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Bram Moolenaard5cdbeb2005-10-10 20:59:28 +00001*usr_05.txt* For Vim version 7.0aa. Last change: 2005 Oct 04
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002
3 VIM USER MANUAL - by Bram Moolenaar
4
5 Set your settings
6
7
8Vim can be tuned to work like you want it to. This chapter shows you how to
9make Vim start with options set to different values. Add plugins to extend
Bram Moolenaar4399ef42005-02-12 14:29:27 +000010Vim's capabilities. Or define your own macros.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000011
12|05.1| The vimrc file
13|05.2| The example vimrc file explained
14|05.3| Simple mappings
15|05.4| Adding a plugin
16|05.5| Adding a help file
17|05.6| The option window
18|05.7| Often used options
19
20 Next chapter: |usr_06.txt| Using syntax highlighting
21 Previous chapter: |usr_04.txt| Making small changes
22Table of contents: |usr_toc.txt|
23
24==============================================================================
25*05.1* The vimrc file *vimrc-intro*
26
27You probably got tired of typing commands that you use very often. To start
28with all your favorite option settings and mappings, you write them in what is
29called the vimrc file. Vim reads this file when it starts up.
30
31If you have trouble finding your vimrc file, use this command: >
32
33 :scriptnames
34
35One of the first files in the list should be called ".vimrc" or "_vimrc" and
36is located in your home directory.
37 If you don't have a vimrc file yet, see |vimrc| to find out where you can
38create a vimrc file. Also, the ":version" command mentions the name of the
39"user vimrc file" Vim looks for.
40
41For Unix this file is always used: >
42
43 ~/.vimrc
44
45For MS-DOS and MS-Windows it is mostly one of these: >
46
47 $HOME/_vimrc
48 $VIM/_vimrc
49
50The vimrc file can contain all the commands that you type after a colon. The
51most simple ones are for setting options. For example, if you want Vim to
52always start with the 'incsearch' option on, add this line you your vimrc
53file: >
54
55 set incsearch
56
57For this new line to take effect you need to exit Vim and start it again.
58Later you will learn how to do this without exiting Vim.
59
60This chapter only explains the most basic items. For more information on how
61to write a Vim script file: |usr_41.txt|.
62
63==============================================================================
64*05.2* The example vimrc file explained *vimrc_example.vim*
65
66In the first chapter was explained how the example vimrc (included in the
67Vim distribution) file can be used to make Vim startup in not-compatible mode
68(see |not-compatible|). The file can be found here:
69
70 $VIMRUNTIME/vimrc_example.vim ~
71
72In this section we will explain the various commands used in this file. This
73will give you hints about how to set up your own preferences. Not everything
74will be explained though. Use the ":help" command to find out more.
75
76>
77 set nocompatible
78
79As mentioned in the first chapter, these manuals explain Vim working in an
80improved way, thus not completely Vi compatible. Setting the 'compatible'
81option off, thus 'nocompatible' takes care of this.
82
83>
84 set backspace=indent,eol,start
85
86This specifies where in Insert mode the <BS> is allowed to delete the
87character in front of the cursor. The three items, separated by commas, tell
88Vim to delete the white space at the start of the line, a line break and the
89character before where Insert mode started.
90>
91
92 set autoindent
93
94This makes Vim use the indent of the previous line for a newly created line.
95Thus there is the same amount of white space before the new line. For example
96when pressing <Enter> in Insert mode, and when using the "o" command to open a
97new line.
98>
99
100 if has("vms")
101 set nobackup
102 else
103 set backup
104 endif
105
106This tells Vim to keep a backup copy of a file when overwriting it. But not
107on the VMS system, since it keeps old versions of files already. The backup
108file will have the same name as the original file with "~" added. See |07.4|
109>
110
111 set history=50
112
113Keep 50 commands and 50 search patterns in the history. Use another number if
114you want to remember fewer or more lines.
115>
116
117 set ruler
118
119Always display the current cursor position in the lower right corner of the
120Vim window.
121
122>
123 set showcmd
124
125Display an incomplete command in the lower right corner of the Vim window,
126left of the ruler. For example, when you type "2f", Vim is waiting for you to
127type the character to find and "2f" is displayed. When you press "w" next,
128the "2fw" command is executed and the displayed "2f" is removed.
129
130 +-------------------------------------------------+
131 |text in the Vim window |
132 |~ |
133 |~ |
134 |-- VISUAL -- 2f 43,8 17% |
135 +-------------------------------------------------+
136 ^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^
137 'showmode' 'showcmd' 'ruler'
138
139>
140 set incsearch
141
142Display the match for a search pattern when halfway typing it.
143
144>
145 map Q gq
146
147This defines a key mapping. More about that in the next section. This
148defines the "Q" command to do formatting with the "gq" operator. This is how
149it worked before Vim 5.0. Otherwise the "Q" command starts Ex mode, but you
150will not need it.
151
152>
Bram Moolenaar8fc061c2004-12-29 21:03:02 +0000153 vnoremap _g y:exe "grep /" . escape(@", '\\/') . "/ *.c *.h"<CR>
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000154
Bram Moolenaar8fc061c2004-12-29 21:03:02 +0000155This mapping yanks the visually selected text and searches for it in C files.
156This is a complicated mapping. You can see that mappings can be used to do
157quite complicated things. Still, it is just a sequence of commands that are
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000158executed like you typed them.
159
160>
161 if &t_Co > 2 || has("gui_running")
162 syntax on
163 set hlsearch
164 endif
165
166This switches on syntax highlighting, but only if colors are available. And
167the 'hlsearch' option tells Vim to highlight matches with the last used search
168pattern. The "if" command is very useful to set options only when some
169condition is met. More about that in |usr_41.txt|.
170
171 *vimrc-filetype* >
172 filetype plugin indent on
173
174This switches on three very clever mechanisms:
1751. Filetype detection.
176 Whenever you start editing a file, Vim will try to figure out what kind of
177 file this is. When you edit "main.c", Vim will see the ".c" extension and
178 recognize this as a "c" filetype. When you edit a file that starts with
179 "#!/bin/sh", Vim will recognize it as a "sh" filetype.
180 The filetype detection is used for syntax highlighting and the other two
181 items below.
182 See |filetypes|.
183
1842. Using filetype plugin files
185 Many different filetypes are edited with different options. For example,
186 when you edit a "c" file, it's very useful to set the 'cindent' option to
187 automatically indent the lines. These commonly useful option settings are
188 included with Vim in filetype plugins. You can also add your own, see
189 |write-filetype-plugin|.
190
1913. Using indent files
192 When editing programs, the indent of a line can often be computed
193 automatically. Vim comes with these indent rules for a number of
194 filetypes. See |:filetype-indent-on| and 'indentexpr'.
195
196>
197 autocmd FileType text setlocal textwidth=78
198
199This makes Vim break text to avoid lines getting longer than 78 characters.
200But only for files that have been detected to be plain text. There are
201actually two parts here. "autocmd FileType text" is an autocommand. This
202defines that when the file type is set to "text" the following command is
203automatically executed. "setlocal textwidth=78" sets the 'textwidth' option
204to 78, but only locally in one file.
205>
206
207 autocmd BufReadPost *
208 \ if line("'\"") > 0 && line("'\"") <= line("$") |
209 \ exe "normal g`\"" |
210 \ endif
211
212Another autocommand. This time it is used after reading any file. The
213complicated stuff after it checks if the '" mark is defined, and jumps to it
214if so. The backslash at the start of a line is used to continue the command
215from the previous line. That avoids a line getting very long.
216See |line-continuation|. This only works in a Vim script file, not when
217typing commands at the command-line.
218
219==============================================================================
220*05.3* Simple mappings
221
222A mapping enables you to bind a set of Vim commands to a single key. Suppose,
223for example, that you need to surround certain words with curly braces. In
224other words, you need to change a word such as "amount" into "{amount}". With
225the :map command, you can tell Vim that the F5 key does this job. The command
226is as follows: >
227
228 :map <F5> i{<Esc>ea}<Esc>
229<
230 Note:
231 When entering this command, you must enter <F5> by typing four
232 characters. Similarly, <Esc> is not entered by pressing the <Esc>
233 key, but by typing five characters. Watch out for this difference
234 when reading the manual!
235
236Let's break this down:
237 <F5> The F5 function key. This is the trigger key that causes the
238 command to be executed as the key is pressed.
239
240 i{<Esc> Insert the { character. The <Esc> key ends Insert mode.
241
242 e Move to the end of the word.
243
244 a}<Esc> Append the } to the word.
245
246After you execute the ":map" command, all you have to do to put {} around a
247word is to put the cursor on the first character and press F5.
248
249In this example, the trigger is a single key; it can be any string. But when
250you use an existing Vim command, that command will no longer be available.
251You better avoid that.
252 One key that can be used with mappings is the backslash. Since you
253probably want to define more than one mapping, add another character. You
Bram Moolenaar4399ef42005-02-12 14:29:27 +0000254could map "\p" to add parentheses around a word, and "\c" to add curly braces,
255for example: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000256
257 :map \p i(<Esc>ea)<Esc>
258 :map \c i{<Esc>ea}<Esc>
259
260You need to type the \ and the p quickly after another, so that Vim knows they
261belong together.
262
263The ":map" command (with no arguments) lists your current mappings. At
264least the ones for Normal mode. More about mappings in section |40.1|.
265
266==============================================================================
267*05.4* Adding a plugin *add-plugin* *plugin*
268
269Vim's functionality can be extended by adding plugins. A plugin is nothing
270more than a Vim script file that is loaded automatically when Vim starts. You
271can add a plugin very easily by dropping it in your plugin directory.
272{not available when Vim was compiled without the |+eval| feature}
273
274There are two types of plugins:
275
276 global plugin: Used for all kinds of files
277 filetype plugin: Only used for a specific type of file
278
279The global plugins will be discussed first, then the filetype ones
280|add-filetype-plugin|.
281
282
283GLOBAL PLUGINS *standard-plugin*
284
285When you start Vim, it will automatically load a number of global plugins.
286You don't have to do anything for this. They add functionality that most
287people will want to use, but which was implemented as a Vim script instead of
288being compiled into Vim. You can find them listed in the help index
289|standard-plugin-list|. Also see |load-plugins|.
290
291 *add-global-plugin*
292You can add a global plugin to add functionality that will always be present
293when you use Vim. There are only two steps for adding a global plugin:
2941. Get a copy of the plugin.
2952. Drop it in the right directory.
296
297
298GETTING A GLOBAL PLUGIN
299
300Where can you find plugins?
301- Some come with Vim. You can find them in the directory $VIMRUNTIME/macros
302 and its sub-directories.
303- Download from the net, check out http://vim.sf.net.
304- They are sometimes posted in a Vim |maillist|.
305- You could write one yourself, see |write-plugin|.
306
307
308USING A GLOBAL PLUGIN
309
310First read the text in the plugin itself to check for any special conditions.
311Then copy the file to your plugin directory:
312
313 system plugin directory ~
314 Unix ~/.vim/plugin/
315 PC and OS/2 $HOME/vimfiles/plugin or $VIM/vimfiles/plugin
316 Amiga s:vimfiles/plugin
317 Macintosh $VIM:vimfiles:plugin
318 Mac OS X ~/.vim/plugin/
319 RISC-OS Choices:vimfiles.plugin
320
321Example for Unix (assuming you didn't have a plugin directory yet): >
322
323 mkdir ~/.vim
324 mkdir ~/.vim/plugin
325 cp /usr/local/share/vim/vim60/macros/justify.vim ~/.vim/plugin
326
327That's all! Now you can use the commands defined in this plugin to justify
328text.
329
Bram Moolenaard5cdbeb2005-10-10 20:59:28 +0000330Instead of putting plugins directly into the plugin/ directory, you may
331better organize them by putting them into subdirectories under plugin/.
332As an example, consider using "~/.vim/plugin/perl/*.vim" for all your Perl
333plugins.
Bram Moolenaar07d4d732005-10-03 22:04:08 +0000334
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000335
336FILETYPE PLUGINS *add-filetype-plugin* *ftplugins*
337
338The Vim distribution comes with a set of plugins for different filetypes that
339you can start using with this command: >
340
341 :filetype plugin on
342
343That's all! See |vimrc-filetype|.
344
345If you are missing a plugin for a filetype you are using, or you found a
346better one, you can add it. There are two steps for adding a filetype plugin:
3471. Get a copy of the plugin.
3482. Drop it in the right directory.
349
350
351GETTING A FILETYPE PLUGIN
352
353You can find them in the same places as the global plugins. Watch out if the
354type of file is mentioned, then you know if the plugin is a global or a
355filetype one. The scripts in $VIMRUNTIME/macros are global ones, the filetype
356plugins are in $VIMRUNTIME/ftplugin.
357
358
359USING A FILETYPE PLUGIN *ftplugin-name*
360
361You can add a filetype plugin by dropping it in the right directory. The
362name of this directory is in the same directory mentioned above for global
363plugins, but the last part is "ftplugin". Suppose you have found a plugin for
364the "stuff" filetype, and you are on Unix. Then you can move this file to the
365ftplugin directory: >
366
367 mv thefile ~/.vim/ftplugin/stuff.vim
368
369If that file already exists you already have a plugin for "stuff". You might
370want to check if the existing plugin doesn't conflict with the one you are
371adding. If it's OK, you can give the new one another name: >
372
373 mv thefile ~/.vim/ftplugin/stuff_too.vim
374
375The underscore is used to separate the name of the filetype from the rest,
Bram Moolenaarf4b8e572004-06-24 15:53:16 +0000376which can be anything. If you use "otherstuff.vim" it wouldn't work, it would
377be loaded for the "otherstuff" filetype.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000378
379On MS-DOS you cannot use long filenames. You would run into trouble if you
380add a second plugin and the filetype has more than six characters. You can
381use an extra directory to get around this: >
382
383 mkdir $VIM/vimfiles/ftplugin/fortran
384 copy thefile $VIM/vimfiles/ftplugin/fortran/too.vim
385
386The generic names for the filetype plugins are: >
387
388 ftplugin/<filetype>.vim
389 ftplugin/<filetype>_<name>.vim
390 ftplugin/<filetype>/<name>.vim
391
392Here "<name>" can be any name that you prefer.
393Examples for the "stuff" filetype on Unix: >
394
395 ~/.vim/ftplugin/stuff.vim
396 ~/.vim/ftplugin/stuff_def.vim
397 ~/.vim/ftplugin/stuff/header.vim
398
399The <filetype> part is the name of the filetype the plugin is to be used for.
400Only files of this filetype will use the settings from the plugin. The <name>
401part of the plugin file doesn't matter, you can use it to have several plugins
402for the same filetype. Note that it must end in ".vim".
403
404
405Further reading:
406|filetype-plugins| Documentation for the filetype plugins and information
407 about how to avoid that mappings cause problems.
408|load-plugins| When the global plugins are loaded during startup.
409|ftplugin-overrule| Overruling the settings from a global plugin.
410|write-plugin| How to write a plugin script.
411|plugin-details| For more information about using plugins or when your
412 plugin doesn't work.
413|new-filetype| How to detect a new file type.
414
415==============================================================================
416*05.5* Adding a help file *add-local-help* *matchit-install*
417
418If you are lucky, the plugin you installed also comes with a help file. We
419will explain how to install the help file, so that you can easily find help
420for your new plugin.
421 Let us use the "matchit.vim" plugin as an example (it is included with
422Vim). This plugin makes the "%" command jump to matching HTML tags,
423if/else/endif in Vim scripts, etc. Very useful, although it's not backwards
424compatible (that's why it is not enabled by default).
425 This plugin comes with documentation: "matchit.txt". Let's first copy the
426plugin to the right directory. This time we will do it from inside Vim, so
427that we can use $VIMRUNTIME. (You may skip some of the "mkdir" commands if
428you already have the directory.) >
429
430 :!mkdir ~/.vim
431 :!mkdir ~/.vim/plugin
432 :!cp $VIMRUNTIME/macros/matchit.vim ~/.vim/plugin
433
Bram Moolenaard4755bb2004-09-02 19:12:26 +0000434The "cp" command is for Unix, on MS-DOS you can use "copy".
435
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000436Now create a "doc" directory in one of the directories in 'runtimepath'. >
437
438 :!mkdir ~/.vim/doc
439
440Copy the help file to the "doc" directory. >
441
442 :!cp $VIMRUNTIME/macros/matchit.txt ~/.vim/doc
443
444Now comes the trick, which allows you to jump to the subjects in the new help
445file: Generate the local tags file with the |:helptags| command. >
446
447 :helptags ~/.vim/doc
448
449Now you can use the >
450
451 :help g%
452
453command to find help for "g%" in the help file you just added. You can see an
454entry for the local help file when you do: >
455
456 :help local-additions
457
458The title lines from the local help files are automagically added to this
459section. There you can see which local help files have been added and jump to
460them through the tag.
461
462For writing a local help file, see |write-local-help|.
463
464==============================================================================
465*05.6* The option window
466
467If you are looking for an option that does what you want, you can search in
468the help files here: |options|. Another way is by using this command: >
469
470 :options
471
472This opens a new window, with a list of options with a one-line explanation.
473The options are grouped by subject. Move the cursor to a subject and press
474<Enter> to jump there. Press <Enter> again to jump back. Or use CTRL-O.
475
476You can change the value of an option. For example, move to the "displaying
477text" subject. Then move the cursor down to this line:
478
479 set wrap nowrap ~
480
481When you hit <Enter>, the line will change to:
482
483 set nowrap wrap ~
484
485The option has now been switched off.
486
487Just above this line is a short description of the 'wrap' option. Move the
488cursor one line up to place it in this line. Now hit <Enter> and you jump to
489the full help on the 'wrap' option.
490
491For options that take a number or string argument you can edit the value.
492Then press <Enter> to apply the new value. For example, move the cursor a few
493lines up to this line:
494
495 set so=0 ~
496
497Position the cursor on the zero with "$". Change it into a five with "r5".
498Then press <Enter> to apply the new value. When you now move the cursor
499around you will notice that the text starts scrolling before you reach the
500border. This is what the 'scrolloff' option does, it specifies an offset
501from the window border where scrolling starts.
502
503==============================================================================
504*05.7* Often used options
505
506There are an awful lot of options. Most of them you will hardly ever use.
507Some of the more useful ones will be mentioned here. Don't forget you can
508find more help on these options with the ":help" command, with single quotes
509before and after the option name. For example: >
510
511 :help 'wrap'
512
513In case you have messed up an option value, you can set it back to the
Bram Moolenaarf4b8e572004-06-24 15:53:16 +0000514default by putting an ampersand (&) after the option name. Example: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000515
516 :set iskeyword&
517
518
519NOT WRAPPING LINES
520
521Vim normally wraps long lines, so that you can see all of the text. Sometimes
522it's better to let the text continue right of the window. Then you need to
Bram Moolenaarf4b8e572004-06-24 15:53:16 +0000523scroll the text left-right to see all of a long line. Switch wrapping off
524with this command: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000525
526 :set nowrap
527
528Vim will automatically scroll the text when you move to text that is not
529displayed. To see a context of ten characters, do this: >
530
531 :set sidescroll=10
532
533This doesn't change the text in the file, only the way it is displayed.
534
535
536WRAPPING MOVEMENT COMMANDS
537
538Most commands for moving around will stop moving at the start and end of a
539line. You can change that with the 'whichwrap' option. This sets it to the
540default value: >
541
542 :set whichwrap=b,s
543
544This allows the <BS> key, when used in the first position of a line, to move
545the cursor to the end of the previous line. And the <Space> key moves from
546the end of a line to the start of the next one.
547
548To allow the cursor keys <Left> and <Right> to also wrap, use this command: >
549
550 :set whichwrap=b,s,<,>
551
552This is still only for Normal mode. To let <Left> and <Right> do this in
553Insert mode as well: >
554
555 :set whichwrap=b,s,<,>,[,]
556
557There are a few other flags that can be added, see 'whichwrap'.
558
559
560VIEWING TABS
561
562When there are tabs in a file, you cannot see where they are. To make them
563visible: >
564
565 :set list
566
567Now every Tab is displayed as ^I. And a $ is displayed at the end of each
568line, so that you can spot trailing spaces that would otherwise go unnoticed.
569 A disadvantage is that this looks ugly when there are many Tabs in a file.
570If you have a color terminal, or are using the GUI, Vim can show the spaces
571and tabs as highlighted characters. Use the 'listchars' option: >
572
573 :set listchars=tab:>-,trail:-
574
575Now every tab will be displayed as ">---" (with more or less "-") and trailing
576white space as "-". Looks a lot better, doesn't it?
577
578
579KEYWORDS
580
581The 'iskeyword' option specifies which characters can appear in a word: >
582
583 :set iskeyword
584< iskeyword=@,48-57,_,192-255 ~
585
586The "@" stands for all alphabetic letters. "48-57" stands for ASCII
587characters 48 to 57, which are the numbers 0 to 9. "192-255" are the
588printable latin characters.
589 Sometimes you will want to include a dash in keywords, so that commands
590like "w" consider "upper-case" to be one word. You can do it like this: >
591
592 :set iskeyword+=-
593 :set iskeyword
594< iskeyword=@,48-57,_,192-255,- ~
595
596If you look at the new value, you will see that Vim has added a comma for you.
597 To remove a character use "-=". For example, to remove the underscore: >
598
599 :set iskeyword-=_
600 :set iskeyword
601< iskeyword=@,48-57,192-255,- ~
602
603This time a comma is automatically deleted.
604
605
606ROOM FOR MESSAGES
607
608When Vim starts there is one line at the bottom that is used for messages.
609When a message is long, it is either truncated, thus you can only see part of
610it, or the text scrolls and you have to press <Enter> to continue.
611 You can set the 'cmdheight' option to the number of lines used for
612messages. Example: >
613
614 :set cmdheight=3
615
616This does mean there is less room to edit text, thus it's a compromise.
617
618==============================================================================
619
620Next chapter: |usr_06.txt| Using syntax highlighting
621
622Copyright: see |manual-copyright| vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl: