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glepnir1c5a1202024-12-04 20:27:34 +01001*autocmd.txt* For Vim version 9.1. Last change: 2024 Dec 04
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002
3
4 VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar
5
6
Bram Moolenaar675e8d62018-06-24 20:42:01 +02007Automatic commands *autocommand* *autocommands*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00008
9For a basic explanation, see section |40.3| in the user manual.
10
111. Introduction |autocmd-intro|
122. Defining autocommands |autocmd-define|
133. Removing autocommands |autocmd-remove|
144. Listing autocommands |autocmd-list|
155. Events |autocmd-events|
166. Patterns |autocmd-patterns|
Bram Moolenaarb5bf5b82004-12-24 14:35:23 +0000177. Buffer-local autocommands |autocmd-buflocal|
188. Groups |autocmd-groups|
199. Executing autocommands |autocmd-execute|
2010. Using autocommands |autocmd-use|
Bram Moolenaarb3480382005-12-11 21:33:32 +00002111. Disabling autocommands |autocmd-disable|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000022
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000023
24==============================================================================
251. Introduction *autocmd-intro*
26
Bram Moolenaard4755bb2004-09-02 19:12:26 +000027You can specify commands to be executed automatically when reading or writing
28a file, when entering or leaving a buffer or window, and when exiting Vim.
29For example, you can create an autocommand to set the 'cindent' option for
30files matching *.c. You can also use autocommands to implement advanced
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000031features, such as editing compressed files (see |gzip-example|). The usual
32place to put autocommands is in your .vimrc or .exrc file.
33
Bram Moolenaar72540672018-02-09 22:00:53 +010034 *E203* *E204* *E143* *E855* *E937* *E952*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000035WARNING: Using autocommands is very powerful, and may lead to unexpected side
36effects. Be careful not to destroy your text.
37- It's a good idea to do some testing on an expendable copy of a file first.
38 For example: If you use autocommands to decompress a file when starting to
39 edit it, make sure that the autocommands for compressing when writing work
40 correctly.
41- Be prepared for an error halfway through (e.g., disk full). Vim will mostly
42 be able to undo the changes to the buffer, but you may have to clean up the
43 changes to other files by hand (e.g., compress a file that has been
44 decompressed).
45- If the BufRead* events allow you to edit a compressed file, the FileRead*
46 events should do the same (this makes recovery possible in some rare cases).
47 It's a good idea to use the same autocommands for the File* and Buf* events
48 when possible.
49
Yegappan Lakshmanan971f6822022-05-24 11:40:11 +010050Recommended use:
51- Always use a group, so that it's easy to delete the autocommand.
52- Keep the command itself short, call a function to do more work.
Bram Moolenaarcfa8f9a2022-06-03 21:59:47 +010053- Make it so that the script it is defined in can be sourced several times
Yegappan Lakshmanan971f6822022-05-24 11:40:11 +010054 without the autocommand being repeated.
55
56Example in Vim9 script: >
Boyang Du72985652024-07-09 18:46:12 +020057 autocmd_add([{replace: true,
Yegappan Lakshmanan971f6822022-05-24 11:40:11 +010058 group: 'DemoGroup',
59 event: 'BufEnter',
60 pattern: '*.txt',
61 cmd: 'call DemoBufEnter()'
Boyang Du72985652024-07-09 18:46:12 +020062 }])
Yegappan Lakshmanan971f6822022-05-24 11:40:11 +010063
64In legacy script: >
Boyang Du72985652024-07-09 18:46:12 +020065 call autocmd_add([#{replace: v:true,
Yegappan Lakshmanan971f6822022-05-24 11:40:11 +010066 \ group: 'DemoGroup',
Bram Moolenaar938ae282023-02-20 20:44:55 +000067 \ event: 'BufEnter',
Yegappan Lakshmanan971f6822022-05-24 11:40:11 +010068 \ pattern: '*.txt',
69 \ cmd: 'call DemoBufEnter()'
Boyang Du72985652024-07-09 18:46:12 +020070 \ }])
Yegappan Lakshmanan971f6822022-05-24 11:40:11 +010071
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000072==============================================================================
732. Defining autocommands *autocmd-define*
74
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000075 *:au* *:autocmd*
Bram Moolenaarfd31be22022-01-16 14:46:06 +000076:au[tocmd] [group] {event} {aupat} [++once] [++nested] {cmd}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000077 Add {cmd} to the list of commands that Vim will
78 execute automatically on {event} for a file matching
Bram Moolenaarfd31be22022-01-16 14:46:06 +000079 {aupat} |autocmd-patterns|.
Bram Moolenaar85388672021-01-31 17:03:52 +010080 Here {event} cannot be "*". *E1155*
Bram Moolenaar98ef2332018-03-18 14:44:37 +010081 Note: A quote character is seen as argument to the
82 :autocmd and won't start a comment.
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +010083 Vim always adds the {cmd} after existing autocommands,
84 so that the autocommands execute in the order in which
Bram Moolenaareb93f3f2019-04-04 15:04:56 +020085 they were given.
86 See |autocmd-nested| for [++nested]. "nested"
87 (without the ++) can also be used, for backwards
Bram Moolenaar1588bc82022-03-08 21:35:07 +000088 compatibility, but not in |Vim9| script. *E1078*
Bram Moolenaareb93f3f2019-04-04 15:04:56 +020089 *autocmd-once*
90 If [++once] is supplied the command is executed once,
91 then removed ("one shot").
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000092
Bram Moolenaarb5bf5b82004-12-24 14:35:23 +000093The special pattern <buffer> or <buffer=N> defines a buffer-local autocommand.
94See |autocmd-buflocal|.
95
Bram Moolenaar1b884a02020-12-10 21:11:27 +010096If the `:autocmd` is in Vim9 script (a script that starts with `:vim9script`
97and in a `:def` function) then {cmd} will be executed as in Vim9
Bram Moolenaar4466ad62020-11-21 13:16:30 +010098script. Thus this depends on where the autocmd is defined, not where it is
99triggered.
Bram Moolenaarf1dcd142022-12-31 15:30:45 +0000100 *:autocmd-block*
Bram Moolenaar6aa57292021-08-14 21:25:52 +0200101{cmd} can be a block, like with `:command`, see |:command-repl|. Example: >
Bram Moolenaar73b8b0a2021-08-01 14:52:32 +0200102 au BufReadPost *.xml {
103 setlocal matchpairs+=<:>
104 /<start
105 }
106
Yegappan Lakshmanan1755a912022-05-19 10:31:47 +0100107The |autocmd_add()| function can be used to add a list of autocmds and autocmd
Yegappan Lakshmanan971f6822022-05-24 11:40:11 +0100108groups from a Vim script. It is preferred if you have anything that would
109require using `:execute` with `:autocmd`.
Yegappan Lakshmanan1755a912022-05-19 10:31:47 +0100110
Bram Moolenaare99e8442016-07-26 20:43:40 +0200111Note: The ":autocmd" command can only be followed by another command when the
Bram Moolenaar88a42052021-11-21 21:13:36 +0000112'|' appears where the pattern is expected. This works: >
Bram Moolenaare99e8442016-07-26 20:43:40 +0200113 :augroup mine | au! BufRead | augroup END
114But this sees "augroup" as part of the defined command: >
Bram Moolenaarb0d45e72017-11-05 18:19:24 +0100115 :augroup mine | au! BufRead * | augroup END
Bram Moolenaare99e8442016-07-26 20:43:40 +0200116 :augroup mine | au BufRead * set tw=70 | augroup END
Bram Moolenaarb0d45e72017-11-05 18:19:24 +0100117Instead you can put the group name into the command: >
118 :au! mine BufRead *
119 :au mine BufRead * set tw=70
120Or use `:execute`: >
121 :augroup mine | exe "au! BufRead *" | augroup END
122 :augroup mine | exe "au BufRead * set tw=70" | augroup END
Bram Moolenaare99e8442016-07-26 20:43:40 +0200123
Bram Moolenaar75ab5902022-04-18 15:36:40 +0100124< *autocmd-expand*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000125Note that special characters (e.g., "%", "<cword>") in the ":autocmd"
126arguments are not expanded when the autocommand is defined. These will be
127expanded when the Event is recognized, and the {cmd} is executed. The only
128exception is that "<sfile>" is expanded when the autocmd is defined. Example:
129>
130 :au BufNewFile,BufRead *.html so <sfile>:h/html.vim
131
132Here Vim expands <sfile> to the name of the file containing this line.
133
Bram Moolenaar2ec618c2016-10-01 14:47:05 +0200134`:autocmd` adds to the list of autocommands regardless of whether they are
135already present. When your .vimrc file is sourced twice, the autocommands
136will appear twice. To avoid this, define your autocommands in a group, so
137that you can easily clear them: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000138
Bram Moolenaar2ec618c2016-10-01 14:47:05 +0200139 augroup vimrc
Bram Moolenaar98ef2332018-03-18 14:44:37 +0100140 " Remove all vimrc autocommands
141 autocmd!
Bram Moolenaar2ec618c2016-10-01 14:47:05 +0200142 au BufNewFile,BufRead *.html so <sfile>:h/html.vim
143 augroup END
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000144
145If you don't want to remove all autocommands, you can instead use a variable
146to ensure that Vim includes the autocommands only once: >
147
148 :if !exists("autocommands_loaded")
149 : let autocommands_loaded = 1
150 : au ...
151 :endif
152
153When the [group] argument is not given, Vim uses the current group (as defined
154with ":augroup"); otherwise, Vim uses the group defined with [group]. Note
155that [group] must have been defined before. You cannot define a new group
156with ":au group ..."; use ":augroup" for that.
157
158While testing autocommands, you might find the 'verbose' option to be useful: >
159 :set verbose=9
160This setting makes Vim echo the autocommands as it executes them.
161
162When defining an autocommand in a script, it will be able to call functions
163local to the script and use mappings local to the script. When the event is
164triggered and the command executed, it will run in the context of the script
165it was defined in. This matters if |<SID>| is used in a command.
166
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000167When executing the commands, the message from one command overwrites a
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000168previous message. This is different from when executing the commands
169manually. Mostly the screen will not scroll up, thus there is no hit-enter
170prompt. When one command outputs two messages this can happen anyway.
171
172==============================================================================
1733. Removing autocommands *autocmd-remove*
174
Yegappan Lakshmanan1755a912022-05-19 10:31:47 +0100175In addition to the below described commands, the |autocmd_delete()| function can
176be used to remove a list of autocmds and autocmd groups from a Vim script.
177
Bram Moolenaarfd31be22022-01-16 14:46:06 +0000178:au[tocmd]! [group] {event} {aupat} [++once] [++nested] {cmd}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000179 Remove all autocommands associated with {event} and
Bram Moolenaarfd31be22022-01-16 14:46:06 +0000180 {aupat}, and add the command {cmd}.
Bram Moolenaareb93f3f2019-04-04 15:04:56 +0200181 See |autocmd-once| for [++once].
182 See |autocmd-nested| for [++nested].
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000183
Bram Moolenaarfd31be22022-01-16 14:46:06 +0000184:au[tocmd]! [group] {event} {aupat}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000185 Remove all autocommands associated with {event} and
Bram Moolenaarfd31be22022-01-16 14:46:06 +0000186 {aupat}.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000187
Bram Moolenaarfd31be22022-01-16 14:46:06 +0000188:au[tocmd]! [group] * {aupat}
189 Remove all autocommands associated with {aupat} for
190 all events.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000191
192:au[tocmd]! [group] {event}
193 Remove ALL autocommands for {event}.
Bram Moolenaar2ec618c2016-10-01 14:47:05 +0200194 Warning: You should not do this without a group for
195 |BufRead| and other common events, it can break
196 plugins, syntax highlighting, etc.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000197
198:au[tocmd]! [group] Remove ALL autocommands.
Bram Moolenaar98ef2332018-03-18 14:44:37 +0100199 Note: a quote will be seen as argument to the :autocmd
200 and won't start a comment.
Bram Moolenaar2ec618c2016-10-01 14:47:05 +0200201 Warning: You should normally not do this without a
202 group, it breaks plugins, syntax highlighting, etc.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000203
204When the [group] argument is not given, Vim uses the current group (as defined
205with ":augroup"); otherwise, Vim uses the group defined with [group].
206
207==============================================================================
2084. Listing autocommands *autocmd-list*
209
Bram Moolenaarfd31be22022-01-16 14:46:06 +0000210:au[tocmd] [group] {event} {aupat}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000211 Show the autocommands associated with {event} and
Bram Moolenaarfd31be22022-01-16 14:46:06 +0000212 {aupat}.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000213
Bram Moolenaarfd31be22022-01-16 14:46:06 +0000214:au[tocmd] [group] * {aupat}
215 Show the autocommands associated with {aupat} for all
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000216 events.
217
218:au[tocmd] [group] {event}
219 Show all autocommands for {event}.
220
221:au[tocmd] [group] Show all autocommands.
222
223If you provide the [group] argument, Vim lists only the autocommands for
224[group]; otherwise, Vim lists the autocommands for ALL groups. Note that this
225argument behavior differs from that for defining and removing autocommands.
226
Bram Moolenaarb5bf5b82004-12-24 14:35:23 +0000227In order to list buffer-local autocommands, use a pattern in the form <buffer>
228or <buffer=N>. See |autocmd-buflocal|.
229
Yegappan Lakshmanan1755a912022-05-19 10:31:47 +0100230The |autocmd_get()| function can be used from a Vim script to get a list of
231autocmds.
232
Bram Moolenaarac6e65f2005-08-29 22:25:38 +0000233 *:autocmd-verbose*
234When 'verbose' is non-zero, listing an autocommand will also display where it
235was last defined. Example: >
236
237 :verbose autocmd BufEnter
238 FileExplorer BufEnter
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +0000239 * call s:LocalBrowse(expand("<amatch>"))
Bram Moolenaarac6e65f2005-08-29 22:25:38 +0000240 Last set from /usr/share/vim/vim-7.0/plugin/NetrwPlugin.vim
241<
242See |:verbose-cmd| for more information.
243
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000244==============================================================================
2455. Events *autocmd-events* *E215* *E216*
246
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000247You can specify a comma-separated list of event names. No white space can be
248used in this list. The command applies to all the events in the list.
249
250For READING FILES there are four kinds of events possible:
251 BufNewFile starting to edit a non-existent file
252 BufReadPre BufReadPost starting to edit an existing file
253 FilterReadPre FilterReadPost read the temp file with filter output
254 FileReadPre FileReadPost any other file read
255Vim uses only one of these four kinds when reading a file. The "Pre" and
256"Post" events are both triggered, before and after reading the file.
257
258Note that the autocommands for the *ReadPre events and all the Filter events
259are not allowed to change the current buffer (you will get an error message if
260this happens). This is to prevent the file to be read into the wrong buffer.
261
262Note that the 'modified' flag is reset AFTER executing the BufReadPost
263and BufNewFile autocommands. But when the 'modified' option was set by the
264autocommands, this doesn't happen.
265
266You can use the 'eventignore' option to ignore a number of events or all
267events.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000268 *autocommand-events* *{event}*
269Vim recognizes the following events. Vim ignores the case of event names
270(e.g., you can use "BUFread" or "bufread" instead of "BufRead").
271
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000272First an overview by function with a short explanation. Then the list
Bram Moolenaar551dbcc2006-04-25 22:13:59 +0000273alphabetically with full explanations |autocmd-events-abc|.
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000274
275Name triggered by ~
276
277 Reading
278|BufNewFile| starting to edit a file that doesn't exist
279|BufReadPre| starting to edit a new buffer, before reading the file
280|BufRead| starting to edit a new buffer, after reading the file
281|BufReadPost| starting to edit a new buffer, after reading the file
282|BufReadCmd| before starting to edit a new buffer |Cmd-event|
283
284|FileReadPre| before reading a file with a ":read" command
285|FileReadPost| after reading a file with a ":read" command
Bram Moolenaar551dbcc2006-04-25 22:13:59 +0000286|FileReadCmd| before reading a file with a ":read" command |Cmd-event|
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000287
288|FilterReadPre| before reading a file from a filter command
289|FilterReadPost| after reading a file from a filter command
290
291|StdinReadPre| before reading from stdin into the buffer
292|StdinReadPost| After reading from the stdin into the buffer
293
294 Writing
295|BufWrite| starting to write the whole buffer to a file
296|BufWritePre| starting to write the whole buffer to a file
297|BufWritePost| after writing the whole buffer to a file
298|BufWriteCmd| before writing the whole buffer to a file |Cmd-event|
299
300|FileWritePre| starting to write part of a buffer to a file
301|FileWritePost| after writing part of a buffer to a file
302|FileWriteCmd| before writing part of a buffer to a file |Cmd-event|
303
304|FileAppendPre| starting to append to a file
305|FileAppendPost| after appending to a file
306|FileAppendCmd| before appending to a file |Cmd-event|
307
308|FilterWritePre| starting to write a file for a filter command or diff
309|FilterWritePost| after writing a file for a filter command or diff
310
311 Buffers
312|BufAdd| just after adding a buffer to the buffer list
313|BufCreate| just after adding a buffer to the buffer list
314|BufDelete| before deleting a buffer from the buffer list
315|BufWipeout| before completely deleting a buffer
316
317|BufFilePre| before changing the name of the current buffer
318|BufFilePost| after changing the name of the current buffer
319
320|BufEnter| after entering a buffer
321|BufLeave| before leaving to another buffer
322|BufWinEnter| after a buffer is displayed in a window
323|BufWinLeave| before a buffer is removed from a window
324
325|BufUnload| before unloading a buffer
Bram Moolenaarcb80aa22020-10-26 21:12:46 +0100326|BufHidden| just before a buffer becomes hidden
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000327|BufNew| just after creating a new buffer
328
329|SwapExists| detected an existing swap file
330
331 Options
332|FileType| when the 'filetype' option has been set
333|Syntax| when the 'syntax' option has been set
334|EncodingChanged| after the 'encoding' option has been changed
335|TermChanged| after the value of 'term' has changed
Bram Moolenaar53744302015-07-17 17:38:22 +0200336|OptionSet| after setting any option
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000337
338 Startup and exit
339|VimEnter| after doing all the startup stuff
340|GUIEnter| after starting the GUI successfully
Bram Moolenaard09acef2012-09-21 14:54:30 +0200341|GUIFailed| after starting the GUI failed
Bram Moolenaard7afed32007-05-06 13:26:41 +0000342|TermResponse| after the terminal response to |t_RV| is received
Danek Duvalld7d56032024-01-14 20:19:59 +0100343|TermResponseAll| after the terminal response to |t_RV| and others is received
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000344
Bram Moolenaar12a96de2018-03-11 14:44:18 +0100345|QuitPre| when using `:quit`, before deciding whether to exit
346|ExitPre| when using a command that may make Vim exit
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000347|VimLeavePre| before exiting Vim, before writing the viminfo file
348|VimLeave| before exiting Vim, after writing the viminfo file
349
Bram Moolenaar100118c2020-12-11 19:30:34 +0100350|VimSuspend| when suspending Vim
351|VimResume| when Vim is resumed after being suspended
352
Bram Moolenaar28ed4df2019-10-26 16:21:40 +0200353 Terminal
354|TerminalOpen| after a terminal buffer was created
355|TerminalWinOpen| after a terminal buffer was created in a new window
356
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000357 Various
358|FileChangedShell| Vim notices that a file changed since editing started
Bram Moolenaar7d47b6e2006-03-15 22:59:18 +0000359|FileChangedShellPost| After handling a file changed since editing started
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000360|FileChangedRO| before making the first change to a read-only file
361
Bram Moolenaar2c64ca12018-10-19 16:22:31 +0200362|DiffUpdated| after diffs have been updated
Bram Moolenaar28e8f732022-02-09 12:58:20 +0000363|DirChangedPre| before the working directory will change
Bram Moolenaarb7407d32018-02-03 17:36:27 +0100364|DirChanged| after the working directory has changed
365
Bram Moolenaara94bc432006-03-10 21:42:59 +0000366|ShellCmdPost| after executing a shell command
367|ShellFilterPost| after filtering with a shell command
368
Bram Moolenaard5005162014-08-22 23:05:54 +0200369|CmdUndefined| a user command is used but it isn't defined
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000370|FuncUndefined| a user function is used but it isn't defined
Bram Moolenaarafeb4fa2006-02-01 21:51:12 +0000371|SpellFileMissing| a spell file is used but it can't be found
Bram Moolenaar1f35bf92006-03-07 22:38:47 +0000372|SourcePre| before sourcing a Vim script
Bram Moolenaar2a953fc2019-01-26 17:41:47 +0100373|SourcePost| after sourcing a Vim script
Bram Moolenaar8dd1aa52007-01-16 20:33:19 +0000374|SourceCmd| before sourcing a Vim script |Cmd-event|
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000375
Bram Moolenaar7d47b6e2006-03-15 22:59:18 +0000376|VimResized| after the Vim window size changed
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000377|FocusGained| Vim got input focus
378|FocusLost| Vim lost input focus
379|CursorHold| the user doesn't press a key for a while
Bram Moolenaar754b5602006-02-09 23:53:20 +0000380|CursorHoldI| the user doesn't press a key for a while in Insert mode
381|CursorMoved| the cursor was moved in Normal mode
Shougo Matsushitad0952142024-06-20 22:05:16 +0200382|CursorMovedC| the cursor was moved in the |Command-line|
Bram Moolenaar754b5602006-02-09 23:53:20 +0000383|CursorMovedI| the cursor was moved in Insert mode
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000384
Sergey Vlasov1f47db72024-01-25 23:07:00 +0100385|WinNewPre| before creating a new window
Bram Moolenaarc917da42016-07-19 22:31:36 +0200386|WinNew| after creating a new window
Bram Moolenaar12c11d52016-07-19 23:13:03 +0200387|TabNew| after creating a new tab page
naohiro ono23beefe2021-11-13 12:38:49 +0000388|WinClosed| after closing a window
Bram Moolenaar12c11d52016-07-19 23:13:03 +0200389|TabClosed| after closing a tab page
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000390|WinEnter| after entering another window
391|WinLeave| before leaving a window
Bram Moolenaarfaa959a2006-02-20 21:37:40 +0000392|TabEnter| after entering another tab page
393|TabLeave| before leaving a tab page
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000394|CmdwinEnter| after entering the command-line window
395|CmdwinLeave| before leaving the command-line window
396
Bram Moolenaarb5b75622018-03-09 22:22:21 +0100397|CmdlineChanged| after a change was made to the command-line text
398|CmdlineEnter| after the cursor moves to the command line
399|CmdlineLeave| before the cursor leaves the command line
400
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000401|InsertEnter| starting Insert mode
402|InsertChange| when typing <Insert> while in Insert or Replace mode
403|InsertLeave| when leaving Insert mode
Bram Moolenaar938ae282023-02-20 20:44:55 +0000404|InsertLeavePre| just before leaving Insert mode
Bram Moolenaare659c952011-05-19 17:25:41 +0200405|InsertCharPre| when a character was typed in Insert mode, before
406 inserting it
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000407
=?UTF-8?q?Magnus=20Gro=C3=9F?=f1e88762021-09-12 13:39:55 +0200408|ModeChanged| after changing the mode
409
Bram Moolenaardfb18412013-12-11 18:53:29 +0100410|TextChanged| after a change was made to the text in Normal mode
411|TextChangedI| after a change was made to the text in Insert mode
Bram Moolenaar5a093432018-02-10 18:15:19 +0100412 when popup menu is not visible
413|TextChangedP| after a change was made to the text in Insert mode
414 when popup menu visible
Shougo Matsushita4ccaedf2022-10-15 11:48:00 +0100415|TextChangedT| after a change was made to the text in Terminal mode
Bram Moolenaarb477af22018-07-15 20:20:18 +0200416|TextYankPost| after text has been yanked or deleted
Bram Moolenaardfb18412013-12-11 18:53:29 +0100417
Bram Moolenaar8aeec402019-09-15 23:02:04 +0200418|SafeState| nothing pending, going to wait for the user to type a
419 character
Bram Moolenaar69198cb2019-09-16 21:58:13 +0200420|SafeStateAgain| repeated SafeState
Bram Moolenaar8aeec402019-09-15 23:02:04 +0200421
Bram Moolenaar15142e22018-04-30 22:19:58 +0200422|ColorSchemePre| before loading a color scheme
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000423|ColorScheme| after loading a color scheme
424
425|RemoteReply| a reply from a server Vim was received
426
427|QuickFixCmdPre| before a quickfix command is run
428|QuickFixCmdPost| after a quickfix command is run
429
430|SessionLoadPost| after loading a session file
431
h-east53753f62024-05-05 18:42:31 +0200432|SessionWritePost| after writing the session file using
433 the |:mksession| command
Colin Kennedye5f22802024-03-26 18:20:16 +0100434
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000435|MenuPopup| just before showing the popup menu
Bram Moolenaard7f246c2019-04-08 18:15:41 +0200436|CompleteChanged| after Insert mode completion menu changed
Bram Moolenaar3f169ce2020-01-26 22:43:31 +0100437|CompleteDonePre| after Insert mode completion is done, before clearing
438 info
439|CompleteDone| after Insert mode completion is done, after clearing
440 info
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000441
Shougo Matsushita83678842024-07-11 22:05:12 +0200442|KeyInputPre| just before a key is processed
443
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000444|User| to be used in combination with ":doautocmd"
Bram Moolenaarbe5ee862020-06-10 20:56:58 +0200445|SigUSR1| after the SIGUSR1 signal has been detected
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000446
LemonBoy09371822022-04-08 15:18:45 +0100447|WinScrolled| after scrolling or resizing a window
448
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000449
450The alphabetical list of autocommand events: *autocmd-events-abc*
451
452 *BufCreate* *BufAdd*
453BufAdd or BufCreate Just after creating a new buffer which is
454 added to the buffer list, or adding a buffer
455 to the buffer list.
456 Also used just after a buffer in the buffer
457 list has been renamed.
Bram Moolenaar469bdbd2019-12-11 23:05:48 +0100458 Not triggered for the initial buffers created
459 during startup.
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000460 The BufCreate event is for historic reasons.
461 NOTE: When this autocommand is executed, the
462 current buffer "%" may be different from the
463 buffer being created "<afile>".
464 *BufDelete*
465BufDelete Before deleting a buffer from the buffer list.
466 The BufUnload may be called first (if the
467 buffer was loaded).
468 Also used just before a buffer in the buffer
469 list is renamed.
470 NOTE: When this autocommand is executed, the
471 current buffer "%" may be different from the
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000472 buffer being deleted "<afile>" and "<abuf>".
Bram Moolenaarb849e712009-06-24 15:51:37 +0000473 Don't change to another buffer, it will cause
474 problems.
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000475 *BufEnter*
476BufEnter After entering a buffer. Useful for setting
477 options for a file type. Also executed when
478 starting to edit a buffer, after the
479 BufReadPost autocommands.
480 *BufFilePost*
481BufFilePost After changing the name of the current buffer
482 with the ":file" or ":saveas" command.
Bram Moolenaar4770d092006-01-12 23:22:24 +0000483 *BufFilePre*
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000484BufFilePre Before changing the name of the current buffer
485 with the ":file" or ":saveas" command.
486 *BufHidden*
Bram Moolenaar790c18b2019-07-04 17:22:06 +0200487BufHidden Just before a buffer becomes hidden. That is,
488 when there are no longer windows that show
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000489 the buffer, but the buffer is not unloaded or
490 deleted. Not used for ":qa" or ":q" when
491 exiting Vim.
492 NOTE: When this autocommand is executed, the
493 current buffer "%" may be different from the
494 buffer being unloaded "<afile>".
495 *BufLeave*
496BufLeave Before leaving to another buffer. Also when
497 leaving or closing the current window and the
498 new current window is not for the same buffer.
499 Not used for ":qa" or ":q" when exiting Vim.
500 *BufNew*
501BufNew Just after creating a new buffer. Also used
502 just after a buffer has been renamed. When
503 the buffer is added to the buffer list BufAdd
504 will be triggered too.
505 NOTE: When this autocommand is executed, the
506 current buffer "%" may be different from the
507 buffer being created "<afile>".
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000508 *BufNewFile*
509BufNewFile When starting to edit a file that doesn't
510 exist. Can be used to read in a skeleton
511 file.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000512 *BufRead* *BufReadPost*
513BufRead or BufReadPost When starting to edit a new buffer, after
514 reading the file into the buffer, before
515 executing the modelines. See |BufWinEnter|
516 for when you need to do something after
517 processing the modelines.
Bram Moolenaar75ab5902022-04-18 15:36:40 +0100518 Also triggered:
519 - when writing an unnamed buffer in a way that
520 the buffer gets a name
521 - after successfully recovering a file
522 - for the filetypedetect group when executing
523 ":filetype detect"
524 Not triggered:
525 - for the `:read file` command
526 - when the file doesn't exist
Bram Moolenaar4770d092006-01-12 23:22:24 +0000527 *BufReadCmd*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000528BufReadCmd Before starting to edit a new buffer. Should
529 read the file into the buffer. |Cmd-event|
Bram Moolenaar4770d092006-01-12 23:22:24 +0000530 *BufReadPre* *E200* *E201*
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000531BufReadPre When starting to edit a new buffer, before
532 reading the file into the buffer. Not used
533 if the file doesn't exist.
534 *BufUnload*
535BufUnload Before unloading a buffer. This is when the
536 text in the buffer is going to be freed. This
537 may be after a BufWritePost and before a
538 BufDelete. Also used for all buffers that are
539 loaded when Vim is going to exit.
540 NOTE: When this autocommand is executed, the
541 current buffer "%" may be different from the
542 buffer being unloaded "<afile>".
Bram Moolenaar64d8e252016-09-06 22:12:34 +0200543 Don't change to another buffer or window, it
544 will cause problems!
Bram Moolenaar0e1e25f2010-05-28 21:07:08 +0200545 When exiting and v:dying is 2 or more this
546 event is not triggered.
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000547 *BufWinEnter*
548BufWinEnter After a buffer is displayed in a window. This
549 can be when the buffer is loaded (after
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000550 processing the modelines) or when a hidden
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000551 buffer is displayed in a window (and is no
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000552 longer hidden).
553 Does not happen for |:split| without
554 arguments, since you keep editing the same
555 buffer, or ":split" with a file that's already
Bram Moolenaarc236c162008-07-13 17:41:49 +0000556 open in a window, because it re-uses an
557 existing buffer. But it does happen for a
558 ":split" with the name of the current buffer,
559 since it reloads that buffer.
Bram Moolenaar606cb8b2018-05-03 20:40:20 +0200560 Does not happen for a terminal window, because
561 it starts in Terminal-Job mode and Normal mode
562 commands won't work. Use |TerminalOpen| instead.
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000563 *BufWinLeave*
564BufWinLeave Before a buffer is removed from a window.
565 Not when it's still visible in another window.
566 Also triggered when exiting. It's triggered
567 before BufUnload or BufHidden.
568 NOTE: When this autocommand is executed, the
569 current buffer "%" may be different from the
570 buffer being unloaded "<afile>".
Bram Moolenaar0e1e25f2010-05-28 21:07:08 +0200571 When exiting and v:dying is 2 or more this
572 event is not triggered.
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000573 *BufWipeout*
574BufWipeout Before completely deleting a buffer. The
575 BufUnload and BufDelete events may be called
576 first (if the buffer was loaded and was in the
577 buffer list). Also used just before a buffer
578 is renamed (also when it's not in the buffer
579 list).
580 NOTE: When this autocommand is executed, the
581 current buffer "%" may be different from the
582 buffer being deleted "<afile>".
Bram Moolenaarb849e712009-06-24 15:51:37 +0000583 Don't change to another buffer, it will cause
584 problems.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000585 *BufWrite* *BufWritePre*
586BufWrite or BufWritePre Before writing the whole buffer to a file.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000587 *BufWriteCmd*
588BufWriteCmd Before writing the whole buffer to a file.
589 Should do the writing of the file and reset
Bram Moolenaar1cd871b2004-12-19 22:46:22 +0000590 'modified' if successful, unless '+' is in
591 'cpo' and writing to another file |cpo-+|.
592 The buffer contents should not be changed.
Bram Moolenaar5302d9e2011-09-14 17:55:08 +0200593 When the command resets 'modified' the undo
594 information is adjusted to mark older undo
595 states as 'modified', like |:write| does.
Bram Moolenaar1cd871b2004-12-19 22:46:22 +0000596 |Cmd-event|
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000597 *BufWritePost*
598BufWritePost After writing the whole buffer to a file
599 (should undo the commands for BufWritePre).
Bram Moolenaard5005162014-08-22 23:05:54 +0200600 *CmdUndefined*
601CmdUndefined When a user command is used but it isn't
602 defined. Useful for defining a command only
603 when it's used. The pattern is matched
604 against the command name. Both <amatch> and
605 <afile> are set to the name of the command.
606 NOTE: Autocompletion won't work until the
607 command is defined. An alternative is to
608 always define the user command and have it
609 invoke an autoloaded function. See |autoload|.
Bram Moolenaar153b7042018-01-31 15:48:32 +0100610 *CmdlineChanged*
Bram Moolenaarb5b75622018-03-09 22:22:21 +0100611CmdlineChanged After a change was made to the text in the
612 command line. Be careful not to mess up
613 the command line, it may cause Vim to lock up.
Bram Moolenaar153b7042018-01-31 15:48:32 +0100614 <afile> is set to a single character,
615 indicating the type of command-line.
616 |cmdwin-char|
Bram Moolenaarfafcf0d2017-10-19 18:35:51 +0200617 *CmdlineEnter*
618CmdlineEnter After moving the cursor to the command line,
619 where the user can type a command or search
Bram Moolenaar957cf672020-11-12 14:21:06 +0100620 string; including non-interactive use of ":"
621 in a mapping, but not when using |<Cmd>|.
Bram Moolenaar938ae282023-02-20 20:44:55 +0000622 The pattern is matched against the character
623 representing the type of command-line.
624 |cmdwin-char|
Bram Moolenaarfafcf0d2017-10-19 18:35:51 +0200625 <afile> is set to a single character,
626 indicating the type of command-line.
Bram Moolenaarfafcf0d2017-10-19 18:35:51 +0200627 *CmdlineLeave*
Bram Moolenaar957cf672020-11-12 14:21:06 +0100628CmdlineLeave Before leaving the command line; including
629 non-interactive use of ":" in a mapping, but
630 not when using |<Cmd>|.
Bram Moolenaar01164a62017-11-02 22:58:42 +0100631 Also when abandoning the command line, after
632 typing CTRL-C or <Esc>.
633 When the commands result in an error the
634 command line is still executed.
Bram Moolenaarfafcf0d2017-10-19 18:35:51 +0200635 <afile> is set to a single character,
636 indicating the type of command-line.
637 |cmdwin-char|
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000638 *CmdwinEnter*
639CmdwinEnter After entering the command-line window.
640 Useful for setting options specifically for
Bram Moolenaar96e38a82019-09-09 18:35:33 +0200641 this special type of window.
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000642 <afile> is set to a single character,
643 indicating the type of command-line.
644 |cmdwin-char|
645 *CmdwinLeave*
646CmdwinLeave Before leaving the command-line window.
647 Useful to clean up any global setting done
Bram Moolenaar96e38a82019-09-09 18:35:33 +0200648 with CmdwinEnter.
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000649 <afile> is set to a single character,
650 indicating the type of command-line.
651 |cmdwin-char|
652 *ColorScheme*
653ColorScheme After loading a color scheme. |:colorscheme|
Bram Moolenaar0daafaa2022-09-04 17:45:43 +0100654 Not triggered if the color scheme is not
655 found.
Bram Moolenaarb95186f2013-11-28 18:53:52 +0100656 The pattern is matched against the
657 colorscheme name. <afile> can be used for the
658 name of the actual file where this option was
659 set, and <amatch> for the new colorscheme
660 name.
661
Bram Moolenaar15142e22018-04-30 22:19:58 +0200662 *ColorSchemePre*
663ColorSchemePre Before loading a color scheme. |:colorscheme|
664 Useful to setup removing things added by a
665 color scheme, before another one is loaded.
Bram Moolenaar589edb32019-09-20 14:38:13 +0200666CompleteChanged *CompleteChanged*
Bram Moolenaard7f246c2019-04-08 18:15:41 +0200667 After each time the Insert mode completion
668 menu changed. Not fired on popup menu hide,
Bram Moolenaar3f169ce2020-01-26 22:43:31 +0100669 use |CompleteDonePre| or |CompleteDone| for
670 that. Never triggered recursively.
Bram Moolenaar754b5602006-02-09 23:53:20 +0000671
Bram Moolenaard7f246c2019-04-08 18:15:41 +0200672 Sets these |v:event| keys:
Bram Moolenaar911ead12019-04-21 00:03:35 +0200673 completed_item See |complete-items|.
Bram Moolenaard7f246c2019-04-08 18:15:41 +0200674 height nr of items visible
675 width screen cells
676 row top screen row
677 col leftmost screen column
678 size total nr of items
679 scrollbar TRUE if visible
680
681 It is not allowed to change the text |textlock|.
Bram Moolenaare9bd5722019-08-17 19:36:06 +0200682
683 The size and position of the popup are also
684 available by calling |pum_getpos()|.
685
Bram Moolenaar3f169ce2020-01-26 22:43:31 +0100686 *CompleteDonePre*
687CompleteDonePre After Insert mode completion is done. Either
688 when something was completed or abandoning
689 completion. |ins-completion|
690 |complete_info()| can be used, the info is
691 cleared after triggering CompleteDonePre.
692 The |v:completed_item| variable contains
693 information about the completed item.
694
Bram Moolenaar30b65812012-07-12 22:01:11 +0200695 *CompleteDone*
696CompleteDone After Insert mode completion is done. Either
697 when something was completed or abandoning
698 completion. |ins-completion|
Bram Moolenaar3f169ce2020-01-26 22:43:31 +0100699 |complete_info()| cannot be used, the info is
700 cleared before triggering CompleteDone. Use
701 CompleteDonePre if you need it.
Bram Moolenaar42a45122015-07-10 17:56:23 +0200702 The |v:completed_item| variable contains
703 information about the completed item.
Bram Moolenaar30b65812012-07-12 22:01:11 +0200704
glepnir1c5a1202024-12-04 20:27:34 +0100705 Sets these |v:event| keys:
706 complete_word The word that was
707 selected, empty if
708 abandoned complete.
709 complete_type |complete_info_mode|
710
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000711 *CursorHold*
712CursorHold When the user doesn't press a key for the time
Bram Moolenaard58a3bf2020-09-28 21:48:16 +0200713 specified with 'updatetime'. Not triggered
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000714 until the user has pressed a key (i.e. doesn't
715 fire every 'updatetime' ms if you leave Vim to
716 make some coffee. :) See |CursorHold-example|
717 for previewing tags.
718 This event is only triggered in Normal mode.
Bram Moolenaard7afed32007-05-06 13:26:41 +0000719 It is not triggered when waiting for a command
720 argument to be typed, or a movement after an
721 operator.
Bram Moolenaare3226be2005-12-18 22:10:00 +0000722 While recording the CursorHold event is not
723 triggered. |q|
Bram Moolenaar3a991dd2014-10-02 01:41:41 +0200724 *<CursorHold>*
725 Internally the autocommand is triggered by the
726 <CursorHold> key. In an expression mapping
727 |getchar()| may see this character.
728
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000729 Note: Interactive commands cannot be used for
730 this event. There is no hit-enter prompt,
731 the screen is updated directly (when needed).
732 Note: In the future there will probably be
733 another option to set the time.
734 Hint: to force an update of the status lines
735 use: >
736 :let &ro = &ro
Bram Moolenaar5666fcd2019-12-26 14:35:26 +0100737< {only on Amiga, Unix, Win32 and all GUI
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000738 versions}
Bram Moolenaar754b5602006-02-09 23:53:20 +0000739 *CursorHoldI*
740CursorHoldI Just like CursorHold, but in Insert mode.
Bram Moolenaaraa3b15d2016-04-21 08:53:19 +0200741 Not triggered when waiting for another key,
742 e.g. after CTRL-V, and not when in CTRL-X mode
743 |insert_expand|.
Bram Moolenaar754b5602006-02-09 23:53:20 +0000744
745 *CursorMoved*
Bram Moolenaar52b91d82013-06-15 21:39:51 +0200746CursorMoved After the cursor was moved in Normal or Visual
747 mode. Also when the text of the cursor line
748 has been changed, e.g., with "x", "rx" or "p".
Bram Moolenaar46eea442022-03-30 10:51:39 +0100749 Not always triggered when there is typeahead,
750 while executing commands in a script file,
751 when an operator is pending or when moving to
Bram Moolenaar90df4b92021-07-07 20:26:08 +0200752 another window while remaining at the same
753 cursor position.
Bram Moolenaar1d2ba7f2006-02-14 22:29:30 +0000754 For an example see |match-parens|.
Bram Moolenaar26967612019-03-17 17:13:16 +0100755 Note: This can not be skipped with
756 `:noautocmd`.
Bram Moolenaarbf884932013-04-05 22:26:15 +0200757 Careful: This is triggered very often, don't
758 do anything that the user does not expect or
759 that is slow.
Shougo Matsushitad0952142024-06-20 22:05:16 +0200760 *CursorMovedC*
761CursorMovedC After the cursor was moved in the command
zeertzjq81456202024-07-07 20:48:25 +0200762 line. Be careful not to mess up the command
763 line, it may cause Vim to lock up.
Shougo Matsushitad0952142024-06-20 22:05:16 +0200764 <afile> is set to a single character,
765 indicating the type of command-line.
766 |cmdwin-char|
Bram Moolenaar754b5602006-02-09 23:53:20 +0000767 *CursorMovedI*
768CursorMovedI After the cursor was moved in Insert mode.
Bram Moolenaar5302d9e2011-09-14 17:55:08 +0200769 Not triggered when the popup menu is visible.
Bram Moolenaar754b5602006-02-09 23:53:20 +0000770 Otherwise the same as CursorMoved.
Bram Moolenaar75ab5902022-04-18 15:36:40 +0100771 *DiffUpdated*
772DiffUpdated After diffs have been updated. Depending on
773 what kind of diff is being used (internal or
774 external) this can be triggered on every
775 change or when doing |:diffupdate|.
776 *DirChangedPre*
777DirChangedPre The working directory is going to be changed,
778 as with |DirChanged|. The pattern is like
779 with |DirChanged|. The new directory can be
780 found in v:event.directory.
781 *DirChanged*
782DirChanged The working directory has changed in response
783 to the |:cd| or |:tcd| or |:lcd| commands, or
784 as a result of the 'autochdir' option.
785 The pattern can be:
786 "window" to trigger on `:lcd`
787 "tabpage" to trigger on `:tcd`
788 "global" to trigger on `:cd`
789 "auto" to trigger on 'autochdir'.
790 "drop" to trigger on editing a file
791 <afile> is set to the new directory name.
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000792 *EncodingChanged*
793EncodingChanged Fires off after the 'encoding' option has been
794 changed. Useful to set up fonts, for example.
Bram Moolenaar75ab5902022-04-18 15:36:40 +0100795 *ExitPre*
796ExitPre When using `:quit`, `:wq` in a way it makes
797 Vim exit, or using `:qall`, just after
798 |QuitPre|. Can be used to close any
799 non-essential window. Exiting may still be
800 cancelled if there is a modified buffer that
801 isn't automatically saved, use |VimLeavePre|
802 for really exiting.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000803 *FileAppendCmd*
804FileAppendCmd Before appending to a file. Should do the
Bram Moolenaar3fdfa4a2004-10-07 21:02:47 +0000805 appending to the file. Use the '[ and ']
Bram Moolenaar22863042021-10-16 15:23:36 +0100806 marks for the range of lines. |Cmd-event|
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000807 *FileAppendPost*
808FileAppendPost After appending to a file.
809 *FileAppendPre*
810FileAppendPre Before appending to a file. Use the '[ and ']
811 marks for the range of lines.
812 *FileChangedRO*
813FileChangedRO Before making the first change to a read-only
814 file. Can be used to check-out the file from
815 a source control system. Not triggered when
816 the change was caused by an autocommand.
817 This event is triggered when making the first
818 change in a buffer or the first change after
Bram Moolenaar61660ea2006-04-07 21:40:07 +0000819 'readonly' was set, just before the change is
820 applied to the text.
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000821 WARNING: If the autocommand moves the cursor
822 the effect of the change is undefined.
Bram Moolenaar910f66f2006-04-05 20:41:53 +0000823 *E788*
824 It is not allowed to change to another buffer
825 here. You can reload the buffer but not edit
826 another one.
Bram Moolenaar92dff182014-02-11 19:15:50 +0100827 *E881*
828 If the number of lines changes saving for undo
829 may fail and the change will be aborted.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000830 *FileChangedShell*
831FileChangedShell When Vim notices that the modification time of
832 a file has changed since editing started.
833 Also when the file attributes of the file
Bram Moolenaare968e362014-05-13 20:23:24 +0200834 change or when the size of the file changes.
835 |timestamp|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000836 Mostly triggered after executing a shell
837 command, but also with a |:checktime| command
Bram Moolenaar6aa8cea2017-06-05 14:44:35 +0200838 or when gvim regains input focus.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000839 This autocommand is triggered for each changed
840 file. It is not used when 'autoread' is set
841 and the buffer was not changed. If a
842 FileChangedShell autocommand is present the
843 warning message and prompt is not given.
Bram Moolenaar19a09a12005-03-04 23:39:37 +0000844 The |v:fcs_reason| variable is set to indicate
845 what happened and |v:fcs_choice| can be used
846 to tell Vim what to do next.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000847 NOTE: When this autocommand is executed, the
848 current buffer "%" may be different from the
Bram Moolenaarcd5c8f82017-04-09 20:11:58 +0200849 buffer that was changed, which is in "<afile>".
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000850 NOTE: The commands must not change the current
851 buffer, jump to another buffer or delete a
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +0100852 buffer. *E246* *E811*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000853 NOTE: This event never nests, to avoid an
854 endless loop. This means that while executing
855 commands for the FileChangedShell event no
856 other FileChangedShell event will be
857 triggered.
Bram Moolenaar7d47b6e2006-03-15 22:59:18 +0000858 *FileChangedShellPost*
859FileChangedShellPost After handling a file that was changed outside
860 of Vim. Can be used to update the statusline.
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000861 *FileEncoding*
862FileEncoding Obsolete. It still works and is equivalent
863 to |EncodingChanged|.
864 *FileReadCmd*
865FileReadCmd Before reading a file with a ":read" command.
866 Should do the reading of the file. |Cmd-event|
867 *FileReadPost*
868FileReadPost After reading a file with a ":read" command.
869 Note that Vim sets the '[ and '] marks to the
870 first and last line of the read. This can be
871 used to operate on the lines just read.
872 *FileReadPre*
873FileReadPre Before reading a file with a ":read" command.
874 *FileType*
Bram Moolenaard7afed32007-05-06 13:26:41 +0000875FileType When the 'filetype' option has been set. The
876 pattern is matched against the filetype.
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000877 <afile> can be used for the name of the file
878 where this option was set, and <amatch> for
Bram Moolenaar74675a62017-07-15 13:53:23 +0200879 the new value of 'filetype'. Navigating to
880 another window or buffer is not allowed.
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000881 See |filetypes|.
882 *FileWriteCmd*
883FileWriteCmd Before writing to a file, when not writing the
884 whole buffer. Should do the writing to the
885 file. Should not change the buffer. Use the
886 '[ and '] marks for the range of lines.
887 |Cmd-event|
888 *FileWritePost*
889FileWritePost After writing to a file, when not writing the
890 whole buffer.
891 *FileWritePre*
892FileWritePre Before writing to a file, when not writing the
893 whole buffer. Use the '[ and '] marks for the
894 range of lines.
895 *FilterReadPost*
896FilterReadPost After reading a file from a filter command.
897 Vim checks the pattern against the name of
898 the current buffer as with FilterReadPre.
899 Not triggered when 'shelltemp' is off.
900 *FilterReadPre* *E135*
901FilterReadPre Before reading a file from a filter command.
902 Vim checks the pattern against the name of
903 the current buffer, not the name of the
904 temporary file that is the output of the
905 filter command.
906 Not triggered when 'shelltemp' is off.
907 *FilterWritePost*
908FilterWritePost After writing a file for a filter command or
Bram Moolenaar4c05fa02019-01-01 15:32:17 +0100909 making a diff with an external diff (see
Bram Moolenaar22863042021-10-16 15:23:36 +0100910 |DiffUpdated| for internal diff).
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000911 Vim checks the pattern against the name of
912 the current buffer as with FilterWritePre.
913 Not triggered when 'shelltemp' is off.
914 *FilterWritePre*
915FilterWritePre Before writing a file for a filter command or
Bram Moolenaar4c05fa02019-01-01 15:32:17 +0100916 making a diff with an external diff.
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000917 Vim checks the pattern against the name of
918 the current buffer, not the name of the
919 temporary file that is the output of the
920 filter command.
921 Not triggered when 'shelltemp' is off.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000922 *FocusGained*
923FocusGained When Vim got input focus. Only for the GUI
924 version and a few console versions where this
Christian Brabandt49ddeef2024-07-07 20:29:43 +0200925 can be detected. |xterm-focus-event|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000926 *FocusLost*
927FocusLost When Vim lost input focus. Only for the GUI
928 version and a few console versions where this
Christian Brabandt49ddeef2024-07-07 20:29:43 +0200929 can be detected. |xterm-focus-event|
930 May also happen when a dialog pops up.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000931 *FuncUndefined*
932FuncUndefined When a user function is used but it isn't
933 defined. Useful for defining a function only
Bram Moolenaard7afed32007-05-06 13:26:41 +0000934 when it's used. The pattern is matched
935 against the function name. Both <amatch> and
936 <afile> are set to the name of the function.
Bram Moolenaar4072ba52020-12-23 13:56:35 +0100937 Not triggered when compiling a |Vim9|
938 function.
Bram Moolenaard5005162014-08-22 23:05:54 +0200939 NOTE: When writing Vim scripts a better
940 alternative is to use an autoloaded function.
Bram Moolenaar7c626922005-02-07 22:01:03 +0000941 See |autoload-functions|.
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000942 *GUIEnter*
943GUIEnter After starting the GUI successfully, and after
944 opening the window. It is triggered before
945 VimEnter when using gvim. Can be used to
946 position the window from a .gvimrc file: >
947 :autocmd GUIEnter * winpos 100 50
Bram Moolenaard7afed32007-05-06 13:26:41 +0000948< *GUIFailed*
949GUIFailed After starting the GUI failed. Vim may
950 continue to run in the terminal, if possible
951 (only on Unix and alikes, when connecting the
952 X server fails). You may want to quit Vim: >
953 :autocmd GUIFailed * qall
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000954< *InsertChange*
955InsertChange When typing <Insert> while in Insert or
956 Replace mode. The |v:insertmode| variable
957 indicates the new mode.
958 Be careful not to move the cursor or do
959 anything else that the user does not expect.
Bram Moolenaare659c952011-05-19 17:25:41 +0200960 *InsertCharPre*
961InsertCharPre When a character is typed in Insert mode,
962 before inserting the char.
963 The |v:char| variable indicates the char typed
964 and can be changed during the event to insert
965 a different character. When |v:char| is set
966 to more than one character this text is
967 inserted literally.
968 It is not allowed to change the text |textlock|.
969 The event is not triggered when 'paste' is
Bram Moolenaarb5b75622018-03-09 22:22:21 +0100970 set. {only with the +eval feature}
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000971 *InsertEnter*
Bram Moolenaard7afed32007-05-06 13:26:41 +0000972InsertEnter Just before starting Insert mode. Also for
973 Replace mode and Virtual Replace mode. The
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000974 |v:insertmode| variable indicates the mode.
Bram Moolenaar097c9922013-05-19 21:15:15 +0200975 Be careful not to do anything else that the
976 user does not expect.
977 The cursor is restored afterwards. If you do
978 not want that set |v:char| to a non-empty
979 string.
Bram Moolenaarb53e13a2020-10-21 12:19:53 +0200980 *InsertLeavePre*
981InsertLeavePre Just before leaving Insert mode. Also when
Bram Moolenaarcb80aa22020-10-26 21:12:46 +0100982 using CTRL-O |i_CTRL-O|. Be careful not to
Bram Moolenaarb53e13a2020-10-21 12:19:53 +0200983 change mode or use `:normal`, it will likely
984 cause trouble.
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +0000985 *InsertLeave*
Bram Moolenaarb53e13a2020-10-21 12:19:53 +0200986InsertLeave Just after leaving Insert mode. Also when
987 using CTRL-O |i_CTRL-O|. But not for |i_CTRL-C|.
Shougo Matsushita83678842024-07-11 22:05:12 +0200988 *KeyInputPre*
Shougo Matsushitafcc1b572024-07-17 20:25:22 +0200989KeyInputPre Just before a key is processed after mappings
990 have been applied. The pattern is matched
991 against a string that indicates the current
992 mode, which is the same as what is returned by
993 `mode(1)`.
Shougo Matsushita83678842024-07-11 22:05:12 +0200994 The |v:char| variable indicates the key typed
995 and can be changed during the event to process
996 a different key. When |v:char| is not a
997 single character or a special key, the first
998 character is used.
999 The following values of |v:event| are set:
1000 typed The key is typed or not.
Shougo Matsushita890f97c2024-08-18 16:57:04 +02001001 typedchar The (actual) typed key since
1002 the last |KeyInputPre| call.
1003 Note: "typedchar" may be empty if successive
1004 |KeyInputPre| autocmds are processed.
Shougo Matsushita83678842024-07-11 22:05:12 +02001005 It is not allowed to change the text
1006 |textlock| or the current mode.
1007 {only with the +eval feature}
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +00001008 *MenuPopup*
1009MenuPopup Just before showing the popup menu (under the
1010 right mouse button). Useful for adjusting the
1011 menu for what is under the cursor or mouse
1012 pointer.
Bram Moolenaar4c5d8152018-10-19 22:36:53 +02001013 The pattern is matched against one or two
1014 characters representing the mode:
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +00001015 n Normal
1016 v Visual
1017 o Operator-pending
1018 i Insert
Bram Moolenaar551dbcc2006-04-25 22:13:59 +00001019 c Command line
Bram Moolenaar4c5d8152018-10-19 22:36:53 +02001020 tl Terminal
=?UTF-8?q?Magnus=20Gro=C3=9F?=f1e88762021-09-12 13:39:55 +02001021 *ModeChanged*
1022ModeChanged After changing the mode. The pattern is
1023 matched against `'old_mode:new_mode'`, for
=?UTF-8?q?Magnus=20Gro=C3=9F?=25def2c2021-10-22 18:56:39 +01001024 example match against `*:c*` to simulate
1025 |CmdlineEnter|.
=?UTF-8?q?Magnus=20Gro=C3=9F?=f1e88762021-09-12 13:39:55 +02001026 The following values of |v:event| are set:
1027 old_mode The mode before it changed.
1028 new_mode The new mode as also returned
=?UTF-8?q?Magnus=20Gro=C3=9F?=25def2c2021-10-22 18:56:39 +01001029 by |mode()| called with a
1030 non-zero argument.
=?UTF-8?q?Magnus=20Gro=C3=9F?=f1e88762021-09-12 13:39:55 +02001031 When ModeChanged is triggered, old_mode will
1032 have the value of new_mode when the event was
1033 last triggered.
=?UTF-8?q?Magnus=20Gro=C3=9F?=25def2c2021-10-22 18:56:39 +01001034 This will be triggered on every minor mode
1035 change.
=?UTF-8?q?Magnus=20Gro=C3=9F?=f1e88762021-09-12 13:39:55 +02001036 Usage example to use relative line numbers
Bram Moolenaar6e649222021-10-04 21:32:54 +01001037 when entering Visual mode: >
=?UTF-8?q?Magnus=20Gro=C3=9F?=25def2c2021-10-22 18:56:39 +01001038 :au ModeChanged [vV\x16]*:* let &l:rnu = mode() =~# '^[vV\x16]'
1039 :au ModeChanged *:[vV\x16]* let &l:rnu = mode() =~# '^[vV\x16]'
1040 :au WinEnter,WinLeave * let &l:rnu = mode() =~# '^[vV\x16]'
=?UTF-8?q?Magnus=20Gro=C3=9F?=f1e88762021-09-12 13:39:55 +02001041< *OptionSet*
Bram Moolenaar53744302015-07-17 17:38:22 +02001042OptionSet After setting an option. The pattern is
1043 matched against the long option name.
Bram Moolenaard7c96872019-06-15 17:12:48 +02001044 |<amatch>| indicates what option has been set.
Bram Moolenaar53744302015-07-17 17:38:22 +02001045
Bram Moolenaard7c96872019-06-15 17:12:48 +02001046 |v:option_type| indicates whether it's global
Bram Moolenaar6c1e1572019-06-22 02:13:00 +02001047 or local scoped.
Bram Moolenaard7c96872019-06-15 17:12:48 +02001048 |v:option_command| indicates what type of
1049 set/let command was used (follow the tag to
1050 see the table).
1051 |v:option_new| indicates the newly set value.
Bram Moolenaar6c1e1572019-06-22 02:13:00 +02001052 |v:option_oldlocal| has the old local value.
1053 |v:option_oldglobal| has the old global value.
Bram Moolenaard7c96872019-06-15 17:12:48 +02001054 |v:option_old| indicates the old option value.
1055
1056 |v:option_oldlocal| is only set when |:set|
1057 or |:setlocal| or a |modeline| was used to set
1058 the option. Similarly |v:option_oldglobal| is
1059 only set when |:set| or |:setglobal| was used.
1060
Bram Moolenaar10e8ff92023-06-10 21:40:39 +01001061 This does not set |<abuf>|, you could use
1062 |bufnr()|.
1063
Bram Moolenaard7c96872019-06-15 17:12:48 +02001064 Note that when setting a |global-local| string
1065 option with |:set|, then |v:option_old| is the
1066 old global value. However, for all other kinds
1067 of options (local string options, global-local
1068 number options, ...) it is the old local
1069 value.
1070
1071 OptionSet is not triggered on startup and for
1072 the 'key' option for obvious reasons.
Bram Moolenaar53744302015-07-17 17:38:22 +02001073
Bram Moolenaarf9132812015-07-21 19:19:13 +02001074 Usage example: Check for the existence of the
1075 directory in the 'backupdir' and 'undodir'
1076 options, create the directory if it doesn't
1077 exist yet.
1078
1079 Note: It's a bad idea to reset an option
1080 during this autocommand, this may break a
1081 plugin. You can always use `:noa` to prevent
1082 triggering this autocommand.
Bram Moolenaar53744302015-07-17 17:38:22 +02001083
Bram Moolenaar95bafa22018-10-02 13:26:25 +02001084 When using |:set| in the autocommand the event
1085 is not triggered again.
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +00001086 *QuickFixCmdPre*
1087QuickFixCmdPre Before a quickfix command is run (|:make|,
Bram Moolenaara6557602006-02-04 22:43:20 +00001088 |:lmake|, |:grep|, |:lgrep|, |:grepadd|,
1089 |:lgrepadd|, |:vimgrep|, |:lvimgrep|,
Bram Moolenaar6be7f872012-01-20 21:08:56 +01001090 |:vimgrepadd|, |:lvimgrepadd|, |:cscope|,
Bram Moolenaar84f72352012-03-11 15:57:40 +01001091 |:cfile|, |:cgetfile|, |:caddfile|, |:lfile|,
1092 |:lgetfile|, |:laddfile|, |:helpgrep|,
Bram Moolenaar64d8e252016-09-06 22:12:34 +02001093 |:lhelpgrep|, |:cexpr|, |:cgetexpr|,
1094 |:caddexpr|, |:cbuffer|, |:cgetbuffer|,
1095 |:caddbuffer|).
Bram Moolenaarf1eeae92010-05-14 23:14:42 +02001096 The pattern is matched against the command
1097 being run. When |:grep| is used but 'grepprg'
1098 is set to "internal" it still matches "grep".
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +00001099 This command cannot be used to set the
1100 'makeprg' and 'grepprg' variables.
1101 If this command causes an error, the quickfix
1102 command is not executed.
1103 *QuickFixCmdPost*
1104QuickFixCmdPost Like QuickFixCmdPre, but after a quickfix
Bram Moolenaarf9393ef2006-04-24 19:47:27 +00001105 command is run, before jumping to the first
Bram Moolenaar8ec1f852012-03-07 20:13:49 +01001106 location. For |:cfile| and |:lfile| commands
Bram Moolenaarb59ae592022-11-23 23:46:31 +00001107 it is run after the error file is read and
1108 before moving to the first error.
Bram Moolenaar8ec1f852012-03-07 20:13:49 +01001109 See |QuickFixCmdPost-example|.
Bram Moolenaar30b65812012-07-12 22:01:11 +02001110 *QuitPre*
Bram Moolenaarac7bd632013-03-19 11:35:58 +01001111QuitPre When using `:quit`, `:wq` or `:qall`, before
1112 deciding whether it closes the current window
Bram Moolenaard2ea7cf2021-05-30 20:54:13 +02001113 or quits Vim. For `:wq` the buffer is written
1114 before QuitPre is triggered. Can be used to
1115 close any non-essential window if the current
1116 window is the last ordinary window.
Bram Moolenaar12a96de2018-03-11 14:44:18 +01001117 Also see |ExitPre|.
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +00001118 *RemoteReply*
1119RemoteReply When a reply from a Vim that functions as
Bram Moolenaard7afed32007-05-06 13:26:41 +00001120 server was received |server2client()|. The
1121 pattern is matched against the {serverid}.
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +00001122 <amatch> is equal to the {serverid} from which
1123 the reply was sent, and <afile> is the actual
1124 reply string.
1125 Note that even if an autocommand is defined,
1126 the reply should be read with |remote_read()|
1127 to consume it.
Bram Moolenaar8aeec402019-09-15 23:02:04 +02001128 *SafeState*
1129SafeState When nothing is pending, going to wait for the
1130 user to type a character.
1131 This will not be triggered when:
1132 - an operator is pending
1133 - a register was entered with "r
1134 - halfway executing a command
1135 - executing a mapping
1136 - there is typeahead
1137 - Insert mode completion is active
1138 - Command line completion is active
1139 You can use `mode()` to find out what state
1140 Vim is in. That may be:
zeertzjqe13b6652024-01-24 03:39:04 +08001141 - Visual mode
Bram Moolenaar8aeec402019-09-15 23:02:04 +02001142 - Normal mode
1143 - Insert mode
1144 - Command-line mode
1145 Depending on what you want to do, you may also
1146 check more with `state()`, e.g. whether the
1147 screen was scrolled for messages.
Bram Moolenaar69198cb2019-09-16 21:58:13 +02001148 *SafeStateAgain*
1149SafeStateAgain Like SafeState but after processing any
1150 messages and invoking callbacks. This may be
1151 triggered often, don't do something that takes
1152 time.
Bram Moolenaar8aeec402019-09-15 23:02:04 +02001153
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +00001154 *SessionLoadPost*
1155SessionLoadPost After loading the session file created using
1156 the |:mksession| command.
Colin Kennedye5f22802024-03-26 18:20:16 +01001157 *SessionWritePost*
1158SessionWritePost After writing a session file by calling
1159 the |:mksession| command.
Bram Moolenaara94bc432006-03-10 21:42:59 +00001160 *ShellCmdPost*
1161ShellCmdPost After executing a shell command with |:!cmd|,
1162 |:shell|, |:make| and |:grep|. Can be used to
1163 check for any changed files.
1164 *ShellFilterPost*
1165ShellFilterPost After executing a shell command with
1166 ":{range}!cmd", ":w !cmd" or ":r !cmd".
1167 Can be used to check for any changed files.
Bram Moolenaar1f35bf92006-03-07 22:38:47 +00001168 *SourcePre*
1169SourcePre Before sourcing a Vim script. |:source|
Bram Moolenaar8dd1aa52007-01-16 20:33:19 +00001170 <afile> is the name of the file being sourced.
Bram Moolenaar2b618522019-01-12 13:26:03 +01001171 *SourcePost*
1172SourcePost After sourcing a Vim script. |:source|
1173 <afile> is the name of the file being sourced.
1174 Not triggered when sourcing was interrupted.
1175 Also triggered after a SourceCmd autocommand
1176 was triggered.
Bram Moolenaar8dd1aa52007-01-16 20:33:19 +00001177 *SourceCmd*
1178SourceCmd When sourcing a Vim script. |:source|
1179 <afile> is the name of the file being sourced.
1180 The autocommand must source this file.
1181 |Cmd-event|
Bram Moolenaarafeb4fa2006-02-01 21:51:12 +00001182 *SpellFileMissing*
1183SpellFileMissing When trying to load a spell checking file and
Bram Moolenaar8dd1aa52007-01-16 20:33:19 +00001184 it can't be found. The pattern is matched
1185 against the language. <amatch> is the
1186 language, 'encoding' also matters. See
Bram Moolenaarafeb4fa2006-02-01 21:51:12 +00001187 |spell-SpellFileMissing|.
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +00001188 *StdinReadPost*
1189StdinReadPost After reading from the stdin into the buffer,
1190 before executing the modelines. Only used
1191 when the "-" argument was used when Vim was
1192 started |--|.
1193 *StdinReadPre*
1194StdinReadPre Before reading from stdin into the buffer.
1195 Only used when the "-" argument was used when
1196 Vim was started |--|.
1197 *SwapExists*
1198SwapExists Detected an existing swap file when starting
1199 to edit a file. Only when it is possible to
1200 select a way to handle the situation, when Vim
1201 would ask the user what to do.
1202 The |v:swapname| variable holds the name of
Bram Moolenaarb3480382005-12-11 21:33:32 +00001203 the swap file found, <afile> the file being
1204 edited. |v:swapcommand| may contain a command
1205 to be executed in the opened file.
1206 The commands should set the |v:swapchoice|
1207 variable to a string with one character to
1208 tell Vim what should be done next:
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +00001209 'o' open read-only
1210 'e' edit the file anyway
1211 'r' recover
1212 'd' delete the swap file
1213 'q' quit, don't edit the file
1214 'a' abort, like hitting CTRL-C
1215 When set to an empty string the user will be
1216 asked, as if there was no SwapExists autocmd.
Bram Moolenaarb849e712009-06-24 15:51:37 +00001217 *E812*
1218 It is not allowed to change to another buffer,
1219 change a buffer name or change directory
1220 here.
Bram Moolenaarb5b75622018-03-09 22:22:21 +01001221 {only available with the +eval feature}
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +00001222 *Syntax*
Bram Moolenaard7afed32007-05-06 13:26:41 +00001223Syntax When the 'syntax' option has been set. The
1224 pattern is matched against the syntax name.
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +00001225 <afile> can be used for the name of the file
1226 where this option was set, and <amatch> for
1227 the new value of 'syntax'.
1228 See |:syn-on|.
Bram Moolenaar12c11d52016-07-19 23:13:03 +02001229 *TabClosed*
1230TabClosed After closing a tab page.
Bram Moolenaarfaa959a2006-02-20 21:37:40 +00001231 *TabEnter*
1232TabEnter Just after entering a tab page. |tab-page|
Bram Moolenaar56a907a2006-05-06 21:44:30 +00001233 After triggering the WinEnter and before
1234 triggering the BufEnter event.
Bram Moolenaarfaa959a2006-02-20 21:37:40 +00001235 *TabLeave*
1236TabLeave Just before leaving a tab page. |tab-page|
1237 A WinLeave event will have been triggered
1238 first.
Bram Moolenaarc917da42016-07-19 22:31:36 +02001239 *TabNew*
1240TabNew When a tab page was created. |tab-page|
1241 A WinEnter event will have been triggered
1242 first, TabEnter follows.
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +00001243 *TermChanged*
1244TermChanged After the value of 'term' has changed. Useful
1245 for re-loading the syntax file to update the
1246 colors, fonts and other terminal-dependent
1247 settings. Executed for all loaded buffers.
Bram Moolenaarb852c3e2018-03-11 16:55:36 +01001248 *TerminalOpen*
1249TerminalOpen Just after a terminal buffer was created, with
1250 `:terminal` or |term_start()|. This event is
1251 triggered even if the buffer is created
1252 without a window, with the ++hidden option.
Bram Moolenaar28ed4df2019-10-26 16:21:40 +02001253 *TerminalWinOpen*
1254TerminalWinOpen Just after a terminal buffer was created, with
1255 `:terminal` or |term_start()|. This event is
1256 triggered only if the buffer is created
1257 with a window. Can be used to set window
1258 local options for the terminal window.
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +00001259 *TermResponse*
1260TermResponse After the response to |t_RV| is received from
1261 the terminal. The value of |v:termresponse|
1262 can be used to do things depending on the
Christian Brabandt2abec432024-10-27 21:33:09 +01001263 terminal version.
1264 This is used in |defaults.vim| to detect
1265 putty terminal and set a dark background: >
1266
1267 au TermResponse *
1268 \ if v:termresponse == "\e[>0;136;0c"
1269 \ set bg=dark
1270 \ endif
1271<
1272 Note: that this event may be triggered halfway
1273 executing another event, especially if file
1274 I/O, a shell command or anything else that
1275 takes time is involved.
Danek Duvalld7d56032024-01-14 20:19:59 +01001276 *TermResponseAll*
1277TermResponseAll After the response to |t_RV|, |t_RC|, |t_RS|,
1278 |t_RB|, |t_RF|, or |t_u7| are received from
1279 the terminal. The value of |v:termresponse|,
1280 |v:termblinkresp|, |v:termstyleresp|,
1281 |v:termrbgresp|, |v:termrfgresp|, and
1282 |v:termu7resp|, correspondingly, can be used.
1283 <amatch> will be set to any of:
1284 "version",
1285 "cursorblink",
1286 "cursorshape",
1287 "background",
1288 "foreground",
1289 "ambiguouswidth"
1290 Note that this event may be triggered halfway
1291 executing another event, especially if file I/O,
1292 a shell command or anything else that takes time
1293 is involved.
Bram Moolenaarbf884932013-04-05 22:26:15 +02001294 *TextChanged*
1295TextChanged After a change was made to the text in the
Bram Moolenaard09091d2019-01-17 16:07:22 +01001296 current buffer in Normal mode. That is after
1297 |b:changedtick| has changed (also when that
1298 happened before the TextChanged autocommand
1299 was defined).
Bram Moolenaarbf884932013-04-05 22:26:15 +02001300 Not triggered when there is typeahead or when
1301 an operator is pending.
Bram Moolenaar26967612019-03-17 17:13:16 +01001302 Note: This can not be skipped with
1303 `:noautocmd`.
Bram Moolenaarbf884932013-04-05 22:26:15 +02001304 Careful: This is triggered very often, don't
1305 do anything that the user does not expect or
1306 that is slow.
1307 *TextChangedI*
1308TextChangedI After a change was made to the text in the
1309 current buffer in Insert mode.
1310 Not triggered when the popup menu is visible.
1311 Otherwise the same as TextChanged.
Bram Moolenaar5a093432018-02-10 18:15:19 +01001312 *TextChangedP*
1313TextChangedP After a change was made to the text in the
1314 current buffer in Insert mode, only when the
1315 popup menu is visible. Otherwise the same as
1316 TextChanged.
Shougo Matsushita4ccaedf2022-10-15 11:48:00 +01001317 *TextChangedT*
1318TextChangedT After a change was made to the text in the
1319 current buffer in Terminal mode.
1320 Otherwise the same as TextChanged.
Bram Moolenaarf0b03c42017-12-17 17:17:07 +01001321 *TextYankPost*
Bram Moolenaar7e1652c2017-12-16 18:27:02 +01001322TextYankPost After text has been yanked or deleted in the
1323 current buffer. The following values of
1324 |v:event| can be used to determine the operation
1325 that triggered this autocmd:
Bram Moolenaara016eeb2022-04-09 11:37:38 +01001326 inclusive TRUE if the motion is
1327 |inclusive| else the motion is
1328 |exclusive|.
Bram Moolenaar589edb32019-09-20 14:38:13 +02001329 operator The operation performed.
1330 regcontents Text that was stored in the
Bram Moolenaar7e1652c2017-12-16 18:27:02 +01001331 register, as a list of lines,
1332 like with: >
1333 getreg(r, 1, 1)
Bram Moolenaar22863042021-10-16 15:23:36 +01001334< regname Name of the register or empty
1335 string for the unnamed
1336 register, see |registers|.
Bram Moolenaar7e1652c2017-12-16 18:27:02 +01001337 regtype Type of the register, see
1338 |getregtype()|.
Bram Moolenaar37d16732020-06-12 22:09:01 +02001339 visual True if the operation is
1340 performed on a |Visual| area.
Bram Moolenaar7e1652c2017-12-16 18:27:02 +01001341 Not triggered when |quote_| is used nor when
1342 called recursively.
1343 It is not allowed to change the buffer text,
Bram Moolenaar6f4754b2022-01-23 12:07:04 +00001344 see |textlock|. *E1064*
Bram Moolenaarb5b75622018-03-09 22:22:21 +01001345 {only when compiled with the +eval feature}
Bram Moolenaarbe5ee862020-06-10 20:56:58 +02001346
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +00001347 *User*
1348User Never executed automatically. To be used for
1349 autocommands that are only executed with
1350 ":doautocmd".
Bram Moolenaar7dda86f2018-04-20 22:36:41 +02001351 Note that when `:doautocmd User MyEvent` is
1352 used while there are no matching autocommands,
1353 you will get an error. If you don't want
LemonBoy09371822022-04-08 15:18:45 +01001354 that, either check whether an autocommand is
1355 defined using `exists('#User#MyEvent')` or
1356 define a dummy autocommand yourself.
1357 Example: >
1358 if exists('#User#MyEvent')
1359 doautocmd User MyEvent
1360 endif
Bram Moolenaarb529cfb2022-07-25 15:42:07 +01001361<
Bram Moolenaarbe5ee862020-06-10 20:56:58 +02001362 *SigUSR1*
1363SigUSR1 After the SIGUSR1 signal has been detected.
1364 Could be used if other ways of notifying Vim
1365 are not feasible. E.g. to check for the
1366 result of a build that takes a long time, or
1367 when a motion sensor is triggered.
1368 {only on Unix}
1369
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +00001370 *UserGettingBored*
Bram Moolenaarbf884932013-04-05 22:26:15 +02001371UserGettingBored When the user presses the same key 42 times.
1372 Just kidding! :-)
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +00001373 *VimEnter*
1374VimEnter After doing all the startup stuff, including
1375 loading .vimrc files, executing the "-c cmd"
1376 arguments, creating all windows and loading
1377 the buffers in them.
Bram Moolenaar14735512016-03-26 21:00:08 +01001378 Just before this event is triggered the
1379 |v:vim_did_enter| variable is set, so that you
1380 can do: >
1381 if v:vim_did_enter
1382 call s:init()
1383 else
Bram Moolenaar589edb32019-09-20 14:38:13 +02001384 au VimEnter * call s:init()
Bram Moolenaar14735512016-03-26 21:00:08 +01001385 endif
1386< *VimLeave*
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +00001387VimLeave Before exiting Vim, just after writing the
1388 .viminfo file. Executed only once, like
1389 VimLeavePre.
1390 To detect an abnormal exit use |v:dying|.
Bram Moolenaar0e1e25f2010-05-28 21:07:08 +02001391 When v:dying is 2 or more this event is not
1392 triggered.
Bram Moolenaarf0068c52020-11-30 17:42:10 +01001393 To get the exit code use |v:exiting|.
Bram Moolenaar4e330bb2005-12-07 21:04:31 +00001394 *VimLeavePre*
1395VimLeavePre Before exiting Vim, just before writing the
1396 .viminfo file. This is executed only once,
1397 if there is a match with the name of what
1398 happens to be the current buffer when exiting.
1399 Mostly useful with a "*" pattern. >
1400 :autocmd VimLeavePre * call CleanupStuff()
1401< To detect an abnormal exit use |v:dying|.
Bram Moolenaar0e1e25f2010-05-28 21:07:08 +02001402 When v:dying is 2 or more this event is not
1403 triggered.
Bram Moolenaarf0068c52020-11-30 17:42:10 +01001404 To get the exit code use |v:exiting|.
Bram Moolenaar7d47b6e2006-03-15 22:59:18 +00001405 *VimResized*
1406VimResized After the Vim window was resized, thus 'lines'
1407 and/or 'columns' changed. Not when starting
1408 up though.
Bram Moolenaar100118c2020-12-11 19:30:34 +01001409 *VimResume*
1410VimResume When the Vim instance is resumed after being
1411 suspended and |VimSuspend| was triggered.
1412 Useful for triggering |:checktime| and ensure
1413 the buffers content did not change while Vim
1414 was suspended: >
1415 :autocmd VimResume * checktime
1416< *VimSuspend*
1417VimSuspend When the Vim instance is suspended. Only when
dbivolaruab16ad32021-12-29 19:41:47 +00001418 CTRL-Z was typed inside Vim, or when the SIGTSTP
1419 signal was sent to Vim, but not for SIGSTOP.
naohiro ono23beefe2021-11-13 12:38:49 +00001420 *WinClosed*
Bram Moolenaarb59ae592022-11-23 23:46:31 +00001421WinClosed When closing a window, just before it is
1422 removed from the window layout. The pattern
1423 is matched against the |window-ID|. Both
naohiro ono23beefe2021-11-13 12:38:49 +00001424 <amatch> and <afile> are set to the
1425 |window-ID|. Non-recursive (event cannot
1426 trigger itself).
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001427 *WinEnter*
1428WinEnter After entering another window. Not done for
1429 the first window, when Vim has just started.
1430 Useful for setting the window height.
1431 If the window is for another buffer, Vim
1432 executes the BufEnter autocommands after the
1433 WinEnter autocommands.
Bram Moolenaar7dda86f2018-04-20 22:36:41 +02001434 Note: For split and tabpage commands the
1435 WinEnter event is triggered after the split
1436 or tab command but before the file is loaded.
1437
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001438 *WinLeave*
1439WinLeave Before leaving a window. If the window to be
1440 entered next is for a different buffer, Vim
1441 executes the BufLeave autocommands before the
1442 WinLeave autocommands (but not for ":new").
1443 Not used for ":qa" or ":q" when exiting Vim.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001444
Sergey Vlasov1f47db72024-01-25 23:07:00 +01001445 *WinNewPre*
1446WinNewPre Before creating a new window. Triggered
1447 before commands that modify window layout by
Christian Brabandtfb3f9692024-08-11 20:09:17 +02001448 creating a split.
h-east90e1fe42024-08-12 18:26:08 +02001449 Not done when creating tab pages and for the
1450 first window, as the window structure is not
Christian Brabandtfb3f9692024-08-11 20:09:17 +02001451 initialized yet and so is generally not safe.
Sergey Vlasov1f47db72024-01-25 23:07:00 +01001452 It is not allowed to modify window layout
1453 while executing commands for the WinNewPre
1454 event.
1455 Most useful to store current window layout
1456 and compare it with the new layout after the
1457 Window has been created.
1458
Bram Moolenaar12c11d52016-07-19 23:13:03 +02001459 *WinNew*
1460WinNew When a new window was created. Not done for
Bram Moolenaar50ba5262016-09-22 22:33:02 +02001461 the first window, when Vim has just started.
Bram Moolenaar12c11d52016-07-19 23:13:03 +02001462 Before a WinEnter event.
1463
LemonBoy09371822022-04-08 15:18:45 +01001464 *WinScrolled*
Bram Moolenaar35fc61c2022-11-22 12:40:50 +00001465WinScrolled After any window in the current tab page
1466 scrolled the text (horizontally or vertically)
1467 or changed width or height. See
1468 |win-scrolled-resized|.
Bram Moolenaar0a60f792022-11-19 21:18:11 +00001469
1470 The pattern is matched against the |window-ID|
1471 of the first window that scrolled or resized.
1472 Both <amatch> and <afile> are set to the
1473 |window-ID|.
1474
Bram Moolenaar35fc61c2022-11-22 12:40:50 +00001475 |v:event| is set with information about size
1476 and scroll changes. |WinScrolled-event|
1477
Bram Moolenaar0a60f792022-11-19 21:18:11 +00001478 Only starts triggering after startup finished
1479 and the first screen redraw was done.
Bram Moolenaar35fc61c2022-11-22 12:40:50 +00001480 Does not trigger when defining the first
1481 WinScrolled or WinResized event, but may
1482 trigger when adding more.
Bram Moolenaar0a60f792022-11-19 21:18:11 +00001483
1484 Non-recursive: the event will not trigger
1485 while executing commands for the WinScrolled
1486 event. However, if the command causes a
1487 window to scroll or change size, then another
LemonBoy09371822022-04-08 15:18:45 +01001488 WinScrolled event will be triggered later.
Bram Moolenaar0a60f792022-11-19 21:18:11 +00001489
Bram Moolenaar35fc61c2022-11-22 12:40:50 +00001490
1491 *WinResized*
1492WinResized After a window in the current tab page changed
1493 width or height.
1494 See |win-scrolled-resized|.
1495
1496 |v:event| is set with information about size
1497 changes. |WinResized-event|
1498
1499 Same behavior as |WinScrolled| for the
1500 pattern, triggering and recursiveness.
LemonBoy09371822022-04-08 15:18:45 +01001501
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001502==============================================================================
Bram Moolenaarfd31be22022-01-16 14:46:06 +000015036. Patterns *autocmd-patterns* *{aupat}*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001504
LemonBoy09371822022-04-08 15:18:45 +01001505The {aupat} argument of `:autocmd` can be a comma-separated list. This works as
Bram Moolenaarfd31be22022-01-16 14:46:06 +00001506if the command was given with each pattern separately. Thus this command: >
Bram Moolenaar5a5f4592015-04-13 12:43:06 +02001507 :autocmd BufRead *.txt,*.info set et
1508Is equivalent to: >
1509 :autocmd BufRead *.txt set et
1510 :autocmd BufRead *.info set et
1511
Bram Moolenaarfd31be22022-01-16 14:46:06 +00001512The file pattern {aupat} is tested for a match against the file name in one of
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001513two ways:
15141. When there is no '/' in the pattern, Vim checks for a match against only
1515 the tail part of the file name (without its leading directory path).
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +010015162. When there is a '/' in the pattern, Vim checks for a match against both the
1517 short file name (as you typed it) and the full file name (after expanding
1518 it to a full path and resolving symbolic links).
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001519
Bram Moolenaarb5bf5b82004-12-24 14:35:23 +00001520The special pattern <buffer> or <buffer=N> is used for buffer-local
1521autocommands |autocmd-buflocal|. This pattern is not matched against the name
1522of a buffer.
1523
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001524Examples: >
1525 :autocmd BufRead *.txt set et
1526Set the 'et' option for all text files. >
1527
1528 :autocmd BufRead /vim/src/*.c set cindent
1529Set the 'cindent' option for C files in the /vim/src directory. >
1530
1531 :autocmd BufRead /tmp/*.c set ts=5
1532If you have a link from "/tmp/test.c" to "/home/nobody/vim/src/test.c", and
1533you start editing "/tmp/test.c", this autocommand will match.
1534
1535Note: To match part of a path, but not from the root directory, use a '*' as
1536the first character. Example: >
1537 :autocmd BufRead */doc/*.txt set tw=78
1538This autocommand will for example be executed for "/tmp/doc/xx.txt" and
1539"/usr/home/piet/doc/yy.txt". The number of directories does not matter here.
1540
1541
1542The file name that the pattern is matched against is after expanding
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001543wildcards. Thus if you issue this command: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001544 :e $ROOTDIR/main.$EXT
1545The argument is first expanded to: >
1546 /usr/root/main.py
1547Before it's matched with the pattern of the autocommand. Careful with this
1548when using events like FileReadCmd, the value of <amatch> may not be what you
1549expect.
1550
1551
1552Environment variables can be used in a pattern: >
1553 :autocmd BufRead $VIMRUNTIME/doc/*.txt set expandtab
1554And ~ can be used for the home directory (if $HOME is defined): >
1555 :autocmd BufWritePost ~/.vimrc so ~/.vimrc
1556 :autocmd BufRead ~archive/* set readonly
1557The environment variable is expanded when the autocommand is defined, not when
1558the autocommand is executed. This is different from the command!
1559
1560 *file-pattern*
1561The pattern is interpreted like mostly used in file names:
Bram Moolenaar3b1db362013-08-10 15:00:24 +02001562 * matches any sequence of characters; Unusual: includes path
Bram Moolenaar9d98fe92013-08-03 18:35:36 +02001563 separators
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001564 ? matches any single character
1565 \? matches a '?'
1566 . matches a '.'
1567 ~ matches a '~'
1568 , separates patterns
1569 \, matches a ','
1570 { } like \( \) in a |pattern|
1571 , inside { }: like \| in a |pattern|
Bram Moolenaara946afe2013-08-02 15:22:39 +02001572 \} literal }
1573 \{ literal {
1574 \\\{n,m\} like \{n,m} in a |pattern|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001575 \ special meaning like in a |pattern|
1576 [ch] matches 'c' or 'h'
1577 [^ch] match any character but 'c' and 'h'
1578
1579Note that for all systems the '/' character is used for path separator (even
Bram Moolenaar6f345a12019-12-17 21:27:18 +01001580for MS-Windows). This was done because the backslash is difficult to use in a
1581pattern and to make the autocommands portable across different systems.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001582
Bram Moolenaar64d8e252016-09-06 22:12:34 +02001583It is possible to use |pattern| items, but they may not work as expected,
1584because of the translation done for the above.
1585
Bram Moolenaarb5bf5b82004-12-24 14:35:23 +00001586 *autocmd-changes*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001587Matching with the pattern is done when an event is triggered. Changing the
1588buffer name in one of the autocommands, or even deleting the buffer, does not
1589change which autocommands will be executed. Example: >
1590
1591 au BufEnter *.foo bdel
1592 au BufEnter *.foo set modified
1593
1594This will delete the current buffer and then set 'modified' in what has become
1595the current buffer instead. Vim doesn't take into account that "*.foo"
1596doesn't match with that buffer name. It matches "*.foo" with the name of the
1597buffer at the moment the event was triggered.
1598
Bram Moolenaarb5bf5b82004-12-24 14:35:23 +00001599However, buffer-local autocommands will not be executed for a buffer that has
1600been wiped out with |:bwipe|. After deleting the buffer with |:bdel| the
1601buffer actually still exists (it becomes unlisted), thus the autocommands are
1602still executed.
1603
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001604==============================================================================
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +000016057. Buffer-local autocommands *autocmd-buflocal* *autocmd-buffer-local*
1606 *<buffer=N>* *<buffer=abuf>* *E680*
Bram Moolenaarb5bf5b82004-12-24 14:35:23 +00001607
1608Buffer-local autocommands are attached to a specific buffer. They are useful
1609if the buffer does not have a name and when the name does not match a specific
1610pattern. But it also means they must be explicitly added to each buffer.
1611
1612Instead of a pattern buffer-local autocommands use one of these forms:
1613 <buffer> current buffer
1614 <buffer=99> buffer number 99
1615 <buffer=abuf> using <abuf> (only when executing autocommands)
1616 |<abuf>|
1617
1618Examples: >
1619 :au CursorHold <buffer> echo 'hold'
1620 :au CursorHold <buffer=33> echo 'hold'
Bram Moolenaar88774fd2015-08-25 19:52:04 +02001621 :au BufNewFile * au CursorHold <buffer=abuf> echo 'hold'
Bram Moolenaarb5bf5b82004-12-24 14:35:23 +00001622
1623All the commands for autocommands also work with buffer-local autocommands,
1624simply use the special string instead of the pattern. Examples: >
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +00001625 :au! * <buffer> " remove buffer-local autocommands for
1626 " current buffer
1627 :au! * <buffer=33> " remove buffer-local autocommands for
1628 " buffer #33
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001629 :bufdo :au! CursorHold <buffer> " remove autocmd for given event for all
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +00001630 " buffers
1631 :au * <buffer> " list buffer-local autocommands for
1632 " current buffer
Bram Moolenaarb5bf5b82004-12-24 14:35:23 +00001633
1634Note that when an autocommand is defined for the current buffer, it is stored
1635with the buffer number. Thus it uses the form "<buffer=12>", where 12 is the
1636number of the current buffer. You will see this when listing autocommands,
1637for example.
1638
1639To test for presence of buffer-local autocommands use the |exists()| function
1640as follows: >
1641 :if exists("#CursorHold#<buffer=12>") | ... | endif
1642 :if exists("#CursorHold#<buffer>") | ... | endif " for current buffer
1643
1644When a buffer is wiped out its buffer-local autocommands are also gone, of
1645course. Note that when deleting a buffer, e.g., with ":bdel", it is only
1646unlisted, the autocommands are still present. In order to see the removal of
1647buffer-local autocommands: >
1648 :set verbose=6
1649
1650It is not possible to define buffer-local autocommands for a non-existent
1651buffer.
1652
1653==============================================================================
16548. Groups *autocmd-groups*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001655
1656Autocommands can be put together in a group. This is useful for removing or
1657executing a group of autocommands. For example, all the autocommands for
1658syntax highlighting are put in the "highlight" group, to be able to execute
1659":doautoall highlight BufRead" when the GUI starts.
1660
1661When no specific group is selected, Vim uses the default group. The default
1662group does not have a name. You cannot execute the autocommands from the
1663default group separately; you can execute them only by executing autocommands
1664for all groups.
1665
1666Normally, when executing autocommands automatically, Vim uses the autocommands
1667for all groups. The group only matters when executing autocommands with
1668":doautocmd" or ":doautoall", or when defining or deleting autocommands.
1669
1670The group name can contain any characters except white space. The group name
1671"end" is reserved (also in uppercase).
1672
1673The group name is case sensitive. Note that this is different from the event
1674name!
1675
1676 *:aug* *:augroup*
1677:aug[roup] {name} Define the autocmd group name for the
1678 following ":autocmd" commands. The name "end"
1679 or "END" selects the default group.
Bram Moolenaar256972a2015-12-29 19:10:25 +01001680 To avoid confusion, the name should be
1681 different from existing {event} names, as this
1682 most likely will not do what you intended.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001683
Bram Moolenaar64d8e252016-09-06 22:12:34 +02001684 *:augroup-delete* *E367* *W19* *E936*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001685:aug[roup]! {name} Delete the autocmd group {name}. Don't use
1686 this if there is still an autocommand using
Bram Moolenaarbc8801c2016-08-02 21:04:33 +02001687 this group! You will get a warning if doing
Bram Moolenaare7b1ea02020-08-07 19:54:59 +02001688 it anyway. When the group is the current
1689 group you will get error E936.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001690
1691To enter autocommands for a specific group, use this method:
16921. Select the group with ":augroup {name}".
16932. Delete any old autocommands with ":au!".
16943. Define the autocommands.
16954. Go back to the default group with "augroup END".
1696
1697Example: >
1698 :augroup uncompress
1699 : au!
1700 : au BufEnter *.gz %!gunzip
1701 :augroup END
1702
1703This prevents having the autocommands defined twice (e.g., after sourcing the
1704.vimrc file again).
1705
Bram Moolenaar6e649222021-10-04 21:32:54 +01001706 *FileExplorer*
1707There is one group that is recognized by Vim: FileExplorer. If this group
1708exists Vim assumes that editing a directory is possible and will trigger a
1709plugin that lists the files in that directory. This is used by the |netrw|
1710plugin. This allows you to do: >
1711 browse edit
1712
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001713==============================================================================
Bram Moolenaarb5bf5b82004-12-24 14:35:23 +000017149. Executing autocommands *autocmd-execute*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001715
1716Vim can also execute Autocommands non-automatically. This is useful if you
1717have changed autocommands, or when Vim has executed the wrong autocommands
1718(e.g., the file pattern match was wrong).
1719
1720Note that the 'eventignore' option applies here too. Events listed in this
1721option will not cause any commands to be executed.
1722
Bram Moolenaar61da1bf2019-06-06 12:14:49 +02001723 *:do* *:doau* *:doaut* *:doautocmd* *E217*
Bram Moolenaar5dc62522012-02-13 00:05:22 +01001724:do[autocmd] [<nomodeline>] [group] {event} [fname]
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001725 Apply the autocommands matching [fname] (default:
1726 current file name) for {event} to the current buffer.
1727 You can use this when the current file name does not
1728 match the right pattern, after changing settings, or
1729 to execute autocommands for a certain event.
1730 It's possible to use this inside an autocommand too,
1731 so you can base the autocommands for one extension on
1732 another extension. Example: >
Bram Moolenaarf1568ec2011-12-14 21:17:39 +01001733 :au BufEnter *.cpp so ~/.vimrc_cpp
1734 :au BufEnter *.cpp doau BufEnter x.c
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001735< Be careful to avoid endless loops. See
1736 |autocmd-nested|.
1737
1738 When the [group] argument is not given, Vim executes
1739 the autocommands for all groups. When the [group]
1740 argument is included, Vim executes only the matching
1741 autocommands for that group. Note: if you use an
1742 undefined group name, Vim gives you an error message.
Bram Moolenaar60542ac2012-02-12 20:14:01 +01001743 *<nomodeline>*
1744 After applying the autocommands the modelines are
1745 processed, so that their settings overrule the
1746 settings from autocommands, like what happens when
1747 editing a file. This is skipped when the <nomodeline>
1748 argument is present. You probably want to use
1749 <nomodeline> for events that are not used when loading
1750 a buffer, such as |User|.
Bram Moolenaarc95a3022016-06-12 23:01:46 +02001751 Processing modelines is also skipped when no
1752 matching autocommands were executed.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001753
1754 *:doautoa* *:doautoall*
Bram Moolenaara61d5fb2012-02-12 00:18:58 +01001755:doautoa[ll] [<nomodeline>] [group] {event} [fname]
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001756 Like ":doautocmd", but apply the autocommands to each
Bram Moolenaardad44732021-03-31 20:07:33 +02001757 loaded buffer. The current buffer is done last.
1758
1759 Note that [fname] is used to select the autocommands,
Bram Moolenaar4c295022021-05-02 17:19:11 +02001760 not the buffers to which they are applied. Example: >
1761 augroup mine
1762 autocmd!
1763 autocmd FileType * echo expand('<amatch>')
1764 augroup END
1765 doautoall mine FileType Loaded-Buffer
1766< Sourcing this script, you'll see as many
1767 "Loaded-Buffer" echoed as there are loaded buffers.
Bram Moolenaardad44732021-03-31 20:07:33 +02001768
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001769 Careful: Don't use this for autocommands that delete a
1770 buffer, change to another buffer or change the
1771 contents of a buffer; the result is unpredictable.
1772 This command is intended for autocommands that set
1773 options, change highlighting, and things like that.
1774
1775==============================================================================
Bram Moolenaarb5bf5b82004-12-24 14:35:23 +0000177610. Using autocommands *autocmd-use*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001777
1778For WRITING FILES there are four possible sets of events. Vim uses only one
1779of these sets for a write command:
1780
1781BufWriteCmd BufWritePre BufWritePost writing the whole buffer
1782 FilterWritePre FilterWritePost writing to filter temp file
1783FileAppendCmd FileAppendPre FileAppendPost appending to a file
1784FileWriteCmd FileWritePre FileWritePost any other file write
1785
1786When there is a matching "*Cmd" autocommand, it is assumed it will do the
1787writing. No further writing is done and the other events are not triggered.
1788|Cmd-event|
1789
1790Note that the *WritePost commands should undo any changes to the buffer that
1791were caused by the *WritePre commands; otherwise, writing the file will have
1792the side effect of changing the buffer.
1793
1794Before executing the autocommands, the buffer from which the lines are to be
1795written temporarily becomes the current buffer. Unless the autocommands
1796change the current buffer or delete the previously current buffer, the
1797previously current buffer is made the current buffer again.
1798
1799The *WritePre and *AppendPre autocommands must not delete the buffer from
1800which the lines are to be written.
1801
1802The '[ and '] marks have a special position:
1803- Before the *ReadPre event the '[ mark is set to the line just above where
1804 the new lines will be inserted.
1805- Before the *ReadPost event the '[ mark is set to the first line that was
1806 just read, the '] mark to the last line.
Bram Moolenaar3fdfa4a2004-10-07 21:02:47 +00001807- Before executing the *WriteCmd, *WritePre and *AppendPre autocommands the '[
1808 mark is set to the first line that will be written, the '] mark to the last
1809 line.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001810Careful: '[ and '] change when using commands that change the buffer.
1811
1812In commands which expect a file name, you can use "<afile>" for the file name
1813that is being read |:<afile>| (you can also use "%" for the current file
1814name). "<abuf>" can be used for the buffer number of the currently effective
Bram Moolenaard2f3a8b2018-06-19 14:35:59 +02001815buffer. This also works for buffers that don't have a name. But it doesn't
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001816work for files without a buffer (e.g., with ":r file").
1817
1818 *gzip-example*
1819Examples for reading and writing compressed files: >
1820 :augroup gzip
1821 : autocmd!
1822 : autocmd BufReadPre,FileReadPre *.gz set bin
1823 : autocmd BufReadPost,FileReadPost *.gz '[,']!gunzip
1824 : autocmd BufReadPost,FileReadPost *.gz set nobin
Bram Moolenaarc51cf032022-02-26 12:25:45 +00001825 : autocmd BufReadPost,FileReadPost *.gz execute ":doautocmd BufReadPost " .. expand("%:r")
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001826 : autocmd BufWritePost,FileWritePost *.gz !mv <afile> <afile>:r
1827 : autocmd BufWritePost,FileWritePost *.gz !gzip <afile>:r
1828
1829 : autocmd FileAppendPre *.gz !gunzip <afile>
1830 : autocmd FileAppendPre *.gz !mv <afile>:r <afile>
1831 : autocmd FileAppendPost *.gz !mv <afile> <afile>:r
1832 : autocmd FileAppendPost *.gz !gzip <afile>:r
1833 :augroup END
1834
1835The "gzip" group is used to be able to delete any existing autocommands with
1836":autocmd!", for when the file is sourced twice.
1837
1838("<afile>:r" is the file name without the extension, see |:_%:|)
1839
1840The commands executed for the BufNewFile, BufRead/BufReadPost, BufWritePost,
1841FileAppendPost and VimLeave events do not set or reset the changed flag of the
1842buffer. When you decompress the buffer with the BufReadPost autocommands, you
1843can still exit with ":q". When you use ":undo" in BufWritePost to undo the
1844changes made by BufWritePre commands, you can still do ":q" (this also makes
1845"ZZ" work). If you do want the buffer to be marked as modified, set the
1846'modified' option.
1847
1848To execute Normal mode commands from an autocommand, use the ":normal"
1849command. Use with care! If the Normal mode command is not finished, the user
1850needs to type characters (e.g., after ":normal m" you need to type a mark
1851name).
1852
1853If you want the buffer to be unmodified after changing it, reset the
1854'modified' option. This makes it possible to exit the buffer with ":q"
1855instead of ":q!".
1856
1857 *autocmd-nested* *E218*
Bram Moolenaar26967612019-03-17 17:13:16 +01001858By default, autocommands do not nest. For example, if you use ":e" or ":w" in
1859an autocommand, Vim does not execute the BufRead and BufWrite autocommands for
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001860those commands. If you do want this, use the "nested" flag for those commands
1861in which you want nesting. For example: >
Bram Moolenaareb93f3f2019-04-04 15:04:56 +02001862 :autocmd FileChangedShell *.c ++nested e!
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001863The nesting is limited to 10 levels to get out of recursive loops.
1864
1865It's possible to use the ":au" command in an autocommand. This can be a
1866self-modifying command! This can be useful for an autocommand that should
1867execute only once.
1868
Bram Moolenaarb3480382005-12-11 21:33:32 +00001869If you want to skip autocommands for one command, use the |:noautocmd| command
1870modifier or the 'eventignore' option.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001871
1872Note: When reading a file (with ":read file" or with a filter command) and the
1873last line in the file does not have an <EOL>, Vim remembers this. At the next
1874write (with ":write file" or with a filter command), if the same line is
1875written again as the last line in a file AND 'binary' is set, Vim does not
1876supply an <EOL>. This makes a filter command on the just read lines write the
1877same file as was read, and makes a write command on just filtered lines write
1878the same file as was read from the filter. For example, another way to write
1879a compressed file: >
1880
1881 :autocmd FileWritePre *.gz set bin|'[,']!gzip
1882 :autocmd FileWritePost *.gz undo|set nobin
1883<
1884 *autocommand-pattern*
1885You can specify multiple patterns, separated by commas. Here are some
1886examples: >
1887
1888 :autocmd BufRead * set tw=79 nocin ic infercase fo=2croq
1889 :autocmd BufRead .letter set tw=72 fo=2tcrq
1890 :autocmd BufEnter .letter set dict=/usr/lib/dict/words
1891 :autocmd BufLeave .letter set dict=
1892 :autocmd BufRead,BufNewFile *.c,*.h set tw=0 cin noic
1893 :autocmd BufEnter *.c,*.h abbr FOR for (i = 0; i < 3; ++i)<CR>{<CR>}<Esc>O
1894 :autocmd BufLeave *.c,*.h unabbr FOR
1895
1896For makefiles (makefile, Makefile, imakefile, makefile.unix, etc.): >
1897
1898 :autocmd BufEnter ?akefile* set include=^s\=include
1899 :autocmd BufLeave ?akefile* set include&
1900
1901To always start editing C files at the first function: >
1902
1903 :autocmd BufRead *.c,*.h 1;/^{
1904
1905Without the "1;" above, the search would start from wherever the file was
1906entered, rather than from the start of the file.
1907
1908 *skeleton* *template*
1909To read a skeleton (template) file when opening a new file: >
1910
1911 :autocmd BufNewFile *.c 0r ~/vim/skeleton.c
1912 :autocmd BufNewFile *.h 0r ~/vim/skeleton.h
1913 :autocmd BufNewFile *.java 0r ~/vim/skeleton.java
1914
1915To insert the current date and time in a *.html file when writing it: >
1916
1917 :autocmd BufWritePre,FileWritePre *.html ks|call LastMod()|'s
1918 :fun LastMod()
1919 : if line("$") > 20
1920 : let l = 20
1921 : else
1922 : let l = line("$")
1923 : endif
Bram Moolenaarc51cf032022-02-26 12:25:45 +00001924 : exe "1," .. l .. "g/Last modified: /s/Last modified: .*/Last modified: " ..
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001925 : \ strftime("%Y %b %d")
1926 :endfun
1927
1928You need to have a line "Last modified: <date time>" in the first 20 lines
1929of the file for this to work. Vim replaces <date time> (and anything in the
1930same line after it) with the current date and time. Explanation:
1931 ks mark current position with mark 's'
1932 call LastMod() call the LastMod() function to do the work
1933 's return the cursor to the old position
1934The LastMod() function checks if the file is shorter than 20 lines, and then
1935uses the ":g" command to find lines that contain "Last modified: ". For those
1936lines the ":s" command is executed to replace the existing date with the
1937current one. The ":execute" command is used to be able to use an expression
1938for the ":g" and ":s" commands. The date is obtained with the strftime()
1939function. You can change its argument to get another date string.
1940
1941When entering :autocmd on the command-line, completion of events and command
1942names may be done (with <Tab>, CTRL-D, etc.) where appropriate.
1943
1944Vim executes all matching autocommands in the order that you specify them.
1945It is recommended that your first autocommand be used for all files by using
1946"*" as the file pattern. This means that you can define defaults you like
1947here for any settings, and if there is another matching autocommand it will
1948override these. But if there is no other matching autocommand, then at least
1949your default settings are recovered (if entering this file from another for
1950which autocommands did match). Note that "*" will also match files starting
1951with ".", unlike Unix shells.
1952
1953 *autocmd-searchpat*
1954Autocommands do not change the current search patterns. Vim saves the current
1955search patterns before executing autocommands then restores them after the
1956autocommands finish. This means that autocommands do not affect the strings
1957highlighted with the 'hlsearch' option. Within autocommands, you can still
1958use search patterns normally, e.g., with the "n" command.
1959If you want an autocommand to set the search pattern, such that it is used
1960after the autocommand finishes, use the ":let @/ =" command.
1961The search-highlighting cannot be switched off with ":nohlsearch" in an
1962autocommand. Use the 'h' flag in the 'viminfo' option to disable search-
1963highlighting when starting Vim.
1964
1965 *Cmd-event*
1966When using one of the "*Cmd" events, the matching autocommands are expected to
Bram Moolenaar8dd1aa52007-01-16 20:33:19 +00001967do the file reading, writing or sourcing. This can be used when working with
1968a special kind of file, for example on a remote system.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001969CAREFUL: If you use these events in a wrong way, it may have the effect of
1970making it impossible to read or write the matching files! Make sure you test
1971your autocommands properly. Best is to use a pattern that will never match a
1972normal file name, for example "ftp://*".
1973
1974When defining a BufReadCmd it will be difficult for Vim to recover a crashed
1975editing session. When recovering from the original file, Vim reads only those
1976parts of a file that are not found in the swap file. Since that is not
1977possible with a BufReadCmd, use the |:preserve| command to make sure the
1978original file isn't needed for recovery. You might want to do this only when
1979you expect the file to be modified.
1980
Bram Moolenaar8dd1aa52007-01-16 20:33:19 +00001981For file read and write commands the |v:cmdarg| variable holds the "++enc="
1982and "++ff=" argument that are effective. These should be used for the command
1983that reads/writes the file. The |v:cmdbang| variable is one when "!" was
1984used, zero otherwise.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001985
Bram Moolenaarc88ebf72010-07-22 22:30:23 +02001986See the $VIMRUNTIME/plugin/netrwPlugin.vim for examples.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001987
Bram Moolenaarb3480382005-12-11 21:33:32 +00001988==============================================================================
198911. Disabling autocommands *autocmd-disable*
1990
1991To disable autocommands for some time use the 'eventignore' option. Note that
1992this may cause unexpected behavior, make sure you restore 'eventignore'
1993afterwards, using a |:try| block with |:finally|.
1994
1995 *:noautocmd* *:noa*
1996To disable autocommands for just one command use the ":noautocmd" command
1997modifier. This will set 'eventignore' to "all" for the duration of the
1998following command. Example: >
1999
2000 :noautocmd w fname.gz
2001
2002This will write the file without triggering the autocommands defined by the
2003gzip plugin.
2004
Bram Moolenaar26967612019-03-17 17:13:16 +01002005Note that some autocommands are not triggered right away, but only later.
2006This specifically applies to |CursorMoved| and |TextChanged|.
2007
Bram Moolenaarb5bf5b82004-12-24 14:35:23 +00002008
Bram Moolenaar91f84f62018-07-29 15:07:52 +02002009 vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl: