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Bram Moolenaar98056532019-12-12 14:18:35 +01001*os_dos.txt* For Vim version 8.2. Last change: 2006 Mar 30
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002
3
4 VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar
5
6
7 *dos* *DOS*
8This file documents the common particularities of the MS-DOS and Win32
9versions of Vim. Also see |os_win32.txt| and |os_msdos.txt|.
10
111. File locations |dos-locations|
122. Using backslashes |dos-backslash|
133. Standard mappings |dos-standard-mappings|
144. Screen output and colors |dos-colors|
155. File formats |dos-file-formats|
166. :cd command |dos-:cd|
177. Interrupting |dos-CTRL-Break|
188. Temp files |dos-temp-files|
199. Shell option default |dos-shell|
20
21==============================================================================
221. File locations *dos-locations*
23
24If you keep the Vim executable in the directory that contains the help and
25syntax subdirectories, there is no need to do anything special for Vim to
26work. No registry entries or environment variables need to be set. Just make
27sure that the directory is in your search path, or use a shortcut on the
28desktop.
29
30Your vimrc files ("_vimrc" and "_gvimrc") are normally located one directory
31up from the runtime files. If you want to put them somewhere else, set the
32environment variable $VIM to the directory where you keep them. Example: >
33 set VIM=C:\user\piet
34Will find "c:\user\piet\_vimrc".
35Note: This would only be needed when the computer is used by several people.
36Otherwise it's simpler to keep your _vimrc file in the default place.
37
38If you move the executable to another location, you also need to set the $VIM
39environment variable. The runtime files will be found in "$VIM/vim{version}".
40Example: >
41 set VIM=E:\vim
Bram Moolenaar8024f932020-01-14 19:29:13 +010042Will find the version 8.2 runtime files in "e:\vim\vim82".
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000043Note: This is _not_ recommended. The preferred way is to keep the executable
44in the runtime directory.
45
46If you move your executable AND want to put your "_vimrc" and "_gvimrc" files
47somewhere else, you must set $VIM to where you vimrc files are, and set
48$VIMRUNTIME to the runtime files. Example: >
49 set VIM=C:\usr\piet
Bram Moolenaar8024f932020-01-14 19:29:13 +010050 set VIMRUNTIME=E:\vim\vim82
51Will find "c:\user\piet\_vimrc" and the runtime files in "e:\vim\vim82".
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000052
53See |$VIM| and |$VIMRUNTIME| for more information.
54
55Under Windows 95, you can set $VIM in your C:\autoexec.bat file. For
56example: >
57 set VIM=D:\vim
58Under Windows NT, you can set environment variables for each user separately
59under "Start/Settings/Control Panel->System", or through the properties in the
60menu of "My Computer", under the Environment Tab.
61
62==============================================================================
632. Using backslashes *dos-backslash*
64
65Using backslashes in file names can be a problem. Vi halves the number of
66backslashes for some commands. Vim is a bit more tolerant and does not remove
67backslashes from a file name, so ":e c:\foo\bar" works as expected. But when
68a backslash occurs before a special character (space, comma, backslash, etc.),
69Vim removes the backslash. Use slashes to avoid problems: ":e c:/foo/bar"
70works fine. Vim replaces the slashes with backslashes internally to avoid
71problems with some MS-DOS programs and Win32 programs.
72
73When you prefer to use forward slashes, set the 'shellslash' option. Vim will
74then replace backslashes with forward slashes when expanding file names. This
75is especially useful when using a Unix-like 'shell'.
76
77==============================================================================
783. Standard mappings *dos-standard-mappings*
79
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +000080The mappings for CTRL-PageUp and CTRL-PageDown have been removed, they now
81jump to the next or previous tab page |<C-PageUp>| |<C-PageDown>|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000082
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +000083If you want them to move to the first and last screen line you can use these
84mappings:
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000085
86key key code Normal/Visual mode Insert mode ~
87CTRL-PageUp <M-N><M-C-D> H <C-O>H
88CTRL-PageDown <M-N>v L$ <C-O>L<C-O>$
89
90Additionally, these keys are available for copy/cut/paste. In the Win32
91and DJGPP versions, they also use the clipboard.
92
93Shift-Insert paste text (from clipboard) *<S-Insert>*
94CTRL-Insert copy Visual text (to clipboard) *<C-Insert>*
95CTRL-Del cut Visual text (to clipboard) *<C-Del>*
96Shift-Del cut Visual text (to clipboard) *<S-Del>*
Bram Moolenaare0fa3742016-02-20 15:47:01 +010097CTRL-X cut Visual text (to clipboard)
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000098
99These mappings accomplish this (Win32 and DJGPP versions of Vim):
100
101key key code Normal Visual Insert ~
102Shift-Insert <M-N><M-T> "*P "-d"*P <C-R><C-O>*
103CTRL-Insert <M-N><M-U> "*y
104Shift-Del <M-N><M-W> "*d
105CTRL-Del <M-N><M-X> "*d
Bram Moolenaare0fa3742016-02-20 15:47:01 +0100106CTRL-X <C-X> "*d
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000107
108Or these mappings (non-Win32 version of Vim):
109
110key key code Normal Visual Insert ~
111Shift-Insert <M-N><M-T> P "-dP <C-R><C-O>"
112CTRL-Insert <M-N><M-U> y
113Shift-Del <M-N><M-W> d
114CTRL-Del <M-N><M-X> d
115
116When the clipboard is supported, the "* register is used.
117
118==============================================================================
1194. Screen output and colors *dos-colors*
120
121The default output method for the screen is to use bios calls. This works
122right away on most systems. You do not need ansi.sys. You can use ":mode" to
123set the current screen mode. See |:mode|.
124
125To change the screen colors that Vim uses, you can use the |:highlight|
126command. The Normal highlight group specifies the colors Vim uses for normal
127text. For example, to get grey text on a blue background: >
128 :hi Normal ctermbg=Blue ctermfg=grey
129See |highlight-groups| for other groups that are available.
130
131A DOS console does not support attributes like bold and underlining. You can
Bram Moolenaar1d2ba7f2006-02-14 22:29:30 +0000132set the color used in five modes with nine terminal options. Note that this
133is not necessary since you can set the color directly with the ":highlight"
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000134command; these options are for backward compatibility with older Vim versions.
135The |'highlight'| option specifies which of the five modes is used for which
136action. >
137
138 :set t_mr=^V^[\|xxm start of invert mode
139 :set t_md=^V^[\|xxm start of bold mode
140 :set t_me=^V^[\|xxm back to normal text
141
142 :set t_so=^V^[\|xxm start of standout mode
143 :set t_se=^V^[\|xxm back to normal text
144
145 :set t_us=^V^[\|xxm start of underline mode
146 :set t_ue=^V^[\|xxm back to normal text
147
148 :set t_ZH=^V^[\|xxm start of italics mode
149 :set t_ZR=^V^[\|xxm back to normal text
150
151^V is CTRL-V
152^[ is <Esc>
153You must replace xx with a decimal code, which is the foreground color number
154and background color number added together:
155
156COLOR FOREGROUND BACKGROUND ~
157Black 0 0
158DarkBlue 1 16
159DarkGreen 2 32
160DarkCyan 3 48
161DarkRed 4 64
162DarkMagenta 5 80
163Brown, DarkYellow 6 96
164LightGray 7 112
165DarkGray 8 128 *
166Blue, LightBlue 9 144 *
167Green, LightGreen 10 160 *
168Cyan, LightCyan 11 176 *
169Red, LightRed 12 192 *
170Magenta, LightMagenta 13 208 *
171Yellow, LightYellow 14 224 *
172White 15 240 *
173
174* Depending on the display mode, the color codes above 128 may not be
175 available, and code 128 will make the text blink.
176
177When you use 0, the color is reset to the one used when you started Vim
178(usually 7, lightgray on black, but you can override this. If you have
179overridden the default colors in a command prompt, you may need to adjust
180some of the highlight colors in your vimrc---see below).
181This is the default for t_me.
182
183The defaults for the various highlight modes are:
184 t_mr 112 reverse mode: Black text (0) on LightGray (112)
185 t_md 15 bold mode: White text (15) on Black (0)
186 t_me 0 normal mode (revert to default)
187
188 t_so 31 standout mode: White (15) text on DarkBlue (16)
189 t_se 0 standout mode end (revert to default)
190
191 t_czh 225 italic mode: DarkBlue text (1) on Yellow (224)
192 t_czr 0 italic mode end (revert to default)
193
194 t_us 67 underline mode: DarkCyan text (3) on DarkRed (64)
195 t_ue 0 underline mode end (revert to default)
196
197These colors were chosen because they also look good when using an inverted
198display, but you can change them to your liking.
199
200Example: >
201 :set t_mr=^V^[\|97m " start of invert mode: DarkBlue (1) on Brown (96)
202 :set t_md=^V^[\|67m " start of bold mode: DarkCyan (3) on DarkRed (64)
203 :set t_me=^V^[\|112m " back to normal mode: Black (0) on LightGray (112)
204
205 :set t_so=^V^[\|37m " start of standout mode: DarkMagenta (5) on DarkGreen
206 (32)
207 :set t_se=^V^[\|112m " back to normal mode: Black (0) on LightGray (112)
208
209==============================================================================
2105. File formats *dos-file-formats*
211
212If the 'fileformat' option is set to "dos" (which is the default), Vim accepts
213a single <NL> or a <CR><NL> pair for end-of-line (<EOL>). When writing a
214file, Vim uses <CR><NL>. Thus, if you edit a file and write it, Vim replaces
215<NL> with <CR><NL>.
216
217If the 'fileformat' option is set to "unix", Vim uses a single <NL> for <EOL>
218and shows <CR> as ^M.
219
220You can use Vim to replace <NL> with <CR><NL> by reading in any mode and
221writing in Dos mode (":se ff=dos").
222You can use Vim to replace <CR><NL> with <NL> by reading in Dos mode and
223writing in Unix mode (":se ff=unix").
224
225Vim sets 'fileformat' automatically when 'fileformats' is not empty (which is
226the default), so you don't really have to worry about what you are doing.
227 |'fileformat'| |'fileformats'|
228
229If you want to edit a script file or a binary file, you should set the
230'binary' option before loading the file. Script files and binary files may
231contain single <NL> characters which Vim would replace with <CR><NL>. You can
232set 'binary' automatically by starting Vim with the "-b" (binary) option.
233
234==============================================================================
2356. :cd command *dos-:cd*
236
237The ":cd" command recognizes the drive specifier and changes the current
238drive. Use ":cd c:" to make drive C the active drive. Use ":cd d:\foo" to go
239to the directory "foo" in the root of drive D. Vim also recognizes UNC names
240if the system supports them; e.g., ":cd \\server\share\dir". |:cd|
241
242==============================================================================
2437. Interrupting *dos-CTRL-Break*
244
245Use CTRL-Break instead of CTRL-C to interrupt searches. Vim does not detect
246the CTRL-C until it tries to read a key.
247
248==============================================================================
2498. Temp files *dos-temp-files*
250
251Only for the 16 bit and 32 bit DOS version:
252Vim puts temporary files (for filtering) in the first of these directories
253that exists and in which Vim can create a file:
254 $TMP
255 $TEMP
256 C:\TMP
257 C:\TEMP
258 current directory
259
260For the Win32 version (both console and GUI):
261Vim uses standard Windows functions to obtain a temporary file name (for
262filtering). The first of these directories that exists and in which Vim can
263create a file is used:
264 $TMP
265 $TEMP
266 current directory
267
268==============================================================================
2699. Shell option default *dos-shell*
270
271The default for the 'sh' ('shell') option is "command.com" on Windows 95 and
272"cmd.exe" on Windows NT. If SHELL is defined, Vim uses SHELL instead, and if
273SHELL is not defined but COMSPEC is, Vim uses COMSPEC. Vim starts external
274commands with "<shell> /c <command_name>". Typing CTRL-Z starts a new command
275subshell. Return to Vim with "exit". |'shell'| |CTRL-Z|
276
277If you are running a third-party shell, you may need to set the
278|'shellcmdflag'| ('shcf') and |'shellquote'| ('shq') or |'shellxquote'|
279('sxq') options. Unfortunately, this also depends on the version of Vim used.
280For example, with the MKS Korn shell or with bash, the values of the options
281should be:
282
283 DOS 16 bit DOS 32 bit Win32 ~
284'shellcmdflag' -c -c -c
285'shellquote' "
286'shellxquote' "
287
288For Dos 16 bit this starts the shell as:
289 <shell> -c "command name" >file
290For Win32 as:
291 <shell> -c "command name >file"
292For DOS 32 bit, DJGPP does this internally somehow.
293
294When starting up, Vim checks for the presence of "sh" anywhere in the 'shell'
295option. If it is present, Vim sets the 'shellcmdflag' and 'shellquote' or
296'shellxquote' options will be set as described above.
297
Bram Moolenaar91f84f62018-07-29 15:07:52 +0200298 vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl: