaarbfd8fc02005-09-20 23:22:24 +00004079 :let color = input("Color? ", "white")
4080
4081< The optional {completion} argument specifies the type of
4082 completion supported for the input. Without it completion is
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004083 not performed. The supported completion types are the same as
Bram Moolenaarbfd8fc02005-09-20 23:22:24 +00004084 that can be supplied to a user-defined command using the
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004085 "-complete=" argument. Refer to |:command-completion| for
Bram Moolenaarbfd8fc02005-09-20 23:22:24 +00004086 more information. Example: >
4087 let fname = input("File: ", "", "file")
4088<
4089 NOTE: This function must not be used in a startup file, for
4090 the versions that only run in GUI mode (e.g., the Win32 GUI).
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004091 Note: When input() is called from within a mapping it will
4092 consume remaining characters from that mapping, because a
4093 mapping is handled like the characters were typed.
4094 Use |inputsave()| before input() and |inputrestore()|
4095 after input() to avoid that. Another solution is to avoid
4096 that further characters follow in the mapping, e.g., by using
4097 |:execute| or |:normal|.
4098
Bram Moolenaarbfd8fc02005-09-20 23:22:24 +00004099 Example with a mapping: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004100 :nmap \x :call GetFoo()<CR>:exe "/" . Foo<CR>
4101 :function GetFoo()
4102 : call inputsave()
4103 : let g:Foo = input("enter search pattern: ")
4104 : call inputrestore()
4105 :endfunction
4106
4107inputdialog({prompt} [, {text} [, {cancelreturn}]]) *inputdialog()*
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01004108 Like |input()|, but when the GUI is running and text dialogs
4109 are supported, a dialog window pops up to input the text.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004110 Example: >
Bram Moolenaar2d17fa32012-10-21 00:45:18 +02004111 :let n = inputdialog("value for shiftwidth", shiftwidth())
4112 :if n != ""
4113 : let &sw = n
4114 :endif
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004115< When the dialog is cancelled {cancelreturn} is returned. When
4116 omitted an empty string is returned.
4117 Hitting <Enter> works like pressing the OK button. Hitting
4118 <Esc> works like pressing the Cancel button.
Bram Moolenaarbfd8fc02005-09-20 23:22:24 +00004119 NOTE: Command-line completion is not supported.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004120
Bram Moolenaar578b49e2005-09-10 19:22:57 +00004121inputlist({textlist}) *inputlist()*
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +00004122 {textlist} must be a |List| of strings. This |List| is
4123 displayed, one string per line. The user will be prompted to
4124 enter a number, which is returned.
Bram Moolenaar578b49e2005-09-10 19:22:57 +00004125 The user can also select an item by clicking on it with the
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004126 mouse. For the first string 0 is returned. When clicking
Bram Moolenaar578b49e2005-09-10 19:22:57 +00004127 above the first item a negative number is returned. When
4128 clicking on the prompt one more than the length of {textlist}
4129 is returned.
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01004130 Make sure {textlist} has less than 'lines' entries, otherwise
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004131 it won't work. It's a good idea to put the entry number at
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00004132 the start of the string. And put a prompt in the first item.
4133 Example: >
Bram Moolenaar578b49e2005-09-10 19:22:57 +00004134 let color = inputlist(['Select color:', '1. red',
4135 \ '2. green', '3. blue'])
4136
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004137inputrestore() *inputrestore()*
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01004138 Restore typeahead that was saved with a previous |inputsave()|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004139 Should be called the same number of times inputsave() is
4140 called. Calling it more often is harmless though.
4141 Returns 1 when there is nothing to restore, 0 otherwise.
4142
4143inputsave() *inputsave()*
4144 Preserve typeahead (also from mappings) and clear it, so that
4145 a following prompt gets input from the user. Should be
4146 followed by a matching inputrestore() after the prompt. Can
4147 be used several times, in which case there must be just as
4148 many inputrestore() calls.
4149 Returns 1 when out of memory, 0 otherwise.
4150
4151inputsecret({prompt} [, {text}]) *inputsecret()*
4152 This function acts much like the |input()| function with but
4153 two exceptions:
4154 a) the user's response will be displayed as a sequence of
4155 asterisks ("*") thereby keeping the entry secret, and
4156 b) the user's response will not be recorded on the input
4157 |history| stack.
4158 The result is a String, which is whatever the user actually
4159 typed on the command-line in response to the issued prompt.
Bram Moolenaarbfd8fc02005-09-20 23:22:24 +00004160 NOTE: Command-line completion is not supported.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004161
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00004162insert({list}, {item} [, {idx}]) *insert()*
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00004163 Insert {item} at the start of |List| {list}.
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00004164 If {idx} is specified insert {item} before the item with index
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004165 {idx}. If {idx} is zero it goes before the first item, just
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00004166 like omitting {idx}. A negative {idx} is also possible, see
4167 |list-index|. -1 inserts just before the last item.
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00004168 Returns the resulting |List|. Examples: >
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00004169 :let mylist = insert([2, 3, 5], 1)
4170 :call insert(mylist, 4, -1)
4171 :call insert(mylist, 6, len(mylist))
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00004172< The last example can be done simpler with |add()|.
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00004173 Note that when {item} is a |List| it is inserted as a single
Bram Moolenaara23ccb82006-02-27 00:08:02 +00004174 item. Use |extend()| to concatenate |Lists|.
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00004175
Bram Moolenaard6e256c2011-12-14 15:32:50 +01004176invert({expr}) *invert()*
4177 Bitwise invert. The argument is converted to a number. A
4178 List, Dict or Float argument causes an error. Example: >
4179 :let bits = invert(bits)
4180
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004181isdirectory({directory}) *isdirectory()*
4182 The result is a Number, which is non-zero when a directory
4183 with the name {directory} exists. If {directory} doesn't
4184 exist, or isn't a directory, the result is FALSE. {directory}
4185 is any expression, which is used as a String.
4186
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +00004187islocked({expr}) *islocked()* *E786*
Bram Moolenaar2ce06f62005-01-31 19:19:04 +00004188 The result is a Number, which is non-zero when {expr} is the
4189 name of a locked variable.
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00004190 {expr} must be the name of a variable, |List| item or
4191 |Dictionary| entry, not the variable itself! Example: >
Bram Moolenaar2ce06f62005-01-31 19:19:04 +00004192 :let alist = [0, ['a', 'b'], 2, 3]
4193 :lockvar 1 alist
4194 :echo islocked('alist') " 1
4195 :echo islocked('alist[1]') " 0
4196
4197< When {expr} is a variable that does not exist you get an error
Bram Moolenaar551dbcc2006-04-25 22:13:59 +00004198 message. Use |exists()| to check for existence.
Bram Moolenaar2ce06f62005-01-31 19:19:04 +00004199
Bram Moolenaar677ee682005-01-27 14:41:15 +00004200items({dict}) *items()*
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00004201 Return a |List| with all the key-value pairs of {dict}. Each
4202 |List| item is a list with two items: the key of a {dict}
4203 entry and the value of this entry. The |List| is in arbitrary
4204 order.
Bram Moolenaar677ee682005-01-27 14:41:15 +00004205
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00004206
4207join({list} [, {sep}]) *join()*
4208 Join the items in {list} together into one String.
4209 When {sep} is specified it is put in between the items. If
4210 {sep} is omitted a single space is used.
4211 Note that {sep} is not added at the end. You might want to
4212 add it there too: >
4213 let lines = join(mylist, "\n") . "\n"
Bram Moolenaara23ccb82006-02-27 00:08:02 +00004214< String items are used as-is. |Lists| and |Dictionaries| are
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00004215 converted into a string like with |string()|.
4216 The opposite function is |split()|.
4217
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +00004218keys({dict}) *keys()*
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00004219 Return a |List| with all the keys of {dict}. The |List| is in
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +00004220 arbitrary order.
4221
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +00004222 *len()* *E701*
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00004223len({expr}) The result is a Number, which is the length of the argument.
4224 When {expr} is a String or a Number the length in bytes is
4225 used, as with |strlen()|.
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00004226 When {expr} is a |List| the number of items in the |List| is
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00004227 returned.
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00004228 When {expr} is a |Dictionary| the number of entries in the
4229 |Dictionary| is returned.
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00004230 Otherwise an error is given.
4231
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004232 *libcall()* *E364* *E368*
4233libcall({libname}, {funcname}, {argument})
4234 Call function {funcname} in the run-time library {libname}
4235 with single argument {argument}.
4236 This is useful to call functions in a library that you
4237 especially made to be used with Vim. Since only one argument
4238 is possible, calling standard library functions is rather
4239 limited.
4240 The result is the String returned by the function. If the
4241 function returns NULL, this will appear as an empty string ""
4242 to Vim.
4243 If the function returns a number, use libcallnr()!
4244 If {argument} is a number, it is passed to the function as an
4245 int; if {argument} is a string, it is passed as a
4246 null-terminated string.
4247 This function will fail in |restricted-mode|.
4248
4249 libcall() allows you to write your own 'plug-in' extensions to
4250 Vim without having to recompile the program. It is NOT a
4251 means to call system functions! If you try to do so Vim will
4252 very probably crash.
4253
4254 For Win32, the functions you write must be placed in a DLL
4255 and use the normal C calling convention (NOT Pascal which is
4256 used in Windows System DLLs). The function must take exactly
4257 one parameter, either a character pointer or a long integer,
4258 and must return a character pointer or NULL. The character
4259 pointer returned must point to memory that will remain valid
4260 after the function has returned (e.g. in static data in the
4261 DLL). If it points to allocated memory, that memory will
4262 leak away. Using a static buffer in the function should work,
4263 it's then freed when the DLL is unloaded.
4264
4265 WARNING: If the function returns a non-valid pointer, Vim may
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004266 crash! This also happens if the function returns a number,
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004267 because Vim thinks it's a pointer.
4268 For Win32 systems, {libname} should be the filename of the DLL
4269 without the ".DLL" suffix. A full path is only required if
4270 the DLL is not in the usual places.
4271 For Unix: When compiling your own plugins, remember that the
4272 object code must be compiled as position-independent ('PIC').
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01004273 {only in Win32 and some Unix versions, when the |+libcall|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004274 feature is present}
4275 Examples: >
4276 :echo libcall("libc.so", "getenv", "HOME")
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004277<
4278 *libcallnr()*
4279libcallnr({libname}, {funcname}, {argument})
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01004280 Just like |libcall()|, but used for a function that returns an
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004281 int instead of a string.
4282 {only in Win32 on some Unix versions, when the |+libcall|
4283 feature is present}
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004284 Examples: >
4285 :echo libcallnr("/usr/lib/libc.so", "getpid", "")
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004286 :call libcallnr("libc.so", "printf", "Hello World!\n")
4287 :call libcallnr("libc.so", "sleep", 10)
4288<
4289 *line()*
4290line({expr}) The result is a Number, which is the line number of the file
4291 position given with {expr}. The accepted positions are:
4292 . the cursor position
4293 $ the last line in the current buffer
4294 'x position of mark x (if the mark is not set, 0 is
4295 returned)
Bram Moolenaarc7453f52006-02-10 23:20:28 +00004296 w0 first line visible in current window
4297 w$ last line visible in current window
Bram Moolenaar9ecd0232008-06-20 15:31:51 +00004298 v In Visual mode: the start of the Visual area (the
4299 cursor is the end). When not in Visual mode
4300 returns the cursor position. Differs from |'<| in
4301 that it's updated right away.
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00004302 Note that a mark in another file can be used. The line number
4303 then applies to another buffer.
Bram Moolenaar0b238792006-03-02 22:49:12 +00004304 To get the column number use |col()|. To get both use
4305 |getpos()|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004306 Examples: >
4307 line(".") line number of the cursor
4308 line("'t") line number of mark t
4309 line("'" . marker) line number of mark marker
4310< *last-position-jump*
4311 This autocommand jumps to the last known position in a file
4312 just after opening it, if the '" mark is set: >
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01004313 :au BufReadPost * if line("'\"") > 1 && line("'\"") <= line("$") | exe "normal! g`\"" | endif
Bram Moolenaar69a7cb42004-06-20 12:51:53 +00004314
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004315line2byte({lnum}) *line2byte()*
4316 Return the byte count from the start of the buffer for line
4317 {lnum}. This includes the end-of-line character, depending on
4318 the 'fileformat' option for the current buffer. The first
Bram Moolenaarb6b046b2011-12-30 13:11:27 +01004319 line returns 1. 'encoding' matters, 'fileencoding' is ignored.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004320 This can also be used to get the byte count for the line just
4321 below the last line: >
4322 line2byte(line("$") + 1)
Bram Moolenaarb6b046b2011-12-30 13:11:27 +01004323< This is the buffer size plus one. If 'fileencoding' is empty
4324 it is the file size plus one.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004325 When {lnum} is invalid, or the |+byte_offset| feature has been
4326 disabled at compile time, -1 is returned.
4327 Also see |byte2line()|, |go| and |:goto|.
4328
4329lispindent({lnum}) *lispindent()*
4330 Get the amount of indent for line {lnum} according the lisp
4331 indenting rules, as with 'lisp'.
4332 The indent is counted in spaces, the value of 'tabstop' is
4333 relevant. {lnum} is used just like in |getline()|.
4334 When {lnum} is invalid or Vim was not compiled the
4335 |+lispindent| feature, -1 is returned.
4336
4337localtime() *localtime()*
4338 Return the current time, measured as seconds since 1st Jan
4339 1970. See also |strftime()| and |getftime()|.
4340
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00004341
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02004342log({expr}) *log()*
Bram Moolenaar9855d6b2010-07-18 14:34:51 +02004343 Return the natural logarithm (base e) of {expr} as a |Float|.
4344 {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number| in the range
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02004345 (0, inf].
4346 Examples: >
4347 :echo log(10)
4348< 2.302585 >
4349 :echo log(exp(5))
4350< 5.0
Bram Moolenaardb84e452010-08-15 13:50:43 +02004351 {only available when compiled with the |+float| feature}
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02004352
4353
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004354log10({expr}) *log10()*
4355 Return the logarithm of Float {expr} to base 10 as a |Float|.
4356 {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|.
4357 Examples: >
4358 :echo log10(1000)
4359< 3.0 >
4360 :echo log10(0.01)
4361< -2.0
4362 {only available when compiled with the |+float| feature}
4363
Bram Moolenaard38b0552012-04-25 19:07:41 +02004364luaeval({expr}[, {expr}]) *luaeval()*
4365 Evaluate Lua expression {expr} and return its result converted
4366 to Vim data structures. Second {expr} may hold additional
4367 argument accessible as _A inside first {expr}.
4368 Strings are returned as they are.
4369 Boolean objects are converted to numbers.
4370 Numbers are converted to |Float| values if vim was compiled
4371 with |+float| and to numbers otherwise.
4372 Dictionaries and lists obtained by vim.eval() are returned
4373 as-is.
4374 Other objects are returned as zero without any errors.
4375 See |lua-luaeval| for more details.
4376 {only available when compiled with the |+lua| feature}
4377
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00004378map({expr}, {string}) *map()*
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00004379 {expr} must be a |List| or a |Dictionary|.
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00004380 Replace each item in {expr} with the result of evaluating
4381 {string}.
4382 Inside {string} |v:val| has the value of the current item.
Bram Moolenaar627b1d32009-11-17 11:20:35 +00004383 For a |Dictionary| |v:key| has the key of the current item
4384 and for a |List| |v:key| has the index of the current item.
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00004385 Example: >
4386 :call map(mylist, '"> " . v:val . " <"')
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00004387< This puts "> " before and " <" after each item in "mylist".
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00004388
Bram Moolenaar3a7c85b2005-02-05 21:39:53 +00004389 Note that {string} is the result of an expression and is then
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00004390 used as an expression again. Often it is good to use a
Bram Moolenaar3a7c85b2005-02-05 21:39:53 +00004391 |literal-string| to avoid having to double backslashes. You
4392 still have to double ' quotes
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00004393
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00004394 The operation is done in-place. If you want a |List| or
4395 |Dictionary| to remain unmodified make a copy first: >
Bram Moolenaar30b65812012-07-12 22:01:11 +02004396 :let tlist = map(copy(mylist), ' v:val . "\t"')
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00004397
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00004398< Returns {expr}, the |List| or |Dictionary| that was filtered.
Bram Moolenaar280f1262006-01-30 00:14:18 +00004399 When an error is encountered while evaluating {string} no
4400 further items in {expr} are processed.
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00004401
4402
Bram Moolenaarbd743252010-10-20 21:23:33 +02004403maparg({name}[, {mode} [, {abbr} [, {dict}]]]) *maparg()*
4404 When {dict} is omitted or zero: Return the rhs of mapping
4405 {name} in mode {mode}. The returned String has special
4406 characters translated like in the output of the ":map" command
4407 listing.
4408
4409 When there is no mapping for {name}, an empty String is
4410 returned.
4411
4412 The {name} can have special key names, like in the ":map"
4413 command.
4414
Bram Moolenaard12f5c12006-01-25 22:10:52 +00004415 {mode} can be one of these strings:
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004416 "n" Normal
Bram Moolenaarbd743252010-10-20 21:23:33 +02004417 "v" Visual (including Select)
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004418 "o" Operator-pending
4419 "i" Insert
4420 "c" Cmd-line
Bram Moolenaarbd743252010-10-20 21:23:33 +02004421 "s" Select
4422 "x" Visual
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004423 "l" langmap |language-mapping|
4424 "" Normal, Visual and Operator-pending
Bram Moolenaard12f5c12006-01-25 22:10:52 +00004425 When {mode} is omitted, the modes for "" are used.
Bram Moolenaarbd743252010-10-20 21:23:33 +02004426
Bram Moolenaar97b2ad32006-03-18 21:40:56 +00004427 When {abbr} is there and it is non-zero use abbreviations
4428 instead of mappings.
Bram Moolenaarbd743252010-10-20 21:23:33 +02004429
4430 When {dict} is there and it is non-zero return a dictionary
4431 containing all the information of the mapping with the
4432 following items:
4433 "lhs" The {lhs} of the mapping.
4434 "rhs" The {rhs} of the mapping as typed.
4435 "silent" 1 for a |:map-silent| mapping, else 0.
Bram Moolenaar05365702010-10-27 18:34:44 +02004436 "noremap" 1 if the {rhs} of the mapping is not remappable.
Bram Moolenaarbd743252010-10-20 21:23:33 +02004437 "expr" 1 for an expression mapping (|:map-<expr>|).
4438 "buffer" 1 for a buffer local mapping (|:map-local|).
4439 "mode" Modes for which the mapping is defined. In
4440 addition to the modes mentioned above, these
4441 characters will be used:
4442 " " Normal, Visual and Operator-pending
4443 "!" Insert and Commandline mode
Bram Moolenaar166af9b2010-11-16 20:34:40 +01004444 (|mapmode-ic|)
Bram Moolenaar05365702010-10-27 18:34:44 +02004445 "sid" The script local ID, used for <sid> mappings
4446 (|<SID>|).
Bram Moolenaardfb18412013-12-11 18:53:29 +01004447 "nowait" Do not wait for other, longer mappings.
4448 (|:map-<nowait>|).
Bram Moolenaarbd743252010-10-20 21:23:33 +02004449
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004450 The mappings local to the current buffer are checked first,
4451 then the global mappings.
Bram Moolenaara40ceaf2006-01-13 22:35:40 +00004452 This function can be used to map a key even when it's already
4453 mapped, and have it do the original mapping too. Sketch: >
4454 exe 'nnoremap <Tab> ==' . maparg('<Tab>', 'n')
4455
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004456
Bram Moolenaar97b2ad32006-03-18 21:40:56 +00004457mapcheck({name}[, {mode} [, {abbr}]]) *mapcheck()*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004458 Check if there is a mapping that matches with {name} in mode
4459 {mode}. See |maparg()| for {mode} and special names in
4460 {name}.
Bram Moolenaar97b2ad32006-03-18 21:40:56 +00004461 When {abbr} is there and it is non-zero use abbreviations
4462 instead of mappings.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004463 A match happens with a mapping that starts with {name} and
4464 with a mapping which is equal to the start of {name}.
4465
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004466 matches mapping "a" "ab" "abc" ~
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004467 mapcheck("a") yes yes yes
4468 mapcheck("abc") yes yes yes
4469 mapcheck("ax") yes no no
4470 mapcheck("b") no no no
4471
4472 The difference with maparg() is that mapcheck() finds a
4473 mapping that matches with {name}, while maparg() only finds a
4474 mapping for {name} exactly.
4475 When there is no mapping that starts with {name}, an empty
4476 String is returned. If there is one, the rhs of that mapping
4477 is returned. If there are several mappings that start with
4478 {name}, the rhs of one of them is returned.
4479 The mappings local to the current buffer are checked first,
4480 then the global mappings.
4481 This function can be used to check if a mapping can be added
4482 without being ambiguous. Example: >
4483 :if mapcheck("_vv") == ""
4484 : map _vv :set guifont=7x13<CR>
4485 :endif
4486< This avoids adding the "_vv" mapping when there already is a
4487 mapping for "_v" or for "_vvv".
4488
Bram Moolenaar89cb5e02004-07-19 20:55:54 +00004489match({expr}, {pat}[, {start}[, {count}]]) *match()*
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00004490 When {expr} is a |List| then this returns the index of the
4491 first item where {pat} matches. Each item is used as a
Bram Moolenaara23ccb82006-02-27 00:08:02 +00004492 String, |Lists| and |Dictionaries| are used as echoed.
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004493 Otherwise, {expr} is used as a String. The result is a
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00004494 Number, which gives the index (byte offset) in {expr} where
4495 {pat} matches.
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00004496 A match at the first character or |List| item returns zero.
Bram Moolenaar89cb5e02004-07-19 20:55:54 +00004497 If there is no match -1 is returned.
Bram Moolenaar20f90cf2011-05-19 12:22:51 +02004498 For getting submatches see |matchlist()|.
Bram Moolenaar89cb5e02004-07-19 20:55:54 +00004499 Example: >
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00004500 :echo match("testing", "ing") " results in 4
Bram Moolenaar362e1a32006-03-06 23:29:24 +00004501 :echo match([1, 'x'], '\a') " results in 1
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00004502< See |string-match| for how {pat} is used.
Bram Moolenaar05159a02005-02-26 23:04:13 +00004503 *strpbrk()*
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004504 Vim doesn't have a strpbrk() function. But you can do: >
Bram Moolenaar05159a02005-02-26 23:04:13 +00004505 :let sepidx = match(line, '[.,;: \t]')
4506< *strcasestr()*
4507 Vim doesn't have a strcasestr() function. But you can add
4508 "\c" to the pattern to ignore case: >
4509 :let idx = match(haystack, '\cneedle')
4510<
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00004511 If {start} is given, the search starts from byte index
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00004512 {start} in a String or item {start} in a |List|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004513 The result, however, is still the index counted from the
Bram Moolenaar402d2fe2005-04-15 21:00:38 +00004514 first character/item. Example: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004515 :echo match("testing", "ing", 2)
4516< result is again "4". >
4517 :echo match("testing", "ing", 4)
4518< result is again "4". >
4519 :echo match("testing", "t", 2)
4520< result is "3".
Bram Moolenaar5e3cb7e2006-02-27 23:58:35 +00004521 For a String, if {start} > 0 then it is like the string starts
Bram Moolenaar0b238792006-03-02 22:49:12 +00004522 {start} bytes later, thus "^" will match at {start}. Except
4523 when {count} is given, then it's like matches before the
4524 {start} byte are ignored (this is a bit complicated to keep it
4525 backwards compatible).
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00004526 For a String, if {start} < 0, it will be set to 0. For a list
4527 the index is counted from the end.
Bram Moolenaare224ffa2006-03-01 00:01:28 +00004528 If {start} is out of range ({start} > strlen({expr}) for a
4529 String or {start} > len({expr}) for a |List|) -1 is returned.
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00004530
Bram Moolenaar5e3cb7e2006-02-27 23:58:35 +00004531 When {count} is given use the {count}'th match. When a match
Bram Moolenaare224ffa2006-03-01 00:01:28 +00004532 is found in a String the search for the next one starts one
Bram Moolenaar5e3cb7e2006-02-27 23:58:35 +00004533 character further. Thus this example results in 1: >
4534 echo match("testing", "..", 0, 2)
4535< In a |List| the search continues in the next item.
Bram Moolenaar0b238792006-03-02 22:49:12 +00004536 Note that when {count} is added the way {start} works changes,
4537 see above.
Bram Moolenaar5e3cb7e2006-02-27 23:58:35 +00004538
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004539 See |pattern| for the patterns that are accepted.
4540 The 'ignorecase' option is used to set the ignore-caseness of
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004541 the pattern. 'smartcase' is NOT used. The matching is always
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004542 done like 'magic' is set and 'cpoptions' is empty.
4543
Bram Moolenaar6ee10162007-07-26 20:58:42 +00004544 *matchadd()* *E798* *E799* *E801*
Bram Moolenaarf9132812015-07-21 19:19:13 +02004545matchadd({group}, {pattern}[, {priority}[, {id} [, {dict}]]])
Bram Moolenaar6ee10162007-07-26 20:58:42 +00004546 Defines a pattern to be highlighted in the current window (a
4547 "match"). It will be highlighted with {group}. Returns an
4548 identification number (ID), which can be used to delete the
4549 match using |matchdelete()|.
Bram Moolenaar8e69b4a2013-11-09 03:41:58 +01004550 Matching is case sensitive and magic, unless case sensitivity
4551 or magicness are explicitly overridden in {pattern}. The
4552 'magic', 'smartcase' and 'ignorecase' options are not used.
Bram Moolenaarf9132812015-07-21 19:19:13 +02004553 The "Conceal" value is special, it causes the match to be
4554 concealed.
Bram Moolenaar6ee10162007-07-26 20:58:42 +00004555
4556 The optional {priority} argument assigns a priority to the
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004557 match. A match with a high priority will have its
Bram Moolenaar6ee10162007-07-26 20:58:42 +00004558 highlighting overrule that of a match with a lower priority.
4559 A priority is specified as an integer (negative numbers are no
4560 exception). If the {priority} argument is not specified, the
4561 default priority is 10. The priority of 'hlsearch' is zero,
4562 hence all matches with a priority greater than zero will
4563 overrule it. Syntax highlighting (see 'syntax') is a separate
4564 mechanism, and regardless of the chosen priority a match will
4565 always overrule syntax highlighting.
4566
4567 The optional {id} argument allows the request for a specific
4568 match ID. If a specified ID is already taken, an error
4569 message will appear and the match will not be added. An ID
4570 is specified as a positive integer (zero excluded). IDs 1, 2
4571 and 3 are reserved for |:match|, |:2match| and |:3match|,
Bram Moolenaar6561d522015-07-21 15:48:27 +02004572 respectively. If the {id} argument is not specified or -1,
Bram Moolenaar6ee10162007-07-26 20:58:42 +00004573 |matchadd()| automatically chooses a free ID.
4574
Bram Moolenaar85084ef2016-01-17 22:26:33 +01004575 The optional {dict} argument allows for further custom
4576 values. Currently this is used to specify a match specific
Bram Moolenaar6561d522015-07-21 15:48:27 +02004577 conceal character that will be shown for |hl-Conceal|
4578 highlighted matches. The dict can have the following members:
4579
4580 conceal Special character to show instead of the
4581 match (only for |hl-Conceal| highlighed
4582 matches, see |:syn-cchar|)
4583
Bram Moolenaar6ee10162007-07-26 20:58:42 +00004584 The number of matches is not limited, as it is the case with
4585 the |:match| commands.
4586
4587 Example: >
4588 :highlight MyGroup ctermbg=green guibg=green
4589 :let m = matchadd("MyGroup", "TODO")
4590< Deletion of the pattern: >
4591 :call matchdelete(m)
4592
4593< A list of matches defined by |matchadd()| and |:match| are
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004594 available from |getmatches()|. All matches can be deleted in
Bram Moolenaar6ee10162007-07-26 20:58:42 +00004595 one operation by |clearmatches()|.
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +00004596
Bram Moolenaar6561d522015-07-21 15:48:27 +02004597matchaddpos({group}, {pos}[, {priority}[, {id}[, {dict}]]]) *matchaddpos()*
Bram Moolenaarb3414592014-06-17 17:48:32 +02004598 Same as |matchadd()|, but requires a list of positions {pos}
4599 instead of a pattern. This command is faster than |matchadd()|
4600 because it does not require to handle regular expressions and
4601 sets buffer line boundaries to redraw screen. It is supposed
4602 to be used when fast match additions and deletions are
4603 required, for example to highlight matching parentheses.
4604
4605 The list {pos} can contain one of these items:
Bram Moolenaarb6da44a2014-06-25 18:15:22 +02004606 - A number. This whole line will be highlighted. The first
Bram Moolenaarb3414592014-06-17 17:48:32 +02004607 line has number 1.
4608 - A list with one number, e.g., [23]. The whole line with this
4609 number will be highlighted.
4610 - A list with two numbers, e.g., [23, 11]. The first number is
Bram Moolenaarb6da44a2014-06-25 18:15:22 +02004611 the line number, the second one is the column number (first
4612 column is 1, the value must correspond to the byte index as
4613 |col()| would return). The character at this position will
4614 be highlighted.
Bram Moolenaarb3414592014-06-17 17:48:32 +02004615 - A list with three numbers, e.g., [23, 11, 3]. As above, but
Bram Moolenaarb6da44a2014-06-25 18:15:22 +02004616 the third number gives the length of the highlight in bytes.
Bram Moolenaarb3414592014-06-17 17:48:32 +02004617
4618 The maximum number of positions is 8.
4619
4620 Example: >
4621 :highlight MyGroup ctermbg=green guibg=green
4622 :let m = matchaddpos("MyGroup", [[23, 24], 34])
4623< Deletion of the pattern: >
4624 :call matchdelete(m)
4625
4626< Matches added by |matchaddpos()| are returned by
4627 |getmatches()| with an entry "pos1", "pos2", etc., with the
4628 value a list like the {pos} item.
4629 These matches cannot be set via |setmatches()|, however they
4630 can still be deleted by |clearmatches()|.
4631
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +00004632matcharg({nr}) *matcharg()*
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +00004633 Selects the {nr} match item, as set with a |:match|,
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +00004634 |:2match| or |:3match| command.
4635 Return a |List| with two elements:
4636 The name of the highlight group used
4637 The pattern used.
4638 When {nr} is not 1, 2 or 3 returns an empty |List|.
4639 When there is no match item set returns ['', ''].
Bram Moolenaar6ee10162007-07-26 20:58:42 +00004640 This is useful to save and restore a |:match|.
4641 Highlighting matches using the |:match| commands are limited
4642 to three matches. |matchadd()| does not have this limitation.
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +00004643
Bram Moolenaar6ee10162007-07-26 20:58:42 +00004644matchdelete({id}) *matchdelete()* *E802* *E803*
4645 Deletes a match with ID {id} previously defined by |matchadd()|
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004646 or one of the |:match| commands. Returns 0 if successful,
Bram Moolenaar6ee10162007-07-26 20:58:42 +00004647 otherwise -1. See example for |matchadd()|. All matches can
4648 be deleted in one operation by |clearmatches()|.
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +00004649
Bram Moolenaar89cb5e02004-07-19 20:55:54 +00004650matchend({expr}, {pat}[, {start}[, {count}]]) *matchend()*
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01004651 Same as |match()|, but return the index of first character
4652 after the match. Example: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004653 :echo matchend("testing", "ing")
4654< results in "7".
Bram Moolenaar05159a02005-02-26 23:04:13 +00004655 *strspn()* *strcspn()*
4656 Vim doesn't have a strspn() or strcspn() function, but you can
4657 do it with matchend(): >
4658 :let span = matchend(line, '[a-zA-Z]')
4659 :let span = matchend(line, '[^a-zA-Z]')
4660< Except that -1 is returned when there are no matches.
4661
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01004662 The {start}, if given, has the same meaning as for |match()|. >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004663 :echo matchend("testing", "ing", 2)
4664< results in "7". >
4665 :echo matchend("testing", "ing", 5)
4666< result is "-1".
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01004667 When {expr} is a |List| the result is equal to |match()|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004668
Bram Moolenaar3a7c85b2005-02-05 21:39:53 +00004669matchlist({expr}, {pat}[, {start}[, {count}]]) *matchlist()*
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01004670 Same as |match()|, but return a |List|. The first item in the
Bram Moolenaar3a7c85b2005-02-05 21:39:53 +00004671 list is the matched string, same as what matchstr() would
4672 return. Following items are submatches, like "\1", "\2", etc.
Bram Moolenaarf9393ef2006-04-24 19:47:27 +00004673 in |:substitute|. When an optional submatch didn't match an
4674 empty string is used. Example: >
4675 echo matchlist('acd', '\(a\)\?\(b\)\?\(c\)\?\(.*\)')
4676< Results in: ['acd', 'a', '', 'c', 'd', '', '', '', '', '']
Bram Moolenaar3a7c85b2005-02-05 21:39:53 +00004677 When there is no match an empty list is returned.
4678
Bram Moolenaar89cb5e02004-07-19 20:55:54 +00004679matchstr({expr}, {pat}[, {start}[, {count}]]) *matchstr()*
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004680 Same as |match()|, but return the matched string. Example: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004681 :echo matchstr("testing", "ing")
4682< results in "ing".
4683 When there is no match "" is returned.
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01004684 The {start}, if given, has the same meaning as for |match()|. >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004685 :echo matchstr("testing", "ing", 2)
4686< results in "ing". >
4687 :echo matchstr("testing", "ing", 5)
4688< result is "".
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00004689 When {expr} is a |List| then the matching item is returned.
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00004690 The type isn't changed, it's not necessarily a String.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004691
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +00004692 *max()*
4693max({list}) Return the maximum value of all items in {list}.
4694 If {list} is not a list or one of the items in {list} cannot
4695 be used as a Number this results in an error.
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00004696 An empty |List| results in zero.
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +00004697
4698 *min()*
Bram Moolenaar79166c42007-05-10 18:29:51 +00004699min({list}) Return the minimum value of all items in {list}.
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +00004700 If {list} is not a list or one of the items in {list} cannot
4701 be used as a Number this results in an error.
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00004702 An empty |List| results in zero.
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +00004703
Bram Moolenaar551dbcc2006-04-25 22:13:59 +00004704 *mkdir()* *E739*
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +00004705mkdir({name} [, {path} [, {prot}]])
4706 Create directory {name}.
4707 If {path} is "p" then intermediate directories are created as
4708 necessary. Otherwise it must be "".
4709 If {prot} is given it is used to set the protection bits of
4710 the new directory. The default is 0755 (rwxr-xr-x: r/w for
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004711 the user readable for others). Use 0700 to make it unreadable
Bram Moolenaared39e1d2008-08-09 17:55:22 +00004712 for others. This is only used for the last part of {name}.
4713 Thus if you create /tmp/foo/bar then /tmp/foo will be created
4714 with 0755.
4715 Example: >
4716 :call mkdir($HOME . "/tmp/foo/bar", "p", 0700)
4717< This function is not available in the |sandbox|.
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +00004718 Not available on all systems. To check use: >
4719 :if exists("*mkdir")
4720<
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004721 *mode()*
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004722mode([expr]) Return a string that indicates the current mode.
Bram Moolenaar05bb9532008-07-04 09:44:11 +00004723 If [expr] is supplied and it evaluates to a non-zero Number or
4724 a non-empty String (|non-zero-arg|), then the full mode is
4725 returned, otherwise only the first letter is returned. Note
4726 that " " and "0" are also non-empty strings.
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004727
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004728 n Normal
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004729 no Operator-pending
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004730 v Visual by character
4731 V Visual by line
4732 CTRL-V Visual blockwise
4733 s Select by character
4734 S Select by line
4735 CTRL-S Select blockwise
4736 i Insert
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004737 R Replace |R|
4738 Rv Virtual Replace |gR|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004739 c Command-line
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004740 cv Vim Ex mode |gQ|
4741 ce Normal Ex mode |Q|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004742 r Hit-enter prompt
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004743 rm The -- more -- prompt
4744 r? A |:confirm| query of some sort
4745 ! Shell or external command is executing
4746 This is useful in the 'statusline' option or when used
4747 with |remote_expr()| In most other places it always returns
4748 "c" or "n".
4749 Also see |visualmode()|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004750
Bram Moolenaar7e506b62010-01-19 15:55:06 +01004751mzeval({expr}) *mzeval()*
4752 Evaluate MzScheme expression {expr} and return its result
Bram Moolenaard38b0552012-04-25 19:07:41 +02004753 converted to Vim data structures.
Bram Moolenaar7e506b62010-01-19 15:55:06 +01004754 Numbers and strings are returned as they are.
4755 Pairs (including lists and improper lists) and vectors are
4756 returned as Vim |Lists|.
4757 Hash tables are represented as Vim |Dictionary| type with keys
4758 converted to strings.
4759 All other types are converted to string with display function.
4760 Examples: >
4761 :mz (define l (list 1 2 3))
4762 :mz (define h (make-hash)) (hash-set! h "list" l)
4763 :echo mzeval("l")
4764 :echo mzeval("h")
4765<
4766 {only available when compiled with the |+mzscheme| feature}
4767
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004768nextnonblank({lnum}) *nextnonblank()*
4769 Return the line number of the first line at or below {lnum}
4770 that is not blank. Example: >
4771 if getline(nextnonblank(1)) =~ "Java"
4772< When {lnum} is invalid or there is no non-blank line at or
4773 below it, zero is returned.
4774 See also |prevnonblank()|.
4775
Bram Moolenaard35d7842013-01-23 17:17:10 +01004776nr2char({expr}[, {utf8}]) *nr2char()*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004777 Return a string with a single character, which has the number
4778 value {expr}. Examples: >
4779 nr2char(64) returns "@"
4780 nr2char(32) returns " "
Bram Moolenaard35d7842013-01-23 17:17:10 +01004781< When {utf8} is omitted or zero, the current 'encoding' is used.
4782 Example for "utf-8": >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004783 nr2char(300) returns I with bow character
Bram Moolenaard35d7842013-01-23 17:17:10 +01004784< With {utf8} set to 1, always return utf-8 characters.
4785 Note that a NUL character in the file is specified with
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004786 nr2char(10), because NULs are represented with newline
4787 characters. nr2char(0) is a real NUL and terminates the
Bram Moolenaar383f9bc2005-01-19 22:18:32 +00004788 string, thus results in an empty string.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00004789
Bram Moolenaard6e256c2011-12-14 15:32:50 +01004790or({expr}, {expr}) *or()*
4791 Bitwise OR on the two arguments. The arguments are converted
4792 to a number. A List, Dict or Float argument causes an error.
4793 Example: >
4794 :let bits = or(bits, 0x80)
4795
4796
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +00004797pathshorten({expr}) *pathshorten()*
4798 Shorten directory names in the path {expr} and return the
4799 result. The tail, the file name, is kept as-is. The other
4800 components in the path are reduced to single letters. Leading
4801 '~' and '.' characters are kept. Example: >
4802 :echo pathshorten('~/.vim/autoload/myfile.vim')
4803< ~/.v/a/myfile.vim ~
4804 It doesn't matter if the path exists or not.
4805
Bram Moolenaare9b892e2016-01-17 21:15:58 +01004806perleval({expr}) *perleval()*
4807 Evaluate Perl expression {expr} in scalar context and return
4808 its result converted to Vim data structures. If value can't be
Bram Moolenaar85084ef2016-01-17 22:26:33 +01004809 converted, it is returned as a string Perl representation.
4810 Note: If you want an array or hash, {expr} must return a
4811 reference to it.
Bram Moolenaare9b892e2016-01-17 21:15:58 +01004812 Example: >
4813 :echo perleval('[1 .. 4]')
4814< [1, 2, 3, 4]
4815 {only available when compiled with the |+perl| feature}
4816
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004817pow({x}, {y}) *pow()*
4818 Return the power of {x} to the exponent {y} as a |Float|.
4819 {x} and {y} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|.
4820 Examples: >
4821 :echo pow(3, 3)
4822< 27.0 >
4823 :echo pow(2, 16)
4824< 65536.0 >
4825 :echo pow(32, 0.20)
4826< 2.0
4827 {only available when compiled with the |+float| feature}
4828
Bram Moolenaar1d2ba7f2006-02-14 22:29:30 +00004829prevnonblank({lnum}) *prevnonblank()*
4830 Return the line number of the first line at or above {lnum}
4831 that is not blank. Example: >
4832 let ind = indent(prevnonblank(v:lnum - 1))
4833< When {lnum} is invalid or there is no non-blank line at or
4834 above it, zero is returned.
4835 Also see |nextnonblank()|.
4836
4837
Bram Moolenaar4be06f92005-07-29 22:36:03 +00004838printf({fmt}, {expr1} ...) *printf()*
4839 Return a String with {fmt}, where "%" items are replaced by
4840 the formatted form of their respective arguments. Example: >
Bram Moolenaar5a8684e2005-07-30 22:43:24 +00004841 printf("%4d: E%d %.30s", lnum, errno, msg)
Bram Moolenaar4be06f92005-07-29 22:36:03 +00004842< May result in:
Bram Moolenaar5a8684e2005-07-30 22:43:24 +00004843 " 99: E42 asdfasdfasdfasdfasdfasdfasdfas" ~
Bram Moolenaar4be06f92005-07-29 22:36:03 +00004844
4845 Often used items are:
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +00004846 %s string
Bram Moolenaar3ab72c52012-11-14 18:10:56 +01004847 %6S string right-aligned in 6 display cells
Bram Moolenaar98692072006-02-04 00:57:42 +00004848 %6s string right-aligned in 6 bytes
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004849 %.9s string truncated to 9 bytes
4850 %c single byte
4851 %d decimal number
4852 %5d decimal number padded with spaces to 5 characters
4853 %x hex number
4854 %04x hex number padded with zeros to at least 4 characters
4855 %X hex number using upper case letters
4856 %o octal number
4857 %f floating point number in the form 123.456
4858 %e floating point number in the form 1.234e3
4859 %E floating point number in the form 1.234E3
4860 %g floating point number, as %f or %e depending on value
4861 %G floating point number, as %f or %E depending on value
4862 %% the % character itself
Bram Moolenaar4be06f92005-07-29 22:36:03 +00004863
4864 Conversion specifications start with '%' and end with the
4865 conversion type. All other characters are copied unchanged to
4866 the result.
4867
4868 The "%" starts a conversion specification. The following
Bram Moolenaar5a8684e2005-07-30 22:43:24 +00004869 arguments appear in sequence:
Bram Moolenaar4be06f92005-07-29 22:36:03 +00004870
Bram Moolenaar5a8684e2005-07-30 22:43:24 +00004871 % [flags] [field-width] [.precision] type
Bram Moolenaar4be06f92005-07-29 22:36:03 +00004872
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +00004873 flags
Bram Moolenaar5a8684e2005-07-30 22:43:24 +00004874 Zero or more of the following flags:
4875
Bram Moolenaar4be06f92005-07-29 22:36:03 +00004876 # The value should be converted to an "alternate
4877 form". For c, d, and s conversions, this option
4878 has no effect. For o conversions, the precision
4879 of the number is increased to force the first
4880 character of the output string to a zero (except
4881 if a zero value is printed with an explicit
4882 precision of zero).
4883 For x and X conversions, a non-zero result has
4884 the string "0x" (or "0X" for X conversions)
4885 prepended to it.
Bram Moolenaar5a8684e2005-07-30 22:43:24 +00004886
Bram Moolenaar4be06f92005-07-29 22:36:03 +00004887 0 (zero) Zero padding. For all conversions the converted
4888 value is padded on the left with zeros rather
4889 than blanks. If a precision is given with a
4890 numeric conversion (d, o, x, and X), the 0 flag
4891 is ignored.
Bram Moolenaar5a8684e2005-07-30 22:43:24 +00004892
Bram Moolenaar4be06f92005-07-29 22:36:03 +00004893 - A negative field width flag; the converted value
4894 is to be left adjusted on the field boundary.
4895 The converted value is padded on the right with
4896 blanks, rather than on the left with blanks or
4897 zeros. A - overrides a 0 if both are given.
Bram Moolenaar5a8684e2005-07-30 22:43:24 +00004898
Bram Moolenaar4be06f92005-07-29 22:36:03 +00004899 ' ' (space) A blank should be left before a positive
4900 number produced by a signed conversion (d).
Bram Moolenaar5a8684e2005-07-30 22:43:24 +00004901
Bram Moolenaar4be06f92005-07-29 22:36:03 +00004902 + A sign must always be placed before a number
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004903 produced by a signed conversion. A + overrides
Bram Moolenaar4be06f92005-07-29 22:36:03 +00004904 a space if both are used.
Bram Moolenaar5a8684e2005-07-30 22:43:24 +00004905
4906 field-width
4907 An optional decimal digit string specifying a minimum
Bram Moolenaar98692072006-02-04 00:57:42 +00004908 field width. If the converted value has fewer bytes
4909 than the field width, it will be padded with spaces on
4910 the left (or right, if the left-adjustment flag has
4911 been given) to fill out the field width.
Bram Moolenaar5a8684e2005-07-30 22:43:24 +00004912
4913 .precision
4914 An optional precision, in the form of a period '.'
4915 followed by an optional digit string. If the digit
4916 string is omitted, the precision is taken as zero.
4917 This gives the minimum number of digits to appear for
4918 d, o, x, and X conversions, or the maximum number of
Bram Moolenaar98692072006-02-04 00:57:42 +00004919 bytes to be printed from a string for s conversions.
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004920 For floating point it is the number of digits after
4921 the decimal point.
Bram Moolenaar5a8684e2005-07-30 22:43:24 +00004922
4923 type
4924 A character that specifies the type of conversion to
4925 be applied, see below.
4926
Bram Moolenaar4be06f92005-07-29 22:36:03 +00004927 A field width or precision, or both, may be indicated by an
4928 asterisk '*' instead of a digit string. In this case, a
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004929 Number argument supplies the field width or precision. A
Bram Moolenaar4be06f92005-07-29 22:36:03 +00004930 negative field width is treated as a left adjustment flag
4931 followed by a positive field width; a negative precision is
4932 treated as though it were missing. Example: >
Bram Moolenaar5a8684e2005-07-30 22:43:24 +00004933 :echo printf("%d: %.*s", nr, width, line)
Bram Moolenaar4be06f92005-07-29 22:36:03 +00004934< This limits the length of the text used from "line" to
Bram Moolenaar5a8684e2005-07-30 22:43:24 +00004935 "width" bytes.
Bram Moolenaar4be06f92005-07-29 22:36:03 +00004936
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +00004937 The conversion specifiers and their meanings are:
Bram Moolenaar5a8684e2005-07-30 22:43:24 +00004938
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004939 *printf-d* *printf-o* *printf-x* *printf-X*
4940 doxX The Number argument is converted to signed decimal
Bram Moolenaar4be06f92005-07-29 22:36:03 +00004941 (d), unsigned octal (o), or unsigned hexadecimal (x
4942 and X) notation. The letters "abcdef" are used for
4943 x conversions; the letters "ABCDEF" are used for X
Bram Moolenaar5a8684e2005-07-30 22:43:24 +00004944 conversions.
4945 The precision, if any, gives the minimum number of
4946 digits that must appear; if the converted value
4947 requires fewer digits, it is padded on the left with
4948 zeros.
4949 In no case does a non-existent or small field width
4950 cause truncation of a numeric field; if the result of
4951 a conversion is wider than the field width, the field
4952 is expanded to contain the conversion result.
4953
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004954 *printf-c*
Bram Moolenaar5a8684e2005-07-30 22:43:24 +00004955 c The Number argument is converted to a byte, and the
4956 resulting character is written.
4957
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004958 *printf-s*
Bram Moolenaar5a8684e2005-07-30 22:43:24 +00004959 s The text of the String argument is used. If a
4960 precision is specified, no more bytes than the number
4961 specified are used.
Bram Moolenaar0122c402015-02-03 19:13:34 +01004962 *printf-S*
Bram Moolenaar3ab72c52012-11-14 18:10:56 +01004963 S The text of the String argument is used. If a
4964 precision is specified, no more display cells than the
4965 number specified are used. Without the |+multi_byte|
4966 feature works just like 's'.
Bram Moolenaar5a8684e2005-07-30 22:43:24 +00004967
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00004968 *printf-f* *E807*
4969 f The Float argument is converted into a string of the
4970 form 123.456. The precision specifies the number of
4971 digits after the decimal point. When the precision is
4972 zero the decimal point is omitted. When the precision
4973 is not specified 6 is used. A really big number
4974 (out of range or dividing by zero) results in "inf".
4975 "0.0 / 0.0" results in "nan".
4976 Example: >
4977 echo printf("%.2f", 12.115)
4978< 12.12
4979 Note that roundoff depends on the system libraries.
4980 Use |round()| when in doubt.
4981
4982 *printf-e* *printf-E*
4983 e E The Float argument is converted into a string of the
4984 form 1.234e+03 or 1.234E+03 when using 'E'. The
4985 precision specifies the number of digits after the
4986 decimal point, like with 'f'.
4987
4988 *printf-g* *printf-G*
4989 g G The Float argument is converted like with 'f' if the
4990 value is between 0.001 (inclusive) and 10000000.0
4991 (exclusive). Otherwise 'e' is used for 'g' and 'E'
4992 for 'G'. When no precision is specified superfluous
4993 zeroes and '+' signs are removed, except for the zero
4994 immediately after the decimal point. Thus 10000000.0
4995 results in 1.0e7.
4996
4997 *printf-%*
Bram Moolenaar4be06f92005-07-29 22:36:03 +00004998 % A '%' is written. No argument is converted. The
4999 complete conversion specification is "%%".
Bram Moolenaar4be06f92005-07-29 22:36:03 +00005000
Bram Moolenaarc236c162008-07-13 17:41:49 +00005001 When a Number argument is expected a String argument is also
5002 accepted and automatically converted.
5003 When a Float or String argument is expected a Number argument
5004 is also accepted and automatically converted.
5005 Any other argument type results in an error message.
Bram Moolenaar4be06f92005-07-29 22:36:03 +00005006
Bram Moolenaar83bab712005-08-01 21:58:57 +00005007 *E766* *E767*
Bram Moolenaar4be06f92005-07-29 22:36:03 +00005008 The number of {exprN} arguments must exactly match the number
5009 of "%" items. If there are not sufficient or too many
Bram Moolenaar5a8684e2005-07-30 22:43:24 +00005010 arguments an error is given. Up to 18 arguments can be used.
Bram Moolenaar4be06f92005-07-29 22:36:03 +00005011
5012
Bram Moolenaar1d2ba7f2006-02-14 22:29:30 +00005013pumvisible() *pumvisible()*
5014 Returns non-zero when the popup menu is visible, zero
5015 otherwise. See |ins-completion-menu|.
Bram Moolenaar87b5ca52006-03-04 21:55:31 +00005016 This can be used to avoid some things that would remove the
5017 popup menu.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005018
Bram Moolenaare6ae6222013-05-21 21:01:10 +02005019 *E860*
Bram Moolenaar30b65812012-07-12 22:01:11 +02005020py3eval({expr}) *py3eval()*
5021 Evaluate Python expression {expr} and return its result
5022 converted to Vim data structures.
5023 Numbers and strings are returned as they are (strings are
Bram Moolenaar2b8388b2015-02-28 13:11:45 +01005024 copied though, Unicode strings are additionally converted to
Bram Moolenaar30b65812012-07-12 22:01:11 +02005025 'encoding').
5026 Lists are represented as Vim |List| type.
5027 Dictionaries are represented as Vim |Dictionary| type with
5028 keys converted to strings.
5029 {only available when compiled with the |+python3| feature}
5030
5031 *E858* *E859*
5032pyeval({expr}) *pyeval()*
5033 Evaluate Python expression {expr} and return its result
5034 converted to Vim data structures.
5035 Numbers and strings are returned as they are (strings are
5036 copied though).
5037 Lists are represented as Vim |List| type.
Bram Moolenaard09acef2012-09-21 14:54:30 +02005038 Dictionaries are represented as Vim |Dictionary| type,
5039 non-string keys result in error.
Bram Moolenaar30b65812012-07-12 22:01:11 +02005040 {only available when compiled with the |+python| feature}
5041
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +00005042 *E726* *E727*
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +00005043range({expr} [, {max} [, {stride}]]) *range()*
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00005044 Returns a |List| with Numbers:
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +00005045 - If only {expr} is specified: [0, 1, ..., {expr} - 1]
5046 - If {max} is specified: [{expr}, {expr} + 1, ..., {max}]
5047 - If {stride} is specified: [{expr}, {expr} + {stride}, ...,
5048 {max}] (increasing {expr} with {stride} each time, not
5049 producing a value past {max}).
Bram Moolenaare7566042005-06-17 22:00:15 +00005050 When the maximum is one before the start the result is an
5051 empty list. When the maximum is more than one before the
5052 start this is an error.
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +00005053 Examples: >
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +00005054 range(4) " [0, 1, 2, 3]
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +00005055 range(2, 4) " [2, 3, 4]
5056 range(2, 9, 3) " [2, 5, 8]
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +00005057 range(2, -2, -1) " [2, 1, 0, -1, -2]
Bram Moolenaare7566042005-06-17 22:00:15 +00005058 range(0) " []
5059 range(2, 0) " error!
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +00005060<
Bram Moolenaar3a7c85b2005-02-05 21:39:53 +00005061 *readfile()*
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +00005062readfile({fname} [, {binary} [, {max}]])
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00005063 Read file {fname} and return a |List|, each line of the file
5064 as an item. Lines broken at NL characters. Macintosh files
Bram Moolenaar3a7c85b2005-02-05 21:39:53 +00005065 separated with CR will result in a single long line (unless a
5066 NL appears somewhere).
Bram Moolenaar06583f12010-08-07 20:30:49 +02005067 All NUL characters are replaced with a NL character.
Bram Moolenaar86ae7202015-07-10 19:31:35 +02005068 When {binary} contains "b" binary mode is used:
Bram Moolenaar3a7c85b2005-02-05 21:39:53 +00005069 - When the last line ends in a NL an extra empty list item is
5070 added.
5071 - No CR characters are removed.
5072 Otherwise:
5073 - CR characters that appear before a NL are removed.
5074 - Whether the last line ends in a NL or not does not matter.
Bram Moolenaar06583f12010-08-07 20:30:49 +02005075 - When 'encoding' is Unicode any UTF-8 byte order mark is
5076 removed from the text.
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +00005077 When {max} is given this specifies the maximum number of lines
5078 to be read. Useful if you only want to check the first ten
5079 lines of a file: >
5080 :for line in readfile(fname, '', 10)
5081 : if line =~ 'Date' | echo line | endif
5082 :endfor
Bram Moolenaar582fd852005-03-28 20:58:01 +00005083< When {max} is negative -{max} lines from the end of the file
5084 are returned, or as many as there are.
5085 When {max} is zero the result is an empty list.
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +00005086 Note that without {max} the whole file is read into memory.
5087 Also note that there is no recognition of encoding. Read a
5088 file into a buffer if you need to.
Bram Moolenaar3a7c85b2005-02-05 21:39:53 +00005089 When the file can't be opened an error message is given and
5090 the result is an empty list.
5091 Also see |writefile()|.
5092
Bram Moolenaar433f7c82006-03-21 21:29:36 +00005093reltime([{start} [, {end}]]) *reltime()*
5094 Return an item that represents a time value. The format of
5095 the item depends on the system. It can be passed to
5096 |reltimestr()| to convert it to a string.
5097 Without an argument it returns the current time.
5098 With one argument is returns the time passed since the time
5099 specified in the argument.
Bram Moolenaar551dbcc2006-04-25 22:13:59 +00005100 With two arguments it returns the time passed between {start}
Bram Moolenaar433f7c82006-03-21 21:29:36 +00005101 and {end}.
5102 The {start} and {end} arguments must be values returned by
5103 reltime().
Bram Moolenaardb84e452010-08-15 13:50:43 +02005104 {only available when compiled with the |+reltime| feature}
Bram Moolenaar433f7c82006-03-21 21:29:36 +00005105
5106reltimestr({time}) *reltimestr()*
5107 Return a String that represents the time value of {time}.
5108 This is the number of seconds, a dot and the number of
5109 microseconds. Example: >
5110 let start = reltime()
5111 call MyFunction()
5112 echo reltimestr(reltime(start))
5113< Note that overhead for the commands will be added to the time.
5114 The accuracy depends on the system.
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00005115 Leading spaces are used to make the string align nicely. You
5116 can use split() to remove it. >
5117 echo split(reltimestr(reltime(start)))[0]
5118< Also see |profiling|.
Bram Moolenaardb84e452010-08-15 13:50:43 +02005119 {only available when compiled with the |+reltime| feature}
Bram Moolenaar433f7c82006-03-21 21:29:36 +00005120
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005121 *remote_expr()* *E449*
5122remote_expr({server}, {string} [, {idvar}])
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00005123 Send the {string} to {server}. The string is sent as an
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005124 expression and the result is returned after evaluation.
Bram Moolenaar362e1a32006-03-06 23:29:24 +00005125 The result must be a String or a |List|. A |List| is turned
5126 into a String by joining the items with a line break in
5127 between (not at the end), like with join(expr, "\n").
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005128 If {idvar} is present, it is taken as the name of a
5129 variable and a {serverid} for later use with
5130 remote_read() is stored there.
5131 See also |clientserver| |RemoteReply|.
5132 This function is not available in the |sandbox|.
5133 {only available when compiled with the |+clientserver| feature}
5134 Note: Any errors will cause a local error message to be issued
5135 and the result will be the empty string.
5136 Examples: >
5137 :echo remote_expr("gvim", "2+2")
5138 :echo remote_expr("gvim1", "b:current_syntax")
5139<
5140
5141remote_foreground({server}) *remote_foreground()*
5142 Move the Vim server with the name {server} to the foreground.
5143 This works like: >
5144 remote_expr({server}, "foreground()")
5145< Except that on Win32 systems the client does the work, to work
5146 around the problem that the OS doesn't always allow the server
5147 to bring itself to the foreground.
Bram Moolenaar9372a112005-12-06 19:59:18 +00005148 Note: This does not restore the window if it was minimized,
5149 like foreground() does.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005150 This function is not available in the |sandbox|.
5151 {only in the Win32, Athena, Motif and GTK GUI versions and the
5152 Win32 console version}
5153
5154
5155remote_peek({serverid} [, {retvar}]) *remote_peek()*
5156 Returns a positive number if there are available strings
5157 from {serverid}. Copies any reply string into the variable
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00005158 {retvar} if specified. {retvar} must be a string with the
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005159 name of a variable.
5160 Returns zero if none are available.
5161 Returns -1 if something is wrong.
5162 See also |clientserver|.
5163 This function is not available in the |sandbox|.
5164 {only available when compiled with the |+clientserver| feature}
5165 Examples: >
5166 :let repl = ""
5167 :echo "PEEK: ".remote_peek(id, "repl").": ".repl
5168
5169remote_read({serverid}) *remote_read()*
5170 Return the oldest available reply from {serverid} and consume
5171 it. It blocks until a reply is available.
5172 See also |clientserver|.
5173 This function is not available in the |sandbox|.
5174 {only available when compiled with the |+clientserver| feature}
5175 Example: >
5176 :echo remote_read(id)
5177<
5178 *remote_send()* *E241*
5179remote_send({server}, {string} [, {idvar}])
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00005180 Send the {string} to {server}. The string is sent as input
Bram Moolenaard4755bb2004-09-02 19:12:26 +00005181 keys and the function returns immediately. At the Vim server
5182 the keys are not mapped |:map|.
Bram Moolenaar1d2ba7f2006-02-14 22:29:30 +00005183 If {idvar} is present, it is taken as the name of a variable
5184 and a {serverid} for later use with remote_read() is stored
5185 there.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005186 See also |clientserver| |RemoteReply|.
5187 This function is not available in the |sandbox|.
5188 {only available when compiled with the |+clientserver| feature}
5189 Note: Any errors will be reported in the server and may mess
5190 up the display.
5191 Examples: >
5192 :echo remote_send("gvim", ":DropAndReply ".file, "serverid").
5193 \ remote_read(serverid)
5194
5195 :autocmd NONE RemoteReply *
5196 \ echo remote_read(expand("<amatch>"))
5197 :echo remote_send("gvim", ":sleep 10 | echo ".
5198 \ 'server2client(expand("<client>"), "HELLO")<CR>')
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00005199<
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +00005200remove({list}, {idx} [, {end}]) *remove()*
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00005201 Without {end}: Remove the item at {idx} from |List| {list} and
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01005202 return the item.
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +00005203 With {end}: Remove items from {idx} to {end} (inclusive) and
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01005204 return a List with these items. When {idx} points to the same
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +00005205 item as {end} a list with one item is returned. When {end}
5206 points to an item before {idx} this is an error.
5207 See |list-index| for possible values of {idx} and {end}.
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00005208 Example: >
5209 :echo "last item: " . remove(mylist, -1)
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +00005210 :call remove(mylist, 0, 9)
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +00005211remove({dict}, {key})
5212 Remove the entry from {dict} with key {key}. Example: >
5213 :echo "removed " . remove(dict, "one")
5214< If there is no {key} in {dict} this is an error.
5215
5216 Use |delete()| to remove a file.
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00005217
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005218rename({from}, {to}) *rename()*
5219 Rename the file by the name {from} to the name {to}. This
5220 should also work to move files across file systems. The
5221 result is a Number, which is 0 if the file was renamed
5222 successfully, and non-zero when the renaming failed.
Bram Moolenaar798b30b2009-04-22 10:56:16 +00005223 NOTE: If {to} exists it is overwritten without warning.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005224 This function is not available in the |sandbox|.
5225
Bram Moolenaarab79bcb2004-07-18 21:34:53 +00005226repeat({expr}, {count}) *repeat()*
5227 Repeat {expr} {count} times and return the concatenated
5228 result. Example: >
Bram Moolenaar551dbcc2006-04-25 22:13:59 +00005229 :let separator = repeat('-', 80)
Bram Moolenaarab79bcb2004-07-18 21:34:53 +00005230< When {count} is zero or negative the result is empty.
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00005231 When {expr} is a |List| the result is {expr} concatenated
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00005232 {count} times. Example: >
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +00005233 :let longlist = repeat(['a', 'b'], 3)
5234< Results in ['a', 'b', 'a', 'b', 'a', 'b'].
Bram Moolenaarab79bcb2004-07-18 21:34:53 +00005235
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00005236
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005237resolve({filename}) *resolve()* *E655*
5238 On MS-Windows, when {filename} is a shortcut (a .lnk file),
5239 returns the path the shortcut points to in a simplified form.
5240 On Unix, repeat resolving symbolic links in all path
5241 components of {filename} and return the simplified result.
5242 To cope with link cycles, resolving of symbolic links is
5243 stopped after 100 iterations.
5244 On other systems, return the simplified {filename}.
5245 The simplification step is done as by |simplify()|.
5246 resolve() keeps a leading path component specifying the
5247 current directory (provided the result is still a relative
5248 path name) and also keeps a trailing path separator.
5249
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00005250 *reverse()*
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00005251reverse({list}) Reverse the order of items in {list} in-place. Returns
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00005252 {list}.
5253 If you want a list to remain unmodified make a copy first: >
5254 :let revlist = reverse(copy(mylist))
5255
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00005256round({expr}) *round()*
Bram Moolenaarc236c162008-07-13 17:41:49 +00005257 Round off {expr} to the nearest integral value and return it
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00005258 as a |Float|. If {expr} lies halfway between two integral
5259 values, then use the larger one (away from zero).
5260 {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|.
5261 Examples: >
5262 echo round(0.456)
5263< 0.0 >
5264 echo round(4.5)
5265< 5.0 >
5266 echo round(-4.5)
5267< -5.0
5268 {only available when compiled with the |+float| feature}
Bram Moolenaar34feacb2012-12-05 19:01:43 +01005269
Bram Moolenaar9a773482013-06-11 18:40:13 +02005270screenattr(row, col) *screenattr()*
5271 Like screenchar(), but return the attribute. This is a rather
5272 arbitrary number that can only be used to compare to the
5273 attribute at other positions.
5274
5275screenchar(row, col) *screenchar()*
5276 The result is a Number, which is the character at position
5277 [row, col] on the screen. This works for every possible
5278 screen position, also status lines, window separators and the
5279 command line. The top left position is row one, column one
5280 The character excludes composing characters. For double-byte
5281 encodings it may only be the first byte.
5282 This is mainly to be used for testing.
5283 Returns -1 when row or col is out of range.
5284
Bram Moolenaar34feacb2012-12-05 19:01:43 +01005285screencol() *screencol()*
5286 The result is a Number, which is the current screen column of
5287 the cursor. The leftmost column has number 1.
5288 This function is mainly used for testing.
5289
5290 Note: Always returns the current screen column, thus if used
5291 in a command (e.g. ":echo screencol()") it will return the
5292 column inside the command line, which is 1 when the command is
5293 executed. To get the cursor position in the file use one of
5294 the following mappings: >
5295 nnoremap <expr> GG ":echom ".screencol()."\n"
5296 nnoremap <silent> GG :echom screencol()<CR>
5297<
5298screenrow() *screenrow()*
5299 The result is a Number, which is the current screen row of the
5300 cursor. The top line has number one.
5301 This function is mainly used for testing.
5302
5303 Note: Same restrictions as with |screencol()|.
5304
Bram Moolenaar76929292008-01-06 19:07:36 +00005305search({pattern} [, {flags} [, {stopline} [, {timeout}]]]) *search()*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005306 Search for regexp pattern {pattern}. The search starts at the
Bram Moolenaar383f9bc2005-01-19 22:18:32 +00005307 cursor position (you can use |cursor()| to set it).
Bram Moolenaar65c923a2006-03-03 22:56:30 +00005308
Bram Moolenaar2df58b42012-11-28 18:21:11 +01005309 When a match has been found its line number is returned.
Bram Moolenaarb8ff1fb2012-02-04 21:59:01 +01005310 If there is no match a 0 is returned and the cursor doesn't
5311 move. No error message is given.
Bram Moolenaarb8ff1fb2012-02-04 21:59:01 +01005312
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005313 {flags} is a String, which can contain these character flags:
Bram Moolenaarad4d8a12015-12-28 19:20:36 +01005314 'b' search Backward instead of forward
5315 'c' accept a match at the Cursor position
Bram Moolenaar87b5ca52006-03-04 21:55:31 +00005316 'e' move to the End of the match
Bram Moolenaar5eb86f92004-07-26 12:53:41 +00005317 'n' do Not move the cursor
Bram Moolenaarad4d8a12015-12-28 19:20:36 +01005318 'p' return number of matching sub-Pattern (see below)
5319 's' Set the ' mark at the previous location of the cursor
5320 'w' Wrap around the end of the file
5321 'W' don't Wrap around the end of the file
5322 'z' start searching at the cursor column instead of zero
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005323 If neither 'w' or 'W' is given, the 'wrapscan' option applies.
5324
Bram Moolenaar02743632005-07-25 20:42:36 +00005325 If the 's' flag is supplied, the ' mark is set, only if the
5326 cursor is moved. The 's' flag cannot be combined with the 'n'
5327 flag.
5328
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00005329 'ignorecase', 'smartcase' and 'magic' are used.
Bram Moolenaarad4d8a12015-12-28 19:20:36 +01005330
Bram Moolenaar85084ef2016-01-17 22:26:33 +01005331 When the 'z' flag is not given, searching always starts in
Bram Moolenaarad4d8a12015-12-28 19:20:36 +01005332 column zero and then matches before the cursor are skipped.
5333 When the 'c' flag is present in 'cpo' the next search starts
5334 after the match. Without the 'c' flag the next search starts
5335 one column further.
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00005336
Bram Moolenaara23ccb82006-02-27 00:08:02 +00005337 When the {stopline} argument is given then the search stops
5338 after searching this line. This is useful to restrict the
5339 search to a range of lines. Examples: >
5340 let match = search('(', 'b', line("w0"))
5341 let end = search('END', '', line("w$"))
5342< When {stopline} is used and it is not zero this also implies
5343 that the search does not wrap around the end of the file.
Bram Moolenaar76929292008-01-06 19:07:36 +00005344 A zero value is equal to not giving the argument.
5345
5346 When the {timeout} argument is given the search stops when
Bram Moolenaar1aeaf8c2012-05-18 13:46:39 +02005347 more than this many milliseconds have passed. Thus when
Bram Moolenaar76929292008-01-06 19:07:36 +00005348 {timeout} is 500 the search stops after half a second.
5349 The value must not be negative. A zero value is like not
5350 giving the argument.
Bram Moolenaardb84e452010-08-15 13:50:43 +02005351 {only available when compiled with the |+reltime| feature}
Bram Moolenaara23ccb82006-02-27 00:08:02 +00005352
Bram Moolenaar362e1a32006-03-06 23:29:24 +00005353 *search()-sub-match*
5354 With the 'p' flag the returned value is one more than the
5355 first sub-match in \(\). One if none of them matched but the
5356 whole pattern did match.
Bram Moolenaara23ccb82006-02-27 00:08:02 +00005357 To get the column number too use |searchpos()|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005358
Bram Moolenaar87b5ca52006-03-04 21:55:31 +00005359 The cursor will be positioned at the match, unless the 'n'
5360 flag is used.
5361
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005362 Example (goes over all files in the argument list): >
5363 :let n = 1
5364 :while n <= argc() " loop over all files in arglist
5365 : exe "argument " . n
5366 : " start at the last char in the file and wrap for the
5367 : " first search to find match at start of file
5368 : normal G$
5369 : let flags = "w"
5370 : while search("foo", flags) > 0
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00005371 : s/foo/bar/g
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005372 : let flags = "W"
5373 : endwhile
5374 : update " write the file if modified
5375 : let n = n + 1
5376 :endwhile
5377<
Bram Moolenaar87b5ca52006-03-04 21:55:31 +00005378 Example for using some flags: >
5379 :echo search('\<if\|\(else\)\|\(endif\)', 'ncpe')
5380< This will search for the keywords "if", "else", and "endif"
5381 under or after the cursor. Because of the 'p' flag, it
5382 returns 1, 2, or 3 depending on which keyword is found, or 0
5383 if the search fails. With the cursor on the first word of the
5384 line:
5385 if (foo == 0) | let foo = foo + 1 | endif ~
5386 the function returns 1. Without the 'c' flag, the function
5387 finds the "endif" and returns 3. The same thing happens
5388 without the 'e' flag if the cursor is on the "f" of "if".
5389 The 'n' flag tells the function not to move the cursor.
5390
Bram Moolenaar92d640f2005-09-05 22:11:52 +00005391
Bram Moolenaarf75a9632005-09-13 21:20:47 +00005392searchdecl({name} [, {global} [, {thisblock}]]) *searchdecl()*
5393 Search for the declaration of {name}.
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +00005394
Bram Moolenaarf75a9632005-09-13 21:20:47 +00005395 With a non-zero {global} argument it works like |gD|, find
5396 first match in the file. Otherwise it works like |gd|, find
5397 first match in the function.
5398
5399 With a non-zero {thisblock} argument matches in a {} block
5400 that ends before the cursor position are ignored. Avoids
5401 finding variable declarations only valid in another scope.
5402
Bram Moolenaar92d640f2005-09-05 22:11:52 +00005403 Moves the cursor to the found match.
5404 Returns zero for success, non-zero for failure.
5405 Example: >
5406 if searchdecl('myvar') == 0
5407 echo getline('.')
5408 endif
5409<
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005410 *searchpair()*
Bram Moolenaar76929292008-01-06 19:07:36 +00005411searchpair({start}, {middle}, {end} [, {flags} [, {skip}
5412 [, {stopline} [, {timeout}]]]])
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005413 Search for the match of a nested start-end pair. This can be
5414 used to find the "endif" that matches an "if", while other
5415 if/endif pairs in between are ignored.
Bram Moolenaarfaa959a2006-02-20 21:37:40 +00005416 The search starts at the cursor. The default is to search
5417 forward, include 'b' in {flags} to search backward.
5418 If a match is found, the cursor is positioned at it and the
5419 line number is returned. If no match is found 0 or -1 is
5420 returned and the cursor doesn't move. No error message is
5421 given.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005422
5423 {start}, {middle} and {end} are patterns, see |pattern|. They
5424 must not contain \( \) pairs. Use of \%( \) is allowed. When
5425 {middle} is not empty, it is found when searching from either
5426 direction, but only when not in a nested start-end pair. A
5427 typical use is: >
5428 searchpair('\<if\>', '\<else\>', '\<endif\>')
5429< By leaving {middle} empty the "else" is skipped.
5430
Bram Moolenaar87b5ca52006-03-04 21:55:31 +00005431 {flags} 'b', 'c', 'n', 's', 'w' and 'W' are used like with
5432 |search()|. Additionally:
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005433 'r' Repeat until no more matches found; will find the
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00005434 outer pair. Implies the 'W' flag.
5435 'm' Return number of matches instead of line number with
Bram Moolenaar87b5ca52006-03-04 21:55:31 +00005436 the match; will be > 1 when 'r' is used.
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00005437 Note: it's nearly always a good idea to use the 'W' flag, to
5438 avoid wrapping around the end of the file.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005439
5440 When a match for {start}, {middle} or {end} is found, the
5441 {skip} expression is evaluated with the cursor positioned on
5442 the start of the match. It should return non-zero if this
5443 match is to be skipped. E.g., because it is inside a comment
5444 or a string.
5445 When {skip} is omitted or empty, every match is accepted.
5446 When evaluating {skip} causes an error the search is aborted
5447 and -1 returned.
5448
Bram Moolenaar76929292008-01-06 19:07:36 +00005449 For {stopline} and {timeout} see |search()|.
Bram Moolenaara23ccb82006-02-27 00:08:02 +00005450
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005451 The value of 'ignorecase' is used. 'magic' is ignored, the
5452 patterns are used like it's on.
5453
5454 The search starts exactly at the cursor. A match with
5455 {start}, {middle} or {end} at the next character, in the
5456 direction of searching, is the first one found. Example: >
5457 if 1
5458 if 2
5459 endif 2
5460 endif 1
5461< When starting at the "if 2", with the cursor on the "i", and
5462 searching forwards, the "endif 2" is found. When starting on
5463 the character just before the "if 2", the "endif 1" will be
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00005464 found. That's because the "if 2" will be found first, and
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005465 then this is considered to be a nested if/endif from "if 2" to
5466 "endif 2".
5467 When searching backwards and {end} is more than one character,
5468 it may be useful to put "\zs" at the end of the pattern, so
5469 that when the cursor is inside a match with the end it finds
5470 the matching start.
5471
5472 Example, to find the "endif" command in a Vim script: >
5473
5474 :echo searchpair('\<if\>', '\<el\%[seif]\>', '\<en\%[dif]\>', 'W',
5475 \ 'getline(".") =~ "^\\s*\""')
5476
5477< The cursor must be at or after the "if" for which a match is
5478 to be found. Note that single-quote strings are used to avoid
5479 having to double the backslashes. The skip expression only
5480 catches comments at the start of a line, not after a command.
5481 Also, a word "en" or "if" halfway a line is considered a
5482 match.
5483 Another example, to search for the matching "{" of a "}": >
5484
5485 :echo searchpair('{', '', '}', 'bW')
5486
5487< This works when the cursor is at or before the "}" for which a
5488 match is to be found. To reject matches that syntax
5489 highlighting recognized as strings: >
5490
5491 :echo searchpair('{', '', '}', 'bW',
5492 \ 'synIDattr(synID(line("."), col("."), 0), "name") =~? "string"')
5493<
Bram Moolenaar1d2ba7f2006-02-14 22:29:30 +00005494 *searchpairpos()*
Bram Moolenaar76929292008-01-06 19:07:36 +00005495searchpairpos({start}, {middle}, {end} [, {flags} [, {skip}
5496 [, {stopline} [, {timeout}]]]])
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01005497 Same as |searchpair()|, but returns a |List| with the line and
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00005498 column position of the match. The first element of the |List|
5499 is the line number and the second element is the byte index of
Bram Moolenaar1d2ba7f2006-02-14 22:29:30 +00005500 the column position of the match. If no match is found,
Bram Moolenaar9855d6b2010-07-18 14:34:51 +02005501 returns [0, 0]. >
5502
Bram Moolenaar1d2ba7f2006-02-14 22:29:30 +00005503 :let [lnum,col] = searchpairpos('{', '', '}', 'n')
5504<
5505 See |match-parens| for a bigger and more useful example.
5506
Bram Moolenaar76929292008-01-06 19:07:36 +00005507searchpos({pattern} [, {flags} [, {stopline} [, {timeout}]]]) *searchpos()*
Bram Moolenaara23ccb82006-02-27 00:08:02 +00005508 Same as |search()|, but returns a |List| with the line and
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00005509 column position of the match. The first element of the |List|
5510 is the line number and the second element is the byte index of
5511 the column position of the match. If no match is found,
5512 returns [0, 0].
Bram Moolenaar362e1a32006-03-06 23:29:24 +00005513 Example: >
5514 :let [lnum, col] = searchpos('mypattern', 'n')
5515
5516< When the 'p' flag is given then there is an extra item with
5517 the sub-pattern match number |search()-sub-match|. Example: >
5518 :let [lnum, col, submatch] = searchpos('\(\l\)\|\(\u\)', 'np')
5519< In this example "submatch" is 2 when a lowercase letter is
5520 found |/\l|, 3 when an uppercase letter is found |/\u|.
5521
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005522server2client( {clientid}, {string}) *server2client()*
5523 Send a reply string to {clientid}. The most recent {clientid}
5524 that sent a string can be retrieved with expand("<client>").
5525 {only available when compiled with the |+clientserver| feature}
5526 Note:
5527 This id has to be stored before the next command can be
Bram Moolenaar402d2fe2005-04-15 21:00:38 +00005528 received. I.e. before returning from the received command and
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005529 before calling any commands that waits for input.
5530 See also |clientserver|.
5531 Example: >
5532 :echo server2client(expand("<client>"), "HELLO")
5533<
5534serverlist() *serverlist()*
5535 Return a list of available server names, one per line.
5536 When there are no servers or the information is not available
5537 an empty string is returned. See also |clientserver|.
5538 {only available when compiled with the |+clientserver| feature}
5539 Example: >
5540 :echo serverlist()
5541<
5542setbufvar({expr}, {varname}, {val}) *setbufvar()*
5543 Set option or local variable {varname} in buffer {expr} to
5544 {val}.
5545 This also works for a global or local window option, but it
5546 doesn't work for a global or local window variable.
5547 For a local window option the global value is unchanged.
5548 For the use of {expr}, see |bufname()| above.
5549 Note that the variable name without "b:" must be used.
5550 Examples: >
5551 :call setbufvar(1, "&mod", 1)
5552 :call setbufvar("todo", "myvar", "foobar")
5553< This function is not available in the |sandbox|.
5554
Bram Moolenaar12969c02015-09-08 23:36:10 +02005555setcharsearch({dict}) *setcharsearch()*
Bram Moolenaardbd24b52015-08-11 14:26:19 +02005556 Set the current character search information to {dict},
5557 which contains one or more of the following entries:
5558
5559 char character which will be used for a subsequent
5560 |,| or |;| command; an empty string clears the
5561 character search
5562 forward direction of character search; 1 for forward,
5563 0 for backward
5564 until type of character search; 1 for a |t| or |T|
5565 character search, 0 for an |f| or |F|
5566 character search
5567
5568 This can be useful to save/restore a user's character search
5569 from a script: >
5570 :let prevsearch = getcharsearch()
5571 :" Perform a command which clobbers user's search
5572 :call setcharsearch(prevsearch)
5573< Also see |getcharsearch()|.
5574
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005575setcmdpos({pos}) *setcmdpos()*
5576 Set the cursor position in the command line to byte position
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00005577 {pos}. The first position is 1.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005578 Use |getcmdpos()| to obtain the current position.
5579 Only works while editing the command line, thus you must use
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +00005580 |c_CTRL-\_e|, |c_CTRL-R_=| or |c_CTRL-R_CTRL-R| with '='. For
5581 |c_CTRL-\_e| and |c_CTRL-R_CTRL-R| with '=' the position is
5582 set after the command line is set to the expression. For
5583 |c_CTRL-R_=| it is set after evaluating the expression but
5584 before inserting the resulting text.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005585 When the number is too big the cursor is put at the end of the
5586 line. A number smaller than one has undefined results.
5587 Returns 0 when successful, 1 when not editing the command
5588 line.
5589
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00005590setline({lnum}, {text}) *setline()*
Bram Moolenaarb8ff1fb2012-02-04 21:59:01 +01005591 Set line {lnum} of the current buffer to {text}. To insert
5592 lines use |append()|.
Bram Moolenaar402d2fe2005-04-15 21:00:38 +00005593 {lnum} is used like with |getline()|.
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00005594 When {lnum} is just below the last line the {text} will be
Bram Moolenaar2389c3c2005-05-22 22:07:59 +00005595 added as a new line.
Bram Moolenaar402d2fe2005-04-15 21:00:38 +00005596 If this succeeds, 0 is returned. If this fails (most likely
5597 because {lnum} is invalid) 1 is returned. Example: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005598 :call setline(5, strftime("%c"))
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00005599< When {text} is a |List| then line {lnum} and following lines
Bram Moolenaar2389c3c2005-05-22 22:07:59 +00005600 will be set to the items in the list. Example: >
5601 :call setline(5, ['aaa', 'bbb', 'ccc'])
5602< This is equivalent to: >
Bram Moolenaar53bfca22012-04-13 23:04:47 +02005603 :for [n, l] in [[5, 'aaa'], [6, 'bbb'], [7, 'ccc']]
Bram Moolenaar2389c3c2005-05-22 22:07:59 +00005604 : call setline(n, l)
5605 :endfor
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005606< Note: The '[ and '] marks are not set.
5607
Bram Moolenaar17c7c012006-01-26 22:25:15 +00005608setloclist({nr}, {list} [, {action}]) *setloclist()*
5609 Create or replace or add to the location list for window {nr}.
5610 When {nr} is zero the current window is used. For a location
Bram Moolenaar280f1262006-01-30 00:14:18 +00005611 list window, the displayed location list is modified. For an
5612 invalid window number {nr}, -1 is returned.
Bram Moolenaar6ee10162007-07-26 20:58:42 +00005613 Otherwise, same as |setqflist()|.
5614 Also see |location-list|.
5615
5616setmatches({list}) *setmatches()*
5617 Restores a list of matches saved by |getmatches()|. Returns 0
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00005618 if successful, otherwise -1. All current matches are cleared
Bram Moolenaar6ee10162007-07-26 20:58:42 +00005619 before the list is restored. See example for |getmatches()|.
Bram Moolenaar68b76a62005-03-25 21:53:48 +00005620
Bram Moolenaar65c923a2006-03-03 22:56:30 +00005621 *setpos()*
5622setpos({expr}, {list})
5623 Set the position for {expr}. Possible values:
5624 . the cursor
5625 'x mark x
5626
Bram Moolenaar493c1782014-05-28 14:34:46 +02005627 {list} must be a |List| with four or five numbers:
Bram Moolenaar65c923a2006-03-03 22:56:30 +00005628 [bufnum, lnum, col, off]
Bram Moolenaar493c1782014-05-28 14:34:46 +02005629 [bufnum, lnum, col, off, curswant]
Bram Moolenaar65c923a2006-03-03 22:56:30 +00005630
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00005631 "bufnum" is the buffer number. Zero can be used for the
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +00005632 current buffer. Setting the cursor is only possible for
Bram Moolenaar65c923a2006-03-03 22:56:30 +00005633 the current buffer. To set a mark in another buffer you can
5634 use the |bufnr()| function to turn a file name into a buffer
5635 number.
Bram Moolenaardb552d602006-03-23 22:59:57 +00005636 Does not change the jumplist.
Bram Moolenaar65c923a2006-03-03 22:56:30 +00005637
5638 "lnum" and "col" are the position in the buffer. The first
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01005639 column is 1. Use a zero "lnum" to delete a mark. If "col" is
5640 smaller than 1 then 1 is used.
Bram Moolenaar65c923a2006-03-03 22:56:30 +00005641
5642 The "off" number is only used when 'virtualedit' is set. Then
5643 it is the offset in screen columns from the start of the
Bram Moolenaard46bbc72007-05-12 14:38:41 +00005644 character. E.g., a position within a <Tab> or after the last
Bram Moolenaar65c923a2006-03-03 22:56:30 +00005645 character.
5646
Bram Moolenaar493c1782014-05-28 14:34:46 +02005647 The "curswant" number is only used when setting the cursor
5648 position. It sets the preferred column for when moving the
5649 cursor vertically. When the "curswant" number is missing the
5650 preferred column is not set. When it is present and setting a
5651 mark position it is not used.
5652
Bram Moolenaardfb18412013-12-11 18:53:29 +01005653 Note that for '< and '> changing the line number may result in
5654 the marks to be effectively be swapped, so that '< is always
5655 before '>.
5656
Bram Moolenaar08250432008-02-13 11:42:46 +00005657 Returns 0 when the position could be set, -1 otherwise.
5658 An error message is given if {expr} is invalid.
5659
Bram Moolenaar6f6c0f82014-05-28 20:31:42 +02005660 Also see |getpos()| and |getcurpos()|.
Bram Moolenaar65c923a2006-03-03 22:56:30 +00005661
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00005662 This does not restore the preferred column for moving
Bram Moolenaar493c1782014-05-28 14:34:46 +02005663 vertically; if you set the cursor position with this, |j| and
5664 |k| motions will jump to previous columns! Use |cursor()| to
5665 also set the preferred column. Also see the "curswant" key in
5666 |winrestview()|.
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00005667
Bram Moolenaar65c923a2006-03-03 22:56:30 +00005668
Bram Moolenaar35c54e52005-05-20 21:25:31 +00005669setqflist({list} [, {action}]) *setqflist()*
Bram Moolenaar17c7c012006-01-26 22:25:15 +00005670 Create or replace or add to the quickfix list using the items
5671 in {list}. Each item in {list} is a dictionary.
5672 Non-dictionary items in {list} are ignored. Each dictionary
5673 item can contain the following entries:
Bram Moolenaar68b76a62005-03-25 21:53:48 +00005674
Bram Moolenaar48b66fb2007-02-04 01:58:18 +00005675 bufnr buffer number; must be the number of a valid
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00005676 buffer
Bram Moolenaar48b66fb2007-02-04 01:58:18 +00005677 filename name of a file; only used when "bufnr" is not
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00005678 present or it is invalid.
Bram Moolenaar68b76a62005-03-25 21:53:48 +00005679 lnum line number in the file
Bram Moolenaar68b76a62005-03-25 21:53:48 +00005680 pattern search pattern used to locate the error
Bram Moolenaar582fd852005-03-28 20:58:01 +00005681 col column number
5682 vcol when non-zero: "col" is visual column
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +00005683 when zero: "col" is byte index
Bram Moolenaar582fd852005-03-28 20:58:01 +00005684 nr error number
Bram Moolenaar68b76a62005-03-25 21:53:48 +00005685 text description of the error
Bram Moolenaar582fd852005-03-28 20:58:01 +00005686 type single-character error type, 'E', 'W', etc.
Bram Moolenaar68b76a62005-03-25 21:53:48 +00005687
Bram Moolenaar582fd852005-03-28 20:58:01 +00005688 The "col", "vcol", "nr", "type" and "text" entries are
5689 optional. Either "lnum" or "pattern" entry can be used to
5690 locate a matching error line.
Bram Moolenaar48b66fb2007-02-04 01:58:18 +00005691 If the "filename" and "bufnr" entries are not present or
5692 neither the "lnum" or "pattern" entries are present, then the
5693 item will not be handled as an error line.
Bram Moolenaar68b76a62005-03-25 21:53:48 +00005694 If both "pattern" and "lnum" are present then "pattern" will
5695 be used.
Bram Moolenaar00a927d2010-05-14 23:24:24 +02005696 If you supply an empty {list}, the quickfix list will be
5697 cleared.
Bram Moolenaar48b66fb2007-02-04 01:58:18 +00005698 Note that the list is not exactly the same as what
5699 |getqflist()| returns.
Bram Moolenaar68b76a62005-03-25 21:53:48 +00005700
Bram Moolenaar35c54e52005-05-20 21:25:31 +00005701 If {action} is set to 'a', then the items from {list} are
5702 added to the existing quickfix list. If there is no existing
5703 list, then a new list is created. If {action} is set to 'r',
5704 then the items from the current quickfix list are replaced
5705 with the items from {list}. If {action} is not present or is
5706 set to ' ', then a new list is created.
5707
Bram Moolenaar68b76a62005-03-25 21:53:48 +00005708 Returns zero for success, -1 for failure.
5709
5710 This function can be used to create a quickfix list
5711 independent of the 'errorformat' setting. Use a command like
5712 ":cc 1" to jump to the first position.
5713
5714
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005715 *setreg()*
5716setreg({regname}, {value} [,{options}])
5717 Set the register {regname} to {value}.
Bram Moolenaar5a50c222014-04-02 22:17:10 +02005718 {value} may be any value returned by |getreg()|, including
5719 a |List|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005720 If {options} contains "a" or {regname} is upper case,
5721 then the value is appended.
Bram Moolenaarc6485bc2010-07-28 17:02:55 +02005722 {options} can also contain a register type specification:
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005723 "c" or "v" |characterwise| mode
5724 "l" or "V" |linewise| mode
5725 "b" or "<CTRL-V>" |blockwise-visual| mode
5726 If a number immediately follows "b" or "<CTRL-V>" then this is
5727 used as the width of the selection - if it is not specified
5728 then the width of the block is set to the number of characters
Bram Moolenaard46bbc72007-05-12 14:38:41 +00005729 in the longest line (counting a <Tab> as 1 character).
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005730
5731 If {options} contains no register settings, then the default
Bram Moolenaar5a50c222014-04-02 22:17:10 +02005732 is to use character mode unless {value} ends in a <NL> for
5733 string {value} and linewise mode for list {value}. Blockwise
5734 mode is never selected automatically.
5735 Returns zero for success, non-zero for failure.
5736
5737 *E883*
Bram Moolenaar34401cc2014-08-29 15:12:19 +02005738 Note: you may not use |List| containing more than one item to
Bram Moolenaar5a50c222014-04-02 22:17:10 +02005739 set search and expression registers. Lists containing no
5740 items act like empty strings.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005741
5742 Examples: >
5743 :call setreg(v:register, @*)
5744 :call setreg('*', @%, 'ac')
5745 :call setreg('a', "1\n2\n3", 'b5')
5746
5747< This example shows using the functions to save and restore a
Bram Moolenaar5a50c222014-04-02 22:17:10 +02005748 register (note: you may not reliably restore register value
5749 without using the third argument to |getreg()| as without it
5750 newlines are represented as newlines AND Nul bytes are
5751 represented as newlines as well, see |NL-used-for-Nul|). >
5752 :let var_a = getreg('a', 1, 1)
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005753 :let var_amode = getregtype('a')
5754 ....
5755 :call setreg('a', var_a, var_amode)
5756
5757< You can also change the type of a register by appending
5758 nothing: >
5759 :call setreg('a', '', 'al')
5760
Bram Moolenaar06b5d512010-05-22 15:37:44 +02005761settabvar({tabnr}, {varname}, {val}) *settabvar()*
5762 Set tab-local variable {varname} to {val} in tab page {tabnr}.
5763 |t:var|
5764 Note that the variable name without "t:" must be used.
5765 Tabs are numbered starting with one.
Bram Moolenaar06b5d512010-05-22 15:37:44 +02005766 This function is not available in the |sandbox|.
5767
Bram Moolenaarc6249bb2006-04-15 20:25:09 +00005768settabwinvar({tabnr}, {winnr}, {varname}, {val}) *settabwinvar()*
5769 Set option or local variable {varname} in window {winnr} to
5770 {val}.
5771 Tabs are numbered starting with one. For the current tabpage
5772 use |setwinvar()|.
5773 When {winnr} is zero the current window is used.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005774 This also works for a global or local buffer option, but it
5775 doesn't work for a global or local buffer variable.
5776 For a local buffer option the global value is unchanged.
5777 Note that the variable name without "w:" must be used.
Bram Moolenaarc6249bb2006-04-15 20:25:09 +00005778 Examples: >
5779 :call settabwinvar(1, 1, "&list", 0)
5780 :call settabwinvar(3, 2, "myvar", "foobar")
5781< This function is not available in the |sandbox|.
5782
5783setwinvar({nr}, {varname}, {val}) *setwinvar()*
5784 Like |settabwinvar()| for the current tab page.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005785 Examples: >
5786 :call setwinvar(1, "&list", 0)
5787 :call setwinvar(2, "myvar", "foobar")
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005788
Bram Moolenaaraf9aeb92013-02-13 17:35:04 +01005789sha256({string}) *sha256()*
Bram Moolenaar2b8388b2015-02-28 13:11:45 +01005790 Returns a String with 64 hex characters, which is the SHA256
Bram Moolenaaraf9aeb92013-02-13 17:35:04 +01005791 checksum of {string}.
5792 {only available when compiled with the |+cryptv| feature}
5793
Bram Moolenaar05bb9532008-07-04 09:44:11 +00005794shellescape({string} [, {special}]) *shellescape()*
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01005795 Escape {string} for use as a shell command argument.
Bram Moolenaar60a495f2006-10-03 12:44:42 +00005796 On MS-Windows and MS-DOS, when 'shellslash' is not set, it
Bram Moolenaar05bb9532008-07-04 09:44:11 +00005797 will enclose {string} in double quotes and double all double
Bram Moolenaar60a495f2006-10-03 12:44:42 +00005798 quotes within {string}.
5799 For other systems, it will enclose {string} in single quotes
5800 and replace all "'" with "'\''".
Bram Moolenaar05bb9532008-07-04 09:44:11 +00005801 When the {special} argument is present and it's a non-zero
5802 Number or a non-empty String (|non-zero-arg|), then special
Bram Moolenaare37d50a2008-08-06 17:06:04 +00005803 items such as "!", "%", "#" and "<cword>" will be preceded by
5804 a backslash. This backslash will be removed again by the |:!|
Bram Moolenaar05bb9532008-07-04 09:44:11 +00005805 command.
Bram Moolenaare37d50a2008-08-06 17:06:04 +00005806 The "!" character will be escaped (again with a |non-zero-arg|
5807 {special}) when 'shell' contains "csh" in the tail. That is
5808 because for csh and tcsh "!" is used for history replacement
5809 even when inside single quotes.
5810 The <NL> character is also escaped. With a |non-zero-arg|
5811 {special} and 'shell' containing "csh" in the tail it's
5812 escaped a second time.
Bram Moolenaar05bb9532008-07-04 09:44:11 +00005813 Example of use with a |:!| command: >
5814 :exe '!dir ' . shellescape(expand('<cfile>'), 1)
5815< This results in a directory listing for the file under the
5816 cursor. Example of use with |system()|: >
5817 :call system("chmod +w -- " . shellescape(expand("%")))
Bram Moolenaar26df0922014-02-23 23:39:13 +01005818< See also |::S|.
Bram Moolenaar60a495f2006-10-03 12:44:42 +00005819
5820
Bram Moolenaar2d17fa32012-10-21 00:45:18 +02005821shiftwidth() *shiftwidth()*
5822 Returns the effective value of 'shiftwidth'. This is the
5823 'shiftwidth' value unless it is zero, in which case it is the
5824 'tabstop' value. To be backwards compatible in indent
5825 plugins, use this: >
5826 if exists('*shiftwidth')
5827 func s:sw()
5828 return shiftwidth()
5829 endfunc
5830 else
5831 func s:sw()
5832 return &sw
5833 endfunc
5834 endif
5835< And then use s:sw() instead of &sw.
5836
5837
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00005838simplify({filename}) *simplify()*
5839 Simplify the file name as much as possible without changing
5840 the meaning. Shortcuts (on MS-Windows) or symbolic links (on
5841 Unix) are not resolved. If the first path component in
5842 {filename} designates the current directory, this will be
5843 valid for the result as well. A trailing path separator is
5844 not removed either.
5845 Example: >
5846 simplify("./dir/.././/file/") == "./file/"
5847< Note: The combination "dir/.." is only removed if "dir" is
5848 a searchable directory or does not exist. On Unix, it is also
5849 removed when "dir" is a symbolic link within the same
5850 directory. In order to resolve all the involved symbolic
5851 links before simplifying the path name, use |resolve()|.
5852
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00005853
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00005854sin({expr}) *sin()*
5855 Return the sine of {expr}, measured in radians, as a |Float|.
5856 {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|.
5857 Examples: >
5858 :echo sin(100)
5859< -0.506366 >
5860 :echo sin(-4.01)
5861< 0.763301
5862 {only available when compiled with the |+float| feature}
5863
5864
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02005865sinh({expr}) *sinh()*
Bram Moolenaar9855d6b2010-07-18 14:34:51 +02005866 Return the hyperbolic sine of {expr} as a |Float| in the range
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02005867 [-inf, inf].
Bram Moolenaar9855d6b2010-07-18 14:34:51 +02005868 {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|.
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02005869 Examples: >
5870 :echo sinh(0.5)
5871< 0.521095 >
5872 :echo sinh(-0.9)
5873< -1.026517
Bram Moolenaardb84e452010-08-15 13:50:43 +02005874 {only available when compiled with the |+float| feature}
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02005875
5876
Bram Moolenaar5f894962011-06-19 02:55:37 +02005877sort({list} [, {func} [, {dict}]]) *sort()* *E702*
Bram Moolenaar327aa022014-03-25 18:24:23 +01005878 Sort the items in {list} in-place. Returns {list}.
5879
5880 If you want a list to remain unmodified make a copy first: >
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00005881 :let sortedlist = sort(copy(mylist))
Bram Moolenaar822ff862014-06-12 21:46:14 +02005882
Bram Moolenaar946e27a2014-06-25 18:50:27 +02005883< When {func} is omitted, is empty or zero, then sort() uses the
5884 string representation of each item to sort on. Numbers sort
5885 after Strings, |Lists| after Numbers. For sorting text in the
5886 current buffer use |:sort|.
Bram Moolenaar327aa022014-03-25 18:24:23 +01005887
Bram Moolenaar34401cc2014-08-29 15:12:19 +02005888 When {func} is given and it is '1' or 'i' then case is
Bram Moolenaar946e27a2014-06-25 18:50:27 +02005889 ignored.
5890
5891 When {func} is given and it is 'n' then all items will be
5892 sorted numerical (Implementation detail: This uses the
5893 strtod() function to parse numbers, Strings, Lists, Dicts and
5894 Funcrefs will be considered as being 0).
5895
Bram Moolenaarb00da1d2015-12-03 16:33:12 +01005896 When {func} is given and it is 'N' then all items will be
5897 sorted numerical. This is like 'n' but a string containing
5898 digits will be used as the number they represent.
5899
Bram Moolenaar13d5aee2016-01-21 23:36:05 +01005900 When {func} is given and it is 'f' then all items will be
5901 sorted numerical. All values must be a Number or a Float.
5902
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00005903 When {func} is a |Funcref| or a function name, this function
5904 is called to compare items. The function is invoked with two
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01005905 items as argument and must return zero if they are equal, 1 or
5906 bigger if the first one sorts after the second one, -1 or
5907 smaller if the first one sorts before the second one.
Bram Moolenaar327aa022014-03-25 18:24:23 +01005908
5909 {dict} is for functions with the "dict" attribute. It will be
5910 used to set the local variable "self". |Dictionary-function|
5911
Bram Moolenaar8bb1c3e2014-07-04 16:43:17 +02005912 The sort is stable, items which compare equal (as number or as
5913 string) will keep their relative position. E.g., when sorting
Bram Moolenaardb6ea062014-07-10 22:01:47 +02005914 on numbers, text strings will sort next to each other, in the
Bram Moolenaar8bb1c3e2014-07-04 16:43:17 +02005915 same order as they were originally.
5916
Bram Moolenaar327aa022014-03-25 18:24:23 +01005917 Also see |uniq()|.
5918
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01005919 Example: >
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00005920 func MyCompare(i1, i2)
5921 return a:i1 == a:i2 ? 0 : a:i1 > a:i2 ? 1 : -1
5922 endfunc
5923 let sortedlist = sort(mylist, "MyCompare")
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01005924< A shorter compare version for this specific simple case, which
5925 ignores overflow: >
5926 func MyCompare(i1, i2)
5927 return a:i1 - a:i2
5928 endfunc
Bram Moolenaard857f0e2005-06-21 22:37:39 +00005929<
Bram Moolenaar24bbcfe2005-06-28 23:32:02 +00005930 *soundfold()*
5931soundfold({word})
5932 Return the sound-folded equivalent of {word}. Uses the first
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00005933 language in 'spelllang' for the current window that supports
Bram Moolenaar42eeac32005-06-29 22:40:58 +00005934 soundfolding. 'spell' must be set. When no sound folding is
5935 possible the {word} is returned unmodified.
Bram Moolenaar24bbcfe2005-06-28 23:32:02 +00005936 This can be used for making spelling suggestions. Note that
5937 the method can be quite slow.
5938
Bram Moolenaard857f0e2005-06-21 22:37:39 +00005939 *spellbadword()*
Bram Moolenaar1e015462005-09-25 22:16:38 +00005940spellbadword([{sentence}])
5941 Without argument: The result is the badly spelled word under
5942 or after the cursor. The cursor is moved to the start of the
5943 bad word. When no bad word is found in the cursor line the
5944 result is an empty string and the cursor doesn't move.
5945
5946 With argument: The result is the first word in {sentence} that
5947 is badly spelled. If there are no spelling mistakes the
5948 result is an empty string.
5949
5950 The return value is a list with two items:
5951 - The badly spelled word or an empty string.
5952 - The type of the spelling error:
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +00005953 "bad" spelling mistake
Bram Moolenaar1e015462005-09-25 22:16:38 +00005954 "rare" rare word
5955 "local" word only valid in another region
5956 "caps" word should start with Capital
5957 Example: >
5958 echo spellbadword("the quik brown fox")
5959< ['quik', 'bad'] ~
5960
5961 The spelling information for the current window is used. The
5962 'spell' option must be set and the value of 'spelllang' is
5963 used.
Bram Moolenaard857f0e2005-06-21 22:37:39 +00005964
5965 *spellsuggest()*
Bram Moolenaarc54b8a72005-09-30 21:20:29 +00005966spellsuggest({word} [, {max} [, {capital}]])
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00005967 Return a |List| with spelling suggestions to replace {word}.
Bram Moolenaard857f0e2005-06-21 22:37:39 +00005968 When {max} is given up to this number of suggestions are
5969 returned. Otherwise up to 25 suggestions are returned.
5970
Bram Moolenaarc54b8a72005-09-30 21:20:29 +00005971 When the {capital} argument is given and it's non-zero only
5972 suggestions with a leading capital will be given. Use this
5973 after a match with 'spellcapcheck'.
5974
Bram Moolenaard857f0e2005-06-21 22:37:39 +00005975 {word} can be a badly spelled word followed by other text.
5976 This allows for joining two words that were split. The
Bram Moolenaarf461c8e2005-06-25 23:04:51 +00005977 suggestions also include the following text, thus you can
5978 replace a line.
5979
5980 {word} may also be a good word. Similar words will then be
Bram Moolenaarc54b8a72005-09-30 21:20:29 +00005981 returned. {word} itself is not included in the suggestions,
5982 although it may appear capitalized.
Bram Moolenaard857f0e2005-06-21 22:37:39 +00005983
5984 The spelling information for the current window is used. The
Bram Moolenaar42eeac32005-06-29 22:40:58 +00005985 'spell' option must be set and the values of 'spelllang' and
5986 'spellsuggest' are used.
Bram Moolenaard857f0e2005-06-21 22:37:39 +00005987
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00005988
Bram Moolenaar2389c3c2005-05-22 22:07:59 +00005989split({expr} [, {pattern} [, {keepempty}]]) *split()*
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00005990 Make a |List| out of {expr}. When {pattern} is omitted or
5991 empty each white-separated sequence of characters becomes an
5992 item.
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00005993 Otherwise the string is split where {pattern} matches,
Bram Moolenaar97d62492012-11-15 21:28:22 +01005994 removing the matched characters. 'ignorecase' is not used
5995 here, add \c to ignore case. |/\c|
Bram Moolenaar2389c3c2005-05-22 22:07:59 +00005996 When the first or last item is empty it is omitted, unless the
5997 {keepempty} argument is given and it's non-zero.
Bram Moolenaar5c06f8b2005-05-31 22:14:58 +00005998 Other empty items are kept when {pattern} matches at least one
5999 character or when {keepempty} is non-zero.
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00006000 Example: >
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00006001 :let words = split(getline('.'), '\W\+')
Bram Moolenaar2389c3c2005-05-22 22:07:59 +00006002< To split a string in individual characters: >
Bram Moolenaar402d2fe2005-04-15 21:00:38 +00006003 :for c in split(mystring, '\zs')
Bram Moolenaar12969c02015-09-08 23:36:10 +02006004< If you want to keep the separator you can also use '\zs' at
6005 the end of the pattern: >
Bram Moolenaar0cb032e2005-04-23 20:52:00 +00006006 :echo split('abc:def:ghi', ':\zs')
6007< ['abc:', 'def:', 'ghi'] ~
Bram Moolenaar2389c3c2005-05-22 22:07:59 +00006008 Splitting a table where the first element can be empty: >
6009 :let items = split(line, ':', 1)
6010< The opposite function is |join()|.
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00006011
6012
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00006013sqrt({expr}) *sqrt()*
6014 Return the non-negative square root of Float {expr} as a
6015 |Float|.
6016 {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|. When {expr}
6017 is negative the result is NaN (Not a Number).
6018 Examples: >
6019 :echo sqrt(100)
6020< 10.0 >
6021 :echo sqrt(-4.01)
6022< nan
Bram Moolenaarc236c162008-07-13 17:41:49 +00006023 "nan" may be different, it depends on system libraries.
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00006024 {only available when compiled with the |+float| feature}
6025
6026
6027str2float( {expr}) *str2float()*
6028 Convert String {expr} to a Float. This mostly works the same
6029 as when using a floating point number in an expression, see
6030 |floating-point-format|. But it's a bit more permissive.
6031 E.g., "1e40" is accepted, while in an expression you need to
6032 write "1.0e40".
6033 Text after the number is silently ignored.
6034 The decimal point is always '.', no matter what the locale is
6035 set to. A comma ends the number: "12,345.67" is converted to
6036 12.0. You can strip out thousands separators with
6037 |substitute()|: >
6038 let f = str2float(substitute(text, ',', '', 'g'))
6039< {only available when compiled with the |+float| feature}
6040
6041
Bram Moolenaar97b2ad32006-03-18 21:40:56 +00006042str2nr( {expr} [, {base}]) *str2nr()*
6043 Convert string {expr} to a number.
Bram Moolenaarfa735342016-01-03 22:14:44 +01006044 {base} is the conversion base, it can be 2, 8, 10 or 16.
Bram Moolenaar97b2ad32006-03-18 21:40:56 +00006045 When {base} is omitted base 10 is used. This also means that
6046 a leading zero doesn't cause octal conversion to be used, as
6047 with the default String to Number conversion.
6048 When {base} is 16 a leading "0x" or "0X" is ignored. With a
Bram Moolenaarfa735342016-01-03 22:14:44 +01006049 different base the result will be zero. Similarly, when
6050 {base} is 8 a leading "0" is ignored, and when {base} is 2 a
6051 leading "0b" or "0B" is ignored.
Bram Moolenaar97b2ad32006-03-18 21:40:56 +00006052 Text after the number is silently ignored.
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +00006053
Bram Moolenaar97b2ad32006-03-18 21:40:56 +00006054
Bram Moolenaar979243b2015-06-26 19:35:49 +02006055strchars({expr} [, {skipcc}]) *strchars()*
Bram Moolenaar72597a52010-07-18 15:31:08 +02006056 The result is a Number, which is the number of characters
Bram Moolenaar979243b2015-06-26 19:35:49 +02006057 in String {expr}.
6058 When {skipcc} is omitted or zero, composing characters are
6059 counted separately.
6060 When {skipcc} set to 1, Composing characters are ignored.
Bram Moolenaardc536092010-07-18 15:45:49 +02006061 Also see |strlen()|, |strdisplaywidth()| and |strwidth()|.
6062
Bram Moolenaar86ae7202015-07-10 19:31:35 +02006063
6064 {skipcc} is only available after 7.4.755. For backward
6065 compatibility, you can define a wrapper function: >
6066 if has("patch-7.4.755")
6067 function s:strchars(str, skipcc)
6068 return strchars(a:str, a:skipcc)
6069 endfunction
6070 else
6071 function s:strchars(str, skipcc)
6072 if a:skipcc
6073 return strlen(substitute(a:str, ".", "x", "g"))
6074 else
6075 return strchars(a:str)
6076 endif
6077 endfunction
6078 endif
6079<
6080
Bram Moolenaardc536092010-07-18 15:45:49 +02006081strdisplaywidth({expr}[, {col}]) *strdisplaywidth()*
6082 The result is a Number, which is the number of display cells
Bram Moolenaar979243b2015-06-26 19:35:49 +02006083 String {expr} occupies on the screen when it starts at {col}.
Bram Moolenaardc536092010-07-18 15:45:49 +02006084 When {col} is omitted zero is used. Otherwise it is the
6085 screen column where to start. This matters for Tab
6086 characters.
Bram Moolenaar4d32c2d2010-07-18 22:10:01 +02006087 The option settings of the current window are used. This
6088 matters for anything that's displayed differently, such as
6089 'tabstop' and 'display'.
Bram Moolenaardc536092010-07-18 15:45:49 +02006090 When {expr} contains characters with East Asian Width Class
6091 Ambiguous, this function's return value depends on 'ambiwidth'.
6092 Also see |strlen()|, |strwidth()| and |strchars()|.
Bram Moolenaar72597a52010-07-18 15:31:08 +02006093
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006094strftime({format} [, {time}]) *strftime()*
6095 The result is a String, which is a formatted date and time, as
6096 specified by the {format} string. The given {time} is used,
6097 or the current time if no time is given. The accepted
6098 {format} depends on your system, thus this is not portable!
6099 See the manual page of the C function strftime() for the
6100 format. The maximum length of the result is 80 characters.
6101 See also |localtime()| and |getftime()|.
6102 The language can be changed with the |:language| command.
6103 Examples: >
6104 :echo strftime("%c") Sun Apr 27 11:49:23 1997
6105 :echo strftime("%Y %b %d %X") 1997 Apr 27 11:53:25
6106 :echo strftime("%y%m%d %T") 970427 11:53:55
6107 :echo strftime("%H:%M") 11:55
6108 :echo strftime("%c", getftime("file.c"))
6109 Show mod time of file.c.
Bram Moolenaara14de3d2005-01-07 21:48:26 +00006110< Not available on all systems. To check use: >
6111 :if exists("*strftime")
6112
Bram Moolenaar8f999f12005-01-25 22:12:55 +00006113stridx({haystack}, {needle} [, {start}]) *stridx()*
6114 The result is a Number, which gives the byte index in
6115 {haystack} of the first occurrence of the String {needle}.
Bram Moolenaar677ee682005-01-27 14:41:15 +00006116 If {start} is specified, the search starts at index {start}.
6117 This can be used to find a second match: >
Bram Moolenaar81af9252010-12-10 20:35:50 +01006118 :let colon1 = stridx(line, ":")
6119 :let colon2 = stridx(line, ":", colon1 + 1)
Bram Moolenaar677ee682005-01-27 14:41:15 +00006120< The search is done case-sensitive.
Bram Moolenaare2cc9702005-03-15 22:43:58 +00006121 For pattern searches use |match()|.
Bram Moolenaar8f999f12005-01-25 22:12:55 +00006122 -1 is returned if the {needle} does not occur in {haystack}.
Bram Moolenaar677ee682005-01-27 14:41:15 +00006123 See also |strridx()|.
6124 Examples: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006125 :echo stridx("An Example", "Example") 3
6126 :echo stridx("Starting point", "Start") 0
6127 :echo stridx("Starting point", "start") -1
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +00006128< *strstr()* *strchr()*
Bram Moolenaar05159a02005-02-26 23:04:13 +00006129 stridx() works similar to the C function strstr(). When used
6130 with a single character it works similar to strchr().
6131
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00006132 *string()*
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00006133string({expr}) Return {expr} converted to a String. If {expr} is a Number,
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00006134 Float, String or a composition of them, then the result can be
6135 parsed back with |eval()|.
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00006136 {expr} type result ~
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +00006137 String 'string'
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00006138 Number 123
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00006139 Float 123.123456 or 1.123456e8
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +00006140 Funcref function('name')
Bram Moolenaar5f2bb9f2005-01-11 21:29:04 +00006141 List [item, item]
Bram Moolenaar9ba0eb82005-06-13 22:28:56 +00006142 Dictionary {key: value, key: value}
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +00006143 Note that in String values the ' character is doubled.
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00006144 Also see |strtrans()|.
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00006145
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006146 *strlen()*
6147strlen({expr}) The result is a Number, which is the length of the String
Bram Moolenaare344bea2005-09-01 20:46:49 +00006148 {expr} in bytes.
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00006149 If the argument is a Number it is first converted to a String.
6150 For other types an error is given.
Bram Moolenaar641e48c2015-06-25 16:09:26 +02006151 If you want to count the number of multi-byte characters use
6152 |strchars()|.
6153 Also see |len()|, |strdisplaywidth()| and |strwidth()|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006154
6155strpart({src}, {start}[, {len}]) *strpart()*
6156 The result is a String, which is part of {src}, starting from
Bram Moolenaar9372a112005-12-06 19:59:18 +00006157 byte {start}, with the byte length {len}.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006158 When non-existing bytes are included, this doesn't result in
6159 an error, the bytes are simply omitted.
6160 If {len} is missing, the copy continues from {start} till the
6161 end of the {src}. >
6162 strpart("abcdefg", 3, 2) == "de"
6163 strpart("abcdefg", -2, 4) == "ab"
6164 strpart("abcdefg", 5, 4) == "fg"
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00006165 strpart("abcdefg", 3) == "defg"
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006166< Note: To get the first character, {start} must be 0. For
6167 example, to get three bytes under and after the cursor: >
Bram Moolenaar61660ea2006-04-07 21:40:07 +00006168 strpart(getline("."), col(".") - 1, 3)
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006169<
Bram Moolenaar677ee682005-01-27 14:41:15 +00006170strridx({haystack}, {needle} [, {start}]) *strridx()*
6171 The result is a Number, which gives the byte index in
6172 {haystack} of the last occurrence of the String {needle}.
6173 When {start} is specified, matches beyond this index are
6174 ignored. This can be used to find a match before a previous
6175 match: >
6176 :let lastcomma = strridx(line, ",")
6177 :let comma2 = strridx(line, ",", lastcomma - 1)
6178< The search is done case-sensitive.
Bram Moolenaar8f999f12005-01-25 22:12:55 +00006179 For pattern searches use |match()|.
6180 -1 is returned if the {needle} does not occur in {haystack}.
Bram Moolenaard4755bb2004-09-02 19:12:26 +00006181 If the {needle} is empty the length of {haystack} is returned.
Bram Moolenaar402d2fe2005-04-15 21:00:38 +00006182 See also |stridx()|. Examples: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006183 :echo strridx("an angry armadillo", "an") 3
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +00006184< *strrchr()*
Bram Moolenaar05159a02005-02-26 23:04:13 +00006185 When used with a single character it works similar to the C
6186 function strrchr().
6187
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006188strtrans({expr}) *strtrans()*
6189 The result is a String, which is {expr} with all unprintable
6190 characters translated into printable characters |'isprint'|.
6191 Like they are shown in a window. Example: >
6192 echo strtrans(@a)
6193< This displays a newline in register a as "^@" instead of
6194 starting a new line.
6195
Bram Moolenaar72597a52010-07-18 15:31:08 +02006196strwidth({expr}) *strwidth()*
6197 The result is a Number, which is the number of display cells
6198 String {expr} occupies. A Tab character is counted as one
Bram Moolenaardc536092010-07-18 15:45:49 +02006199 cell, alternatively use |strdisplaywidth()|.
Bram Moolenaar72597a52010-07-18 15:31:08 +02006200 When {expr} contains characters with East Asian Width Class
6201 Ambiguous, this function's return value depends on 'ambiwidth'.
Bram Moolenaardc536092010-07-18 15:45:49 +02006202 Also see |strlen()|, |strdisplaywidth()| and |strchars()|.
Bram Moolenaar72597a52010-07-18 15:31:08 +02006203
Bram Moolenaar41571762014-04-02 19:00:58 +02006204submatch({nr}[, {list}]) *submatch()*
Bram Moolenaar251e1912011-06-19 05:09:16 +02006205 Only for an expression in a |:substitute| command or
6206 substitute() function.
6207 Returns the {nr}'th submatch of the matched text. When {nr}
6208 is 0 the whole matched text is returned.
Bram Moolenaar41571762014-04-02 19:00:58 +02006209 Note that a NL in the string can stand for a line break of a
6210 multi-line match or a NUL character in the text.
Bram Moolenaar251e1912011-06-19 05:09:16 +02006211 Also see |sub-replace-expression|.
Bram Moolenaar41571762014-04-02 19:00:58 +02006212
6213 If {list} is present and non-zero then submatch() returns
6214 a list of strings, similar to |getline()| with two arguments.
6215 NL characters in the text represent NUL characters in the
6216 text.
6217 Only returns more than one item for |:substitute|, inside
6218 |substitute()| this list will always contain one or zero
6219 items, since there are no real line breaks.
6220
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006221 Example: >
6222 :s/\d\+/\=submatch(0) + 1/
6223< This finds the first number in the line and adds one to it.
6224 A line break is included as a newline character.
6225
6226substitute({expr}, {pat}, {sub}, {flags}) *substitute()*
6227 The result is a String, which is a copy of {expr}, in which
Bram Moolenaar251e1912011-06-19 05:09:16 +02006228 the first match of {pat} is replaced with {sub}.
6229 When {flags} is "g", all matches of {pat} in {expr} are
6230 replaced. Otherwise {flags} should be "".
6231
6232 This works like the ":substitute" command (without any flags).
6233 But the matching with {pat} is always done like the 'magic'
6234 option is set and 'cpoptions' is empty (to make scripts
Bram Moolenaar2df58b42012-11-28 18:21:11 +01006235 portable). 'ignorecase' is still relevant, use |/\c| or |/\C|
6236 if you want to ignore or match case and ignore 'ignorecase'.
6237 'smartcase' is not used. See |string-match| for how {pat} is
6238 used.
Bram Moolenaar251e1912011-06-19 05:09:16 +02006239
6240 A "~" in {sub} is not replaced with the previous {sub}.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006241 Note that some codes in {sub} have a special meaning
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00006242 |sub-replace-special|. For example, to replace something with
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006243 "\n" (two characters), use "\\\\n" or '\\n'.
Bram Moolenaar251e1912011-06-19 05:09:16 +02006244
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006245 When {pat} does not match in {expr}, {expr} is returned
6246 unmodified.
Bram Moolenaar251e1912011-06-19 05:09:16 +02006247
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006248 Example: >
6249 :let &path = substitute(&path, ",\\=[^,]*$", "", "")
6250< This removes the last component of the 'path' option. >
6251 :echo substitute("testing", ".*", "\\U\\0", "")
6252< results in "TESTING".
Bram Moolenaar251e1912011-06-19 05:09:16 +02006253
6254 When {sub} starts with "\=", the remainder is interpreted as
6255 an expression. See |sub-replace-expression|. Example: >
Bram Moolenaar20f90cf2011-05-19 12:22:51 +02006256 :echo substitute(s, '%\(\x\x\)',
6257 \ '\=nr2char("0x" . submatch(1))', 'g')
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006258
Bram Moolenaar47136d72004-10-12 20:02:24 +00006259synID({lnum}, {col}, {trans}) *synID()*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006260 The result is a Number, which is the syntax ID at the position
Bram Moolenaar47136d72004-10-12 20:02:24 +00006261 {lnum} and {col} in the current window.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006262 The syntax ID can be used with |synIDattr()| and
6263 |synIDtrans()| to obtain syntax information about text.
Bram Moolenaarce0842a2005-07-18 21:58:11 +00006264
Bram Moolenaar47136d72004-10-12 20:02:24 +00006265 {col} is 1 for the leftmost column, {lnum} is 1 for the first
Bram Moolenaarce0842a2005-07-18 21:58:11 +00006266 line. 'synmaxcol' applies, in a longer line zero is returned.
Bram Moolenaarca635012015-09-25 20:34:21 +02006267 Note that when the position is after the last character,
6268 that's where the cursor can be in Insert mode, synID() returns
6269 zero.
Bram Moolenaarce0842a2005-07-18 21:58:11 +00006270
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006271 When {trans} is non-zero, transparent items are reduced to the
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00006272 item that they reveal. This is useful when wanting to know
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006273 the effective color. When {trans} is zero, the transparent
6274 item is returned. This is useful when wanting to know which
6275 syntax item is effective (e.g. inside parens).
6276 Warning: This function can be very slow. Best speed is
6277 obtained by going through the file in forward direction.
6278
6279 Example (echoes the name of the syntax item under the cursor): >
6280 :echo synIDattr(synID(line("."), col("."), 1), "name")
6281<
Bram Moolenaar7510fe72010-07-25 12:46:44 +02006282
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006283synIDattr({synID}, {what} [, {mode}]) *synIDattr()*
6284 The result is a String, which is the {what} attribute of
6285 syntax ID {synID}. This can be used to obtain information
6286 about a syntax item.
6287 {mode} can be "gui", "cterm" or "term", to get the attributes
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00006288 for that mode. When {mode} is omitted, or an invalid value is
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006289 used, the attributes for the currently active highlighting are
6290 used (GUI, cterm or term).
6291 Use synIDtrans() to follow linked highlight groups.
6292 {what} result
6293 "name" the name of the syntax item
6294 "fg" foreground color (GUI: color name used to set
6295 the color, cterm: color number as a string,
6296 term: empty string)
Bram Moolenaar6f507d62008-11-28 10:16:05 +00006297 "bg" background color (as with "fg")
Bram Moolenaar12682fd2010-03-10 13:43:49 +01006298 "font" font name (only available in the GUI)
6299 |highlight-font|
Bram Moolenaar6f507d62008-11-28 10:16:05 +00006300 "sp" special color (as with "fg") |highlight-guisp|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006301 "fg#" like "fg", but for the GUI and the GUI is
6302 running the name in "#RRGGBB" form
6303 "bg#" like "fg#" for "bg"
Bram Moolenaar6f507d62008-11-28 10:16:05 +00006304 "sp#" like "fg#" for "sp"
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006305 "bold" "1" if bold
6306 "italic" "1" if italic
6307 "reverse" "1" if reverse
6308 "inverse" "1" if inverse (= reverse)
Bram Moolenaar12682fd2010-03-10 13:43:49 +01006309 "standout" "1" if standout
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006310 "underline" "1" if underlined
Bram Moolenaare2cc9702005-03-15 22:43:58 +00006311 "undercurl" "1" if undercurled
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006312
6313 Example (echoes the color of the syntax item under the
6314 cursor): >
6315 :echo synIDattr(synIDtrans(synID(line("."), col("."), 1)), "fg")
6316<
6317synIDtrans({synID}) *synIDtrans()*
6318 The result is a Number, which is the translated syntax ID of
6319 {synID}. This is the syntax group ID of what is being used to
6320 highlight the character. Highlight links given with
6321 ":highlight link" are followed.
6322
Bram Moolenaar483c5d82010-10-20 18:45:33 +02006323synconcealed({lnum}, {col}) *synconcealed()*
6324 The result is a List. The first item in the list is 0 if the
6325 character at the position {lnum} and {col} is not part of a
6326 concealable region, 1 if it is. The second item in the list is
6327 a string. If the first item is 1, the second item contains the
6328 text which will be displayed in place of the concealed text,
6329 depending on the current setting of 'conceallevel'. The third
6330 and final item in the list is a unique number representing the
6331 specific syntax region matched. This allows detection of the
6332 beginning of a new concealable region if there are two
6333 consecutive regions with the same replacement character.
6334 For an example use see $VIMRUNTIME/syntax/2html.vim .
6335
6336
Bram Moolenaar9d188ab2008-01-10 21:24:39 +00006337synstack({lnum}, {col}) *synstack()*
6338 Return a |List|, which is the stack of syntax items at the
6339 position {lnum} and {col} in the current window. Each item in
6340 the List is an ID like what |synID()| returns.
Bram Moolenaar9d188ab2008-01-10 21:24:39 +00006341 The first item in the List is the outer region, following are
6342 items contained in that one. The last one is what |synID()|
6343 returns, unless not the whole item is highlighted or it is a
6344 transparent item.
6345 This function is useful for debugging a syntax file.
6346 Example that shows the syntax stack under the cursor: >
6347 for id in synstack(line("."), col("."))
6348 echo synIDattr(id, "name")
6349 endfor
Bram Moolenaar0bc380a2010-07-10 13:52:13 +02006350< When the position specified with {lnum} and {col} is invalid
6351 nothing is returned. The position just after the last
6352 character in a line and the first column in an empty line are
6353 valid positions.
Bram Moolenaar9d188ab2008-01-10 21:24:39 +00006354
Bram Moolenaarc0197e22004-09-13 20:26:32 +00006355system({expr} [, {input}]) *system()* *E677*
Bram Moolenaar39c29ed2014-04-05 19:44:40 +02006356 Get the output of the shell command {expr} as a string. See
6357 |systemlist()| to get the output as a List.
Bram Moolenaar57ebe6e2014-04-05 18:55:46 +02006358
6359 When {input} is given and is a string this string is written
6360 to a file and passed as stdin to the command. The string is
6361 written as-is, you need to take care of using the correct line
6362 separators yourself.
6363 If {input} is given and is a |List| it is written to the file
6364 in a way |writefile()| does with {binary} set to "b" (i.e.
6365 with a newline between each list item with newlines inside
6366 list items converted to NULs).
6367 Pipes are not used.
6368
Bram Moolenaar52a72462014-08-29 15:53:52 +02006369 When prepended by |:silent| the shell will not be set to
6370 cooked mode. This is meant to be used for commands that do
6371 not need the user to type. It avoids stray characters showing
6372 up on the screen which require |CTRL-L| to remove. >
6373 :silent let f = system('ls *.vim')
6374<
Bram Moolenaar26df0922014-02-23 23:39:13 +01006375 Note: Use |shellescape()| or |::S| with |expand()| or
6376 |fnamemodify()| to escape special characters in a command
6377 argument. Newlines in {expr} may cause the command to fail.
6378 The characters in 'shellquote' and 'shellxquote' may also
6379 cause trouble.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006380 This is not to be used for interactive commands.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006381
Bram Moolenaar05bb9532008-07-04 09:44:11 +00006382 The result is a String. Example: >
6383 :let files = system("ls " . shellescape(expand('%:h')))
Bram Moolenaar26df0922014-02-23 23:39:13 +01006384 :let files = system('ls ' . expand('%:h:S'))
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006385
6386< To make the result more system-independent, the shell output
6387 is filtered to replace <CR> with <NL> for Macintosh, and
6388 <CR><NL> with <NL> for DOS-like systems.
Bram Moolenaar9d98fe92013-08-03 18:35:36 +02006389 To avoid the string being truncated at a NUL, all NUL
6390 characters are replaced with SOH (0x01).
6391
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006392 The command executed is constructed using several options:
6393 'shell' 'shellcmdflag' 'shellxquote' {expr} 'shellredir' {tmp} 'shellxquote'
6394 ({tmp} is an automatically generated file name).
6395 For Unix and OS/2 braces are put around {expr} to allow for
6396 concatenated commands.
6397
Bram Moolenaar433f7c82006-03-21 21:29:36 +00006398 The command will be executed in "cooked" mode, so that a
6399 CTRL-C will interrupt the command (on Unix at least).
6400
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006401 The resulting error code can be found in |v:shell_error|.
6402 This function will fail in |restricted-mode|.
Bram Moolenaar4770d092006-01-12 23:22:24 +00006403
6404 Note that any wrong value in the options mentioned above may
6405 make the function fail. It has also been reported to fail
6406 when using a security agent application.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006407 Unlike ":!cmd" there is no automatic check for changed files.
6408 Use |:checktime| to force a check.
6409
Bram Moolenaare2cc9702005-03-15 22:43:58 +00006410
Bram Moolenaar39c29ed2014-04-05 19:44:40 +02006411systemlist({expr} [, {input}]) *systemlist()*
6412 Same as |system()|, but returns a |List| with lines (parts of
6413 output separated by NL) with NULs transformed into NLs. Output
6414 is the same as |readfile()| will output with {binary} argument
6415 set to "b".
6416
6417 Returns an empty string on error, so be careful not to run
6418 into |E706|.
6419
6420
Bram Moolenaarfaa959a2006-02-20 21:37:40 +00006421tabpagebuflist([{arg}]) *tabpagebuflist()*
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00006422 The result is a |List|, where each item is the number of the
Bram Moolenaarfaa959a2006-02-20 21:37:40 +00006423 buffer associated with each window in the current tab page.
6424 {arg} specifies the number of tab page to be used. When
6425 omitted the current tab page is used.
6426 When {arg} is invalid the number zero is returned.
6427 To get a list of all buffers in all tabs use this: >
Bram Moolenaar61d35bd2012-03-28 20:51:51 +02006428 let buflist = []
Bram Moolenaarfaa959a2006-02-20 21:37:40 +00006429 for i in range(tabpagenr('$'))
Bram Moolenaar61d35bd2012-03-28 20:51:51 +02006430 call extend(buflist, tabpagebuflist(i + 1))
Bram Moolenaarfaa959a2006-02-20 21:37:40 +00006431 endfor
6432< Note that a buffer may appear in more than one window.
6433
6434
6435tabpagenr([{arg}]) *tabpagenr()*
Bram Moolenaar7e8fd632006-02-18 22:14:51 +00006436 The result is a Number, which is the number of the current
6437 tab page. The first tab page has number 1.
6438 When the optional argument is "$", the number of the last tab
6439 page is returned (the tab page count).
6440 The number can be used with the |:tab| command.
6441
6442
Bram Moolenaar76f3b1a2014-03-27 22:30:07 +01006443tabpagewinnr({tabarg} [, {arg}]) *tabpagewinnr()*
Bram Moolenaard04f4402010-08-15 13:30:34 +02006444 Like |winnr()| but for tab page {tabarg}.
Bram Moolenaarfaa959a2006-02-20 21:37:40 +00006445 {tabarg} specifies the number of tab page to be used.
6446 {arg} is used like with |winnr()|:
6447 - When omitted the current window number is returned. This is
6448 the window which will be used when going to this tab page.
6449 - When "$" the number of windows is returned.
6450 - When "#" the previous window nr is returned.
6451 Useful examples: >
6452 tabpagewinnr(1) " current window of tab page 1
6453 tabpagewinnr(4, '$') " number of windows in tab page 4
6454< When {tabarg} is invalid zero is returned.
6455
Bram Moolenaarfa1d1402006-03-25 21:59:56 +00006456 *tagfiles()*
6457tagfiles() Returns a |List| with the file names used to search for tags
6458 for the current buffer. This is the 'tags' option expanded.
6459
6460
Bram Moolenaare2cc9702005-03-15 22:43:58 +00006461taglist({expr}) *taglist()*
6462 Returns a list of tags matching the regular expression {expr}.
Bram Moolenaard8c00872005-07-22 21:52:15 +00006463 Each list item is a dictionary with at least the following
6464 entries:
Bram Moolenaar280f1262006-01-30 00:14:18 +00006465 name Name of the tag.
6466 filename Name of the file where the tag is
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00006467 defined. It is either relative to the
6468 current directory or a full path.
Bram Moolenaare2cc9702005-03-15 22:43:58 +00006469 cmd Ex command used to locate the tag in
6470 the file.
Bram Moolenaar280f1262006-01-30 00:14:18 +00006471 kind Type of the tag. The value for this
Bram Moolenaare2cc9702005-03-15 22:43:58 +00006472 entry depends on the language specific
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00006473 kind values. Only available when
6474 using a tags file generated by
6475 Exuberant ctags or hdrtag.
Bram Moolenaar280f1262006-01-30 00:14:18 +00006476 static A file specific tag. Refer to
Bram Moolenaare2cc9702005-03-15 22:43:58 +00006477 |static-tag| for more information.
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00006478 More entries may be present, depending on the content of the
6479 tags file: access, implementation, inherits and signature.
6480 Refer to the ctags documentation for information about these
6481 fields. For C code the fields "struct", "class" and "enum"
6482 may appear, they give the name of the entity the tag is
6483 contained in.
Bram Moolenaar5a8684e2005-07-30 22:43:24 +00006484
Bram Moolenaar4317d9b2005-03-18 20:25:31 +00006485 The ex-command 'cmd' can be either an ex search pattern, a
6486 line number or a line number followed by a byte number.
Bram Moolenaare2cc9702005-03-15 22:43:58 +00006487
6488 If there are no matching tags, then an empty list is returned.
6489
6490 To get an exact tag match, the anchors '^' and '$' should be
Bram Moolenaara3e6bc92013-01-30 14:18:00 +01006491 used in {expr}. This also make the function work faster.
6492 Refer to |tag-regexp| for more information about the tag
6493 search regular expression pattern.
Bram Moolenaare2cc9702005-03-15 22:43:58 +00006494
6495 Refer to |'tags'| for information about how the tags file is
6496 located by Vim. Refer to |tags-file-format| for the format of
6497 the tags file generated by the different ctags tools.
6498
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006499tempname() *tempname()* *temp-file-name*
6500 The result is a String, which is the name of a file that
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00006501 doesn't exist. It can be used for a temporary file. The name
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006502 is different for at least 26 consecutive calls. Example: >
6503 :let tmpfile = tempname()
6504 :exe "redir > " . tmpfile
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01006505< For Unix, the file will be in a private directory |tempfile|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006506 For MS-Windows forward slashes are used when the 'shellslash'
6507 option is set or when 'shellcmdflag' starts with '-'.
6508
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02006509
6510tan({expr}) *tan()*
Bram Moolenaar9855d6b2010-07-18 14:34:51 +02006511 Return the tangent of {expr}, measured in radians, as a |Float|
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02006512 in the range [-inf, inf].
Bram Moolenaar9855d6b2010-07-18 14:34:51 +02006513 {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|.
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02006514 Examples: >
6515 :echo tan(10)
6516< 0.648361 >
6517 :echo tan(-4.01)
6518< -1.181502
Bram Moolenaardb84e452010-08-15 13:50:43 +02006519 {only available when compiled with the |+float| feature}
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02006520
6521
6522tanh({expr}) *tanh()*
Bram Moolenaar9855d6b2010-07-18 14:34:51 +02006523 Return the hyperbolic tangent of {expr} as a |Float| in the
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02006524 range [-1, 1].
Bram Moolenaar9855d6b2010-07-18 14:34:51 +02006525 {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|.
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02006526 Examples: >
6527 :echo tanh(0.5)
6528< 0.462117 >
6529 :echo tanh(-1)
6530< -0.761594
Bram Moolenaardb84e452010-08-15 13:50:43 +02006531 {only available when compiled with the |+float| feature}
Bram Moolenaardb7c6862010-05-21 16:33:48 +02006532
6533
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006534tolower({expr}) *tolower()*
6535 The result is a copy of the String given, with all uppercase
6536 characters turned into lowercase (just like applying |gu| to
6537 the string).
6538
6539toupper({expr}) *toupper()*
6540 The result is a copy of the String given, with all lowercase
6541 characters turned into uppercase (just like applying |gU| to
6542 the string).
6543
Bram Moolenaar8299df92004-07-10 09:47:34 +00006544tr({src}, {fromstr}, {tostr}) *tr()*
6545 The result is a copy of the {src} string with all characters
6546 which appear in {fromstr} replaced by the character in that
6547 position in the {tostr} string. Thus the first character in
6548 {fromstr} is translated into the first character in {tostr}
6549 and so on. Exactly like the unix "tr" command.
6550 This code also deals with multibyte characters properly.
6551
6552 Examples: >
6553 echo tr("hello there", "ht", "HT")
6554< returns "Hello THere" >
6555 echo tr("<blob>", "<>", "{}")
6556< returns "{blob}"
6557
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00006558trunc({expr}) *trunc()*
Bram Moolenaarc236c162008-07-13 17:41:49 +00006559 Return the largest integral value with magnitude less than or
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00006560 equal to {expr} as a |Float| (truncate towards zero).
6561 {expr} must evaluate to a |Float| or a |Number|.
6562 Examples: >
6563 echo trunc(1.456)
6564< 1.0 >
6565 echo trunc(-5.456)
6566< -5.0 >
6567 echo trunc(4.0)
6568< 4.0
6569 {only available when compiled with the |+float| feature}
6570
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +00006571 *type()*
6572type({expr}) The result is a Number, depending on the type of {expr}:
Bram Moolenaar748bf032005-02-02 23:04:36 +00006573 Number: 0
6574 String: 1
6575 Funcref: 2
6576 List: 3
6577 Dictionary: 4
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00006578 Float: 5
Bram Moolenaar748bf032005-02-02 23:04:36 +00006579 To avoid the magic numbers it should be used this way: >
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +00006580 :if type(myvar) == type(0)
6581 :if type(myvar) == type("")
6582 :if type(myvar) == type(function("tr"))
6583 :if type(myvar) == type([])
Bram Moolenaar748bf032005-02-02 23:04:36 +00006584 :if type(myvar) == type({})
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00006585 :if type(myvar) == type(0.0)
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006586
Bram Moolenaara17d4c12010-05-30 18:30:36 +02006587undofile({name}) *undofile()*
6588 Return the name of the undo file that would be used for a file
6589 with name {name} when writing. This uses the 'undodir'
6590 option, finding directories that exist. It does not check if
Bram Moolenaar860cae12010-06-05 23:22:07 +02006591 the undo file exists.
Bram Moolenaar945e2db2010-06-05 17:43:32 +02006592 {name} is always expanded to the full path, since that is what
6593 is used internally.
Bram Moolenaar80716072012-05-01 21:14:34 +02006594 If {name} is empty undofile() returns an empty string, since a
6595 buffer without a file name will not write an undo file.
Bram Moolenaara17d4c12010-05-30 18:30:36 +02006596 Useful in combination with |:wundo| and |:rundo|.
6597 When compiled without the +persistent_undo option this always
6598 returns an empty string.
6599
Bram Moolenaara800b422010-06-27 01:15:55 +02006600undotree() *undotree()*
6601 Return the current state of the undo tree in a dictionary with
6602 the following items:
6603 "seq_last" The highest undo sequence number used.
6604 "seq_cur" The sequence number of the current position in
6605 the undo tree. This differs from "seq_last"
6606 when some changes were undone.
6607 "time_cur" Time last used for |:earlier| and related
6608 commands. Use |strftime()| to convert to
6609 something readable.
6610 "save_last" Number of the last file write. Zero when no
6611 write yet.
Bram Moolenaar730cde92010-06-27 05:18:54 +02006612 "save_cur" Number of the current position in the undo
6613 tree.
Bram Moolenaara800b422010-06-27 01:15:55 +02006614 "synced" Non-zero when the last undo block was synced.
6615 This happens when waiting from input from the
6616 user. See |undo-blocks|.
6617 "entries" A list of dictionaries with information about
6618 undo blocks.
6619
6620 The first item in the "entries" list is the oldest undo item.
6621 Each List item is a Dictionary with these items:
6622 "seq" Undo sequence number. Same as what appears in
6623 |:undolist|.
6624 "time" Timestamp when the change happened. Use
6625 |strftime()| to convert to something readable.
6626 "newhead" Only appears in the item that is the last one
6627 that was added. This marks the last change
6628 and where further changes will be added.
6629 "curhead" Only appears in the item that is the last one
6630 that was undone. This marks the current
6631 position in the undo tree, the block that will
6632 be used by a redo command. When nothing was
6633 undone after the last change this item will
6634 not appear anywhere.
6635 "save" Only appears on the last block before a file
6636 write. The number is the write count. The
6637 first write has number 1, the last one the
6638 "save_last" mentioned above.
6639 "alt" Alternate entry. This is again a List of undo
6640 blocks. Each item may again have an "alt"
6641 item.
6642
Bram Moolenaar327aa022014-03-25 18:24:23 +01006643uniq({list} [, {func} [, {dict}]]) *uniq()* *E882*
6644 Remove second and succeeding copies of repeated adjacent
6645 {list} items in-place. Returns {list}. If you want a list
6646 to remain unmodified make a copy first: >
6647 :let newlist = uniq(copy(mylist))
6648< The default compare function uses the string representation of
6649 each item. For the use of {func} and {dict} see |sort()|.
6650
Bram Moolenaar677ee682005-01-27 14:41:15 +00006651values({dict}) *values()*
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00006652 Return a |List| with all the values of {dict}. The |List| is
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00006653 in arbitrary order.
Bram Moolenaar677ee682005-01-27 14:41:15 +00006654
6655
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006656virtcol({expr}) *virtcol()*
6657 The result is a Number, which is the screen column of the file
6658 position given with {expr}. That is, the last screen position
6659 occupied by the character at that position, when the screen
6660 would be of unlimited width. When there is a <Tab> at the
6661 position, the returned Number will be the column at the end of
6662 the <Tab>. For example, for a <Tab> in column 1, with 'ts'
Bram Moolenaar61d35bd2012-03-28 20:51:51 +02006663 set to 8, it returns 8. |conceal| is ignored.
Bram Moolenaar477933c2007-07-17 14:32:23 +00006664 For the byte position use |col()|.
6665 For the use of {expr} see |col()|.
6666 When 'virtualedit' is used {expr} can be [lnum, col, off], where
Bram Moolenaar0b238792006-03-02 22:49:12 +00006667 "off" is the offset in screen columns from the start of the
Bram Moolenaard46bbc72007-05-12 14:38:41 +00006668 character. E.g., a position within a <Tab> or after the last
Bram Moolenaar97293012011-07-18 19:40:27 +02006669 character. When "off" is omitted zero is used.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006670 When Virtual editing is active in the current mode, a position
6671 beyond the end of the line can be returned. |'virtualedit'|
6672 The accepted positions are:
6673 . the cursor position
6674 $ the end of the cursor line (the result is the
6675 number of displayed characters in the cursor line
6676 plus one)
6677 'x position of mark x (if the mark is not set, 0 is
6678 returned)
Bram Moolenaare3faf442014-12-14 01:27:49 +01006679 v In Visual mode: the start of the Visual area (the
6680 cursor is the end). When not in Visual mode
6681 returns the cursor position. Differs from |'<| in
6682 that it's updated right away.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006683 Note that only marks in the current file can be used.
6684 Examples: >
6685 virtcol(".") with text "foo^Lbar", with cursor on the "^L", returns 5
6686 virtcol("$") with text "foo^Lbar", returns 9
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00006687 virtcol("'t") with text " there", with 't at 'h', returns 6
6688< The first column is 1. 0 is returned for an error.
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00006689 A more advanced example that echoes the maximum length of
6690 all lines: >
6691 echo max(map(range(1, line('$')), "virtcol([v:val, '$'])"))
6692
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006693
6694visualmode([expr]) *visualmode()*
6695 The result is a String, which describes the last Visual mode
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +00006696 used in the current buffer. Initially it returns an empty
6697 string, but once Visual mode has been used, it returns "v",
6698 "V", or "<CTRL-V>" (a single CTRL-V character) for
6699 character-wise, line-wise, or block-wise Visual mode
6700 respectively.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006701 Example: >
6702 :exe "normal " . visualmode()
6703< This enters the same Visual mode as before. It is also useful
6704 in scripts if you wish to act differently depending on the
6705 Visual mode that was used.
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00006706 If Visual mode is active, use |mode()| to get the Visual mode
6707 (e.g., in a |:vmap|).
Bram Moolenaar05bb9532008-07-04 09:44:11 +00006708 *non-zero-arg*
6709 If [expr] is supplied and it evaluates to a non-zero Number or
6710 a non-empty String, then the Visual mode will be cleared and
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00006711 the old value is returned. Note that " " and "0" are also
Bram Moolenaar05bb9532008-07-04 09:44:11 +00006712 non-empty strings, thus cause the mode to be cleared. A List,
6713 Dictionary or Float is not a Number or String, thus does not
6714 cause the mode to be cleared.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006715
Bram Moolenaar8738fc12013-02-20 17:59:11 +01006716wildmenumode() *wildmenumode()*
6717 Returns non-zero when the wildmenu is active and zero
6718 otherwise. See 'wildmenu' and 'wildmode'.
6719 This can be used in mappings to handle the 'wildcharm' option
6720 gracefully. (Makes only sense with |mapmode-c| mappings).
6721
6722 For example to make <c-j> work like <down> in wildmode, use: >
6723 :cnoremap <expr> <C-j> wildmenumode() ? "\<Down>\<Tab>" : "\<c-j>"
6724<
6725 (Note, this needs the 'wildcharm' option set appropriately).
6726
6727
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006728 *winbufnr()*
6729winbufnr({nr}) The result is a Number, which is the number of the buffer
Bram Moolenaar402d2fe2005-04-15 21:00:38 +00006730 associated with window {nr}. When {nr} is zero, the number of
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006731 the buffer in the current window is returned. When window
6732 {nr} doesn't exist, -1 is returned.
6733 Example: >
6734 :echo "The file in the current window is " . bufname(winbufnr(0))
6735<
6736 *wincol()*
6737wincol() The result is a Number, which is the virtual column of the
6738 cursor in the window. This is counting screen cells from the
6739 left side of the window. The leftmost column is one.
6740
6741winheight({nr}) *winheight()*
6742 The result is a Number, which is the height of window {nr}.
6743 When {nr} is zero, the height of the current window is
6744 returned. When window {nr} doesn't exist, -1 is returned.
6745 An existing window always has a height of zero or more.
6746 Examples: >
6747 :echo "The current window has " . winheight(0) . " lines."
6748<
6749 *winline()*
6750winline() The result is a Number, which is the screen line of the cursor
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00006751 in the window. This is counting screen lines from the top of
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006752 the window. The first line is one.
Bram Moolenaarbfd8fc02005-09-20 23:22:24 +00006753 If the cursor was moved the view on the file will be updated
6754 first, this may cause a scroll.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006755
6756 *winnr()*
Bram Moolenaar5eb86f92004-07-26 12:53:41 +00006757winnr([{arg}]) The result is a Number, which is the number of the current
6758 window. The top window has number 1.
6759 When the optional argument is "$", the number of the
Bram Moolenaar2df58b42012-11-28 18:21:11 +01006760 last window is returned (the window count). >
6761 let window_count = winnr('$')
6762< When the optional argument is "#", the number of the last
Bram Moolenaar5eb86f92004-07-26 12:53:41 +00006763 accessed window is returned (where |CTRL-W_p| goes to).
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00006764 If there is no previous window or it is in another tab page 0
6765 is returned.
Bram Moolenaar5eb86f92004-07-26 12:53:41 +00006766 The number can be used with |CTRL-W_w| and ":wincmd w"
6767 |:wincmd|.
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00006768 Also see |tabpagewinnr()|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006769
6770 *winrestcmd()*
6771winrestcmd() Returns a sequence of |:resize| commands that should restore
6772 the current window sizes. Only works properly when no windows
Bram Moolenaar87b5ca52006-03-04 21:55:31 +00006773 are opened or closed and the current window and tab page is
6774 unchanged.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006775 Example: >
6776 :let cmd = winrestcmd()
6777 :call MessWithWindowSizes()
6778 :exe cmd
Bram Moolenaar87b5ca52006-03-04 21:55:31 +00006779<
6780 *winrestview()*
6781winrestview({dict})
6782 Uses the |Dictionary| returned by |winsaveview()| to restore
6783 the view of the current window.
Bram Moolenaar82c25852014-05-28 16:47:16 +02006784 Note: The {dict} does not have to contain all values, that are
6785 returned by |winsaveview()|. If values are missing, those
6786 settings won't be restored. So you can use: >
6787 :call winrestview({'curswant': 4})
6788<
6789 This will only set the curswant value (the column the cursor
6790 wants to move on vertical movements) of the cursor to column 5
6791 (yes, that is 5), while all other settings will remain the
6792 same. This is useful, if you set the cursor position manually.
6793
Bram Moolenaar87b5ca52006-03-04 21:55:31 +00006794 If you have changed the values the result is unpredictable.
6795 If the window size changed the result won't be the same.
6796
6797 *winsaveview()*
6798winsaveview() Returns a |Dictionary| that contains information to restore
6799 the view of the current window. Use |winrestview()| to
6800 restore the view.
6801 This is useful if you have a mapping that jumps around in the
6802 buffer and you want to go back to the original view.
6803 This does not save fold information. Use the 'foldenable'
Bram Moolenaardb552d602006-03-23 22:59:57 +00006804 option to temporarily switch off folding, so that folds are
Bram Moolenaar07d87792014-07-19 14:04:47 +02006805 not opened when moving around. This may have side effects.
Bram Moolenaar87b5ca52006-03-04 21:55:31 +00006806 The return value includes:
6807 lnum cursor line number
Bram Moolenaar82c25852014-05-28 16:47:16 +02006808 col cursor column (Note: the first column
6809 zero, as opposed to what getpos()
6810 returns)
Bram Moolenaar87b5ca52006-03-04 21:55:31 +00006811 coladd cursor column offset for 'virtualedit'
6812 curswant column for vertical movement
6813 topline first line in the window
6814 topfill filler lines, only in diff mode
6815 leftcol first column displayed
6816 skipcol columns skipped
6817 Note that no option values are saved.
6818
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006819
6820winwidth({nr}) *winwidth()*
6821 The result is a Number, which is the width of window {nr}.
6822 When {nr} is zero, the width of the current window is
6823 returned. When window {nr} doesn't exist, -1 is returned.
6824 An existing window always has a width of zero or more.
6825 Examples: >
6826 :echo "The current window has " . winwidth(0) . " columns."
6827 :if winwidth(0) <= 50
6828 : exe "normal 50\<C-W>|"
6829 :endif
6830<
Bram Moolenaared767a22016-01-03 22:49:16 +01006831wordcount() *wordcount()*
6832 The result is a dictionary of byte/chars/word statistics for
6833 the current buffer. This is the same info as provided by
6834 |g_CTRL-G|
6835 The return value includes:
6836 bytes Number of bytes in the buffer
6837 chars Number of chars in the buffer
6838 words Number of words in the buffer
6839 cursor_bytes Number of bytes before cursor position
6840 (not in Visual mode)
6841 cursor_chars Number of chars before cursor position
6842 (not in Visual mode)
6843 cursor_words Number of words before cursor position
6844 (not in Visual mode)
6845 visual_bytes Number of bytes visually selected
6846 (only in Visual mode)
6847 visual_chars Number of chars visually selected
6848 (only in Visual mode)
6849 visual_words Number of chars visually selected
6850 (only in Visual mode)
6851
6852
Bram Moolenaar3a7c85b2005-02-05 21:39:53 +00006853 *writefile()*
Bram Moolenaar6b2e9382014-11-05 18:06:01 +01006854writefile({list}, {fname} [, {flags}])
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00006855 Write |List| {list} to file {fname}. Each list item is
Bram Moolenaar3a7c85b2005-02-05 21:39:53 +00006856 separated with a NL. Each list item must be a String or
6857 Number.
Bram Moolenaar6b2e9382014-11-05 18:06:01 +01006858 When {flags} contains "b" then binary mode is used: There will
Bram Moolenaar3a7c85b2005-02-05 21:39:53 +00006859 not be a NL after the last list item. An empty item at the
6860 end does cause the last line in the file to end in a NL.
Bram Moolenaar6b2e9382014-11-05 18:06:01 +01006861
6862 When {flags} contains "a" then append mode is used, lines are
6863 append to the file: >
6864 :call writefile(["foo"], "event.log", "a")
6865 :call writefile(["bar"], "event.log", "a")
6866>
6867< All NL characters are replaced with a NUL character.
Bram Moolenaar3a7c85b2005-02-05 21:39:53 +00006868 Inserting CR characters needs to be done before passing {list}
6869 to writefile().
6870 An existing file is overwritten, if possible.
6871 When the write fails -1 is returned, otherwise 0. There is an
6872 error message if the file can't be created or when writing
6873 fails.
6874 Also see |readfile()|.
6875 To copy a file byte for byte: >
6876 :let fl = readfile("foo", "b")
6877 :call writefile(fl, "foocopy", "b")
Bram Moolenaard6e256c2011-12-14 15:32:50 +01006878
6879
6880xor({expr}, {expr}) *xor()*
6881 Bitwise XOR on the two arguments. The arguments are converted
6882 to a number. A List, Dict or Float argument causes an error.
6883 Example: >
6884 :let bits = xor(bits, 0x80)
Bram Moolenaar6ee8d892012-01-10 14:55:01 +01006885<
Bram Moolenaard6e256c2011-12-14 15:32:50 +01006886
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006887
6888 *feature-list*
Bram Moolenaar946e27a2014-06-25 18:50:27 +02006889There are four types of features:
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000068901. Features that are only supported when they have been enabled when Vim
6891 was compiled |+feature-list|. Example: >
6892 :if has("cindent")
68932. Features that are only supported when certain conditions have been met.
6894 Example: >
6895 :if has("gui_running")
6896< *has-patch*
Bram Moolenaar7e38ea22014-04-05 22:55:53 +020068973. Included patches. The "patch123" feature means that patch 123 has been
6898 included. Note that this form does not check the version of Vim, you need
6899 to inspect |v:version| for that.
6900 Example (checking version 6.2.148 or later): >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006901 :if v:version > 602 || v:version == 602 && has("patch148")
Bram Moolenaar7e38ea22014-04-05 22:55:53 +02006902< Note that it's possible for patch 147 to be omitted even though 148 is
6903 included.
6904
69054. Beyond a certain version or at a certain version and including a specific
Bram Moolenaarbcb98982014-05-01 14:08:19 +02006906 patch. The "patch-7.4.237" feature means that the Vim version is 7.5 or
6907 later, or it is version 7.4 and patch 237 was included.
6908 Note that this only works for patch 7.4.237 and later, before that you
6909 need to use the example above that checks v:version. Example: >
6910 :if has("patch-7.4.248")
Bram Moolenaar7e38ea22014-04-05 22:55:53 +02006911< Note that it's possible for patch 147 to be omitted even though 148 is
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00006912 included.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006913
Bram Moolenaar7cba6c02013-09-05 22:13:31 +02006914acl Compiled with |ACL| support.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006915all_builtin_terms Compiled with all builtin terminals enabled.
6916amiga Amiga version of Vim.
6917arabic Compiled with Arabic support |Arabic|.
6918arp Compiled with ARP support (Amiga).
Bram Moolenaara9b1e742005-12-19 22:14:58 +00006919autocmd Compiled with autocommand support. |autocommand|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006920balloon_eval Compiled with |balloon-eval| support.
Bram Moolenaar45360022005-07-21 21:08:21 +00006921balloon_multiline GUI supports multiline balloons.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006922beos BeOS version of Vim.
6923browse Compiled with |:browse| support, and browse() will
6924 work.
Bram Moolenaar30b65812012-07-12 22:01:11 +02006925browsefilter Compiled with support for |browsefilter|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006926builtin_terms Compiled with some builtin terminals.
6927byte_offset Compiled with support for 'o' in 'statusline'
6928cindent Compiled with 'cindent' support.
6929clientserver Compiled with remote invocation support |clientserver|.
6930clipboard Compiled with 'clipboard' support.
6931cmdline_compl Compiled with |cmdline-completion| support.
6932cmdline_hist Compiled with |cmdline-history| support.
6933cmdline_info Compiled with 'showcmd' and 'ruler' support.
6934comments Compiled with |'comments'| support.
Bram Moolenaar2a8a3ec2011-01-08 16:06:37 +01006935compatible Compiled to be very Vi compatible.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006936cryptv Compiled with encryption support |encryption|.
6937cscope Compiled with |cscope| support.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006938debug Compiled with "DEBUG" defined.
6939dialog_con Compiled with console dialog support.
6940dialog_gui Compiled with GUI dialog support.
6941diff Compiled with |vimdiff| and 'diff' support.
6942digraphs Compiled with support for digraphs.
Bram Moolenaarb5a7a8b2014-08-06 14:52:30 +02006943directx Compiled with support for Direct-X and 'renderoptions'.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006944dnd Compiled with support for the "~ register |quote_~|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006945dos16 16 bits DOS version of Vim.
Bram Moolenaar2a8a3ec2011-01-08 16:06:37 +01006946dos32 32 bits DOS (DJGPP) version of Vim.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006947ebcdic Compiled on a machine with ebcdic character set.
6948emacs_tags Compiled with support for Emacs tags.
6949eval Compiled with expression evaluation support. Always
6950 true, of course!
6951ex_extra Compiled with extra Ex commands |+ex_extra|.
6952extra_search Compiled with support for |'incsearch'| and
6953 |'hlsearch'|
6954farsi Compiled with Farsi support |farsi|.
6955file_in_path Compiled with support for |gf| and |<cfile>|
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +00006956filterpipe When 'shelltemp' is off pipes are used for shell
6957 read/write/filter commands
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006958find_in_path Compiled with support for include file searches
6959 |+find_in_path|.
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00006960float Compiled with support for |Float|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006961fname_case Case in file names matters (for Amiga, MS-DOS, and
6962 Windows this is not present).
6963folding Compiled with |folding| support.
6964footer Compiled with GUI footer support. |gui-footer|
6965fork Compiled to use fork()/exec() instead of system().
6966gettext Compiled with message translation |multi-lang|
6967gui Compiled with GUI enabled.
6968gui_athena Compiled with Athena GUI.
Bram Moolenaar2a8a3ec2011-01-08 16:06:37 +01006969gui_gnome Compiled with Gnome support (gui_gtk is also defined).
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006970gui_gtk Compiled with GTK+ GUI (any version).
6971gui_gtk2 Compiled with GTK+ 2 GUI (gui_gtk is also defined).
6972gui_mac Compiled with Macintosh GUI.
6973gui_motif Compiled with Motif GUI.
6974gui_photon Compiled with Photon GUI.
Bram Moolenaar2a8a3ec2011-01-08 16:06:37 +01006975gui_running Vim is running in the GUI, or it will start soon.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006976gui_win32 Compiled with MS Windows Win32 GUI.
6977gui_win32s idem, and Win32s system being used (Windows 3.1)
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006978hangul_input Compiled with Hangul input support. |hangul|
6979iconv Can use iconv() for conversion.
6980insert_expand Compiled with support for CTRL-X expansion commands in
6981 Insert mode.
6982jumplist Compiled with |jumplist| support.
6983keymap Compiled with 'keymap' support.
6984langmap Compiled with 'langmap' support.
6985libcall Compiled with |libcall()| support.
Bram Moolenaar597a4222014-06-25 14:39:50 +02006986linebreak Compiled with 'linebreak', 'breakat', 'showbreak' and
6987 'breakindent' support.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006988lispindent Compiled with support for lisp indenting.
6989listcmds Compiled with commands for the buffer list |:files|
6990 and the argument list |arglist|.
6991localmap Compiled with local mappings and abbr. |:map-local|
Bram Moolenaar0ba04292010-07-14 23:23:17 +02006992lua Compiled with Lua interface |Lua|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006993mac Macintosh version of Vim.
6994macunix Macintosh version of Vim, using Unix files (OS-X).
6995menu Compiled with support for |:menu|.
6996mksession Compiled with support for |:mksession|.
6997modify_fname Compiled with file name modifiers. |filename-modifiers|
6998mouse Compiled with support mouse.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00006999mouse_dec Compiled with support for Dec terminal mouse.
7000mouse_gpm Compiled with support for gpm (Linux console mouse)
7001mouse_netterm Compiled with support for netterm mouse.
7002mouse_pterm Compiled with support for qnx pterm mouse.
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00007003mouse_sysmouse Compiled with support for sysmouse (*BSD console mouse)
Bram Moolenaar9b451252012-08-15 17:43:31 +02007004mouse_sgr Compiled with support for sgr mouse.
Bram Moolenaarf1568ec2011-12-14 21:17:39 +01007005mouse_urxvt Compiled with support for urxvt mouse.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007006mouse_xterm Compiled with support for xterm mouse.
Bram Moolenaar2a8a3ec2011-01-08 16:06:37 +01007007mouseshape Compiled with support for 'mouseshape'.
Bram Moolenaar42022d52008-12-09 09:57:49 +00007008multi_byte Compiled with support for 'encoding'
7009multi_byte_encoding 'encoding' is set to a multi-byte encoding.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007010multi_byte_ime Compiled with support for IME input method.
7011multi_lang Compiled with support for multiple languages.
Bram Moolenaar325b7a22004-07-05 15:58:32 +00007012mzscheme Compiled with MzScheme interface |mzscheme|.
Bram Moolenaarb26e6322010-05-22 21:34:09 +02007013netbeans_enabled Compiled with support for |netbeans| and connected.
Bram Moolenaar2a8a3ec2011-01-08 16:06:37 +01007014netbeans_intg Compiled with support for |netbeans|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007015ole Compiled with OLE automation support for Win32.
7016os2 OS/2 version of Vim.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007017path_extra Compiled with up/downwards search in 'path' and 'tags'
7018perl Compiled with Perl interface.
Bram Moolenaar55debbe2010-05-23 23:34:36 +02007019persistent_undo Compiled with support for persistent undo history.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007020postscript Compiled with PostScript file printing.
7021printer Compiled with |:hardcopy| support.
Bram Moolenaar05159a02005-02-26 23:04:13 +00007022profile Compiled with |:profile| support.
Bram Moolenaar446beb42011-05-10 17:18:44 +02007023python Compiled with Python 2.x interface. |has-python|
7024python3 Compiled with Python 3.x interface. |has-python|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007025qnx QNX version of Vim.
7026quickfix Compiled with |quickfix| support.
Bram Moolenaard68071d2006-05-02 22:08:30 +00007027reltime Compiled with |reltime()| support.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007028rightleft Compiled with 'rightleft' support.
7029ruby Compiled with Ruby interface |ruby|.
7030scrollbind Compiled with 'scrollbind' support.
7031showcmd Compiled with 'showcmd' support.
7032signs Compiled with |:sign| support.
7033smartindent Compiled with 'smartindent' support.
Bram Moolenaar69a7cb42004-06-20 12:51:53 +00007034sniff Compiled with SNiFF interface support.
Bram Moolenaar2a8a3ec2011-01-08 16:06:37 +01007035spell Compiled with spell checking support |spell|.
Bram Moolenaaref94eec2009-11-11 13:22:11 +00007036startuptime Compiled with |--startuptime| support.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007037statusline Compiled with support for 'statusline', 'rulerformat'
7038 and special formats of 'titlestring' and 'iconstring'.
7039sun_workshop Compiled with support for Sun |workshop|.
Bram Moolenaar82cf9b62005-06-07 21:09:25 +00007040syntax Compiled with syntax highlighting support |syntax|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007041syntax_items There are active syntax highlighting items for the
7042 current buffer.
7043system Compiled to use system() instead of fork()/exec().
7044tag_binary Compiled with binary searching in tags files
7045 |tag-binary-search|.
7046tag_old_static Compiled with support for old static tags
7047 |tag-old-static|.
7048tag_any_white Compiled with support for any white characters in tags
7049 files |tag-any-white|.
7050tcl Compiled with Tcl interface.
7051terminfo Compiled with terminfo instead of termcap.
7052termresponse Compiled with support for |t_RV| and |v:termresponse|.
7053textobjects Compiled with support for |text-objects|.
7054tgetent Compiled with tgetent support, able to use a termcap
7055 or terminfo file.
7056title Compiled with window title support |'title'|.
7057toolbar Compiled with support for |gui-toolbar|.
7058unix Unix version of Vim.
7059user_commands User-defined commands.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007060vertsplit Compiled with vertically split windows |:vsplit|.
Bram Moolenaar2a8a3ec2011-01-08 16:06:37 +01007061vim_starting True while initial source'ing takes place. |startup|
7062viminfo Compiled with viminfo support.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007063virtualedit Compiled with 'virtualedit' option.
7064visual Compiled with Visual mode.
7065visualextra Compiled with extra Visual mode commands.
7066 |blockwise-operators|.
7067vms VMS version of Vim.
7068vreplace Compiled with |gR| and |gr| commands.
7069wildignore Compiled with 'wildignore' option.
7070wildmenu Compiled with 'wildmenu' option.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007071win16 Win16 version of Vim (MS-Windows 3.1).
Bram Moolenaard58e9292011-02-09 17:07:58 +01007072win32 Win32 version of Vim (MS-Windows 95 and later, 32 or
7073 64 bits)
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007074win32unix Win32 version of Vim, using Unix files (Cygwin)
Bram Moolenaar2a8a3ec2011-01-08 16:06:37 +01007075win64 Win64 version of Vim (MS-Windows 64 bit).
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007076win95 Win32 version for MS-Windows 95/98/ME.
Bram Moolenaar2a8a3ec2011-01-08 16:06:37 +01007077winaltkeys Compiled with 'winaltkeys' option.
7078windows Compiled with support for more than one window.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007079writebackup Compiled with 'writebackup' default on.
7080xfontset Compiled with X fontset support |xfontset|.
7081xim Compiled with X input method support |xim|.
Bram Moolenaar7cba6c02013-09-05 22:13:31 +02007082xpm Compiled with pixmap support.
7083xpm_w32 Compiled with pixmap support for Win32. (Only for
7084 backward compatibility. Use "xpm" instead.)
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007085xsmp Compiled with X session management support.
7086xsmp_interact Compiled with interactive X session management support.
7087xterm_clipboard Compiled with support for xterm clipboard.
7088xterm_save Compiled with support for saving and restoring the
7089 xterm screen.
7090x11 Compiled with X11 support.
7091
7092 *string-match*
7093Matching a pattern in a String
7094
7095A regexp pattern as explained at |pattern| is normally used to find a match in
7096the buffer lines. When a pattern is used to find a match in a String, almost
7097everything works in the same way. The difference is that a String is handled
7098like it is one line. When it contains a "\n" character, this is not seen as a
7099line break for the pattern. It can be matched with a "\n" in the pattern, or
7100with ".". Example: >
7101 :let a = "aaaa\nxxxx"
7102 :echo matchstr(a, "..\n..")
7103 aa
7104 xx
7105 :echo matchstr(a, "a.x")
7106 a
7107 x
7108
7109Don't forget that "^" will only match at the first character of the String and
7110"$" at the last character of the string. They don't match after or before a
7111"\n".
7112
7113==============================================================================
71145. Defining functions *user-functions*
7115
7116New functions can be defined. These can be called just like builtin
7117functions. The function executes a sequence of Ex commands. Normal mode
7118commands can be executed with the |:normal| command.
7119
7120The function name must start with an uppercase letter, to avoid confusion with
7121builtin functions. To prevent from using the same name in different scripts
7122avoid obvious, short names. A good habit is to start the function name with
7123the name of the script, e.g., "HTMLcolor()".
7124
Bram Moolenaar92d640f2005-09-05 22:11:52 +00007125It's also possible to use curly braces, see |curly-braces-names|. And the
7126|autoload| facility is useful to define a function only when it's called.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007127
7128 *local-function*
7129A function local to a script must start with "s:". A local script function
7130can only be called from within the script and from functions, user commands
7131and autocommands defined in the script. It is also possible to call the
Bram Moolenaare37d50a2008-08-06 17:06:04 +00007132function from a mapping defined in the script, but then |<SID>| must be used
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007133instead of "s:" when the mapping is expanded outside of the script.
Bram Moolenaarbcb98982014-05-01 14:08:19 +02007134There are only script-local functions, no buffer-local or window-local
7135functions.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007136
7137 *:fu* *:function* *E128* *E129* *E123*
7138:fu[nction] List all functions and their arguments.
7139
7140:fu[nction] {name} List function {name}.
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00007141 {name} can also be a |Dictionary| entry that is a
7142 |Funcref|: >
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +00007143 :function dict.init
Bram Moolenaar92d640f2005-09-05 22:11:52 +00007144
7145:fu[nction] /{pattern} List functions with a name matching {pattern}.
7146 Example that lists all functions ending with "File": >
7147 :function /File$
Bram Moolenaar5b8d8fd2005-08-16 23:01:50 +00007148<
7149 *:function-verbose*
7150When 'verbose' is non-zero, listing a function will also display where it was
7151last defined. Example: >
7152
7153 :verbose function SetFileTypeSH
7154 function SetFileTypeSH(name)
7155 Last set from /usr/share/vim/vim-7.0/filetype.vim
7156<
Bram Moolenaar8aff23a2005-08-19 20:40:30 +00007157See |:verbose-cmd| for more information.
Bram Moolenaar5b8d8fd2005-08-16 23:01:50 +00007158
Bram Moolenaarbcb98982014-05-01 14:08:19 +02007159 *E124* *E125* *E853* *E884*
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00007160:fu[nction][!] {name}([arguments]) [range] [abort] [dict]
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007161 Define a new function by the name {name}. The name
7162 must be made of alphanumeric characters and '_', and
Bram Moolenaarbcb98982014-05-01 14:08:19 +02007163 must start with a capital or "s:" (see above). Note
7164 that using "b:" or "g:" is not allowed. (since patch
7165 7.4.260 E884 is given if the function name has a colon
7166 in the name, e.g. for "foo:bar()". Before that patch
7167 no error was given).
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +00007168
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00007169 {name} can also be a |Dictionary| entry that is a
7170 |Funcref|: >
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +00007171 :function dict.init(arg)
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00007172< "dict" must be an existing dictionary. The entry
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +00007173 "init" is added if it didn't exist yet. Otherwise [!]
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00007174 is required to overwrite an existing function. The
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +00007175 result is a |Funcref| to a numbered function. The
7176 function can only be used with a |Funcref| and will be
7177 deleted if there are no more references to it.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007178 *E127* *E122*
7179 When a function by this name already exists and [!] is
7180 not used an error message is given. When [!] is used,
7181 an existing function is silently replaced. Unless it
7182 is currently being executed, that is an error.
Bram Moolenaar8f999f12005-01-25 22:12:55 +00007183
7184 For the {arguments} see |function-argument|.
7185
Bram Moolenaar8d043172014-01-23 14:24:41 +01007186 *:func-range* *a:firstline* *a:lastline*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007187 When the [range] argument is added, the function is
7188 expected to take care of a range itself. The range is
7189 passed as "a:firstline" and "a:lastline". If [range]
7190 is excluded, ":{range}call" will call the function for
7191 each line in the range, with the cursor on the start
7192 of each line. See |function-range-example|.
Bram Moolenaar2df58b42012-11-28 18:21:11 +01007193 The cursor is still moved to the first line of the
7194 range, as is the case with all Ex commands.
Bram Moolenaar8d043172014-01-23 14:24:41 +01007195 *:func-abort*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007196 When the [abort] argument is added, the function will
7197 abort as soon as an error is detected.
Bram Moolenaar8d043172014-01-23 14:24:41 +01007198 *:func-dict*
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00007199 When the [dict] argument is added, the function must
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00007200 be invoked through an entry in a |Dictionary|. The
Bram Moolenaar2fda12f2005-01-15 22:14:15 +00007201 local variable "self" will then be set to the
7202 dictionary. See |Dictionary-function|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007203
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00007204 *function-search-undo*
Bram Moolenaar98692072006-02-04 00:57:42 +00007205 The last used search pattern and the redo command "."
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00007206 will not be changed by the function. This also
7207 implies that the effect of |:nohlsearch| is undone
7208 when the function returns.
Bram Moolenaar98692072006-02-04 00:57:42 +00007209
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007210 *:endf* *:endfunction* *E126* *E193*
7211:endf[unction] The end of a function definition. Must be on a line
7212 by its own, without other commands.
7213
7214 *:delf* *:delfunction* *E130* *E131*
7215:delf[unction] {name} Delete function {name}.
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00007216 {name} can also be a |Dictionary| entry that is a
7217 |Funcref|: >
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +00007218 :delfunc dict.init
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00007219< This will remove the "init" entry from "dict". The
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +00007220 function is deleted if there are no more references to
7221 it.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007222 *:retu* *:return* *E133*
7223:retu[rn] [expr] Return from a function. When "[expr]" is given, it is
7224 evaluated and returned as the result of the function.
7225 If "[expr]" is not given, the number 0 is returned.
7226 When a function ends without an explicit ":return",
7227 the number 0 is returned.
7228 Note that there is no check for unreachable lines,
7229 thus there is no warning if commands follow ":return".
7230
7231 If the ":return" is used after a |:try| but before the
7232 matching |:finally| (if present), the commands
7233 following the ":finally" up to the matching |:endtry|
7234 are executed first. This process applies to all
7235 nested ":try"s inside the function. The function
7236 returns at the outermost ":endtry".
7237
Bram Moolenaar8f999f12005-01-25 22:12:55 +00007238 *function-argument* *a:var*
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00007239An argument can be defined by giving its name. In the function this can then
Bram Moolenaar8f999f12005-01-25 22:12:55 +00007240be used as "a:name" ("a:" for argument).
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00007241 *a:0* *a:1* *a:000* *E740* *...*
Bram Moolenaar8f999f12005-01-25 22:12:55 +00007242Up to 20 arguments can be given, separated by commas. After the named
7243arguments an argument "..." can be specified, which means that more arguments
7244may optionally be following. In the function the extra arguments can be used
7245as "a:1", "a:2", etc. "a:0" is set to the number of extra arguments (which
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00007246can be 0). "a:000" is set to a |List| that contains these arguments. Note
7247that "a:1" is the same as "a:000[0]".
Bram Moolenaar2ce06f62005-01-31 19:19:04 +00007248 *E742*
7249The a: scope and the variables in it cannot be changed, they are fixed.
Bram Moolenaare37d50a2008-08-06 17:06:04 +00007250However, if a |List| or |Dictionary| is used, you can change their contents.
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00007251Thus you can pass a |List| to a function and have the function add an item to
7252it. If you want to make sure the function cannot change a |List| or
7253|Dictionary| use |:lockvar|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007254
Bram Moolenaar8f999f12005-01-25 22:12:55 +00007255When not using "...", the number of arguments in a function call must be equal
7256to the number of named arguments. When using "...", the number of arguments
7257may be larger.
7258
7259It is also possible to define a function without any arguments. You must
7260still supply the () then. The body of the function follows in the next lines,
7261until the matching |:endfunction|. It is allowed to define another function
7262inside a function body.
7263
7264 *local-variables*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007265Inside a function variables can be used. These are local variables, which
7266will disappear when the function returns. Global variables need to be
7267accessed with "g:".
7268
7269Example: >
7270 :function Table(title, ...)
7271 : echohl Title
7272 : echo a:title
7273 : echohl None
Bram Moolenaar677ee682005-01-27 14:41:15 +00007274 : echo a:0 . " items:"
7275 : for s in a:000
7276 : echon ' ' . s
7277 : endfor
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007278 :endfunction
7279
7280This function can then be called with: >
Bram Moolenaar677ee682005-01-27 14:41:15 +00007281 call Table("Table", "line1", "line2")
7282 call Table("Empty Table")
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007283
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00007284To return more than one value, return a |List|: >
7285 :function Compute(n1, n2)
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007286 : if a:n2 == 0
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00007287 : return ["fail", 0]
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007288 : endif
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00007289 : return ["ok", a:n1 / a:n2]
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007290 :endfunction
7291
7292This function can then be called with: >
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00007293 :let [success, div] = Compute(102, 6)
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007294 :if success == "ok"
7295 : echo div
7296 :endif
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00007297<
Bram Moolenaar39f05632006-03-19 22:15:26 +00007298 *:cal* *:call* *E107* *E117*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007299:[range]cal[l] {name}([arguments])
7300 Call a function. The name of the function and its arguments
7301 are as specified with |:function|. Up to 20 arguments can be
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00007302 used. The returned value is discarded.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007303 Without a range and for functions that accept a range, the
7304 function is called once. When a range is given the cursor is
7305 positioned at the start of the first line before executing the
7306 function.
7307 When a range is given and the function doesn't handle it
7308 itself, the function is executed for each line in the range,
7309 with the cursor in the first column of that line. The cursor
7310 is left at the last line (possibly moved by the last function
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00007311 call). The arguments are re-evaluated for each line. Thus
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007312 this works:
7313 *function-range-example* >
7314 :function Mynumber(arg)
7315 : echo line(".") . " " . a:arg
7316 :endfunction
7317 :1,5call Mynumber(getline("."))
7318<
7319 The "a:firstline" and "a:lastline" are defined anyway, they
7320 can be used to do something different at the start or end of
7321 the range.
7322
7323 Example of a function that handles the range itself: >
7324
7325 :function Cont() range
7326 : execute (a:firstline + 1) . "," . a:lastline . 's/^/\t\\ '
7327 :endfunction
7328 :4,8call Cont()
7329<
7330 This function inserts the continuation character "\" in front
7331 of all the lines in the range, except the first one.
7332
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00007333 When the function returns a composite value it can be further
7334 dereferenced, but the range will not be used then. Example: >
7335 :4,8call GetDict().method()
7336< Here GetDict() gets the range but method() does not.
7337
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007338 *E132*
7339The recursiveness of user functions is restricted with the |'maxfuncdepth'|
7340option.
7341
Bram Moolenaar7c626922005-02-07 22:01:03 +00007342
7343AUTOMATICALLY LOADING FUNCTIONS ~
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007344 *autoload-functions*
7345When using many or large functions, it's possible to automatically define them
Bram Moolenaar7c626922005-02-07 22:01:03 +00007346only when they are used. There are two methods: with an autocommand and with
7347the "autoload" directory in 'runtimepath'.
7348
7349
7350Using an autocommand ~
7351
Bram Moolenaar05159a02005-02-26 23:04:13 +00007352This is introduced in the user manual, section |41.14|.
7353
Bram Moolenaar7c626922005-02-07 22:01:03 +00007354The autocommand is useful if you have a plugin that is a long Vim script file.
7355You can define the autocommand and quickly quit the script with |:finish|.
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00007356That makes Vim startup faster. The autocommand should then load the same file
Bram Moolenaar7c626922005-02-07 22:01:03 +00007357again, setting a variable to skip the |:finish| command.
7358
7359Use the FuncUndefined autocommand event with a pattern that matches the
7360function(s) to be defined. Example: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007361
7362 :au FuncUndefined BufNet* source ~/vim/bufnetfuncs.vim
7363
7364The file "~/vim/bufnetfuncs.vim" should then define functions that start with
7365"BufNet". Also see |FuncUndefined|.
7366
Bram Moolenaar7c626922005-02-07 22:01:03 +00007367
7368Using an autoload script ~
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +00007369 *autoload* *E746*
Bram Moolenaar05159a02005-02-26 23:04:13 +00007370This is introduced in the user manual, section |41.15|.
7371
Bram Moolenaar7c626922005-02-07 22:01:03 +00007372Using a script in the "autoload" directory is simpler, but requires using
7373exactly the right file name. A function that can be autoloaded has a name
7374like this: >
7375
Bram Moolenaara7fc0102005-05-18 22:17:12 +00007376 :call filename#funcname()
Bram Moolenaar7c626922005-02-07 22:01:03 +00007377
7378When such a function is called, and it is not defined yet, Vim will search the
7379"autoload" directories in 'runtimepath' for a script file called
7380"filename.vim". For example "~/.vim/autoload/filename.vim". That file should
7381then define the function like this: >
7382
Bram Moolenaara7fc0102005-05-18 22:17:12 +00007383 function filename#funcname()
Bram Moolenaar7c626922005-02-07 22:01:03 +00007384 echo "Done!"
7385 endfunction
7386
Bram Moolenaar60a795a2005-09-16 21:55:43 +00007387The file name and the name used before the # in the function must match
Bram Moolenaar7c626922005-02-07 22:01:03 +00007388exactly, and the defined function must have the name exactly as it will be
7389called.
7390
Bram Moolenaara7fc0102005-05-18 22:17:12 +00007391It is possible to use subdirectories. Every # in the function name works like
7392a path separator. Thus when calling a function: >
Bram Moolenaar7c626922005-02-07 22:01:03 +00007393
Bram Moolenaara7fc0102005-05-18 22:17:12 +00007394 :call foo#bar#func()
Bram Moolenaar7c626922005-02-07 22:01:03 +00007395
7396Vim will look for the file "autoload/foo/bar.vim" in 'runtimepath'.
7397
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +00007398This also works when reading a variable that has not been set yet: >
7399
Bram Moolenaara7fc0102005-05-18 22:17:12 +00007400 :let l = foo#bar#lvar
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +00007401
Bram Moolenaara5792f52005-11-23 21:25:05 +00007402However, when the autoload script was already loaded it won't be loaded again
7403for an unknown variable.
7404
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +00007405When assigning a value to such a variable nothing special happens. This can
7406be used to pass settings to the autoload script before it's loaded: >
7407
Bram Moolenaara7fc0102005-05-18 22:17:12 +00007408 :let foo#bar#toggle = 1
7409 :call foo#bar#func()
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +00007410
Bram Moolenaar4399ef42005-02-12 14:29:27 +00007411Note that when you make a mistake and call a function that is supposed to be
7412defined in an autoload script, but the script doesn't actually define the
7413function, the script will be sourced every time you try to call the function.
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +00007414And you will get an error message every time.
7415
7416Also note that if you have two script files, and one calls a function in the
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00007417other and vice versa, before the used function is defined, it won't work.
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +00007418Avoid using the autoload functionality at the toplevel.
Bram Moolenaar7c626922005-02-07 22:01:03 +00007419
Bram Moolenaar433f7c82006-03-21 21:29:36 +00007420Hint: If you distribute a bunch of scripts you can pack them together with the
7421|vimball| utility. Also read the user manual |distribute-script|.
7422
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007423==============================================================================
74246. Curly braces names *curly-braces-names*
7425
Bram Moolenaar84f72352012-03-11 15:57:40 +01007426In most places where you can use a variable, you can use a "curly braces name"
7427variable. This is a regular variable name with one or more expressions
7428wrapped in braces {} like this: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007429 my_{adjective}_variable
7430
7431When Vim encounters this, it evaluates the expression inside the braces, puts
7432that in place of the expression, and re-interprets the whole as a variable
7433name. So in the above example, if the variable "adjective" was set to
7434"noisy", then the reference would be to "my_noisy_variable", whereas if
7435"adjective" was set to "quiet", then it would be to "my_quiet_variable".
7436
7437One application for this is to create a set of variables governed by an option
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00007438value. For example, the statement >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007439 echo my_{&background}_message
7440
7441would output the contents of "my_dark_message" or "my_light_message" depending
7442on the current value of 'background'.
7443
7444You can use multiple brace pairs: >
7445 echo my_{adverb}_{adjective}_message
7446..or even nest them: >
7447 echo my_{ad{end_of_word}}_message
7448where "end_of_word" is either "verb" or "jective".
7449
7450However, the expression inside the braces must evaluate to a valid single
Bram Moolenaar402d2fe2005-04-15 21:00:38 +00007451variable name, e.g. this is invalid: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007452 :let foo='a + b'
7453 :echo c{foo}d
7454.. since the result of expansion is "ca + bd", which is not a variable name.
7455
7456 *curly-braces-function-names*
7457You can call and define functions by an evaluated name in a similar way.
7458Example: >
7459 :let func_end='whizz'
7460 :call my_func_{func_end}(parameter)
7461
7462This would call the function "my_func_whizz(parameter)".
7463
Bram Moolenaar84f72352012-03-11 15:57:40 +01007464This does NOT work: >
7465 :let i = 3
7466 :let @{i} = '' " error
7467 :echo @{i} " error
7468
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007469==============================================================================
74707. Commands *expression-commands*
7471
7472:let {var-name} = {expr1} *:let* *E18*
7473 Set internal variable {var-name} to the result of the
7474 expression {expr1}. The variable will get the type
7475 from the {expr}. If {var-name} didn't exist yet, it
7476 is created.
7477
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +00007478:let {var-name}[{idx}] = {expr1} *E689*
7479 Set a list item to the result of the expression
7480 {expr1}. {var-name} must refer to a list and {idx}
7481 must be a valid index in that list. For nested list
7482 the index can be repeated.
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00007483 This cannot be used to add an item to a |List|.
7484 This cannot be used to set a byte in a String. You
7485 can do that like this: >
7486 :let var = var[0:2] . 'X' . var[4:]
7487<
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +00007488 *E711* *E719*
7489:let {var-name}[{idx1}:{idx2}] = {expr1} *E708* *E709* *E710*
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00007490 Set a sequence of items in a |List| to the result of
7491 the expression {expr1}, which must be a list with the
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +00007492 correct number of items.
7493 {idx1} can be omitted, zero is used instead.
7494 {idx2} can be omitted, meaning the end of the list.
7495 When the selected range of items is partly past the
7496 end of the list, items will be added.
7497
Bram Moolenaar748bf032005-02-02 23:04:36 +00007498 *:let+=* *:let-=* *:let.=* *E734*
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +00007499:let {var} += {expr1} Like ":let {var} = {var} + {expr1}".
7500:let {var} -= {expr1} Like ":let {var} = {var} - {expr1}".
7501:let {var} .= {expr1} Like ":let {var} = {var} . {expr1}".
7502 These fail if {var} was not set yet and when the type
7503 of {var} and {expr1} don't fit the operator.
7504
7505
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007506:let ${env-name} = {expr1} *:let-environment* *:let-$*
7507 Set environment variable {env-name} to the result of
7508 the expression {expr1}. The type is always String.
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +00007509:let ${env-name} .= {expr1}
7510 Append {expr1} to the environment variable {env-name}.
7511 If the environment variable didn't exist yet this
7512 works like "=".
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007513
7514:let @{reg-name} = {expr1} *:let-register* *:let-@*
7515 Write the result of the expression {expr1} in register
7516 {reg-name}. {reg-name} must be a single letter, and
7517 must be the name of a writable register (see
7518 |registers|). "@@" can be used for the unnamed
7519 register, "@/" for the search pattern.
7520 If the result of {expr1} ends in a <CR> or <NL>, the
7521 register will be linewise, otherwise it will be set to
7522 characterwise.
7523 This can be used to clear the last search pattern: >
7524 :let @/ = ""
7525< This is different from searching for an empty string,
7526 that would match everywhere.
7527
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +00007528:let @{reg-name} .= {expr1}
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00007529 Append {expr1} to register {reg-name}. If the
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +00007530 register was empty it's like setting it to {expr1}.
7531
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00007532:let &{option-name} = {expr1} *:let-option* *:let-&*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007533 Set option {option-name} to the result of the
Bram Moolenaarfca34d62005-01-04 21:38:36 +00007534 expression {expr1}. A String or Number value is
7535 always converted to the type of the option.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007536 For an option local to a window or buffer the effect
7537 is just like using the |:set| command: both the local
Bram Moolenaara5fac542005-10-12 20:58:49 +00007538 value and the global value are changed.
Bram Moolenaarfca34d62005-01-04 21:38:36 +00007539 Example: >
7540 :let &path = &path . ',/usr/local/include'
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007541
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +00007542:let &{option-name} .= {expr1}
7543 For a string option: Append {expr1} to the value.
7544 Does not insert a comma like |:set+=|.
7545
7546:let &{option-name} += {expr1}
7547:let &{option-name} -= {expr1}
7548 For a number or boolean option: Add or subtract
7549 {expr1}.
7550
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007551:let &l:{option-name} = {expr1}
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +00007552:let &l:{option-name} .= {expr1}
7553:let &l:{option-name} += {expr1}
7554:let &l:{option-name} -= {expr1}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007555 Like above, but only set the local value of an option
7556 (if there is one). Works like |:setlocal|.
7557
7558:let &g:{option-name} = {expr1}
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +00007559:let &g:{option-name} .= {expr1}
7560:let &g:{option-name} += {expr1}
7561:let &g:{option-name} -= {expr1}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007562 Like above, but only set the global value of an option
7563 (if there is one). Works like |:setglobal|.
7564
Bram Moolenaar13065c42005-01-08 16:08:21 +00007565:let [{name1}, {name2}, ...] = {expr1} *:let-unpack* *E687* *E688*
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00007566 {expr1} must evaluate to a |List|. The first item in
Bram Moolenaarfca34d62005-01-04 21:38:36 +00007567 the list is assigned to {name1}, the second item to
7568 {name2}, etc.
7569 The number of names must match the number of items in
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00007570 the |List|.
Bram Moolenaarfca34d62005-01-04 21:38:36 +00007571 Each name can be one of the items of the ":let"
7572 command as mentioned above.
7573 Example: >
7574 :let [s, item] = GetItem(s)
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +00007575< Detail: {expr1} is evaluated first, then the
7576 assignments are done in sequence. This matters if
7577 {name2} depends on {name1}. Example: >
7578 :let x = [0, 1]
7579 :let i = 0
7580 :let [i, x[i]] = [1, 2]
7581 :echo x
7582< The result is [0, 2].
7583
7584:let [{name1}, {name2}, ...] .= {expr1}
7585:let [{name1}, {name2}, ...] += {expr1}
7586:let [{name1}, {name2}, ...] -= {expr1}
7587 Like above, but append/add/subtract the value for each
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00007588 |List| item.
Bram Moolenaarfca34d62005-01-04 21:38:36 +00007589
7590:let [{name}, ..., ; {lastname}] = {expr1}
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00007591 Like |:let-unpack| above, but the |List| may have more
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +00007592 items than there are names. A list of the remaining
7593 items is assigned to {lastname}. If there are no
7594 remaining items {lastname} is set to an empty list.
Bram Moolenaarfca34d62005-01-04 21:38:36 +00007595 Example: >
7596 :let [a, b; rest] = ["aval", "bval", 3, 4]
7597<
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +00007598:let [{name}, ..., ; {lastname}] .= {expr1}
7599:let [{name}, ..., ; {lastname}] += {expr1}
7600:let [{name}, ..., ; {lastname}] -= {expr1}
7601 Like above, but append/add/subtract the value for each
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00007602 |List| item.
Bram Moolenaar4a748032010-09-30 21:47:56 +02007603
7604 *E121*
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00007605:let {var-name} .. List the value of variable {var-name}. Multiple
Bram Moolenaardcaf10e2005-01-21 11:55:25 +00007606 variable names may be given. Special names recognized
7607 here: *E738*
Bram Moolenaarca003e12006-03-17 23:19:38 +00007608 g: global variables
7609 b: local buffer variables
7610 w: local window variables
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +00007611 t: local tab page variables
Bram Moolenaarca003e12006-03-17 23:19:38 +00007612 s: script-local variables
7613 l: local function variables
Bram Moolenaardcaf10e2005-01-21 11:55:25 +00007614 v: Vim variables.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007615
Bram Moolenaard7ee7ce2005-01-03 21:02:03 +00007616:let List the values of all variables. The type of the
7617 variable is indicated before the value:
7618 <nothing> String
7619 # Number
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +00007620 * Funcref
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007621
Bram Moolenaar2ce06f62005-01-31 19:19:04 +00007622
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00007623:unl[et][!] {name} ... *:unlet* *:unl* *E108* *E795*
Bram Moolenaar2ce06f62005-01-31 19:19:04 +00007624 Remove the internal variable {name}. Several variable
7625 names can be given, they are all removed. The name
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00007626 may also be a |List| or |Dictionary| item.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007627 With [!] no error message is given for non-existing
7628 variables.
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00007629 One or more items from a |List| can be removed: >
Bram Moolenaar9cd15162005-01-16 22:02:49 +00007630 :unlet list[3] " remove fourth item
7631 :unlet list[3:] " remove fourth item to last
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00007632< One item from a |Dictionary| can be removed at a time: >
Bram Moolenaar9cd15162005-01-16 22:02:49 +00007633 :unlet dict['two']
7634 :unlet dict.two
Bram Moolenaarc236c162008-07-13 17:41:49 +00007635< This is especially useful to clean up used global
7636 variables and script-local variables (these are not
7637 deleted when the script ends). Function-local
7638 variables are automatically deleted when the function
7639 ends.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007640
Bram Moolenaar2ce06f62005-01-31 19:19:04 +00007641:lockv[ar][!] [depth] {name} ... *:lockvar* *:lockv*
7642 Lock the internal variable {name}. Locking means that
7643 it can no longer be changed (until it is unlocked).
7644 A locked variable can be deleted: >
7645 :lockvar v
7646 :let v = 'asdf' " fails!
7647 :unlet v
7648< *E741*
7649 If you try to change a locked variable you get an
Bram Moolenaar8a94d872015-01-25 13:02:57 +01007650 error message: "E741: Value is locked: {name}"
Bram Moolenaar2ce06f62005-01-31 19:19:04 +00007651
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00007652 [depth] is relevant when locking a |List| or
7653 |Dictionary|. It specifies how deep the locking goes:
7654 1 Lock the |List| or |Dictionary| itself,
Bram Moolenaar2ce06f62005-01-31 19:19:04 +00007655 cannot add or remove items, but can
7656 still change their values.
7657 2 Also lock the values, cannot change
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00007658 the items. If an item is a |List| or
7659 |Dictionary|, cannot add or remove
Bram Moolenaar2ce06f62005-01-31 19:19:04 +00007660 items, but can still change the
7661 values.
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00007662 3 Like 2 but for the |List| /
7663 |Dictionary| in the |List| /
7664 |Dictionary|, one level deeper.
7665 The default [depth] is 2, thus when {name} is a |List|
7666 or |Dictionary| the values cannot be changed.
Bram Moolenaar2ce06f62005-01-31 19:19:04 +00007667 *E743*
7668 For unlimited depth use [!] and omit [depth].
7669 However, there is a maximum depth of 100 to catch
7670 loops.
7671
Bram Moolenaar32466aa2006-02-24 23:53:04 +00007672 Note that when two variables refer to the same |List|
7673 and you lock one of them, the |List| will also be
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +00007674 locked when used through the other variable.
7675 Example: >
Bram Moolenaar2ce06f62005-01-31 19:19:04 +00007676 :let l = [0, 1, 2, 3]
7677 :let cl = l
7678 :lockvar l
7679 :let cl[1] = 99 " won't work!
7680< You may want to make a copy of a list to avoid this.
7681 See |deepcopy()|.
7682
7683
7684:unlo[ckvar][!] [depth] {name} ... *:unlockvar* *:unlo*
7685 Unlock the internal variable {name}. Does the
7686 opposite of |:lockvar|.
7687
7688
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007689:if {expr1} *:if* *:endif* *:en* *E171* *E579* *E580*
7690:en[dif] Execute the commands until the next matching ":else"
7691 or ":endif" if {expr1} evaluates to non-zero.
7692
7693 From Vim version 4.5 until 5.0, every Ex command in
7694 between the ":if" and ":endif" is ignored. These two
7695 commands were just to allow for future expansions in a
Bram Moolenaar85084ef2016-01-17 22:26:33 +01007696 backward compatible way. Nesting was allowed. Note
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007697 that any ":else" or ":elseif" was ignored, the "else"
7698 part was not executed either.
7699
7700 You can use this to remain compatible with older
7701 versions: >
7702 :if version >= 500
7703 : version-5-specific-commands
7704 :endif
7705< The commands still need to be parsed to find the
7706 "endif". Sometimes an older Vim has a problem with a
7707 new command. For example, ":silent" is recognized as
7708 a ":substitute" command. In that case ":execute" can
7709 avoid problems: >
7710 :if version >= 600
7711 : execute "silent 1,$delete"
7712 :endif
7713<
7714 NOTE: The ":append" and ":insert" commands don't work
7715 properly in between ":if" and ":endif".
7716
7717 *:else* *:el* *E581* *E583*
7718:el[se] Execute the commands until the next matching ":else"
7719 or ":endif" if they previously were not being
7720 executed.
7721
7722 *:elseif* *:elsei* *E582* *E584*
7723:elsei[f] {expr1} Short for ":else" ":if", with the addition that there
7724 is no extra ":endif".
7725
7726:wh[ile] {expr1} *:while* *:endwhile* *:wh* *:endw*
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +00007727 *E170* *E585* *E588* *E733*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007728:endw[hile] Repeat the commands between ":while" and ":endwhile",
7729 as long as {expr1} evaluates to non-zero.
7730 When an error is detected from a command inside the
7731 loop, execution continues after the "endwhile".
Bram Moolenaar12805862005-01-05 22:16:17 +00007732 Example: >
7733 :let lnum = 1
7734 :while lnum <= line("$")
7735 :call FixLine(lnum)
7736 :let lnum = lnum + 1
7737 :endwhile
7738<
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007739 NOTE: The ":append" and ":insert" commands don't work
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +00007740 properly inside a ":while" and ":for" loop.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007741
Bram Moolenaar3a3a7232005-01-17 22:16:15 +00007742:for {var} in {list} *:for* *E690* *E732*
Bram Moolenaar12805862005-01-05 22:16:17 +00007743:endfo[r] *:endfo* *:endfor*
7744 Repeat the commands between ":for" and ":endfor" for
Bram Moolenaar3a7c85b2005-02-05 21:39:53 +00007745 each item in {list}. Variable {var} is set to the
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +00007746 value of each item.
7747 When an error is detected for a command inside the
Bram Moolenaar12805862005-01-05 22:16:17 +00007748 loop, execution continues after the "endfor".
Bram Moolenaar572cb562005-08-05 21:35:02 +00007749 Changing {list} inside the loop affects what items are
7750 used. Make a copy if this is unwanted: >
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +00007751 :for item in copy(mylist)
7752< When not making a copy, Vim stores a reference to the
7753 next item in the list, before executing the commands
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00007754 with the current item. Thus the current item can be
Bram Moolenaarde8866b2005-01-06 23:24:37 +00007755 removed without effect. Removing any later item means
7756 it will not be found. Thus the following example
7757 works (an inefficient way to make a list empty): >
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01007758 for item in mylist
7759 call remove(mylist, 0)
7760 endfor
Bram Moolenaar9588a0f2005-01-08 21:45:39 +00007761< Note that reordering the list (e.g., with sort() or
7762 reverse()) may have unexpected effects.
7763 Note that the type of each list item should be
Bram Moolenaar12805862005-01-05 22:16:17 +00007764 identical to avoid errors for the type of {var}
7765 changing. Unlet the variable at the end of the loop
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01007766 to allow multiple item types: >
7767 for item in ["foo", ["bar"]]
7768 echo item
7769 unlet item " E706 without this
7770 endfor
Bram Moolenaar12805862005-01-05 22:16:17 +00007771
Bram Moolenaar12805862005-01-05 22:16:17 +00007772:for [{var1}, {var2}, ...] in {listlist}
7773:endfo[r]
7774 Like ":for" above, but each item in {listlist} must be
7775 a list, of which each item is assigned to {var1},
7776 {var2}, etc. Example: >
7777 :for [lnum, col] in [[1, 3], [2, 5], [3, 8]]
7778 :echo getline(lnum)[col]
7779 :endfor
7780<
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007781 *:continue* *:con* *E586*
Bram Moolenaar12805862005-01-05 22:16:17 +00007782:con[tinue] When used inside a ":while" or ":for" loop, jumps back
7783 to the start of the loop.
7784 If it is used after a |:try| inside the loop but
7785 before the matching |:finally| (if present), the
7786 commands following the ":finally" up to the matching
7787 |:endtry| are executed first. This process applies to
7788 all nested ":try"s inside the loop. The outermost
7789 ":endtry" then jumps back to the start of the loop.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007790
7791 *:break* *:brea* *E587*
Bram Moolenaar12805862005-01-05 22:16:17 +00007792:brea[k] When used inside a ":while" or ":for" loop, skips to
7793 the command after the matching ":endwhile" or
7794 ":endfor".
7795 If it is used after a |:try| inside the loop but
7796 before the matching |:finally| (if present), the
7797 commands following the ":finally" up to the matching
7798 |:endtry| are executed first. This process applies to
7799 all nested ":try"s inside the loop. The outermost
7800 ":endtry" then jumps to the command after the loop.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007801
7802:try *:try* *:endt* *:endtry* *E600* *E601* *E602*
7803:endt[ry] Change the error handling for the commands between
7804 ":try" and ":endtry" including everything being
7805 executed across ":source" commands, function calls,
7806 or autocommand invocations.
7807
7808 When an error or interrupt is detected and there is
7809 a |:finally| command following, execution continues
7810 after the ":finally". Otherwise, or when the
7811 ":endtry" is reached thereafter, the next
7812 (dynamically) surrounding ":try" is checked for
7813 a corresponding ":finally" etc. Then the script
7814 processing is terminated. (Whether a function
7815 definition has an "abort" argument does not matter.)
7816 Example: >
7817 :try | edit too much | finally | echo "cleanup" | endtry
7818 :echo "impossible" " not reached, script terminated above
7819<
7820 Moreover, an error or interrupt (dynamically) inside
7821 ":try" and ":endtry" is converted to an exception. It
7822 can be caught as if it were thrown by a |:throw|
7823 command (see |:catch|). In this case, the script
7824 processing is not terminated.
7825
7826 The value "Vim:Interrupt" is used for an interrupt
7827 exception. An error in a Vim command is converted
7828 to a value of the form "Vim({command}):{errmsg}",
7829 other errors are converted to a value of the form
7830 "Vim:{errmsg}". {command} is the full command name,
7831 and {errmsg} is the message that is displayed if the
7832 error exception is not caught, always beginning with
7833 the error number.
7834 Examples: >
7835 :try | sleep 100 | catch /^Vim:Interrupt$/ | endtry
7836 :try | edit | catch /^Vim(edit):E\d\+/ | echo "error" | endtry
7837<
7838 *:cat* *:catch* *E603* *E604* *E605*
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01007839:cat[ch] /{pattern}/ The following commands until the next |:catch|,
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007840 |:finally|, or |:endtry| that belongs to the same
7841 |:try| as the ":catch" are executed when an exception
7842 matching {pattern} is being thrown and has not yet
7843 been caught by a previous ":catch". Otherwise, these
7844 commands are skipped.
7845 When {pattern} is omitted all errors are caught.
7846 Examples: >
7847 :catch /^Vim:Interrupt$/ " catch interrupts (CTRL-C)
7848 :catch /^Vim\%((\a\+)\)\=:E/ " catch all Vim errors
7849 :catch /^Vim\%((\a\+)\)\=:/ " catch errors and interrupts
7850 :catch /^Vim(write):/ " catch all errors in :write
7851 :catch /^Vim\%((\a\+)\)\=:E123/ " catch error E123
7852 :catch /my-exception/ " catch user exception
7853 :catch /.*/ " catch everything
7854 :catch " same as /.*/
7855<
7856 Another character can be used instead of / around the
7857 {pattern}, so long as it does not have a special
7858 meaning (e.g., '|' or '"') and doesn't occur inside
7859 {pattern}.
Bram Moolenaar7e38ea22014-04-05 22:55:53 +02007860 Information about the exception is available in
7861 |v:exception|. Also see |throw-variables|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007862 NOTE: It is not reliable to ":catch" the TEXT of
7863 an error message because it may vary in different
7864 locales.
7865
7866 *:fina* *:finally* *E606* *E607*
7867:fina[lly] The following commands until the matching |:endtry|
7868 are executed whenever the part between the matching
7869 |:try| and the ":finally" is left: either by falling
7870 through to the ":finally" or by a |:continue|,
7871 |:break|, |:finish|, or |:return|, or by an error or
7872 interrupt or exception (see |:throw|).
7873
7874 *:th* *:throw* *E608*
7875:th[row] {expr1} The {expr1} is evaluated and thrown as an exception.
7876 If the ":throw" is used after a |:try| but before the
7877 first corresponding |:catch|, commands are skipped
7878 until the first ":catch" matching {expr1} is reached.
7879 If there is no such ":catch" or if the ":throw" is
7880 used after a ":catch" but before the |:finally|, the
7881 commands following the ":finally" (if present) up to
7882 the matching |:endtry| are executed. If the ":throw"
7883 is after the ":finally", commands up to the ":endtry"
7884 are skipped. At the ":endtry", this process applies
7885 again for the next dynamically surrounding ":try"
7886 (which may be found in a calling function or sourcing
7887 script), until a matching ":catch" has been found.
7888 If the exception is not caught, the command processing
7889 is terminated.
7890 Example: >
7891 :try | throw "oops" | catch /^oo/ | echo "caught" | endtry
Bram Moolenaar662db672011-03-22 14:05:35 +01007892< Note that "catch" may need to be on a separate line
7893 for when an error causes the parsing to skip the whole
7894 line and not see the "|" that separates the commands.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007895
7896 *:ec* *:echo*
7897:ec[ho] {expr1} .. Echoes each {expr1}, with a space in between. The
7898 first {expr1} starts on a new line.
7899 Also see |:comment|.
7900 Use "\n" to start a new line. Use "\r" to move the
7901 cursor to the first column.
7902 Uses the highlighting set by the |:echohl| command.
7903 Cannot be followed by a comment.
7904 Example: >
7905 :echo "the value of 'shell' is" &shell
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00007906< *:echo-redraw*
7907 A later redraw may make the message disappear again.
7908 And since Vim mostly postpones redrawing until it's
7909 finished with a sequence of commands this happens
7910 quite often. To avoid that a command from before the
7911 ":echo" causes a redraw afterwards (redraws are often
7912 postponed until you type something), force a redraw
7913 with the |:redraw| command. Example: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007914 :new | redraw | echo "there is a new window"
7915<
7916 *:echon*
7917:echon {expr1} .. Echoes each {expr1}, without anything added. Also see
7918 |:comment|.
7919 Uses the highlighting set by the |:echohl| command.
7920 Cannot be followed by a comment.
7921 Example: >
7922 :echon "the value of 'shell' is " &shell
7923<
7924 Note the difference between using ":echo", which is a
7925 Vim command, and ":!echo", which is an external shell
7926 command: >
7927 :!echo % --> filename
7928< The arguments of ":!" are expanded, see |:_%|. >
7929 :!echo "%" --> filename or "filename"
7930< Like the previous example. Whether you see the double
7931 quotes or not depends on your 'shell'. >
7932 :echo % --> nothing
7933< The '%' is an illegal character in an expression. >
7934 :echo "%" --> %
7935< This just echoes the '%' character. >
7936 :echo expand("%") --> filename
7937< This calls the expand() function to expand the '%'.
7938
7939 *:echoh* *:echohl*
7940:echoh[l] {name} Use the highlight group {name} for the following
7941 |:echo|, |:echon| and |:echomsg| commands. Also used
7942 for the |input()| prompt. Example: >
7943 :echohl WarningMsg | echo "Don't panic!" | echohl None
7944< Don't forget to set the group back to "None",
7945 otherwise all following echo's will be highlighted.
7946
7947 *:echom* *:echomsg*
7948:echom[sg] {expr1} .. Echo the expression(s) as a true message, saving the
7949 message in the |message-history|.
7950 Spaces are placed between the arguments as with the
7951 |:echo| command. But unprintable characters are
7952 displayed, not interpreted.
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00007953 The parsing works slightly different from |:echo|,
7954 more like |:execute|. All the expressions are first
7955 evaluated and concatenated before echoing anything.
7956 The expressions must evaluate to a Number or String, a
7957 Dictionary or List causes an error.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007958 Uses the highlighting set by the |:echohl| command.
7959 Example: >
7960 :echomsg "It's a Zizzer Zazzer Zuzz, as you can plainly see."
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00007961< See |:echo-redraw| to avoid the message disappearing
7962 when the screen is redrawn.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007963 *:echoe* *:echoerr*
7964:echoe[rr] {expr1} .. Echo the expression(s) as an error message, saving the
7965 message in the |message-history|. When used in a
7966 script or function the line number will be added.
7967 Spaces are placed between the arguments as with the
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00007968 :echo command. When used inside a try conditional,
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007969 the message is raised as an error exception instead
7970 (see |try-echoerr|).
7971 Example: >
7972 :echoerr "This script just failed!"
7973< If you just want a highlighted message use |:echohl|.
7974 And to get a beep: >
7975 :exe "normal \<Esc>"
7976<
7977 *:exe* *:execute*
7978:exe[cute] {expr1} .. Executes the string that results from the evaluation
Bram Moolenaar00a927d2010-05-14 23:24:24 +02007979 of {expr1} as an Ex command.
7980 Multiple arguments are concatenated, with a space in
7981 between. To avoid the extra space use the "."
7982 operator to concatenate strings into one argument.
7983 {expr1} is used as the processed command, command line
7984 editing keys are not recognized.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007985 Cannot be followed by a comment.
7986 Examples: >
Bram Moolenaar00a927d2010-05-14 23:24:24 +02007987 :execute "buffer" nextbuf
7988 :execute "normal" count . "w"
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00007989<
7990 ":execute" can be used to append a command to commands
7991 that don't accept a '|'. Example: >
7992 :execute '!ls' | echo "theend"
7993
7994< ":execute" is also a nice way to avoid having to type
7995 control characters in a Vim script for a ":normal"
7996 command: >
7997 :execute "normal ixxx\<Esc>"
7998< This has an <Esc> character, see |expr-string|.
7999
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00008000 Be careful to correctly escape special characters in
8001 file names. The |fnameescape()| function can be used
Bram Moolenaar05bb9532008-07-04 09:44:11 +00008002 for Vim commands, |shellescape()| for |:!| commands.
8003 Examples: >
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00008004 :execute "e " . fnameescape(filename)
Bram Moolenaar251835e2014-02-24 02:51:51 +01008005 :execute "!ls " . shellescape(filename, 1)
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00008006<
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00008007 Note: The executed string may be any command-line, but
Bram Moolenaar76f3b1a2014-03-27 22:30:07 +01008008 starting or ending "if", "while" and "for" does not
8009 always work, because when commands are skipped the
8010 ":execute" is not evaluated and Vim loses track of
8011 where blocks start and end. Also "break" and
8012 "continue" should not be inside ":execute".
8013 This example does not work, because the ":execute" is
8014 not evaluated and Vim does not see the "while", and
8015 gives an error for finding an ":endwhile": >
8016 :if 0
8017 : execute 'while i > 5'
8018 : echo "test"
8019 : endwhile
8020 :endif
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00008021<
8022 It is allowed to have a "while" or "if" command
8023 completely in the executed string: >
8024 :execute 'while i < 5 | echo i | let i = i + 1 | endwhile'
8025<
8026
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01008027 *:exe-comment*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00008028 ":execute", ":echo" and ":echon" cannot be followed by
8029 a comment directly, because they see the '"' as the
8030 start of a string. But, you can use '|' followed by a
8031 comment. Example: >
8032 :echo "foo" | "this is a comment
8033
8034==============================================================================
80358. Exception handling *exception-handling*
8036
8037The Vim script language comprises an exception handling feature. This section
8038explains how it can be used in a Vim script.
8039
8040Exceptions may be raised by Vim on an error or on interrupt, see
8041|catch-errors| and |catch-interrupt|. You can also explicitly throw an
8042exception by using the ":throw" command, see |throw-catch|.
8043
8044
8045TRY CONDITIONALS *try-conditionals*
8046
8047Exceptions can be caught or can cause cleanup code to be executed. You can
8048use a try conditional to specify catch clauses (that catch exceptions) and/or
8049a finally clause (to be executed for cleanup).
8050 A try conditional begins with a |:try| command and ends at the matching
8051|:endtry| command. In between, you can use a |:catch| command to start
8052a catch clause, or a |:finally| command to start a finally clause. There may
8053be none or multiple catch clauses, but there is at most one finally clause,
8054which must not be followed by any catch clauses. The lines before the catch
8055clauses and the finally clause is called a try block. >
8056
8057 :try
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00008058 : ...
8059 : ... TRY BLOCK
8060 : ...
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00008061 :catch /{pattern}/
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00008062 : ...
8063 : ... CATCH CLAUSE
8064 : ...
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00008065 :catch /{pattern}/
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00008066 : ...
8067 : ... CATCH CLAUSE
8068 : ...
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00008069 :finally
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00008070 : ...
8071 : ... FINALLY CLAUSE
8072 : ...
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00008073 :endtry
8074
8075The try conditional allows to watch code for exceptions and to take the
8076appropriate actions. Exceptions from the try block may be caught. Exceptions
8077from the try block and also the catch clauses may cause cleanup actions.
8078 When no exception is thrown during execution of the try block, the control
8079is transferred to the finally clause, if present. After its execution, the
8080script continues with the line following the ":endtry".
8081 When an exception occurs during execution of the try block, the remaining
8082lines in the try block are skipped. The exception is matched against the
8083patterns specified as arguments to the ":catch" commands. The catch clause
8084after the first matching ":catch" is taken, other catch clauses are not
8085executed. The catch clause ends when the next ":catch", ":finally", or
8086":endtry" command is reached - whatever is first. Then, the finally clause
8087(if present) is executed. When the ":endtry" is reached, the script execution
8088continues in the following line as usual.
8089 When an exception that does not match any of the patterns specified by the
8090":catch" commands is thrown in the try block, the exception is not caught by
8091that try conditional and none of the catch clauses is executed. Only the
8092finally clause, if present, is taken. The exception pends during execution of
8093the finally clause. It is resumed at the ":endtry", so that commands after
8094the ":endtry" are not executed and the exception might be caught elsewhere,
8095see |try-nesting|.
8096 When during execution of a catch clause another exception is thrown, the
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00008097remaining lines in that catch clause are not executed. The new exception is
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00008098not matched against the patterns in any of the ":catch" commands of the same
8099try conditional and none of its catch clauses is taken. If there is, however,
8100a finally clause, it is executed, and the exception pends during its
8101execution. The commands following the ":endtry" are not executed. The new
8102exception might, however, be caught elsewhere, see |try-nesting|.
8103 When during execution of the finally clause (if present) an exception is
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00008104thrown, the remaining lines in the finally clause are skipped. If the finally
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00008105clause has been taken because of an exception from the try block or one of the
8106catch clauses, the original (pending) exception is discarded. The commands
8107following the ":endtry" are not executed, and the exception from the finally
8108clause is propagated and can be caught elsewhere, see |try-nesting|.
8109
8110The finally clause is also executed, when a ":break" or ":continue" for
8111a ":while" loop enclosing the complete try conditional is executed from the
8112try block or a catch clause. Or when a ":return" or ":finish" is executed
8113from the try block or a catch clause of a try conditional in a function or
8114sourced script, respectively. The ":break", ":continue", ":return", or
8115":finish" pends during execution of the finally clause and is resumed when the
8116":endtry" is reached. It is, however, discarded when an exception is thrown
8117from the finally clause.
8118 When a ":break" or ":continue" for a ":while" loop enclosing the complete
8119try conditional or when a ":return" or ":finish" is encountered in the finally
8120clause, the rest of the finally clause is skipped, and the ":break",
8121":continue", ":return" or ":finish" is executed as usual. If the finally
8122clause has been taken because of an exception or an earlier ":break",
8123":continue", ":return", or ":finish" from the try block or a catch clause,
8124this pending exception or command is discarded.
8125
8126For examples see |throw-catch| and |try-finally|.
8127
8128
8129NESTING OF TRY CONDITIONALS *try-nesting*
8130
8131Try conditionals can be nested arbitrarily. That is, a complete try
8132conditional can be put into the try block, a catch clause, or the finally
8133clause of another try conditional. If the inner try conditional does not
8134catch an exception thrown in its try block or throws a new exception from one
8135of its catch clauses or its finally clause, the outer try conditional is
8136checked according to the rules above. If the inner try conditional is in the
8137try block of the outer try conditional, its catch clauses are checked, but
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00008138otherwise only the finally clause is executed. It does not matter for
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00008139nesting, whether the inner try conditional is directly contained in the outer
8140one, or whether the outer one sources a script or calls a function containing
8141the inner try conditional.
8142
8143When none of the active try conditionals catches an exception, just their
8144finally clauses are executed. Thereafter, the script processing terminates.
8145An error message is displayed in case of an uncaught exception explicitly
8146thrown by a ":throw" command. For uncaught error and interrupt exceptions
8147implicitly raised by Vim, the error message(s) or interrupt message are shown
8148as usual.
8149
8150For examples see |throw-catch|.
8151
8152
8153EXAMINING EXCEPTION HANDLING CODE *except-examine*
8154
8155Exception handling code can get tricky. If you are in doubt what happens, set
8156'verbose' to 13 or use the ":13verbose" command modifier when sourcing your
8157script file. Then you see when an exception is thrown, discarded, caught, or
8158finished. When using a verbosity level of at least 14, things pending in
8159a finally clause are also shown. This information is also given in debug mode
8160(see |debug-scripts|).
8161
8162
8163THROWING AND CATCHING EXCEPTIONS *throw-catch*
8164
8165You can throw any number or string as an exception. Use the |:throw| command
8166and pass the value to be thrown as argument: >
8167 :throw 4711
8168 :throw "string"
8169< *throw-expression*
8170You can also specify an expression argument. The expression is then evaluated
8171first, and the result is thrown: >
8172 :throw 4705 + strlen("string")
8173 :throw strpart("strings", 0, 6)
8174
8175An exception might be thrown during evaluation of the argument of the ":throw"
8176command. Unless it is caught there, the expression evaluation is abandoned.
8177The ":throw" command then does not throw a new exception.
8178 Example: >
8179
8180 :function! Foo(arg)
8181 : try
8182 : throw a:arg
8183 : catch /foo/
8184 : endtry
8185 : return 1
8186 :endfunction
8187 :
8188 :function! Bar()
8189 : echo "in Bar"
8190 : return 4710
8191 :endfunction
8192 :
8193 :throw Foo("arrgh") + Bar()
8194
8195This throws "arrgh", and "in Bar" is not displayed since Bar() is not
8196executed. >
8197 :throw Foo("foo") + Bar()
8198however displays "in Bar" and throws 4711.
8199
8200Any other command that takes an expression as argument might also be
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00008201abandoned by an (uncaught) exception during the expression evaluation. The
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00008202exception is then propagated to the caller of the command.
8203 Example: >
8204
8205 :if Foo("arrgh")
8206 : echo "then"
8207 :else
8208 : echo "else"
8209 :endif
8210
8211Here neither of "then" or "else" is displayed.
8212
8213 *catch-order*
8214Exceptions can be caught by a try conditional with one or more |:catch|
8215commands, see |try-conditionals|. The values to be caught by each ":catch"
8216command can be specified as a pattern argument. The subsequent catch clause
8217gets executed when a matching exception is caught.
8218 Example: >
8219
8220 :function! Foo(value)
8221 : try
8222 : throw a:value
8223 : catch /^\d\+$/
8224 : echo "Number thrown"
8225 : catch /.*/
8226 : echo "String thrown"
8227 : endtry
8228 :endfunction
8229 :
8230 :call Foo(0x1267)
8231 :call Foo('string')
8232
8233The first call to Foo() displays "Number thrown", the second "String thrown".
8234An exception is matched against the ":catch" commands in the order they are
8235specified. Only the first match counts. So you should place the more
8236specific ":catch" first. The following order does not make sense: >
8237
8238 : catch /.*/
8239 : echo "String thrown"
8240 : catch /^\d\+$/
8241 : echo "Number thrown"
8242
8243The first ":catch" here matches always, so that the second catch clause is
8244never taken.
8245
8246 *throw-variables*
8247If you catch an exception by a general pattern, you may access the exact value
8248in the variable |v:exception|: >
8249
8250 : catch /^\d\+$/
8251 : echo "Number thrown. Value is" v:exception
8252
8253You may also be interested where an exception was thrown. This is stored in
8254|v:throwpoint|. Note that "v:exception" and "v:throwpoint" are valid for the
8255exception most recently caught as long it is not finished.
8256 Example: >
8257
8258 :function! Caught()
8259 : if v:exception != ""
8260 : echo 'Caught "' . v:exception . '" in ' . v:throwpoint
8261 : else
8262 : echo 'Nothing caught'
8263 : endif
8264 :endfunction
8265 :
8266 :function! Foo()
8267 : try
8268 : try
8269 : try
8270 : throw 4711
8271 : finally
8272 : call Caught()
8273 : endtry
8274 : catch /.*/
8275 : call Caught()
8276 : throw "oops"
8277 : endtry
8278 : catch /.*/
8279 : call Caught()
8280 : finally
8281 : call Caught()
8282 : endtry
8283 :endfunction
8284 :
8285 :call Foo()
8286
8287This displays >
8288
8289 Nothing caught
8290 Caught "4711" in function Foo, line 4
8291 Caught "oops" in function Foo, line 10
8292 Nothing caught
8293
8294A practical example: The following command ":LineNumber" displays the line
8295number in the script or function where it has been used: >
8296
8297 :function! LineNumber()
8298 : return substitute(v:throwpoint, '.*\D\(\d\+\).*', '\1', "")
8299 :endfunction
8300 :command! LineNumber try | throw "" | catch | echo LineNumber() | endtry
8301<
8302 *try-nested*
8303An exception that is not caught by a try conditional can be caught by
8304a surrounding try conditional: >
8305
8306 :try
8307 : try
8308 : throw "foo"
8309 : catch /foobar/
8310 : echo "foobar"
8311 : finally
8312 : echo "inner finally"
8313 : endtry
8314 :catch /foo/
8315 : echo "foo"
8316 :endtry
8317
8318The inner try conditional does not catch the exception, just its finally
8319clause is executed. The exception is then caught by the outer try
8320conditional. The example displays "inner finally" and then "foo".
8321
8322 *throw-from-catch*
8323You can catch an exception and throw a new one to be caught elsewhere from the
8324catch clause: >
8325
8326 :function! Foo()
8327 : throw "foo"
8328 :endfunction
8329 :
8330 :function! Bar()
8331 : try
8332 : call Foo()
8333 : catch /foo/
8334 : echo "Caught foo, throw bar"
8335 : throw "bar"
8336 : endtry
8337 :endfunction
8338 :
8339 :try
8340 : call Bar()
8341 :catch /.*/
8342 : echo "Caught" v:exception
8343 :endtry
8344
8345This displays "Caught foo, throw bar" and then "Caught bar".
8346
8347 *rethrow*
8348There is no real rethrow in the Vim script language, but you may throw
8349"v:exception" instead: >
8350
8351 :function! Bar()
8352 : try
8353 : call Foo()
8354 : catch /.*/
8355 : echo "Rethrow" v:exception
8356 : throw v:exception
8357 : endtry
8358 :endfunction
8359< *try-echoerr*
8360Note that this method cannot be used to "rethrow" Vim error or interrupt
8361exceptions, because it is not possible to fake Vim internal exceptions.
8362Trying so causes an error exception. You should throw your own exception
8363denoting the situation. If you want to cause a Vim error exception containing
8364the original error exception value, you can use the |:echoerr| command: >
8365
8366 :try
8367 : try
8368 : asdf
8369 : catch /.*/
8370 : echoerr v:exception
8371 : endtry
8372 :catch /.*/
8373 : echo v:exception
8374 :endtry
8375
8376This code displays
8377
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00008378 Vim(echoerr):Vim:E492: Not an editor command: asdf ~
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00008379
8380
8381CLEANUP CODE *try-finally*
8382
8383Scripts often change global settings and restore them at their end. If the
8384user however interrupts the script by pressing CTRL-C, the settings remain in
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00008385an inconsistent state. The same may happen to you in the development phase of
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00008386a script when an error occurs or you explicitly throw an exception without
8387catching it. You can solve these problems by using a try conditional with
8388a finally clause for restoring the settings. Its execution is guaranteed on
8389normal control flow, on error, on an explicit ":throw", and on interrupt.
8390(Note that errors and interrupts from inside the try conditional are converted
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00008391to exceptions. When not caught, they terminate the script after the finally
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00008392clause has been executed.)
8393Example: >
8394
8395 :try
8396 : let s:saved_ts = &ts
8397 : set ts=17
8398 :
8399 : " Do the hard work here.
8400 :
8401 :finally
8402 : let &ts = s:saved_ts
8403 : unlet s:saved_ts
8404 :endtry
8405
8406This method should be used locally whenever a function or part of a script
8407changes global settings which need to be restored on failure or normal exit of
8408that function or script part.
8409
8410 *break-finally*
8411Cleanup code works also when the try block or a catch clause is left by
8412a ":continue", ":break", ":return", or ":finish".
8413 Example: >
8414
8415 :let first = 1
8416 :while 1
8417 : try
8418 : if first
8419 : echo "first"
8420 : let first = 0
8421 : continue
8422 : else
8423 : throw "second"
8424 : endif
8425 : catch /.*/
8426 : echo v:exception
8427 : break
8428 : finally
8429 : echo "cleanup"
8430 : endtry
8431 : echo "still in while"
8432 :endwhile
8433 :echo "end"
8434
8435This displays "first", "cleanup", "second", "cleanup", and "end". >
8436
8437 :function! Foo()
8438 : try
8439 : return 4711
8440 : finally
8441 : echo "cleanup\n"
8442 : endtry
8443 : echo "Foo still active"
8444 :endfunction
8445 :
8446 :echo Foo() "returned by Foo"
8447
8448This displays "cleanup" and "4711 returned by Foo". You don't need to add an
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00008449extra ":return" in the finally clause. (Above all, this would override the
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00008450return value.)
8451
8452 *except-from-finally*
8453Using either of ":continue", ":break", ":return", ":finish", or ":throw" in
8454a finally clause is possible, but not recommended since it abandons the
8455cleanup actions for the try conditional. But, of course, interrupt and error
8456exceptions might get raised from a finally clause.
8457 Example where an error in the finally clause stops an interrupt from
8458working correctly: >
8459
8460 :try
8461 : try
8462 : echo "Press CTRL-C for interrupt"
8463 : while 1
8464 : endwhile
8465 : finally
8466 : unlet novar
8467 : endtry
8468 :catch /novar/
8469 :endtry
8470 :echo "Script still running"
8471 :sleep 1
8472
8473If you need to put commands that could fail into a finally clause, you should
8474think about catching or ignoring the errors in these commands, see
8475|catch-errors| and |ignore-errors|.
8476
8477
8478CATCHING ERRORS *catch-errors*
8479
8480If you want to catch specific errors, you just have to put the code to be
8481watched in a try block and add a catch clause for the error message. The
8482presence of the try conditional causes all errors to be converted to an
8483exception. No message is displayed and |v:errmsg| is not set then. To find
8484the right pattern for the ":catch" command, you have to know how the format of
8485the error exception is.
8486 Error exceptions have the following format: >
8487
8488 Vim({cmdname}):{errmsg}
8489or >
8490 Vim:{errmsg}
8491
8492{cmdname} is the name of the command that failed; the second form is used when
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00008493the command name is not known. {errmsg} is the error message usually produced
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00008494when the error occurs outside try conditionals. It always begins with
8495a capital "E", followed by a two or three-digit error number, a colon, and
8496a space.
8497
8498Examples:
8499
8500The command >
8501 :unlet novar
8502normally produces the error message >
8503 E108: No such variable: "novar"
8504which is converted inside try conditionals to an exception >
8505 Vim(unlet):E108: No such variable: "novar"
8506
8507The command >
8508 :dwim
8509normally produces the error message >
8510 E492: Not an editor command: dwim
8511which is converted inside try conditionals to an exception >
8512 Vim:E492: Not an editor command: dwim
8513
8514You can catch all ":unlet" errors by a >
8515 :catch /^Vim(unlet):/
8516or all errors for misspelled command names by a >
8517 :catch /^Vim:E492:/
8518
8519Some error messages may be produced by different commands: >
8520 :function nofunc
8521and >
8522 :delfunction nofunc
8523both produce the error message >
8524 E128: Function name must start with a capital: nofunc
8525which is converted inside try conditionals to an exception >
8526 Vim(function):E128: Function name must start with a capital: nofunc
8527or >
8528 Vim(delfunction):E128: Function name must start with a capital: nofunc
8529respectively. You can catch the error by its number independently on the
8530command that caused it if you use the following pattern: >
8531 :catch /^Vim(\a\+):E128:/
8532
8533Some commands like >
8534 :let x = novar
8535produce multiple error messages, here: >
8536 E121: Undefined variable: novar
8537 E15: Invalid expression: novar
8538Only the first is used for the exception value, since it is the most specific
8539one (see |except-several-errors|). So you can catch it by >
8540 :catch /^Vim(\a\+):E121:/
8541
8542You can catch all errors related to the name "nofunc" by >
8543 :catch /\<nofunc\>/
8544
8545You can catch all Vim errors in the ":write" and ":read" commands by >
8546 :catch /^Vim(\(write\|read\)):E\d\+:/
8547
8548You can catch all Vim errors by the pattern >
8549 :catch /^Vim\((\a\+)\)\=:E\d\+:/
8550<
8551 *catch-text*
8552NOTE: You should never catch the error message text itself: >
8553 :catch /No such variable/
Bram Moolenaar2b8388b2015-02-28 13:11:45 +01008554only works in the English locale, but not when the user has selected
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00008555a different language by the |:language| command. It is however helpful to
8556cite the message text in a comment: >
8557 :catch /^Vim(\a\+):E108:/ " No such variable
8558
8559
8560IGNORING ERRORS *ignore-errors*
8561
8562You can ignore errors in a specific Vim command by catching them locally: >
8563
8564 :try
8565 : write
8566 :catch
8567 :endtry
8568
8569But you are strongly recommended NOT to use this simple form, since it could
8570catch more than you want. With the ":write" command, some autocommands could
8571be executed and cause errors not related to writing, for instance: >
8572
8573 :au BufWritePre * unlet novar
8574
8575There could even be such errors you are not responsible for as a script
8576writer: a user of your script might have defined such autocommands. You would
8577then hide the error from the user.
8578 It is much better to use >
8579
8580 :try
8581 : write
8582 :catch /^Vim(write):/
8583 :endtry
8584
8585which only catches real write errors. So catch only what you'd like to ignore
8586intentionally.
8587
8588For a single command that does not cause execution of autocommands, you could
8589even suppress the conversion of errors to exceptions by the ":silent!"
8590command: >
8591 :silent! nunmap k
8592This works also when a try conditional is active.
8593
8594
8595CATCHING INTERRUPTS *catch-interrupt*
8596
8597When there are active try conditionals, an interrupt (CTRL-C) is converted to
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00008598the exception "Vim:Interrupt". You can catch it like every exception. The
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00008599script is not terminated, then.
8600 Example: >
8601
8602 :function! TASK1()
8603 : sleep 10
8604 :endfunction
8605
8606 :function! TASK2()
8607 : sleep 20
8608 :endfunction
8609
8610 :while 1
8611 : let command = input("Type a command: ")
8612 : try
8613 : if command == ""
8614 : continue
8615 : elseif command == "END"
8616 : break
8617 : elseif command == "TASK1"
8618 : call TASK1()
8619 : elseif command == "TASK2"
8620 : call TASK2()
8621 : else
8622 : echo "\nIllegal command:" command
8623 : continue
8624 : endif
8625 : catch /^Vim:Interrupt$/
8626 : echo "\nCommand interrupted"
8627 : " Caught the interrupt. Continue with next prompt.
8628 : endtry
8629 :endwhile
8630
8631You can interrupt a task here by pressing CTRL-C; the script then asks for
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00008632a new command. If you press CTRL-C at the prompt, the script is terminated.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00008633
8634For testing what happens when CTRL-C would be pressed on a specific line in
8635your script, use the debug mode and execute the |>quit| or |>interrupt|
8636command on that line. See |debug-scripts|.
8637
8638
8639CATCHING ALL *catch-all*
8640
8641The commands >
8642
8643 :catch /.*/
8644 :catch //
8645 :catch
8646
8647catch everything, error exceptions, interrupt exceptions and exceptions
8648explicitly thrown by the |:throw| command. This is useful at the top level of
8649a script in order to catch unexpected things.
8650 Example: >
8651
8652 :try
8653 :
8654 : " do the hard work here
8655 :
8656 :catch /MyException/
8657 :
8658 : " handle known problem
8659 :
8660 :catch /^Vim:Interrupt$/
8661 : echo "Script interrupted"
8662 :catch /.*/
8663 : echo "Internal error (" . v:exception . ")"
8664 : echo " - occurred at " . v:throwpoint
8665 :endtry
8666 :" end of script
8667
8668Note: Catching all might catch more things than you want. Thus, you are
8669strongly encouraged to catch only for problems that you can really handle by
8670specifying a pattern argument to the ":catch".
8671 Example: Catching all could make it nearly impossible to interrupt a script
8672by pressing CTRL-C: >
8673
8674 :while 1
8675 : try
8676 : sleep 1
8677 : catch
8678 : endtry
8679 :endwhile
8680
8681
8682EXCEPTIONS AND AUTOCOMMANDS *except-autocmd*
8683
8684Exceptions may be used during execution of autocommands. Example: >
8685
8686 :autocmd User x try
8687 :autocmd User x throw "Oops!"
8688 :autocmd User x catch
8689 :autocmd User x echo v:exception
8690 :autocmd User x endtry
8691 :autocmd User x throw "Arrgh!"
8692 :autocmd User x echo "Should not be displayed"
8693 :
8694 :try
8695 : doautocmd User x
8696 :catch
8697 : echo v:exception
8698 :endtry
8699
8700This displays "Oops!" and "Arrgh!".
8701
8702 *except-autocmd-Pre*
8703For some commands, autocommands get executed before the main action of the
8704command takes place. If an exception is thrown and not caught in the sequence
8705of autocommands, the sequence and the command that caused its execution are
8706abandoned and the exception is propagated to the caller of the command.
8707 Example: >
8708
8709 :autocmd BufWritePre * throw "FAIL"
8710 :autocmd BufWritePre * echo "Should not be displayed"
8711 :
8712 :try
8713 : write
8714 :catch
8715 : echo "Caught:" v:exception "from" v:throwpoint
8716 :endtry
8717
8718Here, the ":write" command does not write the file currently being edited (as
8719you can see by checking 'modified'), since the exception from the BufWritePre
8720autocommand abandons the ":write". The exception is then caught and the
8721script displays: >
8722
8723 Caught: FAIL from BufWrite Auto commands for "*"
8724<
8725 *except-autocmd-Post*
8726For some commands, autocommands get executed after the main action of the
8727command has taken place. If this main action fails and the command is inside
8728an active try conditional, the autocommands are skipped and an error exception
8729is thrown that can be caught by the caller of the command.
8730 Example: >
8731
8732 :autocmd BufWritePost * echo "File successfully written!"
8733 :
8734 :try
8735 : write /i/m/p/o/s/s/i/b/l/e
8736 :catch
8737 : echo v:exception
8738 :endtry
8739
8740This just displays: >
8741
8742 Vim(write):E212: Can't open file for writing (/i/m/p/o/s/s/i/b/l/e)
8743
8744If you really need to execute the autocommands even when the main action
8745fails, trigger the event from the catch clause.
8746 Example: >
8747
8748 :autocmd BufWritePre * set noreadonly
8749 :autocmd BufWritePost * set readonly
8750 :
8751 :try
8752 : write /i/m/p/o/s/s/i/b/l/e
8753 :catch
8754 : doautocmd BufWritePost /i/m/p/o/s/s/i/b/l/e
8755 :endtry
8756<
8757You can also use ":silent!": >
8758
8759 :let x = "ok"
8760 :let v:errmsg = ""
8761 :autocmd BufWritePost * if v:errmsg != ""
8762 :autocmd BufWritePost * let x = "after fail"
8763 :autocmd BufWritePost * endif
8764 :try
8765 : silent! write /i/m/p/o/s/s/i/b/l/e
8766 :catch
8767 :endtry
8768 :echo x
8769
8770This displays "after fail".
8771
8772If the main action of the command does not fail, exceptions from the
8773autocommands will be catchable by the caller of the command: >
8774
8775 :autocmd BufWritePost * throw ":-("
8776 :autocmd BufWritePost * echo "Should not be displayed"
8777 :
8778 :try
8779 : write
8780 :catch
8781 : echo v:exception
8782 :endtry
8783<
8784 *except-autocmd-Cmd*
8785For some commands, the normal action can be replaced by a sequence of
8786autocommands. Exceptions from that sequence will be catchable by the caller
8787of the command.
8788 Example: For the ":write" command, the caller cannot know whether the file
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00008789had actually been written when the exception occurred. You need to tell it in
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00008790some way. >
8791
8792 :if !exists("cnt")
8793 : let cnt = 0
8794 :
8795 : autocmd BufWriteCmd * if &modified
8796 : autocmd BufWriteCmd * let cnt = cnt + 1
8797 : autocmd BufWriteCmd * if cnt % 3 == 2
8798 : autocmd BufWriteCmd * throw "BufWriteCmdError"
8799 : autocmd BufWriteCmd * endif
8800 : autocmd BufWriteCmd * write | set nomodified
8801 : autocmd BufWriteCmd * if cnt % 3 == 0
8802 : autocmd BufWriteCmd * throw "BufWriteCmdError"
8803 : autocmd BufWriteCmd * endif
8804 : autocmd BufWriteCmd * echo "File successfully written!"
8805 : autocmd BufWriteCmd * endif
8806 :endif
8807 :
8808 :try
8809 : write
8810 :catch /^BufWriteCmdError$/
8811 : if &modified
8812 : echo "Error on writing (file contents not changed)"
8813 : else
8814 : echo "Error after writing"
8815 : endif
8816 :catch /^Vim(write):/
8817 : echo "Error on writing"
8818 :endtry
8819
8820When this script is sourced several times after making changes, it displays
8821first >
8822 File successfully written!
8823then >
8824 Error on writing (file contents not changed)
8825then >
8826 Error after writing
8827etc.
8828
8829 *except-autocmd-ill*
8830You cannot spread a try conditional over autocommands for different events.
8831The following code is ill-formed: >
8832
8833 :autocmd BufWritePre * try
8834 :
8835 :autocmd BufWritePost * catch
8836 :autocmd BufWritePost * echo v:exception
8837 :autocmd BufWritePost * endtry
8838 :
8839 :write
8840
8841
8842EXCEPTION HIERARCHIES AND PARAMETERIZED EXCEPTIONS *except-hier-param*
8843
8844Some programming languages allow to use hierarchies of exception classes or to
8845pass additional information with the object of an exception class. You can do
8846similar things in Vim.
8847 In order to throw an exception from a hierarchy, just throw the complete
8848class name with the components separated by a colon, for instance throw the
8849string "EXCEPT:MATHERR:OVERFLOW" for an overflow in a mathematical library.
8850 When you want to pass additional information with your exception class, add
8851it in parentheses, for instance throw the string "EXCEPT:IO:WRITEERR(myfile)"
8852for an error when writing "myfile".
8853 With the appropriate patterns in the ":catch" command, you can catch for
8854base classes or derived classes of your hierarchy. Additional information in
8855parentheses can be cut out from |v:exception| with the ":substitute" command.
8856 Example: >
8857
8858 :function! CheckRange(a, func)
8859 : if a:a < 0
8860 : throw "EXCEPT:MATHERR:RANGE(" . a:func . ")"
8861 : endif
8862 :endfunction
8863 :
8864 :function! Add(a, b)
8865 : call CheckRange(a:a, "Add")
8866 : call CheckRange(a:b, "Add")
8867 : let c = a:a + a:b
8868 : if c < 0
8869 : throw "EXCEPT:MATHERR:OVERFLOW"
8870 : endif
8871 : return c
8872 :endfunction
8873 :
8874 :function! Div(a, b)
8875 : call CheckRange(a:a, "Div")
8876 : call CheckRange(a:b, "Div")
8877 : if (a:b == 0)
8878 : throw "EXCEPT:MATHERR:ZERODIV"
8879 : endif
8880 : return a:a / a:b
8881 :endfunction
8882 :
8883 :function! Write(file)
8884 : try
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00008885 : execute "write" fnameescape(a:file)
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00008886 : catch /^Vim(write):/
8887 : throw "EXCEPT:IO(" . getcwd() . ", " . a:file . "):WRITEERR"
8888 : endtry
8889 :endfunction
8890 :
8891 :try
8892 :
8893 : " something with arithmetics and I/O
8894 :
8895 :catch /^EXCEPT:MATHERR:RANGE/
8896 : let function = substitute(v:exception, '.*(\(\a\+\)).*', '\1', "")
8897 : echo "Range error in" function
8898 :
8899 :catch /^EXCEPT:MATHERR/ " catches OVERFLOW and ZERODIV
8900 : echo "Math error"
8901 :
8902 :catch /^EXCEPT:IO/
8903 : let dir = substitute(v:exception, '.*(\(.\+\),\s*.\+).*', '\1', "")
8904 : let file = substitute(v:exception, '.*(.\+,\s*\(.\+\)).*', '\1', "")
8905 : if file !~ '^/'
8906 : let file = dir . "/" . file
8907 : endif
8908 : echo 'I/O error for "' . file . '"'
8909 :
8910 :catch /^EXCEPT/
8911 : echo "Unspecified error"
8912 :
8913 :endtry
8914
8915The exceptions raised by Vim itself (on error or when pressing CTRL-C) use
8916a flat hierarchy: they are all in the "Vim" class. You cannot throw yourself
8917exceptions with the "Vim" prefix; they are reserved for Vim.
8918 Vim error exceptions are parameterized with the name of the command that
8919failed, if known. See |catch-errors|.
8920
8921
8922PECULIARITIES
8923 *except-compat*
8924The exception handling concept requires that the command sequence causing the
8925exception is aborted immediately and control is transferred to finally clauses
8926and/or a catch clause.
8927
8928In the Vim script language there are cases where scripts and functions
8929continue after an error: in functions without the "abort" flag or in a command
8930after ":silent!", control flow goes to the following line, and outside
8931functions, control flow goes to the line following the outermost ":endwhile"
8932or ":endif". On the other hand, errors should be catchable as exceptions
8933(thus, requiring the immediate abortion).
8934
8935This problem has been solved by converting errors to exceptions and using
8936immediate abortion (if not suppressed by ":silent!") only when a try
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00008937conditional is active. This is no restriction since an (error) exception can
8938be caught only from an active try conditional. If you want an immediate
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00008939termination without catching the error, just use a try conditional without
8940catch clause. (You can cause cleanup code being executed before termination
8941by specifying a finally clause.)
8942
8943When no try conditional is active, the usual abortion and continuation
8944behavior is used instead of immediate abortion. This ensures compatibility of
8945scripts written for Vim 6.1 and earlier.
8946
8947However, when sourcing an existing script that does not use exception handling
8948commands (or when calling one of its functions) from inside an active try
8949conditional of a new script, you might change the control flow of the existing
8950script on error. You get the immediate abortion on error and can catch the
8951error in the new script. If however the sourced script suppresses error
8952messages by using the ":silent!" command (checking for errors by testing
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00008953|v:errmsg| if appropriate), its execution path is not changed. The error is
8954not converted to an exception. (See |:silent|.) So the only remaining cause
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00008955where this happens is for scripts that don't care about errors and produce
8956error messages. You probably won't want to use such code from your new
8957scripts.
8958
8959 *except-syntax-err*
8960Syntax errors in the exception handling commands are never caught by any of
8961the ":catch" commands of the try conditional they belong to. Its finally
8962clauses, however, is executed.
8963 Example: >
8964
8965 :try
8966 : try
8967 : throw 4711
8968 : catch /\(/
8969 : echo "in catch with syntax error"
8970 : catch
8971 : echo "inner catch-all"
8972 : finally
8973 : echo "inner finally"
8974 : endtry
8975 :catch
8976 : echo 'outer catch-all caught "' . v:exception . '"'
8977 : finally
8978 : echo "outer finally"
8979 :endtry
8980
8981This displays: >
8982 inner finally
8983 outer catch-all caught "Vim(catch):E54: Unmatched \("
8984 outer finally
8985The original exception is discarded and an error exception is raised, instead.
8986
8987 *except-single-line*
8988The ":try", ":catch", ":finally", and ":endtry" commands can be put on
8989a single line, but then syntax errors may make it difficult to recognize the
8990"catch" line, thus you better avoid this.
8991 Example: >
8992 :try | unlet! foo # | catch | endtry
8993raises an error exception for the trailing characters after the ":unlet!"
8994argument, but does not see the ":catch" and ":endtry" commands, so that the
8995error exception is discarded and the "E488: Trailing characters" message gets
8996displayed.
8997
8998 *except-several-errors*
8999When several errors appear in a single command, the first error message is
9000usually the most specific one and therefor converted to the error exception.
9001 Example: >
9002 echo novar
9003causes >
9004 E121: Undefined variable: novar
9005 E15: Invalid expression: novar
9006The value of the error exception inside try conditionals is: >
9007 Vim(echo):E121: Undefined variable: novar
9008< *except-syntax-error*
9009But when a syntax error is detected after a normal error in the same command,
9010the syntax error is used for the exception being thrown.
9011 Example: >
9012 unlet novar #
9013causes >
9014 E108: No such variable: "novar"
9015 E488: Trailing characters
9016The value of the error exception inside try conditionals is: >
9017 Vim(unlet):E488: Trailing characters
9018This is done because the syntax error might change the execution path in a way
9019not intended by the user. Example: >
9020 try
9021 try | unlet novar # | catch | echo v:exception | endtry
9022 catch /.*/
9023 echo "outer catch:" v:exception
9024 endtry
9025This displays "outer catch: Vim(unlet):E488: Trailing characters", and then
9026a "E600: Missing :endtry" error message is given, see |except-single-line|.
9027
9028==============================================================================
90299. Examples *eval-examples*
9030
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00009031Printing in Binary ~
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00009032>
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01009033 :" The function Nr2Bin() returns the binary string representation of a number.
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00009034 :func Nr2Bin(nr)
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00009035 : let n = a:nr
9036 : let r = ""
9037 : while n
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00009038 : let r = '01'[n % 2] . r
9039 : let n = n / 2
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00009040 : endwhile
9041 : return r
9042 :endfunc
9043
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00009044 :" The function String2Bin() converts each character in a string to a
9045 :" binary string, separated with dashes.
9046 :func String2Bin(str)
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00009047 : let out = ''
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00009048 : for ix in range(strlen(a:str))
9049 : let out = out . '-' . Nr2Bin(char2nr(a:str[ix]))
9050 : endfor
9051 : return out[1:]
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00009052 :endfunc
9053
9054Example of its use: >
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00009055 :echo Nr2Bin(32)
9056result: "100000" >
9057 :echo String2Bin("32")
9058result: "110011-110010"
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00009059
9060
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00009061Sorting lines ~
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00009062
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00009063This example sorts lines with a specific compare function. >
9064
9065 :func SortBuffer()
9066 : let lines = getline(1, '$')
9067 : call sort(lines, function("Strcmp"))
9068 : call setline(1, lines)
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00009069 :endfunction
9070
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00009071As a one-liner: >
9072 :call setline(1, sort(getline(1, '$'), function("Strcmp")))
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00009073
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00009074
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00009075scanf() replacement ~
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00009076 *sscanf*
9077There is no sscanf() function in Vim. If you need to extract parts from a
9078line, you can use matchstr() and substitute() to do it. This example shows
9079how to get the file name, line number and column number out of a line like
9080"foobar.txt, 123, 45". >
9081 :" Set up the match bit
9082 :let mx='\(\f\+\),\s*\(\d\+\),\s*\(\d\+\)'
9083 :"get the part matching the whole expression
9084 :let l = matchstr(line, mx)
9085 :"get each item out of the match
9086 :let file = substitute(l, mx, '\1', '')
9087 :let lnum = substitute(l, mx, '\2', '')
9088 :let col = substitute(l, mx, '\3', '')
9089
9090The input is in the variable "line", the results in the variables "file",
9091"lnum" and "col". (idea from Michael Geddes)
9092
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00009093
9094getting the scriptnames in a Dictionary ~
9095 *scriptnames-dictionary*
9096The |:scriptnames| command can be used to get a list of all script files that
9097have been sourced. There is no equivalent function or variable for this
9098(because it's rarely needed). In case you need to manipulate the list this
9099code can be used: >
9100 " Get the output of ":scriptnames" in the scriptnames_output variable.
9101 let scriptnames_output = ''
9102 redir => scriptnames_output
9103 silent scriptnames
9104 redir END
9105
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00009106 " Split the output into lines and parse each line. Add an entry to the
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00009107 " "scripts" dictionary.
9108 let scripts = {}
9109 for line in split(scriptnames_output, "\n")
9110 " Only do non-blank lines.
9111 if line =~ '\S'
9112 " Get the first number in the line.
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00009113 let nr = matchstr(line, '\d\+')
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00009114 " Get the file name, remove the script number " 123: ".
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00009115 let name = substitute(line, '.\+:\s*', '', '')
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00009116 " Add an item to the Dictionary
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00009117 let scripts[nr] = name
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00009118 endif
9119 endfor
9120 unlet scriptnames_output
9121
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00009122==============================================================================
912310. No +eval feature *no-eval-feature*
9124
9125When the |+eval| feature was disabled at compile time, none of the expression
9126evaluation commands are available. To prevent this from causing Vim scripts
9127to generate all kinds of errors, the ":if" and ":endif" commands are still
9128recognized, though the argument of the ":if" and everything between the ":if"
9129and the matching ":endif" is ignored. Nesting of ":if" blocks is allowed, but
9130only if the commands are at the start of the line. The ":else" command is not
9131recognized.
9132
9133Example of how to avoid executing commands when the |+eval| feature is
9134missing: >
9135
9136 :if 1
9137 : echo "Expression evaluation is compiled in"
9138 :else
9139 : echo "You will _never_ see this message"
9140 :endif
9141
9142==============================================================================
914311. The sandbox *eval-sandbox* *sandbox* *E48*
9144
Bram Moolenaar368373e2010-07-19 20:46:22 +02009145The 'foldexpr', 'formatexpr', 'includeexpr', 'indentexpr', 'statusline' and
9146'foldtext' options may be evaluated in a sandbox. This means that you are
9147protected from these expressions having nasty side effects. This gives some
9148safety for when these options are set from a modeline. It is also used when
9149the command from a tags file is executed and for CTRL-R = in the command line.
Bram Moolenaar7b0294c2004-10-11 10:16:09 +00009150The sandbox is also used for the |:sandbox| command.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00009151
9152These items are not allowed in the sandbox:
9153 - changing the buffer text
9154 - defining or changing mapping, autocommands, functions, user commands
9155 - setting certain options (see |option-summary|)
Bram Moolenaaref2f6562007-05-06 13:32:59 +00009156 - setting certain v: variables (see |v:var|) *E794*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00009157 - executing a shell command
9158 - reading or writing a file
9159 - jumping to another buffer or editing a file
Bram Moolenaar4770d092006-01-12 23:22:24 +00009160 - executing Python, Perl, etc. commands
Bram Moolenaar7b0294c2004-10-11 10:16:09 +00009161This is not guaranteed 100% secure, but it should block most attacks.
9162
9163 *:san* *:sandbox*
Bram Moolenaar045e82d2005-07-08 22:25:33 +00009164:san[dbox] {cmd} Execute {cmd} in the sandbox. Useful to evaluate an
Bram Moolenaar7b0294c2004-10-11 10:16:09 +00009165 option that may have been set from a modeline, e.g.
9166 'foldexpr'.
9167
Bram Moolenaarb71eaae2006-01-20 23:10:18 +00009168 *sandbox-option*
9169A few options contain an expression. When this expression is evaluated it may
Bram Moolenaar9b2200a2006-03-20 21:55:45 +00009170have to be done in the sandbox to avoid a security risk. But the sandbox is
Bram Moolenaarb71eaae2006-01-20 23:10:18 +00009171restrictive, thus this only happens when the option was set from an insecure
9172location. Insecure in this context are:
Bram Moolenaar551dbcc2006-04-25 22:13:59 +00009173- sourcing a .vimrc or .exrc in the current directory
Bram Moolenaarb71eaae2006-01-20 23:10:18 +00009174- while executing in the sandbox
9175- value coming from a modeline
9176
9177Note that when in the sandbox and saving an option value and restoring it, the
9178option will still be marked as it was set in the sandbox.
9179
9180==============================================================================
918112. Textlock *textlock*
9182
9183In a few situations it is not allowed to change the text in the buffer, jump
9184to another window and some other things that might confuse or break what Vim
9185is currently doing. This mostly applies to things that happen when Vim is
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00009186actually doing something else. For example, evaluating the 'balloonexpr' may
Bram Moolenaarb71eaae2006-01-20 23:10:18 +00009187happen any moment the mouse cursor is resting at some position.
9188
9189This is not allowed when the textlock is active:
9190 - changing the buffer text
9191 - jumping to another buffer or window
9192 - editing another file
9193 - closing a window or quitting Vim
9194 - etc.
9195
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00009196
9197 vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl: