Bram Moolenaar | 21cf823 | 2004-07-16 20:18:37 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | *cmdline.txt* For Vim version 7.0aa. Last change: 2004 Jul 14 |
Bram Moolenaar | 071d427 | 2004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar |
| 5 | |
| 6 | |
| 7 | *Cmdline-mode* *Command-line-mode* |
| 8 | Command-line mode *Cmdline* *Command-line* *mode-cmdline* *:* |
| 9 | |
| 10 | Command-line mode is used to enter Ex commands (":"), search patterns |
| 11 | ("/" and "?"), and filter commands ("!"). |
| 12 | |
| 13 | Basic command line editing is explained in chapter 20 of the user manual |
| 14 | |usr_20.txt|. |
| 15 | |
| 16 | 1. Command-line editing |cmdline-editing| |
| 17 | 2. Command-line completion |cmdline-completion| |
| 18 | 3. Ex command-lines |cmdline-lines| |
| 19 | 4. Ex command-line ranges |cmdline-ranges| |
| 20 | 5. Ex special characters |cmdline-special| |
| 21 | 6. Command-line window |cmdline-window| |
| 22 | |
| 23 | ============================================================================== |
| 24 | 1. Command-line editing *cmdline-editing* |
| 25 | |
| 26 | Normally characters are inserted in front of the cursor position. You can |
| 27 | move around in the command-line with the left and right cursor keys. With the |
| 28 | <Insert> key, you can toggle between inserting and overstriking characters. |
| 29 | {Vi: can only alter the last character in the line} |
| 30 | |
| 31 | Note that if your keyboard does not have working cursor keys or any of the |
| 32 | other special keys, you can use ":cnoremap" to define another key for them. |
| 33 | For example, to define tcsh style editing keys: *tcsh-style* > |
| 34 | :cnoremap <C-A> <Home> |
| 35 | :cnoremap <C-F> <Right> |
| 36 | :cnoremap <C-B> <Left> |
| 37 | :cnoremap <Esc>b <S-Left> |
| 38 | :cnoremap <Esc>f <S-Right> |
| 39 | (<> notation |<>|; type all this literally) |
| 40 | |
| 41 | *cmdline-too-long* |
| 42 | When the command line is getting longer than what fits on the screen, only the |
| 43 | part that fits will be shown. The cursor can only move in this visible part, |
| 44 | thus you cannot edit beyond that. |
| 45 | |
| 46 | *cmdline-history* *history* |
| 47 | The command-lines that you enter are remembered in a history table. You can |
Bram Moolenaar | cfbc5ee | 2004-07-02 15:38:35 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 48 | recall them with the up and down cursor keys. There are actually five |
Bram Moolenaar | 071d427 | 2004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 49 | history tables: |
| 50 | - one for ':' commands |
| 51 | - one for search strings |
| 52 | - one for expressions |
| 53 | - one for input lines, typed for the |input()| function. |
Bram Moolenaar | cfbc5ee | 2004-07-02 15:38:35 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 54 | - one for debug mode commands |
Bram Moolenaar | 071d427 | 2004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 55 | These are completely separate. Each history can only be accessed when |
| 56 | entering the same type of line. |
| 57 | Use the 'history' option to set the number of lines that are remembered |
| 58 | (default: 20). |
| 59 | Notes: |
| 60 | - When you enter a command-line that is exactly the same as an older one, the |
| 61 | old one is removed (to avoid repeated commands moving older commands out of |
| 62 | the history). |
| 63 | - Only commands that are typed are remembered. Ones that completely come from |
| 64 | mappings are not put in the history |
| 65 | - All searches are put in the search history, including the ones that come |
| 66 | from commands like "*" and "#". But for a mapping, only the last search is |
| 67 | remembered (to avoid that long mappings trash the history). |
| 68 | {Vi: no history} |
| 69 | {not available when compiled without the |+cmdline_hist| feature} |
| 70 | |
| 71 | There is an automatic completion of names on the command-line; see |
| 72 | |cmdline-completion|. |
| 73 | |
| 74 | *c_CTRL-V* |
| 75 | CTRL-V Insert next non-digit literally. Up to three digits form the |
| 76 | decimal value of a single byte. The non-digit and the three |
| 77 | digits are not considered for mapping. This works the same |
| 78 | way as in Insert mode (see above, |i_CTRL-V|). |
| 79 | Note: Under Windows CTRL-V is often mapped to paste text. |
| 80 | Use CTRL-Q instead then. |
| 81 | *c_CTRL-Q* |
| 82 | CTRL-Q Same as CTRL-V. But with some terminals it is used for |
| 83 | control flow, it doesn't work then. |
| 84 | |
| 85 | *c_<Left>* |
| 86 | <Left> cursor left |
| 87 | *c_<Right>* |
| 88 | <Right> cursor right |
| 89 | *c_<S-Left>* |
| 90 | <S-Left> or <C-Left> *c_<C-Left>* |
| 91 | cursor one WORD left |
| 92 | *c_<S-Right>* |
| 93 | <S-Right> or <C-Right> *c_<C-Right>* |
| 94 | cursor one WORD right |
| 95 | CTRL-B or <Home> *c_CTRL-B* *c_<Home>* |
| 96 | cursor to beginning of command-line |
| 97 | CTRL-E or <End> *c_CTRL-E* *c_<End>* |
| 98 | cursor to end of command-line |
| 99 | |
| 100 | *c_<LeftMouse>* |
| 101 | <LeftMouse> cursor to position of mouse click. |
| 102 | |
| 103 | CTRL-H *c_<BS>* *c_CTRL-H* |
| 104 | <BS> delete the character in front of the cursor (see |:fixdel| if |
| 105 | your <BS> key does not do what you want). |
| 106 | *c_<Del>* |
| 107 | <Del> delete the character under the cursor (at end of line: |
| 108 | character before the cursor) (see |:fixdel| if your <Del> |
| 109 | key does not do what you want). |
| 110 | *c_CTRL-W* |
| 111 | CTRL-W delete the word before the cursor |
| 112 | *c_CTRL-U* |
| 113 | CTRL-U remove all characters between the cursor position and |
| 114 | the beginning of the line. Previous versions of vim |
| 115 | deleted all characters on the line. If that is the |
| 116 | preferred behavior, add the following to your .vimrc: > |
| 117 | :cnoremap <C-U> <C-E><C-U> |
| 118 | < |
| 119 | Note: if the command-line becomes empty with one of the |
| 120 | delete commands, Command-line mode is quit. |
| 121 | *c_<Insert>* |
| 122 | <Insert> Toggle between insert and overstrike. {not in Vi} |
| 123 | |
| 124 | {char1} <BS> {char2} or *c_digraph* |
| 125 | CTRL-K {char1} {char2} *c_CTRL-K* |
| 126 | enter digraph (see |digraphs|). When {char1} is a special |
| 127 | key, the code for that key is inserted in <> form. {not in Vi} |
| 128 | |
| 129 | CTRL-R {0-9a-z"%#:-=.} *c_CTRL-R* *c_<C-R>* |
| 130 | Insert the contents of a numbered or named register. Between |
| 131 | typing CTRL-R and the second character '"' will be displayed |
| 132 | to indicate that you are expected to enter the name of a |
| 133 | register. |
| 134 | The text is inserted as if you typed it, but mappings and |
| 135 | abbreviations are not used. Command-line completion through |
| 136 | 'wildchar' is not triggered though. And characters that end |
| 137 | the command line are inserted literally (<Esc>, <CR>, <NL>, |
| 138 | <C-C>). A <BS> or CTRL-W could still end the command line |
| 139 | though, and remaining characters will then be interpreted in |
| 140 | another mode, which might not be what you intended. |
| 141 | Special registers: |
| 142 | '"' the unnamed register, containing the text of |
| 143 | the last delete or yank |
| 144 | '%' the current file name |
| 145 | '#' the alternate file name |
| 146 | '*' the clipboard contents (X11: primary selection) |
| 147 | '+' the clipboard contents |
| 148 | '/' the last search pattern |
| 149 | ':' the last command-line |
| 150 | '-' the last small (less than a line) delete |
| 151 | '.' the last inserted text |
| 152 | *c_CTRL-R_=* |
| 153 | '=' the expression register: you are prompted to |
| 154 | enter an expression (see |expression|) |
| 155 | See |registers| about registers. {not in Vi} |
| 156 | |
| 157 | CTRL-R CTRL-F *c_CTRL-R_CTRL-F* *c_<C-R>_<C-F>* |
| 158 | CTRL-R CTRL-P *c_CTRL-R_CTRL-P* *c_<C-R>_<C-P>* |
| 159 | CTRL-R CTRL-W *c_CTRL-R_CTRL-W* *c_<C-R>_<C-W>* |
| 160 | CTRL-R CTRL-A *c_CTRL-R_CTRL-A* *c_<C-R>_<C-A>* |
| 161 | Insert the object under the cursor: |
| 162 | CTRL-F the Filename under the cursor |
| 163 | CTRL-P the Filename under the cursor, expanded with |
| 164 | 'path' as in |gf| |
| 165 | CTRL-W the Word under the cursor |
| 166 | CTRL-A the WORD under the cursor; see |WORD| |
Bram Moolenaar | 21cf823 | 2004-07-16 20:18:37 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 167 | When 'incsearch' is set the cursor position of the currently |
| 168 | displayed match is used. |
Bram Moolenaar | 071d427 | 2004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 169 | {not in Vi} |
| 170 | CTRL-F and CTRL-P: {only when +file_in_path feature is |
| 171 | included} |
| 172 | |
| 173 | *c_CTRL-R_CTRL-R* *c_<C-R>_<C-R>* |
| 174 | *c_CTRL-R_CTRL-O* *c_<C-R>_<C-O>* |
| 175 | CTRL-R CTRL-R {0-9a-z"%#:-=. CTRL-F CTRL-P CTRL-W CTRL-A} |
| 176 | CTRL-R CTRL-O {0-9a-z"%#:-=. CTRL-F CTRL-P CTRL-W CTRL-A} |
| 177 | Insert register or object under the cursor. Works like |
| 178 | |c_CTRL-R| but inserts the text literally. For example, if |
| 179 | register a contains "xy^Hz" (where ^H is a backspace), |
| 180 | "CTRL-R a" will insert "xz" while "CTRL-R CTRL-R a" will |
| 181 | insert "xy^Hz". |
| 182 | |
| 183 | CTRL-\ e {expr} *c_CTRL-\_e* |
| 184 | Evaluate {expr} and replace the whole command line with the |
| 185 | result. You will be prompted for the expression, type <Enter> |
| 186 | to finish it. It's most useful in mappings though. See |
| 187 | |expression|. |
| 188 | See |c_CTRL-R_=| for inserting the result of an expression. |
| 189 | Useful functions are |getcmdline()| and |getcmdpos()|. |
| 190 | The cursor position is unchanged, except when the cursor was |
| 191 | at the end of the line, then it stays at the end. |
| 192 | |setcmdpos()| can be used to set the cursor position. |
| 193 | Example: > |
| 194 | :cmap <F7> <C-\>eAppendSome()<CR> |
| 195 | :func AppendSome() |
| 196 | :let cmd = getcmdline() . " Some()" |
| 197 | :" place the cursor on the ) |
| 198 | :call setcmdpos(strlen(cmd)) |
| 199 | :return cmd |
| 200 | :endfunc |
| 201 | < |
| 202 | *c_CTRL-Y* |
| 203 | CTRL-Y When there is a modeless selection, copy the selection into |
| 204 | the clipboard. |modeless-selection| |
| 205 | If there is no selection CTRL-Y is inserted as a character. |
| 206 | |
| 207 | CTRL-J *c_CTRL-J* *c_<NL>* *c_<CR>* |
| 208 | <CR> or <NL> start entered command |
| 209 | *c_<Esc>* |
| 210 | <Esc> When typed and 'x' not present in 'cpoptions', quit |
| 211 | Command-line mode without executing. In macros or when 'x' |
| 212 | present in 'cpoptions', start entered command. |
| 213 | *c_CTRL-C* |
| 214 | CTRL-C quit command-line without executing |
| 215 | |
| 216 | *c_<Up>* |
| 217 | <Up> recall older command-line from history, whose beginning |
| 218 | matches the current command-line (see below). |
| 219 | {not available when compiled without the |+cmdline_hist| |
| 220 | feature} |
| 221 | *c_<Down>* |
| 222 | <Down> recall more recent command-line from history, whose beginning |
| 223 | matches the current command-line (see below). |
| 224 | {not available when compiled without the |+cmdline_hist| |
| 225 | feature} |
| 226 | |
| 227 | *c_<S-Up>* *c_<PageUp>* |
| 228 | <S-Up> or <PageUp> |
| 229 | recall older command-line from history |
| 230 | {not available when compiled without the |+cmdline_hist| |
| 231 | feature} |
| 232 | *c_<S-Down>* *c_<PageDown>* |
| 233 | <S-Down> or <PageDown> |
| 234 | recall more recent command-line from history |
| 235 | {not available when compiled without the |+cmdline_hist| |
| 236 | feature} |
| 237 | |
| 238 | CTRL-D command-line completion (see |cmdline-completion|) |
| 239 | 'wildchar' option |
| 240 | command-line completion (see |cmdline-completion|) |
| 241 | CTRL-N command-line completion (see |cmdline-completion|) |
| 242 | CTRL-P command-line completion (see |cmdline-completion|) |
| 243 | CTRL-A command-line completion (see |cmdline-completion|) |
| 244 | CTRL-L command-line completion (see |cmdline-completion|) |
| 245 | |
| 246 | *c_CTRL-_* |
| 247 | CTRL-_ a - switch between Hebrew and English keyboard mode, which is |
| 248 | private to the command-line and not related to hkmap. |
| 249 | This is useful when Hebrew text entry is required in the |
| 250 | command-line, searches, abbreviations, etc. Applies only if |
| 251 | Vim is compiled with the |+rightleft| feature and the |
| 252 | 'allowrevins' option is set. |
| 253 | See |rileft.txt|. |
| 254 | |
| 255 | b - switch between Farsi and English keyboard mode, which is |
| 256 | private to the command-line and not related to fkmap. In |
| 257 | Farsi keyboard mode the characters are inserted in reverse |
| 258 | insert manner. This is useful when Farsi text entry is |
| 259 | required in the command-line, searches, abbreviations, etc. |
| 260 | Applies only if Vim is compiled with the |+farsi| feature. |
| 261 | See |farsi.txt|. |
| 262 | |
| 263 | *c_CTRL-^* |
| 264 | CTRL-^ Toggle the use of language |:lmap| mappings and/or Input |
| 265 | Method. |
| 266 | When typing a pattern for a search command and 'imsearch' is |
| 267 | not -1, VAL is the value of 'imsearch', otherwise VAL is the |
| 268 | value of 'iminsert'. |
| 269 | When language mappings are defined: |
| 270 | - If VAL is 1 (langmap mappings used) it becomes 0 (no langmap |
| 271 | mappings used). |
| 272 | - If VAL was not 1 it becomes 1, thus langmap mappings are |
| 273 | enabled. |
| 274 | When no language mappings are defined: |
| 275 | - If VAL is 2 (Input Method is used) it becomes 0 (no input |
| 276 | method used) |
| 277 | - If VAL has another value it becomes 2, thus the Input Method |
| 278 | is enabled. |
| 279 | These language mappings are normally used to type characters |
| 280 | that are different from what the keyboard produces. The |
| 281 | 'keymap' option can be used to install a whole number of them. |
| 282 | When entering a command line, langmap mappings are switched |
| 283 | off, since you are expected to type a command. After |
| 284 | switching it on with CTRL-^, the new state is not used again |
| 285 | for the next command or Search pattern. |
| 286 | {not in Vi} |
| 287 | |
| 288 | For Emacs-style editing on the command-line see |emacs-keys|. |
| 289 | |
| 290 | The <Up> and <Down> keys take the current command-line as a search string. |
| 291 | The beginning of the next/previous command-lines are compared with this |
| 292 | string. The first line that matches is the new command-line. When typing |
| 293 | these two keys repeatedly, the same string is used again. For example, this |
| 294 | can be used to find the previous substitute command: Type ":s" and then <Up>. |
| 295 | The same could be done by typing <S-Up> a number of times until the desired |
| 296 | command-line is shown. (Note: the shifted arrow keys do not work on all |
| 297 | terminals) |
| 298 | |
| 299 | *his* *:history* |
| 300 | :his[tory] Print the history of last entered commands. |
| 301 | {not in Vi} |
| 302 | {not available when compiled without the |+cmdline_hist| |
| 303 | feature} |
| 304 | |
| 305 | :his[tory] [{name}] [{first}][, [{last}]] |
| 306 | List the contents of history {name} which can be: |
| 307 | c[md] or : command-line history |
| 308 | s[earch] or / search string history |
| 309 | e[xpr] or = expression register history |
| 310 | i[nput] or @ input line history |
Bram Moolenaar | cfbc5ee | 2004-07-02 15:38:35 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 311 | d[ebug] or > debug command history |
Bram Moolenaar | 071d427 | 2004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 312 | a[ll] all of the above |
| 313 | {not in Vi} |
| 314 | |
| 315 | If the numbers {first} and/or {last} are given, the respective |
| 316 | range of entries from a history is listed. These numbers can |
| 317 | be specified in the following form: |
| 318 | *:history-indexing* |
| 319 | A positive number represents the absolute index of an entry |
| 320 | as it is given in the first column of a :history listing. |
| 321 | This number remains fixed even if other entries are deleted. |
| 322 | |
| 323 | A negative number means the relative position of an entry, |
| 324 | counted from the newest entry (which has index -1) backwards. |
| 325 | |
| 326 | Examples: |
| 327 | List entries 6 to 12 from the search history: > |
| 328 | :history / 6,12 |
| 329 | < |
| 330 | List the recent five entries from all histories: > |
| 331 | :history all -5, |
| 332 | |
| 333 | ============================================================================== |
| 334 | 2. Command-line completion *cmdline-completion* |
| 335 | |
| 336 | When editing the command-line, a few commands can be used to complete the |
| 337 | word before the cursor. This is available for: |
| 338 | |
| 339 | - Command names: At the start of the command-line. |
| 340 | - Tags: Only after the ":tag" command. |
| 341 | - File names: Only after a command that accepts a file name or a setting for |
| 342 | an option that can be set to a file name. This is called file name |
| 343 | completion. |
| 344 | - Options: Only after the ":set" command. |
| 345 | - Mappings: Only after a ":map" or similar command. |
| 346 | - Variable and function names: Only after a ":if", ":call" or similar command. |
| 347 | |
| 348 | When Vim was compiled with the |+cmdline_compl| feature disabled, only file |
| 349 | names, directories and help items can be completed. |
| 350 | |
| 351 | These are the commands that can be used: |
| 352 | |
| 353 | *c_CTRL-D* |
| 354 | CTRL-D List names that match the pattern in front of the cursor. |
| 355 | When showing file names, directories are highlighted (see |
| 356 | 'highlight' option). Names where 'suffixes' matches are moved |
| 357 | to the end. |
| 358 | *c_CTRL-I* *c_wildchar* *c_<Tab>* |
| 359 | 'wildchar' option |
| 360 | A match is done on the pattern in front of the cursor. The |
| 361 | match (if there are several, the first match) is inserted |
| 362 | in place of the pattern. (Note: does not work inside a |
| 363 | macro, because <Tab> or <Esc> are mostly used as 'wildchar', |
| 364 | and these have a special meaning in some macros.) When typed |
| 365 | again and there were multiple matches, the next |
| 366 | match is inserted. After the last match, the first is used |
| 367 | again (wrap around). |
| 368 | The behavior can be changed with the 'wildmode' option. |
| 369 | *c_CTRL-N* |
| 370 | CTRL-N After using 'wildchar' which got multiple matches, go to next |
| 371 | match. Otherwise recall more recent command-line from history. |
| 372 | <S-Tab> *c_CTRL-P* *c_<S-Tab>* |
| 373 | CTRL-P After using 'wildchar' which got multiple matches, go to |
| 374 | previous match. Otherwise recall older command-line from |
| 375 | history. <S-Tab> only works with the GUI, on the Amiga and |
| 376 | with MS-DOS. |
| 377 | *c_CTRL-A* |
| 378 | CTRL-A All names that match the pattern in front of the cursor are |
| 379 | inserted. |
| 380 | *c_CTRL-L* |
| 381 | CTRL-L A match is done on the pattern in front of the cursor. If |
| 382 | there is one match, it is inserted in place of the pattern. |
| 383 | If there are multiple matches the longest common part is |
| 384 | inserted in place of the pattern. If the result is shorter |
| 385 | than the pattern, no completion is done. |
| 386 | |
| 387 | The 'wildchar' option defaults to <Tab> (CTRL-E when in Vi compatible mode; in |
| 388 | a previous version <Esc> was used). In the pattern standard wildcards '*' and |
| 389 | '?' are accepted. '*' matches any string, '?' matches exactly one character. |
| 390 | |
| 391 | If you like tcsh's autolist completion, you can use this mapping: |
| 392 | :cnoremap X <C-L><C-D> |
| 393 | (Where X is the command key to use, <C-L> is CTRL-L and <C-D> is CTRL-D) |
| 394 | This will find the longest match and then list all matching files. |
| 395 | |
| 396 | If you like tcsh's autolist completion, you can use the 'wildmode' option to |
| 397 | emulate it. For example, this mimics autolist=ambiguous: |
| 398 | :set wildmode=longest,list |
| 399 | This will find the longest match with the first 'wildchar', then list all |
| 400 | matching files with the next. |
| 401 | |
| 402 | *suffixes* |
| 403 | For file name completion you can use the 'suffixes' option to set a priority |
| 404 | between files with almost the same name. If there are multiple matches, |
| 405 | those files with an extension that is in the 'suffixes' option are ignored. |
| 406 | The default is ".bak,~,.o,.h,.info,.swp,.obj", which means that files ending |
| 407 | in ".bak", "~", ".o", ".h", ".info", ".swp" and ".obj" are sometimes ignored. |
| 408 | It is impossible to ignore suffixes with two dots. Examples: |
| 409 | |
| 410 | pattern: files: match: ~ |
| 411 | test* test.c test.h test.o test.c |
| 412 | test* test.h test.o test.h and test.o |
| 413 | test* test.i test.h test.c test.i and test.c |
| 414 | |
| 415 | If there is more than one matching file (after ignoring the ones matching |
| 416 | the 'suffixes' option) the first file name is inserted. You can see that |
| 417 | there is only one match when you type 'wildchar' twice and the completed |
| 418 | match stays the same. You can get to the other matches by entering |
| 419 | 'wildchar', CTRL-N or CTRL-P. All files are included, also the ones with |
| 420 | extensions matching the 'suffixes' option. |
| 421 | |
| 422 | To completely ignore files with some extension use 'wildignore'. |
| 423 | |
| 424 | The old value of an option can be obtained by hitting 'wildchar' just after |
| 425 | the '='. For example, typing 'wildchar' after ":set dir=" will insert the |
| 426 | current value of 'dir'. This overrules file name completion for the options |
| 427 | that take a file name. |
| 428 | |
| 429 | If you would like using <S-Tab> for CTRL-P in an xterm, put this command in |
| 430 | your .cshrc: > |
| 431 | xmodmap -e "keysym Tab = Tab Find" |
| 432 | And this in your .vimrc: > |
| 433 | :cmap <Esc>[1~ <C-P> |
| 434 | |
| 435 | ============================================================================== |
| 436 | 3. Ex command-lines *cmdline-lines* |
| 437 | |
| 438 | The Ex commands have a few specialties: |
| 439 | |
| 440 | *:quote* |
| 441 | '"' at the start of a line causes the whole line to be ignored. '"' |
| 442 | after a command causes the rest of the line to be ignored. This can be used |
| 443 | to add comments. Example: > |
| 444 | :set ai "set 'autoindent' option |
| 445 | It is not possible to add a comment to a shell command ":!cmd" or to the |
| 446 | ":map" command and friends, because they see the '"' as part of their |
| 447 | argument. |
| 448 | |
| 449 | *:bar* *:\bar* |
| 450 | '|' can be used to separate commands, so you can give multiple commands in one |
| 451 | line. If you want to use '|' in an argument, precede it with '\'. |
| 452 | |
| 453 | These commands see the '|' as their argument, and can therefore not be |
| 454 | followed by another command: |
| 455 | :argdo |
| 456 | :autocmd |
| 457 | :bufdo |
| 458 | :command |
| 459 | :cscope |
| 460 | :debug |
| 461 | :folddoopen |
| 462 | :folddoclosed |
| 463 | :function |
| 464 | :global |
| 465 | :help |
| 466 | :helpfind |
| 467 | :make |
| 468 | :normal |
| 469 | :perl |
| 470 | :perldo |
| 471 | :promptfind |
| 472 | :promptrepl |
| 473 | :pyfile |
| 474 | :python |
| 475 | :registers |
| 476 | :read ! |
| 477 | :scscope |
| 478 | :tcl |
| 479 | :tcldo |
| 480 | :tclfile |
| 481 | :vglobal |
| 482 | :windo |
| 483 | :write ! |
| 484 | :[range]! |
| 485 | a user defined command without the "-bar" argument |:command| |
| 486 | |
| 487 | Note that this is confusing (inherited from Vi): With ":g" the '|' is included |
| 488 | in the command, with ":s" it is not. |
| 489 | |
| 490 | To be able to use another command anyway, use the ":execute" command. |
| 491 | Example (append the output of "ls" and jump to the first line): > |
| 492 | :execute 'r !ls' | '[ |
| 493 | |
| 494 | There is one exception: When the 'b' flag is present in 'cpoptions', with the |
| 495 | ":map" and ":abbr" commands and friends CTRL-V needs to be used instead of |
| 496 | '\'. You can also use "<Bar>" instead. See also |map_bar|. |
| 497 | |
| 498 | Examples: > |
| 499 | :!ls | wc view the output of two commands |
| 500 | :r !ls | wc insert the same output in the text |
| 501 | :%g/foo/p|> moves all matching lines one shiftwidth |
| 502 | :%s/foo/bar/|> moves one line one shiftwidth |
| 503 | :map q 10^V| map "q" to "10|" |
| 504 | :map q 10\| map \ l map "q" to "10\" and map "\" to "l" |
| 505 | (when 'b' is present in 'cpoptions') |
| 506 | |
| 507 | You can also use <NL> to separate commands in the same way as with '|'. To |
| 508 | insert a <NL> use CTRL-V CTRL-J. "^@" will be shown. Using '|' is the |
| 509 | preferred method. But for external commands a <NL> must be used, because a |
| 510 | '|' is included in the external command. To avoid the special meaning of <NL> |
| 511 | it must be preceded with a backslash. Example: > |
| 512 | :r !date<NL>-join |
| 513 | This reads the current date into the file and joins it with the previous line. |
| 514 | |
| 515 | Note that when the command before the '|' generates an error, the following |
| 516 | commands will not be executed. |
| 517 | |
| 518 | |
| 519 | Because of Vi compatibility the following strange commands are supported: > |
| 520 | :| print current line (like ":p") |
| 521 | :3| print line 3 (like ":3p") |
| 522 | :3 goto line 3 |
| 523 | |
| 524 | A colon is allowed between the range and the command name. It is ignored |
| 525 | (this is Vi compatible). For example: > |
| 526 | :1,$:s/pat/string |
| 527 | |
| 528 | When the character '%' or '#' is used where a file name is expected, they are |
| 529 | expanded to the current and alternate file name (see the chapter "editing |
| 530 | files" |:_%| |:_#|). |
| 531 | |
| 532 | Embedded spaces in file names are allowed on the Amiga if one file name is |
| 533 | expected as argument. Trailing spaces will be ignored, unless escaped with a |
| 534 | backslash or CTRL-V. Note that the ":next" command uses spaces to separate |
| 535 | file names. Escape the spaces to include them in a file name. Example: > |
| 536 | :next foo\ bar goes\ to school\ |
| 537 | starts editing the three files "foo bar", "goes to" and "school ". |
| 538 | |
| 539 | When you want to use the special characters '"' or '|' in a command, or want |
| 540 | to use '%' or '#' in a file name, precede them with a backslash. The |
| 541 | backslash is not required in a range and in the ":substitute" command. |
| 542 | |
| 543 | *:_!* |
| 544 | The '!' (bang) character after an Ex command makes the command behave in a |
| 545 | different way. The '!' should be placed immediately after the command, without |
| 546 | any blanks in between. If you insert blanks the '!' will be seen as an |
| 547 | argument for the command, which has a different meaning. For example: |
| 548 | :w! name write the current buffer to file "name", overwriting |
| 549 | any existing file |
| 550 | :w !name send the current buffer as standard input to command |
| 551 | "name" |
| 552 | |
| 553 | ============================================================================== |
| 554 | 4. Ex command-line ranges *cmdline-ranges* *[range]* *E16* *E493* |
| 555 | |
| 556 | Some Ex commands accept a line range in front of them. This is noted as |
| 557 | [range]. It consists of one or more line specifiers, separated with ',' or |
| 558 | ';'. |
| 559 | |
| 560 | The basics are explained in section |10.3| of the user manual. |
| 561 | |
| 562 | *:,* *:;* |
| 563 | When separated with ';' the cursor position will be set to that line |
| 564 | before interpreting the next line specifier. This doesn't happen for ','. |
| 565 | Examples: > |
| 566 | 4,/this line/ |
| 567 | < from line 4 till match with "this line" after the cursor line. > |
| 568 | 5;/that line/ |
| 569 | < from line 5 till match with "that line" after line 5. |
| 570 | |
| 571 | The default line specifier for most commands is the cursor position, but the |
| 572 | commands ":write" and ":global" have the whole file (1,$) as default. |
| 573 | |
| 574 | If more line specifiers are given than required for the command, the first |
| 575 | one(s) will be ignored. |
| 576 | |
| 577 | Line numbers may be specified with: *:range* *E14* *{address}* |
| 578 | {number} an absolute line number |
| 579 | . the current line *:.* |
| 580 | $ the last line in the file *:$* |
| 581 | % equal to 1,$ (the entire file) *:%* |
| 582 | 't position of mark t (lowercase) *:'* |
| 583 | 'T position of mark T (uppercase); when the mark is in |
| 584 | another file it cannot be used in a range |
| 585 | /{pattern}[/] the next line where {pattern} matches *:/* |
| 586 | ?{pattern}[?] the previous line where {pattern} matches *:?* |
| 587 | \/ the next line where the previously used search |
| 588 | pattern matches |
| 589 | \? the previous line where the previously used search |
| 590 | pattern matches |
| 591 | \& the next line where the previously used substitute |
| 592 | pattern matches |
| 593 | |
| 594 | Each may be followed (several times) by '+' or '-' and an optional number. |
| 595 | This number is added or subtracted from the preceding line number. If the |
| 596 | number is omitted, 1 is used. |
| 597 | |
| 598 | The "/" and "?" after {pattern} are required to separate the pattern from |
| 599 | anything that follows. |
| 600 | |
| 601 | The "/" and "?" may be preceded with another address. The search starts from |
| 602 | there. The difference from using ';' is that the cursor isn't moved. |
| 603 | Examples: > |
| 604 | /pat1//pat2/ Find line containing "pat2" after line containing |
| 605 | "pat1", without moving the cursor. |
| 606 | 7;/pat2/ Find line containing "pat2", after line 7, leaving |
| 607 | the cursor in line 7. |
| 608 | |
| 609 | The {number} must be between 0 and the number of lines in the file. When |
| 610 | using a 0 (zero) this is interpreted as a 1 by most commands. Commands that |
| 611 | use it as a count do use it as a zero (|:tag|, |:pop|, etc). Some commands |
| 612 | interpret the zero as "before the first line" (|:read|, search pattern, etc). |
| 613 | |
| 614 | Examples: > |
| 615 | .+3 three lines below the cursor |
| 616 | /that/+1 the line below the next line containing "that" |
| 617 | .,$ from current line until end of file |
| 618 | 0;/that the first line containing "that", also matches in the |
| 619 | first line. |
| 620 | 1;/that the first line after line 1 containing "that" |
| 621 | |
| 622 | Some commands allow for a count after the command. This count is used as the |
| 623 | number of lines to be used, starting with the line given in the last line |
| 624 | specifier (the default is the cursor line). The commands that accept a count |
| 625 | are the ones that use a range but do not have a file name argument (because |
| 626 | a file name can also be a number). |
| 627 | |
| 628 | Examples: > |
| 629 | :s/x/X/g 5 substitute 'x' by 'X' in the current line and four |
| 630 | following lines |
| 631 | :23d 4 delete lines 23, 24, 25 and 26 |
| 632 | |
| 633 | |
| 634 | Folds and Range |
| 635 | |
| 636 | When folds are active the line numbers are rounded off to include the whole |
| 637 | closed fold. See |fold-behavior|. |
| 638 | |
| 639 | |
| 640 | Reverse Range |
| 641 | |
| 642 | A range should have the lower line number first. If this is not the case, Vim |
| 643 | will ask you if it should swap the line numbers. This is not done within the |
| 644 | global command ":g". |
| 645 | |
| 646 | |
| 647 | Count and Range *N:* |
| 648 | |
| 649 | When giving a count before entering ":", this is translated into: |
| 650 | :.,.+(count - 1) |
| 651 | In words: The 'count' lines at and after the cursor. Example: To delete |
| 652 | three lines: > |
| 653 | 3:d<CR> is translated into: .,.+2d<CR> |
| 654 | < |
| 655 | |
| 656 | Visual Mode and Range *v_:* |
| 657 | |
| 658 | {Visual}: Starts a command-line with the Visual selected lines as a |
| 659 | range. The code ":'<,'>" is used for this range, which makes |
| 660 | it possible to select a similar line from the command-line |
| 661 | history for repeating a command on different Visually selected |
| 662 | lines. |
| 663 | |
| 664 | ============================================================================== |
| 665 | 5. Ex special characters *cmdline-special* |
| 666 | |
| 667 | In Ex commands, at places where a file name can be used, the following |
| 668 | characters have a special meaning. These can also be used in the expression |
| 669 | function expand() |expand()|. |
| 670 | % is replaced with the current file name *:_%* |
| 671 | # is replaced with the alternate file name *:_#* |
| 672 | #n (where n is a number) is replaced with the file name of |
| 673 | buffer n. "#0" is the same as "#" |
| 674 | ## is replaced with all names in the argument list *:_##* |
| 675 | concatenated, separated by spaces. Each space in a name |
| 676 | is preceded with a backslash. |
| 677 | Note that these give the file name as it was typed. If an absolute path is |
| 678 | needed (when using the file name from a different directory), you need to add |
| 679 | ":p". See |filename-modifiers|. |
| 680 | Note that backslashes are inserted before spaces, so that the command will |
| 681 | correctly interpret the file name. But this doesn't happen for shell |
| 682 | commands. For those you probably have to use quotes: > |
| 683 | :!ls "%" |
| 684 | :r !spell "%" |
| 685 | |
| 686 | To avoid the special meaning of '%' and '#' insert a backslash before it. |
| 687 | Detail: The special meaning is always escaped when there is a backslash before |
| 688 | it, no matter how many backslashes. |
| 689 | you type: result ~ |
| 690 | # alternate.file |
| 691 | \# # |
| 692 | \\# \# |
| 693 | |
| 694 | *:<cword>* *:<cWORD>* *:<cfile>* *<cfile>* |
| 695 | *:<sfile>* *<sfile>* *:<afile>* *<afile>* |
| 696 | *:<abuf>* *<abuf>* *:<amatch>* *<amatch>* |
| 697 | *E495* *E496* *E497* *E498* *E499* *E500* |
| 698 | Note: these are typed literally, they are not special keys! |
| 699 | <cword> is replaced with the word under the cursor (like |star|) |
| 700 | <cWORD> is replaced with the WORD under the cursor (see |WORD|) |
| 701 | <cfile> is replaced with the path name under the cursor (like what |
| 702 | |gf| uses) |
| 703 | <afile> when executing autocommands, is replaced with the file name |
| 704 | for a file read or write |
| 705 | <abuf> when executing autocommands, is replaced with the currently |
| 706 | effective buffer number (for ":r file" it is the current |
| 707 | buffer, the file being read is not in a buffer). |
| 708 | <amatch> when executing autocommands, is replaced with the match for |
| 709 | which this autocommand was executed. It differs form |
| 710 | <afile> only when the file name isn't used to match with |
| 711 | (for FileType and Syntax events). |
| 712 | <sfile> when executing a ":source" command, is replaced with the |
| 713 | file name of the sourced file; |
| 714 | when executing a function, is replaced with |
| 715 | "function {function-name}"; function call nesting is |
| 716 | indicated like this: |
| 717 | "function {function-name1}..{function-name2}". Note that |
| 718 | filename-modifiers are useless when <sfile> is used inside |
| 719 | a function. |
| 720 | |
| 721 | *filename-modifiers* |
| 722 | *:_%:* *::8* *::p* *::.* *::~* *::h* *::t* *::r* *::e* *::s* *::gs* |
| 723 | The file name modifiers can be used after "%", "#", "#n", "<cfile>", "<sfile>", |
| 724 | "<afile>" or "<abuf>". They are also used with the |fnamemodify()| function. |
| 725 | These are not available when Vim has been compiled without the |+modify_fname| |
| 726 | feature. |
| 727 | These modifiers can be given, in this order: |
| 728 | :p Make file name a full path. Must be the first modifier. Also |
| 729 | changes "~/" (and "~user/" for Unix and VMS) to the path for |
| 730 | the home directory. If the name is a directory a path |
| 731 | separator is added at the end. For a file name that does not |
| 732 | exist and does not have an absolute path the result is |
| 733 | unpredictable. |
| 734 | :8 Converts the path to 8.3 short format (currently only on |
| 735 | win32). Will act on as much of a path that is an existing |
| 736 | path. |
| 737 | :~ Reduce file name to be relative to the home directory, if |
| 738 | possible. File name is unmodified if it is not below the home |
| 739 | directory. |
| 740 | :. Reduce file name to be relative to current directory, if |
| 741 | possible. File name is unmodified if it is not below the |
| 742 | current directory. |
| 743 | For maximum shortness, use ":~:.". |
| 744 | :h Head of the file name (the last component and any separators |
| 745 | removed). Cannot be used with :e, :r or :t. |
| 746 | Can be repeated to remove several components at the end. |
| 747 | When the file name ends in a path separator, only the path |
| 748 | separator is removed. Thus ":p:h" on a directory name results |
| 749 | on the directory name itself (without trailing slash). |
| 750 | When the file name is an absolute path (starts with "/" for |
| 751 | Unix; "x:\" for MS-DOS, WIN32, OS/2; "drive:" for Amiga), that |
| 752 | part is not removed. When there is no head (path is relative |
| 753 | to current directory) the result is empty. |
| 754 | :t Tail of the file name (last component of the name). Must |
| 755 | precede any :r or :e. |
| 756 | :r Root of the file name (the last extension removed). When |
| 757 | there is only an extension (file name that starts with '.', |
| 758 | e.g., ".vimrc"), it is not removed. Can be repeated to remove |
| 759 | several extensions (last one first). |
| 760 | :e Extension of the file name. Only makes sense when used alone. |
| 761 | When there is no extension the result is empty. |
| 762 | When there is only an extension (file name that starts with |
| 763 | '.'), the result is empty. Can be repeated to include more |
| 764 | extensions. If there are not enough extensions (but at least |
| 765 | one) as much as possible are included. |
| 766 | :s?pat?sub? |
| 767 | Substitute the first occurrence of "pat" with "sub". This |
| 768 | works like the |:s| command. "pat" is a regular expression. |
| 769 | Any character can be used for '?', but it must not occur in |
| 770 | "pat" or "sub". |
| 771 | After this, the previous modifiers can be used again. For |
| 772 | example ":p", to make a full path after the substitution. |
| 773 | :gs?pat?sub? |
| 774 | Substitute all occurrences of "path" with "sub". Otherwise |
| 775 | this works like ":s". |
| 776 | |
| 777 | Examples, when the file name is "src/version.c", current dir |
| 778 | "/home/mool/vim": > |
| 779 | :p /home/mool/vim/src/version.c |
| 780 | :p:. src/version.c |
| 781 | :p:~ ~/vim/src/version.c |
| 782 | :h src |
| 783 | :p:h /home/mool/vim/src |
| 784 | :p:h:h /home/mool/vim |
| 785 | :t version.c |
| 786 | :p:t version.c |
| 787 | :r src/version |
| 788 | :p:r /home/mool/vim/src/version |
| 789 | :t:r version |
| 790 | :e c |
| 791 | :s?version?main? src/main.c |
| 792 | :s?version?main?:p /home/mool/vim/src/main.c |
| 793 | :p:gs?/?\\? \home\mool\vim\src\version.c |
| 794 | |
| 795 | Examples, when the file name is "src/version.c.gz": > |
| 796 | :p /home/mool/vim/src/version.c.gz |
| 797 | :e gz |
| 798 | :e:e c.gz |
| 799 | :e:e:e c.gz |
| 800 | :e:e:r c |
| 801 | :r src/version.c |
| 802 | :r:e c |
| 803 | :r:r src/version |
| 804 | :r:r:r src/version |
| 805 | < |
| 806 | *extension-removal* *:_%<* |
| 807 | If a "<" is appended to "%", "#", "#n" or "CTRL-V p" the extension of the file |
| 808 | name is removed (everything after and including the last '.' in the file |
| 809 | name). This is included for backwards compatibility with version 3.0, the |
| 810 | ":r" form is preferred. Examples: > |
| 811 | |
| 812 | % current file name |
| 813 | %< current file name without extension |
| 814 | # alternate file name for current window |
| 815 | #< idem, without extension |
| 816 | #31 alternate file number 31 |
| 817 | #31< idem, without extension |
| 818 | <cword> word under the cursor |
| 819 | <cWORD> WORD under the cursor (see |WORD|) |
| 820 | <cfile> path name under the cursor |
| 821 | <cfile>< idem, without extension |
| 822 | |
| 823 | Note: Where a file name is expected wildcards expansion is done. On Unix the |
| 824 | shell is used for this, unless it can be done internally (for speed). |
| 825 | Backticks also work, like in > |
| 826 | :n `echo *.c` |
| 827 | (backtick expansion is not possible in |restricted-mode|) |
| 828 | But expansion is only done if there are any wildcards before expanding the |
| 829 | '%', '#', etc.. This avoids expanding wildcards inside a file name. If you |
| 830 | want to expand the result of <cfile>, add a wildcard character to it. |
| 831 | Examples: (alternate file name is "?readme?") |
| 832 | command expands to ~ |
| 833 | :e # :e ?readme? |
| 834 | :e `ls #` :e {files matching "?readme?"} |
| 835 | :e #.* :e {files matching "?readme?.*"} |
| 836 | :cd <cfile> :cd {file name under cursor} |
| 837 | :cd <cfile>* :cd {file name under cursor plus "*" and then expanded} |
| 838 | |
| 839 | When the expanded argument contains a "!" and it is used for a shell command |
| 840 | (":!cmd", ":r !cmd" or ":w !cmd"), it is escaped with a backslash to avoid it |
| 841 | being expanded into a previously used command. When the 'shell' option |
| 842 | contains "sh", this is done twice, to avoid the shell trying to expand the |
| 843 | "!". |
| 844 | |
| 845 | *filename-backslash* |
| 846 | For filesystems that use a backslash as directory separator (MS-DOS, Windows, |
| 847 | OS/2), it's a bit difficult to recognize a backslash that is used to escape |
| 848 | the special meaning of the next character. The general rule is: If the |
| 849 | backslash is followed by a normal file name character, it does not have a |
| 850 | special meaning. Therefore "\file\foo" is a valid file name, you don't have |
| 851 | to type the backslash twice. |
| 852 | |
| 853 | An exception is the '$' sign. It is a valid character in a file name. But |
| 854 | to avoid a file name like "$home" to be interpreted as an environment variable, |
| 855 | it needs to be preceded by a backslash. Therefore you need to use "/\$home" |
| 856 | for the file "$home" in the root directory. A few examples: |
| 857 | |
| 858 | FILE NAME INTERPRETED AS ~ |
| 859 | $home expanded to value of environment var $home |
| 860 | \$home file "$home" in current directory |
| 861 | /\$home file "$home" in root directory |
| 862 | \\$home file "\\", followed by expanded $home |
| 863 | |
| 864 | ============================================================================== |
| 865 | 6. Command-line window *cmdline-window* *cmdwin* |
| 866 | |
| 867 | In the command-line window the command line can be edited just like editing |
| 868 | text in any window. It is a special kind of window, because you cannot leave |
| 869 | it in a normal way. |
| 870 | {not available when compiled without the |+cmdline_hist| or |+vertsplit| |
| 871 | feature} |
| 872 | |
| 873 | |
| 874 | OPEN |
| 875 | |
| 876 | There are two ways to open the command-line window: |
| 877 | 1. From Command-line mode, use the key specified with the 'cedit' option. |
| 878 | The default is CTRL-F when 'compatible' is not set. |
| 879 | 2. From Normal mode, use the "q:", "q/" or "q?" command. *q:* *q/* *q?* |
| 880 | This starts editing an Ex command-line ("q:") or search string ("q/" or |
| 881 | "q?"). Note that this is not possible while recording is in progress (the |
| 882 | "q" stops recording then). |
| 883 | |
| 884 | When the window opens it is filled with the command-line history. The last |
| 885 | line contains the command as typed so far. The left column will show a |
| 886 | character that indicates the type of command-line being edited, see |
| 887 | |cmdwin-char|. |
| 888 | |
| 889 | Vim will be in Normal mode when the editor is opened, except when 'insertmode' |
| 890 | is set. |
| 891 | |
| 892 | The height of the window is specified with 'cmdwinheight' (or smaller if there |
| 893 | is no room). The window is always full width and is positioned just above the |
| 894 | command-line. |
| 895 | |
| 896 | |
| 897 | EDIT |
| 898 | |
| 899 | You can now use commands to move around and edit the text in the window. Both |
| 900 | in Normal mode and Insert mode. |
| 901 | |
| 902 | It is possible to use ":", "/" and other commands that use the command-line, |
| 903 | but it's not possible to open another command-line window then. There is no |
| 904 | nesting. |
| 905 | *E11* |
| 906 | The command-line window is not a normal window. It is not possible to move to |
| 907 | another window or edit another buffer. All commands that would do this are |
| 908 | disabled in the command-line window. Of course it _is_ possible to execute |
| 909 | any command that you entered in the command-line window. |
| 910 | |
| 911 | |
| 912 | CLOSE *E199* |
| 913 | |
| 914 | There are several ways to leave the command-line window: |
| 915 | |
| 916 | <CR> Execute the command-line under the cursor. Works both in |
| 917 | Insert and in Normal mode. |
| 918 | CTRL-C Continue in Command-line mode. The command-line under the |
| 919 | cursor is used as the command-line. Works both in Insert and |
| 920 | in Normal mode. ":close" also works. There is no redraw, |
| 921 | thus the window will remain visible. |
| 922 | :quit Discard the command line and go back to Normal mode. |
| 923 | ":exit", ":xit" and CTRL-\ CTRL-N also work. |
| 924 | :qall Quit Vim, unless there are changes in some buffer. |
| 925 | :qall! Quit Vim, discarding changes to any buffer. |
| 926 | |
| 927 | Once the command-line window is closed the old window sizes are restored. The |
| 928 | executed command applies to the window and buffer where the command-line was |
| 929 | started from. This works as if the command-line window was not there, except |
| 930 | that there will be an extra screen redraw. |
| 931 | The buffer used for the command-line window is deleted. Any changes to lines |
| 932 | other than the one that is executed with <CR> are lost. |
| 933 | |
| 934 | |
| 935 | VARIOUS |
| 936 | |
| 937 | The command-line window cannot be used: |
| 938 | - when there already is a command-line window (no nesting) |
| 939 | - for entering a encryption key or when using inputsecret() |
| 940 | - when Vim was not compiled with the +vertsplit feature |
| 941 | |
| 942 | Some options are set when the command-line window is opened: |
| 943 | 'filetype' "vim", when editing an Ex command-line; this starts Vim syntax |
| 944 | highlighting if it was enabled |
| 945 | 'rightleft' off |
| 946 | 'modifiable' on |
| 947 | 'buftype' "nofile" |
| 948 | 'swapfile' off |
| 949 | |
| 950 | It is allowed to write the buffer contents to a file. This is an easy way to |
| 951 | save the command-line history and read it back later. |
| 952 | |
| 953 | If the 'wildchar' option is set to <Tab>, and the command-line window is used |
| 954 | for an Ex command, then two mappings will be added to use <Tab> for completion |
| 955 | in the command-line window, like this: > |
| 956 | :imap <buffer> <Tab> <C-X><C-V> |
| 957 | :nmap <buffer> <Tab> a<C-X><C-V> |
| 958 | Note that hitting <Tab> in Normal mode will do completion on the next |
| 959 | character. That way it works at the end of the line. |
| 960 | If you don't want these mappings, disable them with: > |
| 961 | au CmdwinEnter [:>] iunmap <Tab> |
| 962 | au CmdwinEnter [:>] nunmap <Tab> |
| 963 | You could put these lines in your vimrc file. |
| 964 | |
| 965 | While in the command-line window you cannot use the mouse to put the cursor in |
| 966 | another window, or drag statuslines of other windows. You can drag the |
| 967 | statusline of the command-line window itself and the statusline above it. |
| 968 | Thus you can resize the command-line window, but not others. |
| 969 | |
| 970 | |
| 971 | AUTOCOMMANDS |
| 972 | |
| 973 | Two autocommand events are used: |CmdwinEnter| and |CmdwinLeave|. Since this |
| 974 | window is of a special type, the WinEnter, WinLeave, BufEnter and BufLeave |
| 975 | events are not triggered. You can use the Cmdwin events to do settings |
| 976 | specifically for the command-line window. Be careful not to cause side |
| 977 | effects! |
| 978 | Example: > |
| 979 | :au CmdwinEnter : let b:cpt_save = &cpt | set cpt=v |
| 980 | :au CmdwinLeave : let &cpt = b:cpt_save |
| 981 | This sets 'complete' to use command-line completion in Insert mode for CTRL-N. |
| 982 | Another example: > |
| 983 | :au CmdwinEnter [/?] startinsert |
| 984 | This will make Vim start in Insert mode in the command-line window. |
| 985 | |
| 986 | *cmdwin-char* |
| 987 | The character used for the pattern indicates the type of command-line: |
| 988 | : normal Ex command |
| 989 | > debug mode command |debug-mode| |
| 990 | / forward search string |
| 991 | ? backward search string |
| 992 | = expression for "= |expr-register| |
| 993 | @ string for |input()| |
| 994 | - text for |:insert| or |:append| |
| 995 | |
| 996 | vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl: |