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Bram Moolenaar6ee8d892012-01-10 14:55:01 +01001*change.txt* For Vim version 7.3. Last change: 2012 Jan 04
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002
3
4 VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar
5
6
7This file describes commands that delete or change text. In this context,
8changing text means deleting the text and replacing it with other text using
9one command. You can undo all of these commands. You can repeat the non-Ex
10commands with the "." command.
11
121. Deleting text |deleting|
132. Delete and insert |delete-insert|
143. Simple changes |simple-change| *changing*
154. Complex changes |complex-change|
Bram Moolenaar47136d72004-10-12 20:02:24 +000016 4.1 Filter commands |filter|
17 4.2 Substitute |:substitute|
18 4.3 Search and replace |search-replace|
19 4.4 Changing tabs |change-tabs|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000205. Copying and moving text |copy-move|
216. Formatting text |formatting|
Bram Moolenaar2389c3c2005-05-22 22:07:59 +0000227. Sorting text |sorting|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000023
24For inserting text see |insert.txt|.
25
26==============================================================================
271. Deleting text *deleting* *E470*
28
29["x]<Del> or *<Del>* *x* *dl*
30["x]x Delete [count] characters under and after the cursor
31 [into register x] (not |linewise|). Does the same as
32 "dl".
33 The <Del> key does not take a [count]. Instead, it
34 deletes the last character of the count.
35 See |:fixdel| if the <Del> key does not do what you
36 want. See |'whichwrap'| for deleting a line break
37 (join lines). {Vi does not support <Del>}
38
39 *X* *dh*
40["x]X Delete [count] characters before the cursor [into
41 register x] (not |linewise|). Does the same as "dh".
42 Also see |'whichwrap'|.
43
44 *d*
45["x]d{motion} Delete text that {motion} moves over [into register
46 x]. See below for exceptions.
47
48 *dd*
49["x]dd Delete [count] lines [into register x] |linewise|.
50
51 *D*
52["x]D Delete the characters under the cursor until the end
53 of the line and [count]-1 more lines [into register
54 x]; synonym for "d$".
55 (not |linewise|)
Bram Moolenaar4399ef42005-02-12 14:29:27 +000056 When the '#' flag is in 'cpoptions' the count is
57 ignored.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000058
59{Visual}["x]x or *v_x* *v_d* *v_<Del>*
60{Visual}["x]d or
61{Visual}["x]<Del> Delete the highlighted text [into register x] (for
62 {Visual} see |Visual-mode|). {not in Vi}
63
64{Visual}["x]CTRL-H or *v_CTRL-H* *v_<BS>*
65{Visual}["x]<BS> When in Select mode: Delete the highlighted text [into
66 register x].
67
68{Visual}["x]X or *v_X* *v_D* *v_b_D*
69{Visual}["x]D Delete the highlighted lines [into register x] (for
70 {Visual} see |Visual-mode|). In Visual block mode,
71 "D" deletes the highlighted text plus all text until
72 the end of the line. {not in Vi}
73
Bram Moolenaarf1568ec2011-12-14 21:17:39 +010074 *:d* *:de* *:del* *:delete* *:dl*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000075:[range]d[elete] [x] Delete [range] lines (default: current line) [into
76 register x].
77
78:[range]d[elete] [x] {count}
79 Delete {count} lines, starting with [range]
80 (default: current line |cmdline-ranges|) [into
81 register x].
82
83These commands delete text. You can repeat them with the "." command
84(except ":d") and undo them. Use Visual mode to delete blocks of text. See
85|registers| for an explanation of registers.
86
87An exception for the d{motion} command: If the motion is not linewise, the
88start and end of the motion are not in the same line, and there are only
89blanks before the start and after the end of the motion, the delete becomes
90linewise. This means that the delete also removes the line of blanks that you
Bram Moolenaar6ee8d892012-01-10 14:55:01 +010091might expect to remain. Use the |o_v| operator to force the motion to be
92characterwise.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000093
94Trying to delete an empty region of text (e.g., "d0" in the first column)
95is an error when 'cpoptions' includes the 'E' flag.
96
97 *J*
98J Join [count] lines, with a minimum of two lines.
99 Remove the indent and insert up to two spaces (see
100 below).
101
102 *v_J*
103{Visual}J Join the highlighted lines, with a minimum of two
104 lines. Remove the indent and insert up to two spaces
105 (see below). {not in Vi}
106
107 *gJ*
108gJ Join [count] lines, with a minimum of two lines.
109 Don't insert or remove any spaces. {not in Vi}
110
111 *v_gJ*
112{Visual}gJ Join the highlighted lines, with a minimum of two
113 lines. Don't insert or remove any spaces. {not in
114 Vi}
115
116 *:j* *:join*
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +0000117:[range]j[oin][!] [flags]
118 Join [range] lines. Same as "J", except with [!]
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000119 the join does not insert or delete any spaces.
120 If a [range] has equal start and end values, this
121 command does nothing. The default behavior is to
122 join the current line with the line below it.
123 {not in Vi: !}
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +0000124 See |ex-flags| for [flags].
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000125
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +0000126:[range]j[oin][!] {count} [flags]
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000127 Join {count} lines, starting with [range] (default:
128 current line |cmdline-ranges|). Same as "J", except
129 with [!] the join does not insert or delete any
130 spaces.
131 {not in Vi: !}
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +0000132 See |ex-flags| for [flags].
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000133
134These commands delete the <EOL> between lines. This has the effect of joining
135multiple lines into one line. You can repeat these commands (except ":j") and
136undo them.
137
138These commands, except "gJ", insert one space in place of the <EOL> unless
139there is trailing white space or the next line starts with a ')'. These
140commands, except "gJ", delete any leading white space on the next line. If
141the 'joinspaces' option is on, these commands insert two spaces after a '.',
142'!' or '?' (but if 'cpoptions' includes the 'j' flag, they insert two spaces
143only after a '.').
144The 'B' and 'M' flags in 'formatoptions' change the behavior for inserting
145spaces before and after a multi-byte character |fo-table|.
146
147
148==============================================================================
1492. Delete and insert *delete-insert* *replacing*
150
151 *R*
152R Enter Replace mode: Each character you type replaces
153 an existing character, starting with the character
154 under the cursor. Repeat the entered text [count]-1
155 times. See |Replace-mode| for more details.
156
157 *gR*
158gR Enter Virtual Replace mode: Each character you type
159 replaces existing characters in screen space. So a
160 <Tab> may replace several characters at once.
161 Repeat the entered text [count]-1 times. See
162 |Virtual-Replace-mode| for more details.
Bram Moolenaardb84e452010-08-15 13:50:43 +0200163 {not available when compiled without the |+vreplace|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000164 feature}
165
166 *c*
167["x]c{motion} Delete {motion} text [into register x] and start
168 insert. When 'cpoptions' includes the 'E' flag and
169 there is no text to delete (e.g., with "cTx" when the
170 cursor is just after an 'x'), an error occurs and
171 insert mode does not start (this is Vi compatible).
172 When 'cpoptions' does not include the 'E' flag, the
173 "c" command always starts insert mode, even if there
174 is no text to delete.
175
176 *cc*
177["x]cc Delete [count] lines [into register x] and start
178 insert |linewise|. If 'autoindent' is on, preserve
179 the indent of the first line.
180
181 *C*
182["x]C Delete from the cursor position to the end of the
183 line and [count]-1 more lines [into register x], and
184 start insert. Synonym for c$ (not |linewise|).
185
186 *s*
187["x]s Delete [count] characters [into register x] and start
188 insert (s stands for Substitute). Synonym for "cl"
189 (not |linewise|).
190
191 *S*
192["x]S Delete [count] lines [into register x] and start
193 insert. Synonym for "cc" |linewise|.
194
195{Visual}["x]c or *v_c* *v_s*
196{Visual}["x]s Delete the highlighted text [into register x] and
197 start insert (for {Visual} see |Visual-mode|). {not
198 in Vi}
199
200 *v_r*
201{Visual}["x]r{char} Replace all selected characters by {char}.
202
203 *v_C*
204{Visual}["x]C Delete the highlighted lines [into register x] and
205 start insert. In Visual block mode it works
206 differently |v_b_C|. {not in Vi}
207 *v_S*
208{Visual}["x]S Delete the highlighted lines [into register x] and
209 start insert (for {Visual} see |Visual-mode|). {not
210 in Vi}
211 *v_R*
212{Visual}["x]R Currently just like {Visual}["x]S. In a next version
213 it might work differently. {not in Vi}
214
215Notes:
216- You can end Insert and Replace mode with <Esc>.
217- See the section "Insert and Replace mode" |mode-ins-repl| for the other
218 special characters in these modes.
219- The effect of [count] takes place after Vim exits Insert or Replace mode.
220- When the 'cpoptions' option contains '$' and the change is within one line,
221 Vim continues to show the text to be deleted and puts a '$' at the last
222 deleted character.
223
224See |registers| for an explanation of registers.
225
226Replace mode is just like Insert mode, except that every character you enter
227deletes one character. If you reach the end of a line, Vim appends any
228further characters (just like Insert mode). In Replace mode, the backspace
229key restores the original text (if there was any). (See section "Insert and
230Replace mode" |mode-ins-repl|).
231
232 *cw* *cW*
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000233Special case: When the cursor is in a word, "cw" and "cW" do not include the
234white space after a word, they only change up to the end of the word. This is
235because Vim interprets "cw" as change-word, and a word does not include the
236following white space.
237{Vi: "cw" when on a blank followed by other blanks changes only the first
238blank; this is probably a bug, because "dw" deletes all the blanks; use the
239'w' flag in 'cpoptions' to make it work like Vi anyway}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000240
241If you prefer "cw" to include the space after a word, use this mapping: >
242 :map cw dwi
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000243Or use "caw" (see |aw|).
244
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000245 *:c* *:ch* *:change*
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +0000246:{range}c[hange][!] Replace lines of text with some different text.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000247 Type a line containing only "." to stop replacing.
248 Without {range}, this command changes only the current
249 line.
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +0000250 Adding [!] toggles 'autoindent' for the time this
251 command is executed.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000252
253==============================================================================
2543. Simple changes *simple-change*
255
256 *r*
257r{char} Replace the character under the cursor with {char}.
258 If {char} is a <CR> or <NL>, a line break replaces the
259 character. To replace with a real <CR>, use CTRL-V
260 <CR>. CTRL-V <NL> replaces with a <Nul>.
261 {Vi: CTRL-V <CR> still replaces with a line break,
262 cannot replace something with a <CR>}
263 If you give a [count], Vim replaces [count] characters
264 with [count] {char}s. When {char} is a <CR> or <NL>,
265 however, Vim inserts only one <CR>: "5r<CR>" replaces
266 five characters with a single line break.
267 When {char} is a <CR> or <NL>, Vim performs
268 autoindenting. This works just like deleting the
269 characters that are replaced and then doing
270 "i<CR><Esc>".
271 {char} can be entered as a digraph |digraph-arg|.
272 |:lmap| mappings apply to {char}. The CTRL-^ command
273 in Insert mode can be used to switch this on/off
274 |i_CTRL-^|. See |utf-8-char-arg| about using
275 composing characters when 'encoding' is Unicode.
276
277 *gr*
278gr{char} Replace the virtual characters under the cursor with
279 {char}. This replaces in screen space, not file
280 space. See |gR| and |Virtual-Replace-mode| for more
281 details. As with |r| a count may be given.
282 {char} can be entered like with |r|.
Bram Moolenaardb84e452010-08-15 13:50:43 +0200283 {not available when compiled without the |+vreplace|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000284 feature}
285
286 *digraph-arg*
287The argument for Normal mode commands like |r| and |t| is a single character.
288When 'cpo' doesn't contain the 'D' flag, this character can also be entered
289like |digraphs|. First type CTRL-K and then the two digraph characters.
290{not available when compiled without the |+digraphs| feature}
291
292 *case*
293The following commands change the case of letters. The currently active
294|locale| is used. See |:language|. The LC_CTYPE value matters here.
295
296 *~*
297~ 'notildeop' option: Switch case of the character
298 under the cursor and move the cursor to the right.
299 If a [count] is given, do that many characters. {Vi:
300 no count}
301
302~{motion} 'tildeop' option: switch case of {motion} text. {Vi:
303 tilde cannot be used as an operator}
304
305 *g~*
306g~{motion} Switch case of {motion} text. {not in Vi}
307
308g~g~ *g~g~* *g~~*
309g~~ Switch case of current line. {not in Vi}.
310
311 *v_~*
312{Visual}~ Switch case of highlighted text (for {Visual} see
313 |Visual-mode|). {not in Vi}
314
315 *v_U*
316{Visual}U Make highlighted text uppercase (for {Visual} see
317 |Visual-mode|). {not in Vi}
318
319 *gU* *uppercase*
320gU{motion} Make {motion} text uppercase. {not in Vi}
321 Example: >
322 :map! <C-F> <Esc>gUiw`]a
323< This works in Insert mode: press CTRL-F to make the
324 word before the cursor uppercase. Handy to type
325 words in lowercase and then make them uppercase.
326
327
328gUgU *gUgU* *gUU*
329gUU Make current line uppercase. {not in Vi}.
330
331 *v_u*
332{Visual}u Make highlighted text lowercase (for {Visual} see
333 |Visual-mode|). {not in Vi}
334
335 *gu* *lowercase*
336gu{motion} Make {motion} text lowercase. {not in Vi}
337
338gugu *gugu* *guu*
339guu Make current line lowercase. {not in Vi}.
340
341 *g?* *rot13*
342g?{motion} Rot13 encode {motion} text. {not in Vi}
343
344 *v_g?*
345{Visual}g? Rot13 encode the highlighted text (for {Visual} see
346 |Visual-mode|). {not in Vi}
347
348g?g? *g?g?* *g??*
349g?? Rot13 encode current line. {not in Vi}.
350
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000351To turn one line into title caps, make every first letter of a word
352uppercase: >
353 :s/\v<(.)(\w*)/\u\1\L\2/g
354
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000355
356Adding and subtracting ~
357 *CTRL-A*
358CTRL-A Add [count] to the number or alphabetic character at
359 or after the cursor. {not in Vi}
360
361 *CTRL-X*
362CTRL-X Subtract [count] from the number or alphabetic
363 character at or after the cursor. {not in Vi}
364
365The CTRL-A and CTRL-X commands work for (signed) decimal numbers, unsigned
366octal and hexadecimal numbers and alphabetic characters. This depends on the
367'nrformats' option.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000368- When 'nrformats' includes "octal", Vim considers numbers starting with a '0'
Bram Moolenaar1cd871b2004-12-19 22:46:22 +0000369 to be octal, unless the number includes a '8' or '9'. Other numbers are
370 decimal and may have a preceding minus sign.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000371 If the cursor is on a number, the commands apply to that number; otherwise
372 Vim uses the number to the right of the cursor.
Bram Moolenaar293ee4d2004-12-09 21:34:53 +0000373- When 'nrformats' includes "hex", Vim assumes numbers starting with '0x' or
374 '0X' are hexadecimal. The case of the rightmost letter in the number
375 determines the case of the resulting hexadecimal number. If there is no
376 letter in the current number, Vim uses the previously detected case.
377- When 'nrformats' includes "alpha", Vim will change the alphabetic character
378 under or after the cursor. This is useful to make lists with an alphabetic
379 index.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000380
381For numbers with leading zeros (including all octal and hexadecimal numbers),
382Vim preserves the number of characters in the number when possible. CTRL-A on
Bram Moolenaar293ee4d2004-12-09 21:34:53 +0000383"0077" results in "0100", CTRL-X on "0x100" results in "0x0ff".
Bram Moolenaar1cd871b2004-12-19 22:46:22 +0000384There is one exception: When a number that starts with a zero is found not to
385be octal (it contains a '8' or '9'), but 'nrformats' does include "octal",
386leading zeros are removed to avoid that the result may be recognized as an
387octal number.
Bram Moolenaar293ee4d2004-12-09 21:34:53 +0000388
389Note that when 'nrformats' includes "octal", decimal numbers with leading
Bram Moolenaar1cd871b2004-12-19 22:46:22 +0000390zeros cause mistakes, because they can be confused with octal numbers.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000391
392The CTRL-A command is very useful in a macro. Example: Use the following
393steps to make a numbered list.
394
3951. Create the first list entry, make sure it starts with a number.
Bram Moolenaard8b02732005-01-14 21:48:43 +00003962. qa - start recording into register 'a'
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00003973. Y - yank the entry
3984. p - put a copy of the entry below the first one
3995. CTRL-A - increment the number
4006. q - stop recording
4017. <count>@a - repeat the yank, put and increment <count> times
402
403
404SHIFTING LINES LEFT OR RIGHT *shift-left-right*
405
406 *<*
407<{motion} Shift {motion} lines one 'shiftwidth' leftwards.
408
409 *<<*
410<< Shift [count] lines one 'shiftwidth' leftwards.
411
412 *v_<*
413{Visual}[count]< Shift the highlighted lines [count] 'shiftwidth'
414 leftwards (for {Visual} see |Visual-mode|). {not in
415 Vi}
416
417 *>*
418 >{motion} Shift {motion} lines one 'shiftwidth' rightwards.
419
420 *>>*
421 >> Shift [count] lines one 'shiftwidth' rightwards.
422
423 *v_>*
424{Visual}[count]> Shift the highlighted lines [count] 'shiftwidth'
425 rightwards (for {Visual} see |Visual-mode|). {not in
426 Vi}
427
428 *:<*
429:[range]< Shift [range] lines one 'shiftwidth' left. Repeat '<'
430 for shifting multiple 'shiftwidth's.
431
432:[range]< {count} Shift {count} lines one 'shiftwidth' left, starting
433 with [range] (default current line |cmdline-ranges|).
434 Repeat '<' for shifting multiple 'shiftwidth's.
435
436:[range]le[ft] [indent] left align lines in [range]. Sets the indent in the
437 lines to [indent] (default 0). {not in Vi}
438
439 *:>*
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +0000440:[range]> [flags] Shift {count} [range] lines one 'shiftwidth' right.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000441 Repeat '>' for shifting multiple 'shiftwidth's.
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +0000442 See |ex-flags| for [flags].
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000443
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +0000444:[range]> {count} [flags]
445 Shift {count} lines one 'shiftwidth' right, starting
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000446 with [range] (default current line |cmdline-ranges|).
447 Repeat '>' for shifting multiple 'shiftwidth's.
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +0000448 See |ex-flags| for [flags].
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000449
450The ">" and "<" commands are handy for changing the indentation within
451programs. Use the 'shiftwidth' option to set the size of the white space
452which these commands insert or delete. Normally the 'shiftwidth' option is 8,
453but you can set it to, say, 3 to make smaller indents. The shift leftwards
454stops when there is no indent. The shift right does not affect empty lines.
455
456If the 'shiftround' option is on, the indent is rounded to a multiple of
457'shiftwidth'.
458
459If the 'smartindent' option is on, or 'cindent' is on and 'cinkeys' contains
460'#', shift right does not affect lines starting with '#' (these are supposed
461to be C preprocessor lines that must stay in column 1).
462
463When the 'expandtab' option is off (this is the default) Vim uses <Tab>s as
464much as possible to make the indent. You can use ">><<" to replace an indent
465made out of spaces with the same indent made out of <Tab>s (and a few spaces
466if necessary). If the 'expandtab' option is on, Vim uses only spaces. Then
467you can use ">><<" to replace <Tab>s in the indent by spaces (or use
468":retab!").
469
470To move a line several 'shiftwidth's, use Visual mode or the ":" commands.
471For example: >
472 Vjj4> move three lines 4 indents to the right
473 :<<< move current line 3 indents to the left
474 :>> 5 move 5 lines 2 indents to the right
475 :5>> move line 5 2 indents to the right
476
477==============================================================================
4784. Complex changes *complex-change*
479
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +00004804.1 Filter commands *filter*
Bram Moolenaar47136d72004-10-12 20:02:24 +0000481
482A filter is a program that accepts text at standard input, changes it in some
483way, and sends it to standard output. You can use the commands below to send
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000484some text through a filter, so that it is replaced by the filter output.
Bram Moolenaar47136d72004-10-12 20:02:24 +0000485Examples of filters are "sort", which sorts lines alphabetically, and
486"indent", which formats C program files (you need a version of indent that
487works like a filter; not all versions do). The 'shell' option specifies the
488shell Vim uses to execute the filter command (See also the 'shelltype'
489option). You can repeat filter commands with ".". Vim does not recognize a
490comment (starting with '"') after the ":!" command.
491
492 *!*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000493!{motion}{filter} Filter {motion} text lines through the external
494 program {filter}.
495
496 *!!*
497!!{filter} Filter [count] lines through the external program
498 {filter}.
499
500 *v_!*
501{Visual}!{filter} Filter the highlighted lines through the external
502 program {filter} (for {Visual} see |Visual-mode|).
503 {not in Vi}
504
505:{range}![!]{filter} [!][arg] *:range!*
506 Filter {range} lines through the external program
507 {filter}. Vim replaces the optional bangs with the
508 latest given command and appends the optional [arg].
509 Vim saves the output of the filter command in a
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +0100510 temporary file and then reads the file into the buffer
511 |tempfile|. Vim uses the 'shellredir' option to
512 redirect the filter output to the temporary file.
Bram Moolenaar83c465c2005-12-16 21:53:56 +0000513 However, if the 'shelltemp' option is off then pipes
514 are used when possible (on Unix).
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000515 When the 'R' flag is included in 'cpoptions' marks in
516 the filtered lines are deleted, unless the
517 |:keepmarks| command is used. Example: >
518 :keepmarks '<,'>!sort
519< When the number of lines after filtering is less than
520 before, marks in the missing lines are deleted anyway.
521
522 *=*
523={motion} Filter {motion} lines through the external program
524 given with the 'equalprg' option. When the 'equalprg'
525 option is empty (this is the default), use the
Bram Moolenaar20f90cf2011-05-19 12:22:51 +0200526 internal formatting function |C-indenting| and
527 |'lisp'|. But when 'indentexpr' is not empty, it will
528 be used instead |indent-expression|. When Vim was
529 compiled without internal formatting then the "indent"
530 program is used as a last resort.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000531
532 *==*
533== Filter [count] lines like with ={motion}.
534
535 *v_=*
536{Visual}= Filter the highlighted lines like with ={motion}.
537 {not in Vi}
538
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000539
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +0100540 *tempfile* *setuid*
541Vim uses temporary files for filtering, generating diffs and also for
542tempname(). For Unix, the file will be in a private directory (only
543accessible by the current user) to avoid security problems (e.g., a symlink
544attack or other people reading your file). When Vim exits the directory and
545all files in it are deleted. When Vim has the setuid bit set this may cause
546problems, the temp file is owned by the setuid user but the filter command
547probably runs as the original user.
548On MS-DOS and OS/2 the first of these directories that works is used: $TMP,
549$TEMP, c:\TMP, c:\TEMP.
550For Unix the list of directories is: $TMPDIR, /tmp, current-dir, $HOME.
551For MS-Windows the GetTempFileName() system function is used.
552For other systems the tmpnam() library function is used.
553
554
555
Bram Moolenaar47136d72004-10-12 20:02:24 +00005564.2 Substitute *:substitute*
557 *:s* *:su*
Bram Moolenaar05159a02005-02-26 23:04:13 +0000558:[range]s[ubstitute]/{pattern}/{string}/[flags] [count]
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000559 For each line in [range] replace a match of {pattern}
560 with {string}.
561 For the {pattern} see |pattern|.
562 {string} can be a literal string, or something
563 special; see |sub-replace-special|.
564 When [range] and [count] are omitted, replace in the
565 current line only.
566 When [count] is given, replace in [count] lines,
567 starting with the last line in [range]. When [range]
568 is omitted start in the current line.
569 Also see |cmdline-ranges|.
Bram Moolenaar05159a02005-02-26 23:04:13 +0000570 See |:s_flags| for [flags].
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000571
Bram Moolenaar05159a02005-02-26 23:04:13 +0000572:[range]s[ubstitute] [flags] [count]
573:[range]&[&][flags] [count] *:&*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000574 Repeat last :substitute with same search pattern and
575 substitute string, but without the same flags. You
Bram Moolenaar05159a02005-02-26 23:04:13 +0000576 may add [flags], see |:s_flags|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000577 Note that after ":substitute" the '&' flag can't be
578 used, it's recognized as a pattern separator.
579 The space between ":substitute" and the 'c', 'g' and
580 'r' flags isn't required, but in scripts it's a good
581 idea to keep it to avoid confusion.
582
Bram Moolenaar05159a02005-02-26 23:04:13 +0000583:[range]~[&][flags] [count] *:~*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000584 Repeat last substitute with same substitute string
585 but with last used search pattern. This is like
Bram Moolenaar05159a02005-02-26 23:04:13 +0000586 ":&r". See |:s_flags| for [flags].
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000587
Bram Moolenaar05159a02005-02-26 23:04:13 +0000588 *&*
Bram Moolenaar00a927d2010-05-14 23:24:24 +0200589& Synonym for ":s" (repeat last substitute). Note
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000590 that the flags are not remembered, thus it might
591 actually work differently. You can use ":&&" to keep
592 the flags.
593
Bram Moolenaar05159a02005-02-26 23:04:13 +0000594 *g&*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000595g& Synonym for ":%s//~/&" (repeat last substitute on all
596 lines with the same flags).
597 Mnemonic: global substitute. {not in Vi}
598
599 *:snomagic* *:sno*
600:[range]sno[magic] ... Same as ":substitute", but always use 'nomagic'.
601 {not in Vi}
602
603 *:smagic* *:sm*
604:[range]sm[agic] ... Same as ":substitute", but always use 'magic'.
605 {not in Vi}
606
607 *:s_flags*
608The flags that you can use for the substitute commands:
609
610[&] Must be the first one: Keep the flags from the previous substitute
611 command. Examples: >
612 :&&
613 :s/this/that/&
614< Note that ":s" and ":&" don't keep the flags.
615 {not in Vi}
616
617[c] Confirm each substitution. Vim highlights the matching string (with
618 |hl-IncSearch|). You can type: *:s_c*
619 'y' to substitute this match
620 'l' to substitute this match and then quit ("last")
621 'n' to skip this match
622 <Esc> to quit substituting
623 'a' to substitute this and all remaining matches {not in Vi}
624 'q' to quit substituting {not in Vi}
625 CTRL-E to scroll the screen up {not in Vi, not available when
Bram Moolenaardb84e452010-08-15 13:50:43 +0200626 compiled without the |+insert_expand| feature}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000627 CTRL-Y to scroll the screen down {not in Vi, not available when
Bram Moolenaardb84e452010-08-15 13:50:43 +0200628 compiled without the |+insert_expand| feature}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000629 If the 'edcompatible' option is on, Vim remembers the [c] flag and
630 toggles it each time you use it, but resets it when you give a new
631 search pattern.
632 {not in Vi: highlighting of the match, other responses than 'y' or 'n'}
633
634[e] When the search pattern fails, do not issue an error message and, in
635 particular, continue in maps as if no error occurred. This is most
636 useful to prevent the "No match" error from breaking a mapping. Vim
637 does not suppress the following error messages, however:
638 Regular expressions can't be delimited by letters
639 \ should be followed by /, ? or &
640 No previous substitute regular expression
641 Trailing characters
642 Interrupted
643 {not in Vi}
644
645[g] Replace all occurrences in the line. Without this argument,
646 replacement occurs only for the first occurrence in each line. If
647 the 'edcompatible' option is on, Vim remembers this flag and toggles
648 it each time you use it, but resets it when you give a new search
649 pattern. If the 'gdefault' option is on, this flag is on by default
650 and the [g] argument switches it off.
651
652[i] Ignore case for the pattern. The 'ignorecase' and 'smartcase' options
653 are not used.
654 {not in Vi}
655
656[I] Don't ignore case for the pattern. The 'ignorecase' and 'smartcase'
657 options are not used.
658 {not in Vi}
659
Bram Moolenaar05159a02005-02-26 23:04:13 +0000660[n] Report the number of matches, do not actually substitute. The [c]
661 flag is ignored. The matches are reported as if 'report' is zero.
662 Useful to |count-items|.
663
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000664[p] Print the line containing the last substitute.
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +0000665
666[#] Like [p] and prepend the line number.
667
Bram Moolenaar9964e462007-05-05 17:54:07 +0000668[l] Like [p] but print the text like |:list|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000669
670[r] Only useful in combination with ":&" or ":s" without arguments. ":&r"
671 works the same way as ":~": When the search pattern is empty, use the
672 previously used search pattern instead of the search pattern from the
673 last substitute or ":global". If the last command that did a search
674 was a substitute or ":global", there is no effect. If the last
675 command was a search command such as "/", use the pattern from that
676 command.
677 For ":s" with an argument this already happens: >
678 :s/blue/red/
679 /green
680 :s//red/ or :~ or :&r
681< The last commands will replace "green" with "red". >
682 :s/blue/red/
683 /green
684 :&
685< The last command will replace "blue" with "red".
686 {not in Vi}
687
688Note that there is no flag to change the "magicness" of the pattern. A
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000689different command is used instead, or you can use |/\v| and friends. The
690reason is that the flags can only be found by skipping the pattern, and in
691order to skip the pattern the "magicness" must be known. Catch 22!
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000692
693If the {pattern} for the substitute command is empty, the command uses the
Bram Moolenaar662db672011-03-22 14:05:35 +0100694pattern from the last substitute or ":global" command. If there is none, but
695there is a previous search pattern, that one is used. With the [r] flag, the
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000696command uses the pattern from the last substitute, ":global", or search
697command.
698
Bram Moolenaar9964e462007-05-05 17:54:07 +0000699If the {string} is omitted the substitute is done as if it's empty. Thus the
700matched pattern is deleted. The separator after {pattern} can also be left
701out then. Example: >
702 :%s/TESTING
703This deletes "TESTING" from all lines, but only one per line.
704
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000705For compatibility with Vi these two exceptions are allowed:
706"\/{string}/" and "\?{string}?" do the same as "//{string}/r".
707"\&{string}&" does the same as "//{string}/".
708 *E146*
709Instead of the '/' which surrounds the pattern and replacement string, you
Bram Moolenaar9964e462007-05-05 17:54:07 +0000710can use any other single-byte character, but not an alphanumeric character,
711'\', '"' or '|'. This is useful if you want to include a '/' in the search
712pattern or replacement string. Example: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000713 :s+/+//+
714
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +0000715For the definition of a pattern, see |pattern|. In Visual block mode, use
716|/\%V| in the pattern to have the substitute work in the block only.
717Otherwise it works on whole lines anyway.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000718
719 *sub-replace-special* *:s\=*
720When the {string} starts with "\=" it is evaluated as an expression, see
Bram Moolenaar251e1912011-06-19 05:09:16 +0200721|sub-replace-expression|. You can use that for complex replacement or special
722characters.
723
Bram Moolenaar5a8684e2005-07-30 22:43:24 +0000724Otherwise these characters in {string} have a special meaning:
Bram Moolenaar26a60b42005-02-22 08:49:11 +0000725 *:s%*
Bram Moolenaar551dbcc2006-04-25 22:13:59 +0000726When {string} is equal to "%" and '/' is included with the 'cpoptions' option,
Bram Moolenaar251e1912011-06-19 05:09:16 +0200727then the {string} of the previous substitute command is used, see |cpo-/|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000728
729magic nomagic action ~
730 & \& replaced with the whole matched pattern *s/\&*
731 \& & replaced with &
732 \0 replaced with the whole matched pattern *\0* *s/\0*
733 \1 replaced with the matched pattern in the first
734 pair of () *s/\1*
Bram Moolenaar3fdfa4a2004-10-07 21:02:47 +0000735 \2 replaced with the matched pattern in the second
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000736 pair of () *s/\2*
737 .. .. *s/\3*
738 \9 replaced with the matched pattern in the ninth
739 pair of () *s/\9*
740 ~ \~ replaced with the {string} of the previous
741 substitute *s~*
742 \~ ~ replaced with ~ *s/\~*
743 \u next character made uppercase *s/\u*
744 \U following characters made uppercase, until \E *s/\U*
745 \l next character made lowercase *s/\l*
746 \L following characters made lowercase, until \E *s/\L*
747 \e end of \u, \U, \l and \L (NOTE: not <Esc>!) *s/\e*
748 \E end of \u, \U, \l and \L *s/\E*
749 <CR> split line in two at this point
750 (Type the <CR> as CTRL-V <Enter>) *s<CR>*
751 \r idem *s/\r*
752 \<CR> insert a carriage-return (CTRL-M)
753 (Type the <CR> as CTRL-V <Enter>) *s/\<CR>*
754 \n insert a <NL> (<NUL> in the file)
755 (does NOT break the line) *s/\n*
756 \b insert a <BS> *s/\b*
757 \t insert a <Tab> *s/\t*
758 \\ insert a single backslash *s/\\*
759 \x where x is any character not mentioned above:
760 Reserved for future expansion
761
Bram Moolenaar251e1912011-06-19 05:09:16 +0200762The special meaning is also used inside the third argument {sub} of
763the |substitute()| function with the following exceptions:
764 - A % inserts a percent literally without regard to 'cpoptions'.
765 - magic is always set without regard to 'magic'.
766 - A ~ inserts a tilde literally.
767 - <CR> and \r inserts a carriage-return (CTRL-M).
768 - \<CR> does not have a special meaning. it's just one of \x.
769
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000770Examples: >
771 :s/a\|b/xxx\0xxx/g modifies "a b" to "xxxaxxx xxxbxxx"
772 :s/\([abc]\)\([efg]\)/\2\1/g modifies "af fa bg" to "fa fa gb"
773 :s/abcde/abc^Mde/ modifies "abcde" to "abc", "de" (two lines)
774 :s/$/\^M/ modifies "abcde" to "abcde^M"
Bram Moolenaarefd2bf12006-03-16 21:41:35 +0000775 :s/\w\+/\u\0/g modifies "bla bla" to "Bla Bla"
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000776
777Note: In previous versions CTRL-V was handled in a special way. Since this is
778not Vi compatible, this was removed. Use a backslash instead.
779
780command text result ~
781:s/aa/a^Ma/ aa a<line-break>a
782:s/aa/a\^Ma/ aa a^Ma
783:s/aa/a\\^Ma/ aa a\<line-break>a
784
785(you need to type CTRL-V <CR> to get a ^M here)
786
787The numbering of "\1", "\2" etc. is done based on which "\(" comes first in
788the pattern (going left to right). When a parentheses group matches several
789times, the last one will be used for "\1", "\2", etc. Example: >
790 :s/\(\(a[a-d] \)*\)/\2/ modifies "aa ab x" to "ab x"
791
792When using parentheses in combination with '|', like in \([ab]\)\|\([cd]\),
793either the first or second pattern in parentheses did not match, so either
794\1 or \2 is empty. Example: >
795 :s/\([ab]\)\|\([cd]\)/\1x/g modifies "a b c d" to "ax bx x x"
796<
797
798Substitute with an expression *sub-replace-expression*
Bram Moolenaara7fc0102005-05-18 22:17:12 +0000799 *sub-replace-\=*
800When the substitute string starts with "\=" the remainder is interpreted as an
Bram Moolenaar251e1912011-06-19 05:09:16 +0200801expression. This does not work recursively: a |substitute()| function inside
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000802the expression cannot use "\=" for the substitute string.
803
804The special meaning for characters as mentioned at |sub-replace-special| does
Bram Moolenaar251e1912011-06-19 05:09:16 +0200805not apply except for "<CR>". A <NL> character is used as a line break, you
806can get one with a double-quote string: "\n". Prepend a backslash to get a
807real <NL> character (which will be a NUL in the file).
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000808
Bram Moolenaar251e1912011-06-19 05:09:16 +0200809The "\=" notation can also be used inside the third argument {sub} of
810|substitute()| function. In this case, the special meaning for characters as
811mentioned at |sub-replace-special| does not apply at all. Especially, <CR> and
812<NL> are interpreted not as a line break but as a carriage-return and a
813new-line respectively.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000814
Bram Moolenaar362e1a32006-03-06 23:29:24 +0000815When the result is a |List| then the items are joined with separating line
816breaks. Thus each item becomes a line, except that they can contain line
817breaks themselves.
818
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000819The whole matched text can be accessed with "submatch(0)". The text matched
820with the first pair of () with "submatch(1)". Likewise for further
821sub-matches in ().
822
823Be careful: The separation character must not appear in the expression!
824Consider using a character like "@" or ":". There is no problem if the result
825of the expression contains the separation character.
826
Bram Moolenaar5a8684e2005-07-30 22:43:24 +0000827Examples: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000828 :s@\n@\="\r" . expand("$HOME") . "\r"@
Bram Moolenaar5a8684e2005-07-30 22:43:24 +0000829This replaces an end-of-line with a new line containing the value of $HOME. >
830
831 s/E/\="\<Char-0x20ac>"/g
Bram Moolenaarc236c162008-07-13 17:41:49 +0000832This replaces each 'E' character with a euro sign. Read more in |<Char->|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000833
834
Bram Moolenaar47136d72004-10-12 20:02:24 +00008354.3 Search and replace *search-replace*
836
837 *:pro* *:promptfind*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000838:promptf[ind] [string]
839 Put up a Search dialog. When [string] is given, it is
840 used as the initial search string.
841 {only for Win32, Motif and GTK GUI}
842
843 *:promptr* *:promptrepl*
844:promptr[epl] [string]
845 Put up a Search/Replace dialog. When [string] is
846 given, it is used as the initial search string.
847 {only for Win32, Motif and GTK GUI}
848
Bram Moolenaar47136d72004-10-12 20:02:24 +0000849
8504.4 Changing tabs *change-tabs*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000851 *:ret* *:retab*
852:[range]ret[ab][!] [new_tabstop]
853 Replace all sequences of white-space containing a
854 <Tab> with new strings of white-space using the new
855 tabstop value given. If you do not specify a new
856 tabstop size or it is zero, Vim uses the current value
857 of 'tabstop'.
858 The current value of 'tabstop' is always used to
859 compute the width of existing tabs.
860 With !, Vim also replaces strings of only normal
861 spaces with tabs where appropriate.
862 With 'expandtab' on, Vim replaces all tabs with the
863 appropriate number of spaces.
864 This command sets 'tabstop' to the new value given,
865 and if performed on the whole file, which is default,
866 should not make any visible change.
867 Careful: This command modifies any <Tab> characters
868 inside of strings in a C program. Use "\t" to avoid
869 this (that's a good habit anyway).
870 ":retab!" may also change a sequence of spaces by
871 <Tab> characters, which can mess up a printf().
872 {not in Vi}
873 Not available when |+ex_extra| feature was disabled at
874 compile time.
875
876 *retab-example*
877Example for using autocommands and ":retab" to edit a file which is stored
878with tabstops at 8 but edited with tabstops set at 4. Warning: white space
879inside of strings can change! Also see 'softtabstop' option. >
880
881 :auto BufReadPost *.xx retab! 4
882 :auto BufWritePre *.xx retab! 8
883 :auto BufWritePost *.xx retab! 4
884 :auto BufNewFile *.xx set ts=4
885
886==============================================================================
8875. Copying and moving text *copy-move*
888
889 *quote*
890"{a-zA-Z0-9.%#:-"} Use register {a-zA-Z0-9.%#:-"} for next delete, yank
891 or put (use uppercase character to append with
892 delete and yank) ({.%#:} only work with put).
893
894 *:reg* *:registers*
895:reg[isters] Display the contents of all numbered and named
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +0100896 registers. If a register is written to for |:redir|
897 it will not be listed.
898 {not in Vi}
899
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000900
901:reg[isters] {arg} Display the contents of the numbered and named
902 registers that are mentioned in {arg}. For example: >
903 :dis 1a
904< to display registers '1' and 'a'. Spaces are allowed
905 in {arg}. {not in Vi}
906
907 *:di* *:display*
908:di[splay] [arg] Same as :registers. {not in Vi}
909
910 *y* *yank*
911["x]y{motion} Yank {motion} text [into register x]. When no
912 characters are to be yanked (e.g., "y0" in column 1),
913 this is an error when 'cpoptions' includes the 'E'
914 flag.
915
916 *yy*
917["x]yy Yank [count] lines [into register x] |linewise|.
918
919 *Y*
920["x]Y yank [count] lines [into register x] (synonym for
921 yy, |linewise|). If you like "Y" to work from the
922 cursor to the end of line (which is more logical,
923 but not Vi-compatible) use ":map Y y$".
924
925 *v_y*
926{Visual}["x]y Yank the highlighted text [into register x] (for
927 {Visual} see |Visual-mode|). {not in Vi}
928
929 *v_Y*
930{Visual}["x]Y Yank the highlighted lines [into register x] (for
931 {Visual} see |Visual-mode|). {not in Vi}
932
Bram Moolenaar85de2062011-05-05 14:26:41 +0200933 *:y* *:yank* *E850*
934:[range]y[ank] [x] Yank [range] lines [into register x]. Yanking to the
Bram Moolenaar446beb42011-05-10 17:18:44 +0200935 "* or "+ registers is possible only when the
936 |+clipboard| feature is included.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000937
938:[range]y[ank] [x] {count}
939 Yank {count} lines, starting with last line number
940 in [range] (default: current line |cmdline-ranges|),
941 [into register x].
942
943 *p* *put* *E353*
944["x]p Put the text [from register x] after the cursor
945 [count] times. {Vi: no count}
946
947 *P*
948["x]P Put the text [from register x] before the cursor
949 [count] times. {Vi: no count}
950
951 *<MiddleMouse>*
952["x]<MiddleMouse> Put the text from a register before the cursor [count]
953 times. Uses the "* register, unless another is
Bram Moolenaarc9b4b052006-04-30 18:54:39 +0000954 specified.
Bram Moolenaar293ee4d2004-12-09 21:34:53 +0000955 Leaves the cursor at the end of the new text.
956 Using the mouse only works when 'mouse' contains 'n'
957 or 'a'.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000958 {not in Vi}
959 If you have a scrollwheel and often accidentally paste
960 text, you can use these mappings to disable the
961 pasting with the middle mouse button: >
962 :map <MiddleMouse> <Nop>
963 :imap <MiddleMouse> <Nop>
964< You might want to disable the multi-click versions
965 too, see |double-click|.
966
967 *gp*
968["x]gp Just like "p", but leave the cursor just after the new
969 text. {not in Vi}
970
971 *gP*
972["x]gP Just like "P", but leave the cursor just after the new
973 text. {not in Vi}
974
975 *:pu* *:put*
976:[line]pu[t] [x] Put the text [from register x] after [line] (default
977 current line). This always works |linewise|, thus
978 this command can be used to put a yanked block as new
979 lines.
Bram Moolenaar402d2fe2005-04-15 21:00:38 +0000980 The cursor is left on the first non-blank in the last
981 new line.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000982 The register can also be '=' followed by an optional
983 expression. The expression continues until the end of
984 the command. You need to escape the '|' and '"'
985 characters to prevent them from terminating the
986 command. Example: >
987 :put ='path' . \",/test\"
988< If there is no expression after '=', Vim uses the
989 previous expression. You can see it with ":dis =".
990
991:[line]pu[t]! [x] Put the text [from register x] before [line] (default
992 current line).
993
994["x]]p or *]p* *]<MiddleMouse>*
995["x]]<MiddleMouse> Like "p", but adjust the indent to the current line.
996 Using the mouse only works when 'mouse' contains 'n'
997 or 'a'. {not in Vi}
998
999["x][P or *[P*
1000["x]]P or *]P*
1001["x][p or *[p* *[<MiddleMouse>*
1002["x][<MiddleMouse> Like "P", but adjust the indent to the current line.
1003 Using the mouse only works when 'mouse' contains 'n'
1004 or 'a'. {not in Vi}
1005
1006You can use these commands to copy text from one place to another. Do this
1007by first getting the text into a register with a yank, delete or change
1008command, then inserting the register contents with a put command. You can
1009also use these commands to move text from one file to another, because Vim
1010preserves all registers when changing buffers (the CTRL-^ command is a quick
1011way to toggle between two files).
1012
1013 *linewise-register* *characterwise-register*
1014You can repeat the put commands with "." (except for :put) and undo them. If
1015the command that was used to get the text into the register was |linewise|,
1016Vim inserts the text below ("p") or above ("P") the line where the cursor is.
1017Otherwise Vim inserts the text after ("p") or before ("P") the cursor. With
1018the ":put" command, Vim always inserts the text in the next line. You can
1019exchange two characters with the command sequence "xp". You can exchange two
1020lines with the command sequence "ddp". You can exchange two words with the
1021command sequence "deep" (start with the cursor in the blank space before the
1022first word). You can use the "']" or "`]" command after the put command to
1023move the cursor to the end of the inserted text, or use "'[" or "`[" to move
1024the cursor to the start.
1025
1026 *put-Visual-mode* *v_p* *v_P*
1027When using a put command like |p| or |P| in Visual mode, Vim will try to
1028replace the selected text with the contents of the register. Whether this
1029works well depends on the type of selection and the type of the text in the
1030register. With blockwise selection it also depends on the size of the block
Bram Moolenaar402d2fe2005-04-15 21:00:38 +00001031and whether the corners are on an existing character. (Implementation detail:
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001032it actually works by first putting the register after the selection and then
Bram Moolenaar402d2fe2005-04-15 21:00:38 +00001033deleting the selection.)
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01001034The previously selected text is put in the unnamed register. If you want to
1035put the same text into a Visual selection several times you need to use
1036another register. E.g., yank the text to copy, Visually select the text to
1037replace and use "0p . You can repeat this as many times as you like, the
1038unnamed register will be changed each time.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001039
1040 *blockwise-register*
1041If you use a blockwise Visual mode command to get the text into the register,
1042the block of text will be inserted before ("P") or after ("p") the cursor
1043column in the current and next lines. Vim makes the whole block of text start
1044in the same column. Thus the inserted text looks the same as when it was
1045yanked or deleted. Vim may replace some <Tab> characters with spaces to make
1046this happen. However, if the width of the block is not a multiple of a <Tab>
1047width and the text after the inserted block contains <Tab>s, that text may be
1048misaligned.
1049
1050Note that after a characterwise yank command, Vim leaves the cursor on the
1051first yanked character that is closest to the start of the buffer. This means
1052that "yl" doesn't move the cursor, but "yh" moves the cursor one character
1053left.
1054Rationale: In Vi the "y" command followed by a backwards motion would
1055 sometimes not move the cursor to the first yanked character,
1056 because redisplaying was skipped. In Vim it always moves to
1057 the first character, as specified by Posix.
1058With a linewise yank command the cursor is put in the first line, but the
1059column is unmodified, thus it may not be on the first yanked character.
1060
1061There are nine types of registers: *registers* *E354*
10621. The unnamed register ""
10632. 10 numbered registers "0 to "9
10643. The small delete register "-
10654. 26 named registers "a to "z or "A to "Z
10665. four read-only registers ":, "., "% and "#
10676. the expression register "=
10687. The selection and drop registers "*, "+ and "~
10698. The black hole register "_
10709. Last search pattern register "/
1071
10721. Unnamed register "" *quote_quote* *quotequote*
1073Vim fills this register with text deleted with the "d", "c", "s", "x" commands
1074or copied with the yank "y" command, regardless of whether or not a specific
Bram Moolenaared203462004-06-16 11:19:22 +00001075register was used (e.g. "xdd). This is like the unnamed register is pointing
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01001076to the last used register. Thus when appending using an uppercase register
1077name, the unnamed register contains the same text as the named register.
1078An exception is the '_' register: "_dd does not store the deleted text in any
1079register.
Bram Moolenaar81695252004-12-29 20:58:21 +00001080Vim uses the contents of the unnamed register for any put command (p or P)
1081which does not specify a register. Additionally you can access it with the
1082name '"'. This means you have to type two double quotes. Writing to the ""
1083register writes to register "0.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001084{Vi: register contents are lost when changing files, no '"'}
1085
10862. Numbered registers "0 to "9 *quote_number* *quote0* *quote1*
1087 *quote2* *quote3* *quote4* *quote9*
1088Vim fills these registers with text from yank and delete commands.
1089 Numbered register 0 contains the text from the most recent yank command,
1090unless the command specified another register with ["x].
1091 Numbered register 1 contains the text deleted by the most recent delete or
1092change command, unless the command specified another register or the text is
1093less than one line (the small delete register is used then). An exception is
Bram Moolenaar81695252004-12-29 20:58:21 +00001094made for the delete operator with these movement commands: |%|, |(|, |)|, |`|,
1095|/|, |?|, |n|, |N|, |{| and |}|. Register "1 is always used then (this is Vi
1096compatible). The "- register is used as well if the delete is within a line.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001097 With each successive deletion or change, Vim shifts the previous contents
1098of register 1 into register 2, 2 into 3, and so forth, losing the previous
1099contents of register 9.
1100{Vi: numbered register contents are lost when changing files; register 0 does
1101not exist}
1102
11033. Small delete register "- *quote_-* *quote-*
1104This register contains text from commands that delete less than one line,
1105except when the command specifies a register with ["x].
1106{not in Vi}
1107
11084. Named registers "a to "z or "A to "Z *quote_alpha* *quotea*
1109Vim fills these registers only when you say so. Specify them as lowercase
1110letters to replace their previous contents or as uppercase letters to append
Bram Moolenaar4399ef42005-02-12 14:29:27 +00001111to their previous contents. When the '>' flag is present in 'cpoptions' then
1112a line break is inserted before the appended text.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001113
11145. Read-only registers ":, "., "% and "#
1115These are '%', '#', ':' and '.'. You can use them only with the "p", "P",
1116and ":put" commands and with CTRL-R. {not in Vi}
1117 *quote_.* *quote.* *E29*
1118 ". Contains the last inserted text (the same as what is inserted
1119 with the insert mode commands CTRL-A and CTRL-@). Note: this
1120 doesn't work with CTRL-R on the command-line. It works a bit
1121 differently, like inserting the text instead of putting it
1122 ('textwidth' and other options affect what is inserted).
1123 *quote_%* *quote%*
1124 "% Contains the name of the current file.
1125 *quote_#* *quote#*
1126 "# Contains the name of the alternate file.
1127 *quote_:* *quote:* *E30*
1128 ": Contains the most recent executed command-line. Example: Use
1129 "@:" to repeat the previous command-line command.
1130 The command-line is only stored in this register when at least
1131 one character of it was typed. Thus it remains unchanged if
1132 the command was completely from a mapping.
1133 {not available when compiled without the |+cmdline_hist|
1134 feature}
1135
Bram Moolenaar9964e462007-05-05 17:54:07 +000011366. Expression register "= *quote_=* *quote=* *@=*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001137This is not really a register that stores text, but is a way to use an
1138expression in commands which use a register. The expression register is
1139read-only; you cannot put text into it. After the '=', the cursor moves to
1140the command-line, where you can enter any expression (see |expression|). All
1141normal command-line editing commands are available, including a special
1142history for expressions. When you end the command-line by typing <CR>, Vim
1143computes the result of the expression. If you end it with <Esc>, Vim abandons
1144the expression. If you do not enter an expression, Vim uses the previous
Bram Moolenaar8f3f58f2010-01-06 20:52:26 +01001145expression (like with the "/" command).
1146
1147The expression must evaluate to a String. A Number is always automatically
1148converted to a String. For the "p" and ":put" command, if the result is a
1149Float it's converted into a String. If the result is a List each element is
1150turned into a String and used as a line. A Dictionary or FuncRef results in
1151an error message (use string() to convert).
1152
1153If the "= register is used for the "p" command, the String is split up at <NL>
1154characters. If the String ends in a <NL>, it is regarded as a linewise
Bram Moolenaar6bab4d12005-06-16 21:53:56 +00001155register. {not in Vi}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001156
11577. Selection and drop registers "*, "+ and "~
Bram Moolenaar06b5d512010-05-22 15:37:44 +02001158Use these registers for storing and retrieving the selected text for the GUI.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001159See |quotestar| and |quoteplus|. When the clipboard is not available or not
Bram Moolenaarf4d11452005-12-02 00:46:37 +00001160working, the unnamed register is used instead. For Unix systems the clipboard
1161is only available when the |+xterm_clipboard| feature is present. {not in Vi}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001162
1163Note that there is only a distinction between "* and "+ for X11 systems. For
1164an explanation of the difference, see |x11-selection|. Under MS-Windows, use
1165of "* and "+ is actually synonymous and refers to the |gui-clipboard|.
1166
1167 *quote_~* *quote~* *<Drop>*
1168The read-only "~ register stores the dropped text from the last drag'n'drop
1169operation. When something has been dropped onto Vim, the "~ register is
1170filled in and the <Drop> pseudo key is sent for notification. You can remap
1171this key if you want; the default action (for all modes) is to insert the
1172contents of the "~ register at the cursor position. {not in Vi}
Bram Moolenaar69a7cb42004-06-20 12:51:53 +00001173{only available when compiled with the |+dnd| feature, currently only with the
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001174GTK GUI}
1175
1176Note: The "~ register is only used when dropping plain text onto Vim.
1177Drag'n'drop of URI lists is handled internally.
1178
11798. Black hole register "_ *quote_*
1180When writing to this register, nothing happens. This can be used to delete
1181text without affecting the normal registers. When reading from this register,
1182nothing is returned. {not in Vi}
1183
11849. Last search pattern register "/ *quote_/* *quote/*
1185Contains the most recent search-pattern. This is used for "n" and 'hlsearch'.
1186It is writable with ":let", you can change it to have 'hlsearch' highlight
1187other matches without actually searching. You can't yank or delete into this
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001188register. The search direction is available in |v:searchforward|.
1189Note that the valued is restored when returning from a function
1190|function-search-undo|.
1191{not in Vi}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001192
1193 *@/*
1194You can write to a register with a ":let" command |:let-@|. Example: >
1195 :let @/ = "the"
1196
1197If you use a put command without specifying a register, Vim uses the register
1198that was last filled (this is also the contents of the unnamed register). If
1199you are confused, use the ":dis" command to find out what Vim will put (this
1200command displays all named and numbered registers; the unnamed register is
1201labelled '"').
1202
1203The next three commands always work on whole lines.
1204
1205:[range]co[py] {address} *:co* *:copy*
1206 Copy the lines given by [range] to below the line
1207 given by {address}.
1208
1209 *:t*
1210:t Synonym for copy.
1211
1212:[range]m[ove] {address} *:m* *:mo* *:move* *E134*
1213 Move the lines given by [range] to below the line
1214 given by {address}.
1215
1216==============================================================================
12176. Formatting text *formatting*
1218
1219:[range]ce[nter] [width] *:ce* *:center*
1220 Center lines in [range] between [width] columns
1221 (default 'textwidth' or 80 when 'textwidth' is 0).
1222 {not in Vi}
1223 Not available when |+ex_extra| feature was disabled at
1224 compile time.
1225
1226:[range]ri[ght] [width] *:ri* *:right*
1227 Right-align lines in [range] at [width] columns
1228 (default 'textwidth' or 80 when 'textwidth' is 0).
1229 {not in Vi}
1230 Not available when |+ex_extra| feature was disabled at
1231 compile time.
1232
1233 *:le* *:left*
1234:[range]le[ft] [indent]
1235 Left-align lines in [range]. Sets the indent in the
1236 lines to [indent] (default 0). {not in Vi}
1237 Not available when |+ex_extra| feature was disabled at
1238 compile time.
1239
1240 *gq*
Bram Moolenaar4317d9b2005-03-18 20:25:31 +00001241gq{motion} Format the lines that {motion} moves over.
Bram Moolenaar1d2ba7f2006-02-14 22:29:30 +00001242 Formatting is done with one of three methods:
1243 1. If 'formatexpr' is not empty the expression is
1244 evaluated. This can differ for each buffer.
Bram Moolenaar4c7ed462006-02-15 22:18:42 +00001245 2. If 'formatprg' is not empty an external program
Bram Moolenaar1d2ba7f2006-02-14 22:29:30 +00001246 is used.
Bram Moolenaar551dbcc2006-04-25 22:13:59 +00001247 3. Otherwise formatting is done internally.
Bram Moolenaar1d2ba7f2006-02-14 22:29:30 +00001248
1249 In the third case the 'textwidth' option controls the
1250 length of each formatted line (see below).
Bram Moolenaar4317d9b2005-03-18 20:25:31 +00001251 If the 'textwidth' option is 0, the formatted line
1252 length is the screen width (with a maximum width of
Bram Moolenaar1d2ba7f2006-02-14 22:29:30 +00001253 79).
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001254 The 'formatoptions' option controls the type of
1255 formatting |fo-table|.
Bram Moolenaar4317d9b2005-03-18 20:25:31 +00001256 The cursor is left on the first non-blank of the last
1257 formatted line.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001258 NOTE: The "Q" command formerly performed this
1259 function. If you still want to use "Q" for
1260 formatting, use this mapping: >
1261 :nnoremap Q gq
1262
1263gqgq *gqgq* *gqq*
Bram Moolenaar40af4e32010-07-29 22:33:18 +02001264gqq Format the current line. With a count format that
1265 many lines. {not in Vi}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001266
1267 *v_gq*
1268{Visual}gq Format the highlighted text. (for {Visual} see
1269 |Visual-mode|). {not in Vi}
1270
1271 *gw*
1272gw{motion} Format the lines that {motion} moves over. Similar to
1273 |gq| but puts the cursor back at the same position in
Bram Moolenaar1d2ba7f2006-02-14 22:29:30 +00001274 the text. However, 'formatprg' and 'formatexpr' are
1275 not used. {not in Vi}
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001276
Bram Moolenaar69a7cb42004-06-20 12:51:53 +00001277gwgw *gwgw* *gww*
1278gww Format the current line as with "gw". {not in Vi}
1279
1280 *v_gw*
1281{Visual}gw Format the highlighted text as with "gw". (for
1282 {Visual} see |Visual-mode|). {not in Vi}
1283
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001284Example: To format the current paragraph use: *gqap* >
1285 gqap
1286
1287The "gq" command leaves the cursor in the line where the motion command takes
1288the cursor. This allows you to repeat formatting repeated with ".". This
1289works well with "gqj" (format current and next line) and "gq}" (format until
1290end of paragraph). Note: When 'formatprg' is set, "gq" leaves the cursor on
1291the first formatted line (as with using a filter command).
1292
1293If you want to format the current paragraph and continue where you were, use: >
1294 gwap
1295If you always want to keep paragraphs formatted you may want to add the 'a'
1296flag to 'formatoptions'. See |auto-format|.
1297
1298If the 'autoindent' option is on, Vim uses the indent of the first line for
1299the following lines.
1300
1301Formatting does not change empty lines (but it does change lines with only
1302white space!).
1303
1304The 'joinspaces' option is used when lines are joined together.
1305
Bram Moolenaar1d2ba7f2006-02-14 22:29:30 +00001306You can set the 'formatexpr' option to an expression or the 'formatprg' option
1307to the name of an external program for Vim to use for text formatting. The
1308'textwidth' and other options have no effect on formatting by an external
1309program.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001310
1311 *right-justify*
1312There is no command in Vim to right justify text. You can do it with
1313an external command, like "par" (e.g.: "!}par" to format until the end of the
1314paragraph) or set 'formatprg' to "par".
1315
1316 *format-comments*
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001317An overview of comment formatting is in section |30.6| of the user manual.
1318
1319Vim can automatically insert and format comments in a special way. Vim
1320recognizes a comment by a specific string at the start of the line (ignoring
1321white space). Three types of comments can be used:
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001322
1323- A comment string that repeats at the start of each line. An example is the
1324 type of comment used in shell scripts, starting with "#".
1325- A comment string that occurs only in the first line, not in the following
1326 lines. An example is this list with dashes.
1327- Three-piece comments that have a start string, an end string, and optional
1328 lines in between. The strings for the start, middle and end are different.
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001329 An example is the C style comment:
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001330 /*
1331 * this is a C comment
1332 */
1333
1334The 'comments' option is a comma-separated list of parts. Each part defines a
1335type of comment string. A part consists of:
1336 {flags}:{string}
1337
1338{string} is the literal text that must appear.
1339
1340{flags}:
1341 n Nested comment. Nesting with mixed parts is allowed. If 'comments'
1342 is "n:),n:>" a line starting with "> ) >" is a comment.
1343
1344 b Blank (<Space>, <Tab> or <EOL>) required after {string}.
1345
1346 f Only the first line has the comment string. Do not repeat comment on
1347 the next line, but preserve indentation (e.g., a bullet-list).
1348
1349 s Start of three-piece comment
1350
1351 m Middle of a three-piece comment
1352
1353 e End of a three-piece comment
1354
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001355 l Left align. Used together with 's' or 'e', the leftmost character of
1356 start or end will line up with the leftmost character from the middle.
1357 This is the default and can be omitted. See below for more details.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001358
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001359 r Right align. Same as above but rightmost instead of leftmost. See
1360 below for more details.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001361
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001362 O Don't consider this comment for the "O" command.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001363
1364 x Allows three-piece comments to be ended by just typing the last
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001365 character of the end-comment string as the first action on a new
1366 line when the middle-comment string has been inserted automatically.
1367 See below for more details.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001368
1369 {digits}
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001370 When together with 's' or 'e': add {digit} amount of offset to an
1371 automatically inserted middle or end comment leader. The offset begins
1372 from a left alignment. See below for more details.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001373
1374 -{digits}
1375 Like {digits} but reduce the indent. This only works when there is
1376 some indent for the start or end part that can be removed.
1377
1378When a string has none of the 'f', 's', 'm' or 'e' flags, Vim assumes the
1379comment string repeats at the start of each line. The flags field may be
1380empty.
1381
1382Any blank space in the text before and after the {string} is part of the
1383{string}, so do not include leading or trailing blanks unless the blanks are a
1384required part of the comment string.
1385
1386When one comment leader is part of another, specify the part after the whole.
1387For example, to include both "-" and "->", use >
1388 :set comments=f:->,f:-
1389
1390A three-piece comment must always be given as start,middle,end, with no other
1391parts in between. An example of a three-piece comment is >
1392 sr:/*,mb:*,ex:*/
1393for C-comments. To avoid recognizing "*ptr" as a comment, the middle string
1394includes the 'b' flag. For three-piece comments, Vim checks the text after
1395the start and middle strings for the end string. If Vim finds the end string,
1396the comment does not continue on the next line. Three-piece comments must
1397have a middle string because otherwise Vim can't recognize the middle lines.
1398
1399Notice the use of the "x" flag in the above three-piece comment definition.
1400When you hit Return in a C-comment, Vim will insert the middle comment leader
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001401for the new line: " * ". To close this comment you just have to type "/"
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001402before typing anything else on the new line. This will replace the
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001403middle-comment leader with the end-comment leader and apply any specified
1404alignment, leaving just " */". There is no need to hit BackSpace first.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001405
Bram Moolenaar446beb42011-05-10 17:18:44 +02001406When there is a match with a middle part, but there also is a maching end part
1407which is longer, the end part is used. This makes a C style comment work
1408without requiring the middle part to end with a space.
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001409
1410Here is an example of alignment flags at work to make a comment stand out
Bram Moolenaar446beb42011-05-10 17:18:44 +02001411(kind of looks like a 1 too). Consider comment string: >
1412 :set comments=sr:/***,m:**,ex-2:******/
1413<
1414 /*** ~
1415 **<--right aligned from "r" flag ~
1416 ** ~
1417offset 2 spaces for the "-2" flag--->** ~
1418 ******/ ~
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001419In this case, the first comment was typed, then return was pressed 4 times,
1420then "/" was pressed to end the comment.
1421
1422Here are some finer points of three part comments. There are three times when
1423alignment and offset flags are taken into consideration: opening a new line
1424after a start-comment, opening a new line before an end-comment, and
1425automatically ending a three-piece comment. The end alignment flag has a
1426backwards perspective; the result is that the same alignment flag used with
1427"s" and "e" will result in the same indent for the starting and ending pieces.
1428Only one alignment per comment part is meant to be used, but an offset number
1429will override the "r" and "l" flag.
1430
1431Enabling 'cindent' will override the alignment flags in many cases.
1432Reindenting using a different method like |gq| or |=| will not consult
1433alignment flags either. The same behaviour can be defined in those other
1434formatting options. One consideration is that 'cindent' has additional options
1435for context based indenting of comments but cannot replicate many three piece
Bram Moolenaar446beb42011-05-10 17:18:44 +02001436indent alignments. However, 'indentexpr' has the ability to work better with
1437three piece comments.
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001438
1439Other examples: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001440 "b:*" Includes lines starting with "*", but not if the "*" is
1441 followed by a non-blank. This avoids a pointer dereference
1442 like "*str" to be recognized as a comment.
1443 "n:>" Includes a line starting with ">", ">>", ">>>", etc.
1444 "fb:-" Format a list that starts with "- ".
1445
1446By default, "b:#" is included. This means that a line that starts with
1447"#include" is not recognized as a comment line. But a line that starts with
1448"# define" is recognized. This is a compromise.
1449
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001450{not available when compiled without the |+comments| feature}
1451
1452 *fo-table*
1453You can use the 'formatoptions' option to influence how Vim formats text.
1454'formatoptions' is a string that can contain any of the letters below. The
1455default setting is "tcq". You can separate the option letters with commas for
1456readability.
1457
1458letter meaning when present in 'formatoptions' ~
1459
Bram Moolenaar9964e462007-05-05 17:54:07 +00001460t Auto-wrap text using textwidth
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001461c Auto-wrap comments using textwidth, inserting the current comment
1462 leader automatically.
1463r Automatically insert the current comment leader after hitting
1464 <Enter> in Insert mode.
1465o Automatically insert the current comment leader after hitting 'o' or
1466 'O' in Normal mode.
1467q Allow formatting of comments with "gq".
1468 Note that formatting will not change blank lines or lines containing
1469 only the comment leader. A new paragraph starts after such a line,
1470 or when the comment leader changes.
1471w Trailing white space indicates a paragraph continues in the next line.
1472 A line that ends in a non-white character ends a paragraph.
1473a Automatic formatting of paragraphs. Every time text is inserted or
1474 deleted the paragraph will be reformatted. See |auto-format|.
1475 When the 'c' flag is present this only happens for recognized
1476 comments.
Bram Moolenaar86b68352004-12-27 21:59:20 +00001477n When formatting text, recognize numbered lists. This actually uses
1478 the 'formatlistpat' option, thus any kind of list can be used. The
1479 indent of the text after the number is used for the next line. The
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001480 default is to find a number, optionally followed by '.', ':', ')',
Bram Moolenaar86b68352004-12-27 21:59:20 +00001481 ']' or '}'. Note that 'autoindent' must be set too. Doesn't work
1482 well together with "2".
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001483 Example: >
1484 1. the first item
1485 wraps
1486 2. the second item
14872 When formatting text, use the indent of the second line of a paragraph
1488 for the rest of the paragraph, instead of the indent of the first
1489 line. This supports paragraphs in which the first line has a
1490 different indent than the rest. Note that 'autoindent' must be set
1491 too. Example: >
1492 first line of a paragraph
1493 second line of the same paragraph
1494 third line.
1495v Vi-compatible auto-wrapping in insert mode: Only break a line at a
1496 blank that you have entered during the current insert command. (Note:
1497 this is not 100% Vi compatible. Vi has some "unexpected features" or
1498 bugs in this area. It uses the screen column instead of the line
1499 column.)
1500b Like 'v', but only auto-wrap if you enter a blank at or before
1501 the wrap margin. If the line was longer than 'textwidth' when you
1502 started the insert, or you do not enter a blank in the insert before
1503 reaching 'textwidth', Vim does not perform auto-wrapping.
1504l Long lines are not broken in insert mode: When a line was longer than
1505 'textwidth' when the insert command started, Vim does not
1506 automatically format it.
1507m Also break at a multi-byte character above 255. This is useful for
1508 Asian text where every character is a word on its own.
1509M When joining lines, don't insert a space before or after a multi-byte
1510 character. Overrules the 'B' flag.
1511B When joining lines, don't insert a space between two multi-byte
1512 characters. Overruled by the 'M' flag.
15131 Don't break a line after a one-letter word. It's broken before it
1514 instead (if possible).
1515
1516
1517With 't' and 'c' you can specify when Vim performs auto-wrapping:
1518value action ~
1519"" no automatic formatting (you can use "gq" for manual formatting)
1520"t" automatic formatting of text, but not comments
1521"c" automatic formatting for comments, but not text (good for C code)
1522"tc" automatic formatting for text and comments
1523
Bram Moolenaar91170f82006-05-05 21:15:17 +00001524Note that when 'textwidth' is 0, Vim does no automatic formatting anyway (but
1525does insert comment leaders according to the 'comments' option). An exception
1526is when the 'a' flag is present. |auto-format|
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001527
1528Note that when 'paste' is on, Vim does no formatting at all.
1529
1530Note that 'textwidth' can be non-zero even if Vim never performs auto-wrapping;
1531'textwidth' is still useful for formatting with "gq".
1532
1533If the 'comments' option includes "/*", "*" and/or "*/", then Vim has some
1534built in stuff to treat these types of comments a bit more cleverly.
1535Opening a new line before or after "/*" or "*/" (with 'r' or 'o' present in
1536'formatoptions') gives the correct start of the line automatically. The same
Bram Moolenaar402d2fe2005-04-15 21:00:38 +00001537happens with formatting and auto-wrapping. Opening a line after a line
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001538starting with "/*" or "*" and containing "*/", will cause no comment leader to
1539be inserted, and the indent of the new line is taken from the line containing
1540the start of the comment.
1541E.g.:
1542 /* ~
1543 * Your typical comment. ~
1544 */ ~
1545 The indent on this line is the same as the start of the above
1546 comment.
1547
1548All of this should be really cool, especially in conjunction with the new
1549:autocmd command to prepare different settings for different types of file.
1550
1551Some examples:
1552 for C code (only format comments): >
1553 :set fo=croq
1554< for Mail/news (format all, don't start comment with "o" command): >
1555 :set fo=tcrq
1556<
1557
1558Automatic formatting *auto-format*
1559
1560When the 'a' flag is present in 'formatoptions' text is formatted
1561automatically when inserting text or deleting text. This works nice for
1562editing text paragraphs. A few hints on how to use this:
1563
1564- You need to properly define paragraphs. The simplest is paragraphs that are
1565 separated by a blank line. When there is no separating blank line, consider
1566 using the 'w' flag and adding a space at the end of each line in the
1567 paragraphs except the last one.
1568
1569- You can set the 'formatoptions' based on the type of file |filetype| or
1570 specifically for one file with a |modeline|.
1571
1572- Set 'formatoptions' to "aw2tq" to make text with indents like this:
1573
1574 bla bla foobar bla
1575 bla foobar bla foobar bla
1576 bla bla foobar bla
1577 bla foobar bla bla foobar
1578
1579- Add the 'c' flag to only auto-format comments. Useful in source code.
1580
Bram Moolenaar91170f82006-05-05 21:15:17 +00001581- Set 'textwidth' to the desired width. If it is zero then 79 is used, or the
1582 width of the screen if this is smaller.
1583
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001584And a few warnings:
1585
1586- When part of the text is not properly separated in paragraphs, making
1587 changes in this text will cause it to be formatted anyway. Consider doing >
1588
1589 :set fo-=a
1590
1591- When using the 'w' flag (trailing space means paragraph continues) and
1592 deleting the last line of a paragraph with |dd|, the paragraph will be
1593 joined with the next one.
1594
1595- Changed text is saved for undo. Formatting is also a change. Thus each
1596 format action saves text for undo. This may consume quite a lot of memory.
1597
1598- Formatting a long paragraph and/or with complicated indenting may be slow.
1599
Bram Moolenaar2389c3c2005-05-22 22:07:59 +00001600==============================================================================
16017. Sorting text *sorting*
1602
1603Vim has a sorting function and a sorting command. The sorting function can be
1604found here: |sort()|.
1605
1606 *:sor* *:sort*
Bram Moolenaar4c3f5362006-04-11 21:38:50 +00001607:[range]sor[t][!] [i][u][r][n][x][o] [/{pattern}/]
Bram Moolenaare5180522005-12-10 20:19:46 +00001608 Sort lines in [range]. When no range is given all
1609 lines are sorted.
Bram Moolenaar2389c3c2005-05-22 22:07:59 +00001610
1611 With [!] the order is reversed.
1612
1613 With [i] case is ignored.
1614
Bram Moolenaar5c06f8b2005-05-31 22:14:58 +00001615 With [n] sorting is done on the first decimal number
Bram Moolenaar4c3f5362006-04-11 21:38:50 +00001616 in the line (after or inside a {pattern} match).
Bram Moolenaare37d50a2008-08-06 17:06:04 +00001617 One leading '-' is included in the number.
Bram Moolenaar5c06f8b2005-05-31 22:14:58 +00001618
1619 With [x] sorting is done on the first hexadecimal
Bram Moolenaar4c3f5362006-04-11 21:38:50 +00001620 number in the line (after or inside a {pattern}
1621 match). A leading "0x" or "0X" is ignored.
Bram Moolenaare37d50a2008-08-06 17:06:04 +00001622 One leading '-' is included in the number.
Bram Moolenaar5c06f8b2005-05-31 22:14:58 +00001623
1624 With [o] sorting is done on the first octal number in
Bram Moolenaar4c3f5362006-04-11 21:38:50 +00001625 the line (after or inside a {pattern} match).
Bram Moolenaar5c06f8b2005-05-31 22:14:58 +00001626
Bram Moolenaar2389c3c2005-05-22 22:07:59 +00001627 With [u] only keep the first of a sequence of
1628 identical lines (ignoring case when [i] is used).
Bram Moolenaar4c3f5362006-04-11 21:38:50 +00001629 Without this flag, a sequence of identical lines
1630 will be kept in their original order.
Bram Moolenaar5c06f8b2005-05-31 22:14:58 +00001631 Note that leading and trailing white space may cause
1632 lines to be different.
Bram Moolenaar2389c3c2005-05-22 22:07:59 +00001633
Bram Moolenaar4c3f5362006-04-11 21:38:50 +00001634 When /{pattern}/ is specified and there is no [r] flag
1635 the text matched with {pattern} is skipped, so that
1636 you sort on what comes after the match.
Bram Moolenaar2389c3c2005-05-22 22:07:59 +00001637 Instead of the slash any non-letter can be used.
1638 For example, to sort on the second comma-separated
1639 field: >
1640 :sort /[^,]*,/
1641< To sort on the text at virtual column 10 (thus
1642 ignoring the difference between tabs and spaces): >
1643 :sort /.*\%10v/
Bram Moolenaarc6fe9192006-04-09 21:54:49 +00001644< To sort on the first number in the line, no matter
1645 what is in front of it: >
Bram Moolenaar446cb832008-06-24 21:56:24 +00001646 :sort /.\{-}\ze\d/
1647< (Explanation: ".\{-}" matches any text, "\ze" sets the
1648 end of the match and \d matches a digit.)
1649 With [r] sorting is done on the matching {pattern}
Bram Moolenaar4c3f5362006-04-11 21:38:50 +00001650 instead of skipping past it as described above.
1651 For example, to sort on only the first three letters
1652 of each line: >
1653 :sort /\a\a\a/ r
1654
1655< If a {pattern} is used, any lines which don't have a
1656 match for {pattern} are kept in their current order,
1657 but separate from the lines which do match {pattern}.
1658 If you sorted in reverse, they will be in reverse
1659 order after the sorted lines, otherwise they will be
1660 in their original order, right before the sorted
1661 lines.
1662
Bram Moolenaar1256e722007-07-10 15:26:20 +00001663 If {pattern} is empty (e.g. // is specified), the
1664 last search pattern is used. This allows trying out
1665 a pattern first.
1666
Bram Moolenaar5c06f8b2005-05-31 22:14:58 +00001667Note that using ":sort" with ":global" doesn't sort the matching lines, it's
1668quite useless.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001669
Bram Moolenaarf461c8e2005-06-25 23:04:51 +00001670The details about sorting depend on the library function used. There is no
1671guarantee that sorting is "stable" or obeys the current locale. You will have
1672to try it out.
1673
Bram Moolenaar4c3f5362006-04-11 21:38:50 +00001674The sorting can be interrupted, but if you interrupt it too late in the
1675process you may end up with duplicated lines. This also depends on the system
1676library function used.
Bram Moolenaarae5bce12005-08-15 21:41:48 +00001677
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001678 vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl: