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Bram Moolenaar5f148ec2016-03-07 22:59:26 +01001*os_win32.txt* For Vim version 7.4. Last change: 2016 Mar 05
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002
3
4 VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by George Reilly
5
6
7 *win32* *Win32* *MS-Windows*
8This file documents the idiosyncrasies of the Win32 version of Vim.
9
Bram Moolenaarc095b282010-07-20 22:33:34 +020010The Win32 version of Vim works on Windows NT, 95, 98, ME, XP, Vista and
11Windows 7. There are both console and GUI versions.
12
13The 32 bit version also runs on 64 bit MS-Windows systems.
14
15There is GUI version for use in the Win32s subsystem in Windows 3.1[1]. You
16can also use the 32-bit DOS version of Vim instead. See |os_msdos.txt|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000017
181. Known problems |win32-problems|
192. Startup |win32-startup|
203. Restore screen contents |win32-restore|
214. Using the mouse |win32-mouse|
225. Running under Windows 3.1 |win32-win3.1|
236. Win32 mini FAQ |win32-faq|
24
25Additionally, there are a number of common Win32 and DOS items:
26File locations |dos-locations|
27Using backslashes |dos-backslash|
28Standard mappings |dos-standard-mappings|
29Screen output and colors |dos-colors|
30File formats |dos-file-formats|
31:cd command |dos-:cd|
32Interrupting |dos-CTRL-Break|
33Temp files |dos-temp-files|
34Shell option default |dos-shell|
35
36Win32 GUI |gui-w32|
37
38Credits:
39The Win32 version was written by George V. Reilly <george@reilly.org>.
40The original Windows NT port was done by Roger Knobbe <RogerK@wonderware.com>.
41The GUI version was made by George V. Reilly and Robert Webb.
42
Bram Moolenaar442b4222010-05-24 21:34:22 +020043For compiling see "src/INSTALLpc.txt". *win32-compiling*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000044
45==============================================================================
461. Known problems *windows95* *win32-problems*
47
48There are a few known problems with running in a console on Windows 95. As
49far as we know, this is the same in Windows 98 and Windows ME.
50
51Comments from somebody working at Microsoft: "Win95 console support has always
52been and will always be flaky".
531. Dead key support doesn't work.
542. Resizing the window with ":set columns=nn lines=nn" works, but executing
55 external commands MAY CAUSE THE SYSTEM TO HANG OR CRASH.
563. Screen updating is slow, unless you change 'columns' or 'lines' to a
57 non-DOS value. But then the second problem applies!
58
59If this bothers you, use the 32 bit MS-DOS version or the Win32 GUI version.
60
61When doing file name completion, Vim also finds matches for the short file
62name. But Vim will still find and use the corresponding long file name. For
63example, if you have the long file name "this_is_a_test" with the short file
64name "this_i~1", the command ":e *1" will start editing "this_is_a_test".
65
66==============================================================================
672. Startup *win32-startup*
68
69Current directory *win32-curdir*
70
71If Vim is started with a single file name argument, and it has a full path
72(starts with "x:\"), Vim assumes it was started from the file explorer and
73will set the current directory to where that file is. To avoid this when
74typing a command to start Vim, use a forward slash instead of a backslash.
75Example: >
76
77 vim c:\text\files\foo.txt
78
79Will change to the "C:\text\files" directory. >
80
81 vim c:/text\files\foo.txt
82
83Will use the current directory.
84
85
86Term option *win32-term*
87
88The only kind of terminal type that the Win32 version of Vim understands is
89"win32", which is built-in. If you set 'term' to anything else, you will
90probably get very strange behavior from Vim. Therefore Vim does not obtain
91the default value of 'term' from the environment variable "TERM".
92
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +000093$PATH *win32-PATH*
94
95The directory of the Vim executable is appended to $PATH. This is mostly to
Bram Moolenaarb1332082013-10-06 14:22:40 +020096make "!xxd" work, as it is in the Tools menu. And it also means that when
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +000097executable() returns 1 the executable can actually be executed.
98
Bram Moolenaar5f148ec2016-03-07 22:59:26 +010099Quotes in file names *win32-quotes*
100
101Quotes inside a file name (or any other command line argument) can be escaped
102with a backslash. E.g. >
103 vim -c "echo 'foo\"bar'"
104
105Alternatively use three quotes to get one: >
106 vim -c "echo 'foo"""bar'"
107
108The quotation rules are:
109
1101. A `"` starts quotation.
1112. Another `"` or `""` ends quotation. If the quotation ends with `""`, a `"`
112 is produced at the end of the quoted string.
113
114Examples, with [] around an argument:
115 "foo" -> [foo]
116 "foo"" -> [foo"]
117 "foo"bar -> [foobar]
118 "foo" bar -> [foo], [bar]
119 "foo""bar -> [foo"bar]
120 "foo"" bar -> [foo"], [bar]
121 "foo"""bar" -> [foo"bar]
122
123
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000124==============================================================================
1253. Restore screen contents *win32-restore*
126
127When 'restorescreen' is set (which is the default), Vim will restore the
128original contents of the console when exiting or when executing external
129commands. If you don't want this, use ":set nors". |'restorescreen'|
130
131==============================================================================
1324. Using the mouse *win32-mouse*
133
134The Win32 version of Vim supports using the mouse. If you have a two-button
135mouse, the middle button can be emulated by pressing both left and right
136buttons simultaneously - but note that in the Win32 GUI, if you have the right
137mouse button pop-up menu enabled (see 'mouse'), you should err on the side of
138pressing the left button first. |mouse-using|
139
140When the mouse doesn't work, try disabling the "Quick Edit Mode" feature of
141the console.
142
143==============================================================================
1445. Running under Windows 3.1 *win32-win3.1*
145
146 *win32s* *windows-3.1*
147There is a special version of Gvim that runs under Windows 3.1 and 3.11. You
148need the gvim.exe that was compiled with Visual C++ 4.1.
149
150To run the Win32 version under Windows 3.1, you need to install Win32s. You
151might have it already from another Win32 application which you have installed.
152If Vim doesn't seem to be running properly, get the latest version: 1.30c.
153You can find it at:
154
155 http://support.microsoft.com/download/support/mslfiles/pw1118.exe
156
157(Microsoft moved it again, we don't know where it is now :-( ).
158
159The reason for having two versions of gvim.exe is that the Win32s version was
160compiled with VC++ 4.1. This is the last version of VC++ that supports Win32s
161programs. VC++ 5.0 is better, so that one was used for the Win32 version.
162Apart from that, there is no difference between the programs. If you are in a
163mixed environment, you can use the gvim.exe for Win32s on both.
164
165The Win32s version works the same way as the Win32 version under 95/NT. When
166running under Win32s the following differences apply:
167- You cannot use long file names, because Windows 3.1 doesn't support them!
168- When executing an external command, it doesn't return an exit code. After
169 doing ":make" you have to do ":cn" yourself.
170
171==============================================================================
1726. Win32 mini FAQ *win32-faq*
173
174Q. Why does the Win32 version of Vim update the screen so slowly on Windows 95?
175A. The support for Win32 console mode applications is very buggy in Win95.
176 For some unknown reason, the screen updates very slowly when Vim is run at
177 one of the standard resolutions (80x25, 80x43, or 80x50) and the 16-bit DOS
178 version updates the screen much more quickly than the Win32 version.
179 However, if the screen is set to some other resolution, such as by ":set
180 columns=100" or ":set lines=40", screen updating becomes about as fast as
181 it is with the 16-bit version.
182
183 WARNING: Changing 'columns' may make Windows 95 crash while updating the
184 window (complaints --> Microsoft). Since this mostly works, this has not
185 been disabled, but be careful with changing 'columns'.
186
187 Changing the screen resolution makes updates faster, but it brings
188 additional problems. External commands (e.g., ":!dir") can cause Vim to
189 freeze when the screen is set to a non-standard resolution, particularly
190 when 'columns' is not equal to 80. It is not possible for Vim to reliably
191 set the screen resolution back to the value it had upon startup before
192 running external commands, so if you change the number of 'lines' or
193 'columns', be very, very careful. In fact, Vim will not allow you to
194 execute external commands when 'columns' is not equal to 80, because it is
195 so likely to freeze up afterwards.
196
197 None of the above applies on Windows NT. Screen updates are fast, no
198 matter how many 'lines' or 'columns' the window has, and external commands
199 do not cause Vim to freeze.
200
201Q. So if the Win32 version updates the screen so slowly on Windows 95 and the
202 16-bit DOS version updates the screen quickly, why would I want to run the
203 Win32 version?
204A. Firstly, the Win32 version isn't that slow, especially when the screen is
205 set to some non-standard number of 'lines' or 'columns'. Secondly, the
206 16-bit DOS version has some severe limitations: It can't do big changes and
207 it doesn't know about long file names. The Win32 version doesn't have these
208 limitations and it's faster overall (the same is true for the 32-bit DJGPP
209 DOS version of Vim). The Win32 version is smarter about handling the
210 screen, the mouse, and the keyboard than the DJGPP version is.
211
212Q. And what about the 16-bit DOS version versus the Win32 version on NT?
213A. There are no good reasons to run the 16-bit DOS version on NT. The Win32
214 version updates the screen just as fast as the 16-bit version does when
215 running on NT. All of the above disadvantages apply. Finally, DOS
216 applications can take a long time to start up and will run more slowly. On
217 non-Intel NT platforms, the DOS version is almost unusably slow, because it
218 runs on top of an 80x86 emulator.
219
220Q. How do I change the font?
Bram Moolenaard4755bb2004-09-02 19:12:26 +0000221A. In the GUI version, you can use the 'guifont' option. Example: >
222 :set guifont=Lucida_Console:h15:cDEFAULT
223< In the console version, you need to set the font of the console itself.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000224 You cannot do this from within Vim.
225
226Q. When I change the size of the console window with ':set lines=xx' or
227 similar, the font changes! (Win95)
228A. You have the console font set to 'Auto' in Vim's (or your MS-DOS prompt's)
Bram Moolenaar13fcaaf2005-04-15 21:13:42 +0000229 properties. This makes W95 guess (badly!) what font is best. Set an explicit
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000230 font instead.
231
232Q. Why can't I paste into Vim when running Windows 95?
233A. In the properties dialog box for the MS-DOS window, go to "MS-DOS
234 Prompt/Misc/Fast pasting" and make sure that it is NOT checked. You should
235 also do ":set paste" in Vim to avoid unexpected effects. |'paste'|
236
237Q. How do I type dead keys on Windows 95, in the console version?
238 (A dead key is an accent key, such as acute, grave, or umlaut, that doesn't
239 produce a character by itself, but when followed by another key, produces
240 an accented character, such as a-acute, e-grave, u-umlaut, n-tilde, and so
241 on. Very useful for most European languages. English-language keyboard
242 layouts don't use dead keys, as far as we know.)
243A. You don't. The console mode input routines simply do not work correctly in
244 Windows 95, and I have not been able to work around them. In the words
245 of a senior developer at Microsoft:
246 Win95 console support has always been and will always be flaky.
247
248 The flakiness is unavoidable because we are stuck between the world of
249 MS-DOS keyboard TSRs like KEYB (which wants to cook the data;
250 important for international) and the world of Win32.
251
252 So keys that don't "exist" in MS-DOS land (like dead keys) have a
253 very tenuous existence in Win32 console land. Keys that act
254 differently between MS-DOS land and Win32 console land (like
255 capslock) will act flaky.
256
257 Don't even _mention_ the problems with multiple language keyboard
258 layouts...
259
260 You may be able to fashion some sort of workaround with the digraphs
261 mechanism. |digraphs|
262
263 The best solution is to use the Win32 GUI version gvim.exe. Alternatively,
264 you can try one of the DOS versions of Vim where dead keys reportedly do
265 work.
266
267Q. How do I type dead keys on Windows NT?
268A. Dead keys work on NT 3.51. Just type them as you would in any other
269 application.
270 On NT 4.0, you need to make sure that the default locale (set in the
271 Keyboard part of the Control Panel) is the same as the currently active
272 locale. Otherwise the NT code will get confused and crash! This is a NT
273 4.0 problem, not really a Vim problem.
274
275Q. I'm using Vim to edit a symbolically linked file on a Unix NFS file server.
276 When I write the file, Vim does not "write through" the symlink. Instead,
277 it deletes the symbolic link and creates a new file in its place. Why?
278A. On Unix, Vim is prepared for links (symbolic or hard). A backup copy of
279 the original file is made and then the original file is overwritten. This
280 assures that all properties of the file remain the same. On non-Unix
281 systems, the original file is renamed and a new file is written. Only the
282 protection bits are set like the original file. However, this doesn't work
283 properly when working on an NFS-mounted file system where links and other
284 things exist. The only way to fix this in the current version is not
285 making a backup file, by ":set nobackup nowritebackup" |'writebackup'|
286
Bram Moolenaard4755bb2004-09-02 19:12:26 +0000287Q. I'm using Vim to edit a file on a Unix file server through Samba. When I
288 write the file, the owner of the file is changed. Why?
289A. When writing a file Vim renames the original file, this is a backup (in
290 case writing the file fails halfway). Then the file is written as a new
291 file. Samba then gives it the default owner for the file system, which may
292 differ from the original owner.
293 To avoid this set the 'backupcopy' option to "yes". Vim will then make a
294 copy of the file for the backup, and overwrite the original file. The
295 owner isn't changed then.
296
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000297Q. How do I get to see the output of ":make" while it's running?
298A. Basically what you need is to put a tee program that will copy its input
299 (the output from make) to both stdout and to the errorfile. You can find a
Bram Moolenaarc81e5e72007-05-05 18:24:42 +0000300 copy of tee (and a number of other GNU tools) at
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000301 http://gnuwin32.sourceforge.net or http://unxutils.sourceforge.net
302 Alternatively, try the more recent Cygnus version of the GNU tools at
303 http://www.cygwin.com Other Unix-style tools for Win32 are listed at
304 http://directory.google.com/Top/Computers/Software/Operating_Systems/Unix/Win32/
305 When you do get a copy of tee, you'll need to add >
306 :set shellpipe=\|\ tee
307< to your _vimrc.
308
309Q. I'm storing files on a remote machine that works with VisionFS, and files
310 disappear!
311A. VisionFS can't handle certain dot (.) three letter extension file names.
312 SCO declares this behavior required for backwards compatibility with 16bit
313 DOS/Windows environments. The two commands below demonstrate the behavior:
314>
315 echo Hello > file.bat~
316 dir > file.bat
317<
318 The result is that the "dir" command updates the "file.bat~" file, instead
Bram Moolenaar13fcaaf2005-04-15 21:13:42 +0000319 of creating a new "file.bat" file. This same behavior is exhibited in Vim
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000320 when editing an existing file named "foo.bat" because the default behavior
321 of Vim is to create a temporary file with a '~' character appended to the
322 name. When the file is written, it winds up being deleted.
323
324 Solution: Add this command to your _vimrc file: >
325 :set backupext=.temporary
326
327Q. How do I change the blink rate of the cursor?
328A. You can't! This is a limitation of the NT console. NT 5.0 is reported to
329 be able to set the blink rate for all console windows at the same time.
330
331 *:!start*
332Q. How can I run an external command or program asynchronously?
333A. When using :! to run an external command, you can run it with "start": >
334 :!start winfile.exe<CR>
335< Using "start" stops Vim switching to another screen, opening a new console,
336 or waiting for the program to complete; it indicates that you are running a
Bram Moolenaar8c8de832008-06-24 22:58:06 +0000337 program that does not affect the files you are editing. Programs begun
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000338 with :!start do not get passed Vim's open file handles, which means they do
339 not have to be closed before Vim.
340 To avoid this special treatment, use ":! start".
Bram Moolenaarbd8608d2011-05-25 17:06:22 +0200341 There are two optional arguments (see the next Q):
Bram Moolenaar1aeaf8c2012-05-18 13:46:39 +0200342 /min the window will be minimized
343 /b no console window will be opened
Bram Moolenaar5302d9e2011-09-14 17:55:08 +0200344 You can use only one of these flags at a time. A second one will be
Bram Moolenaarbd8608d2011-05-25 17:06:22 +0200345 treated as the start of the command.
346
347Q. How do I avoid getting a window for programs that I run asynchronously?
Bram Moolenaar5302d9e2011-09-14 17:55:08 +0200348A. You have two possible solutions depending on what you want:
Bram Moolenaar251e1912011-06-19 05:09:16 +0200349 1) You may use the /min flag in order to run program in a minimized state
350 with no other changes. It will work equally for console and GUI
351 applications.
352 2) You can use the /b flag to run console applications without creating a
Bram Moolenaarbd8608d2011-05-25 17:06:22 +0200353 console window for them (GUI applications are not affected). But you
Bram Moolenaar251e1912011-06-19 05:09:16 +0200354 should use this flag only if the application you run doesn't require any
355 input. Otherwise it will get an EOF error because its input stream
Bram Moolenaar5302d9e2011-09-14 17:55:08 +0200356 (stdin) would be redirected to \\.\NUL (stdout and stderr too).
Bram Moolenaarbd8608d2011-05-25 17:06:22 +0200357
358 Example for a console application, run Exuberant ctags: >
359 :!start /min ctags -R .
360< When it has finished you should see file named "tags" in your current
361 directory. You should notice the window title blinking on your taskbar.
Bram Moolenaar34401cc2014-08-29 15:12:19 +0200362 This is more noticeable for commands that take longer.
Bram Moolenaarbd8608d2011-05-25 17:06:22 +0200363 Now delete the "tags" file and run this command: >
364 :!start /b ctags -R .
365< You should have the same "tags" file, but this time there will be no
366 blinking on the taskbar.
367 Example for a GUI application: >
368 :!start /min notepad
369 :!start /b notepad
370< The first command runs notepad minimized and the second one runs it
371 normally.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000372
373Q. I'm using Win32s, and when I try to run an external command like "make",
Bram Moolenaar13fcaaf2005-04-15 21:13:42 +0000374 Vim doesn't wait for it to finish! Help!
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000375A. The problem is that a 32-bit application (Vim) can't get notification from
Bram Moolenaar13fcaaf2005-04-15 21:13:42 +0000376 Windows that a 16-bit application (your DOS session) has finished. Vim
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000377 includes a work-around for this, but you must set up your DOS commands to
Bram Moolenaar13fcaaf2005-04-15 21:13:42 +0000378 run in a window, not full-screen. Unfortunately the default when you
379 install Windows is full-screen. To change this:
380 1) Start PIF editor (in the Main program group).
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000381 2) Open the file "_DEFAULT.PIF" in your Windows directory.
382 3) Changes the display option from "Full Screen" to "Windowed".
383 4) Save and exit.
384
385 To test, start Vim and type >
386 :!dir C:\<CR>".
387< You should see a DOS box window appear briefly with the directory listing.
388
Bram Moolenaar13fcaaf2005-04-15 21:13:42 +0000389Q. I use Vim under Win32s and NT. In NT, I can define the console to default to
390 50 lines, so that I get a 80x50 shell when I ':sh'. Can I do the same in
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000391 W3.1x, or am I stuck with 80x25?
Bram Moolenaar13fcaaf2005-04-15 21:13:42 +0000392A. Edit SYSTEM.INI and add 'ScreenLines=50' to the [NonWindowsApp] section. DOS
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000393 prompts and external DOS commands will now run in a 50-line window.
394
Bram Moolenaar3a991dd2014-10-02 01:41:41 +0200395 *windows-icon*
396Q. I don't like the Vim icon, can I change it?
397A. Yes, place your favorite icon in bitmaps/vim.ico in a directory of
398 'runtimepath'. For example ~/vimfiles/bitmaps/vim.ico.
399
400
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000401 vim:tw=78:fo=tcq2:ts=8:ft=help:norl: