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Bram Moolenaar98056532019-12-12 14:18:35 +01001*usr_03.txt* For Vim version 8.2. Last change: 2019 Nov 21
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002
3 VIM USER MANUAL - by Bram Moolenaar
4
5 Moving around
6
7
8Before you can insert or delete text the cursor has to be moved to the right
9place. Vim has a large number of commands to position the cursor. This
10chapter shows you how to use the most important ones. You can find a list of
11these commands below |Q_lr|.
12
13|03.1| Word movement
14|03.2| Moving to the start or end of a line
15|03.3| Moving to a character
Bram Moolenaar4399ef42005-02-12 14:29:27 +000016|03.4| Matching a parenthesis
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000017|03.5| Moving to a specific line
18|03.6| Telling where you are
19|03.7| Scrolling around
20|03.8| Simple searches
21|03.9| Simple search patterns
22|03.10| Using marks
23
24 Next chapter: |usr_04.txt| Making small changes
25 Previous chapter: |usr_02.txt| The first steps in Vim
26Table of contents: |usr_toc.txt|
27
28==============================================================================
29*03.1* Word movement
30
31To move the cursor forward one word, use the "w" command. Like most Vim
32commands, you can use a numeric prefix to move past multiple words. For
33example, "3w" moves three words. This figure shows how it works:
34
35 This is a line with example text ~
36 --->-->->----------------->
37 w w w 3w
38
39Notice that "w" moves to the start of the next word if it already is at the
40start of a word.
41 The "b" command moves backward to the start of the previous word:
42
43 This is a line with example text ~
44 <----<--<-<---------<---
45 b b b 2b b
46
47There is also the "e" command that moves to the next end of a word and "ge",
48which moves to the previous end of a word:
49
50 This is a line with example text ~
51 <- <--- -----> ---->
52 ge ge e e
53
54If you are at the last word of a line, the "w" command will take you to the
55first word in the next line. Thus you can use this to move through a
56paragraph, much faster than using "l". "b" does the same in the other
57direction.
58
59A word ends at a non-word character, such as a ".", "-" or ")". To change
Bram Moolenaar256972a2015-12-29 19:10:25 +010060what Vim considers to be a word, see the 'iskeyword' option. If you try this
61out in the help directly, 'iskeyword' needs to be reset for the examples to
62work: >
63 :set iskeyword&
64It is also possible to move by white-space separated WORDs. This is not a
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000065word in the normal sense, that's why the uppercase is used. The commands for
66moving by WORDs are also uppercase, as this figure shows:
67
68 ge b w e
69 <- <- ---> --->
70 This is-a line, with special/separated/words (and some more). ~
71 <----- <----- --------------------> ----->
72 gE B W E
73
74With this mix of lowercase and uppercase commands, you can quickly move
75forward and backward through a paragraph.
76
77==============================================================================
78*03.2* Moving to the start or end of a line
79
80The "$" command moves the cursor to the end of a line. If your keyboard has
81an <End> key it will do the same thing.
82
83The "^" command moves to the first non-blank character of the line. The "0"
Bram Moolenaar0c0734d2019-11-26 21:44:46 +010084command (zero) moves to the very first character of the line, and the <Home>
85key does the same thing. In a picture:
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +000086
87 ^
88 <------------
89 .....This is a line with example text ~
90 <----------------- --------------->
91 0 $
92
93(the "....." indicates blanks here)
94
95 The "$" command takes a count, like most movement commands. But moving to
96the end of the line several times doesn't make sense. Therefore it causes the
97editor to move to the end of another line. For example, "1$" moves you to
98the end of the first line (the one you're on), "2$" to the end of the next
99line, and so on.
100 The "0" command doesn't take a count argument, because the "0" would be
101part of the count. Unexpectedly, using a count with "^" doesn't have any
102effect.
103
104==============================================================================
105*03.3* Moving to a character
106
107One of the most useful movement commands is the single-character search
108command. The command "fx" searches forward in the line for the single
109character x. Hint: "f" stands for "Find".
110 For example, you are at the beginning of the following line. Suppose you
111want to go to the h of human. Just execute the command "fh" and the cursor
112will be positioned over the h:
113
114 To err is human. To really foul up you need a computer. ~
115 ---------->--------------->
116 fh fy
117
118This also shows that the command "fy" moves to the end of the word really.
119 You can specify a count; therefore, you can go to the "l" of "foul" with
120"3fl":
121
122 To err is human. To really foul up you need a computer. ~
123 --------------------->
124 3fl
125
126The "F" command searches to the left:
127
128 To err is human. To really foul up you need a computer. ~
129 <---------------------
130 Fh
131
132The "tx" command works like the "fx" command, except it stops one character
133before the searched character. Hint: "t" stands for "To". The backward
134version of this command is "Tx".
135
136 To err is human. To really foul up you need a computer. ~
137 <------------ ------------->
138 Th tn
139
140These four commands can be repeated with ";". "," repeats in the other
141direction. The cursor is never moved to another line. Not even when the
142sentence continues.
143
144Sometimes you will start a search, only to realize that you have typed the
145wrong command. You type "f" to search backward, for example, only to realize
146that you really meant "F". To abort a search, press <Esc>. So "f<Esc>" is an
147aborted forward search and doesn't do anything. Note: <Esc> cancels most
148operations, not just searches.
149
150==============================================================================
Bram Moolenaar4399ef42005-02-12 14:29:27 +0000151*03.4* Matching a parenthesis
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000152
153When writing a program you often end up with nested () constructs. Then the
154"%" command is very handy: It moves to the matching paren. If the cursor is
155on a "(" it will move to the matching ")". If it's on a ")" it will move to
156the matching "(".
157
158 %
159 <----->
160 if (a == (b * c) / d) ~
161 <---------------->
162 %
163
164This also works for [] and {} pairs. (This can be defined with the
165'matchpairs' option.)
166
167When the cursor is not on a useful character, "%" will search forward to find
168one. Thus if the cursor is at the start of the line of the previous example,
169"%" will search forward and find the first "(". Then it moves to its match:
170
171 if (a == (b * c) / d) ~
172 ---+---------------->
173 %
174
175==============================================================================
176*03.5* Moving to a specific line
177
178If you are a C or C++ programmer, you are familiar with error messages such as
179the following:
180
181 prog.c:33: j undeclared (first use in this function) ~
182
183This tells you that you might want to fix something on line 33. So how do you
184find line 33? One way is to do "9999k" to go to the top of the file and "32j"
Bram Moolenaar3df01732017-02-17 22:47:16 +0100185to go down thirty-two lines. It is not a good way, but it works. A much
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000186better way of doing things is to use the "G" command. With a count, this
187command positions you at the given line number. For example, "33G" puts you
188on line 33. (For a better way of going through a compiler's error list, see
189|usr_30.txt|, for information on the :make command.)
190 With no argument, "G" positions you at the end of the file. A quick way to
191go to the start of a file use "gg". "1G" will do the same, but is a tiny bit
192more typing.
193
194 | first line of a file ^
195 | text text text text |
196 | text text text text | gg
197 7G | text text text text |
198 | text text text text
199 | text text text text
200 V text text text text |
201 text text text text | G
202 text text text text |
203 last line of a file V
204
205Another way to move to a line is using the "%" command with a count. For
206example "50%" moves you to halfway the file. "90%" goes to near the end.
207
208The previous assumes that you want to move to a line in the file, no matter if
209it's currently visible or not. What if you want to move to one of the lines
210you can see? This figure shows the three commands you can use:
211
212 +---------------------------+
213 H --> | text sample text |
214 | sample text |
215 | text sample text |
216 | sample text |
217 M --> | text sample text |
218 | sample text |
219 | text sample text |
220 | sample text |
221 L --> | text sample text |
222 +---------------------------+
223
Bram Moolenaar0c0734d2019-11-26 21:44:46 +0100224Hints: "H" stands for Home, "M" for Middle and "L" for Last. Alternatively,
225"H" for high, "M" for Middle and "L" for low.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000226
227==============================================================================
228*03.6* Telling where you are
229
230To see where you are in a file, there are three ways:
231
2321. Use the CTRL-G command. You get a message like this (assuming the 'ruler'
233 option is off):
234
235 "usr_03.txt" line 233 of 650 --35%-- col 45-52 ~
236
237 This shows the name of the file you are editing, the line number where the
238 cursor is, the total number of lines, the percentage of the way through
239 the file and the column of the cursor.
240 Sometimes you will see a split column number. For example, "col 2-9".
241 This indicates that the cursor is positioned on the second character, but
242 because character one is a tab, occupying eight spaces worth of columns,
243 the screen column is 9.
244
2452. Set the 'number' option. This will display a line number in front of
246 every line: >
247
248 :set number
249<
250 To switch this off again: >
251
252 :set nonumber
253<
254 Since 'number' is a boolean option, prepending "no" to its name has the
255 effect of switching it off. A boolean option has only these two values,
256 it is either on or off.
257 Vim has many options. Besides the boolean ones there are options with
258 a numerical value and string options. You will see examples of this where
259 they are used.
260
2613. Set the 'ruler' option. This will display the cursor position in the
262 lower right corner of the Vim window: >
263
264 :set ruler
265
266Using the 'ruler' option has the advantage that it doesn't take much room,
267thus there is more space for your text.
268
269==============================================================================
270*03.7* Scrolling around
271
272The CTRL-U command scrolls down half a screen of text. Think of looking
273through a viewing window at the text and moving this window up by half the
274height of the window. Thus the window moves up over the text, which is
275backward in the file. Don't worry if you have a little trouble remembering
276which end is up. Most users have the same problem.
277 The CTRL-D command moves the viewing window down half a screen in the file,
278thus scrolls the text up half a screen.
279
280 +----------------+
281 | some text |
282 | some text |
283 | some text |
284 +---------------+ | some text |
285 | some text | CTRL-U --> | |
286 | | | 123456 |
287 | 123456 | +----------------+
288 | 7890 |
289 | | +----------------+
290 | example | CTRL-D --> | 7890 |
291 +---------------+ | |
292 | example |
293 | example |
294 | example |
295 | example |
296 +----------------+
297
298To scroll one line at a time use CTRL-E (scroll up) and CTRL-Y (scroll down).
299Think of CTRL-E to give you one line Extra. (If you use MS-Windows compatible
300key mappings CTRL-Y will redo a change instead of scroll.)
301
Bram Moolenaar0c0734d2019-11-26 21:44:46 +0100302To scroll forward by a whole screen (except for two lines) use CTRL-F. To
303scroll backwards, use CTRL-B. These should be easy to remember: F for
304Forwards and B for Backwards.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000305
306A common issue is that after moving down many lines with "j" your cursor is at
307the bottom of the screen. You would like to see the context of the line with
308the cursor. That's done with the "zz" command.
309
310 +------------------+ +------------------+
Bram Moolenaar0c0734d2019-11-26 21:44:46 +0100311 | earlier text | | earlier text |
312 | earlier text | | earlier text |
313 | earlier text | | earlier text |
314 | earlier text | zz --> | line with cursor |
315 | earlier text | | later text |
316 | earlier text | | later text |
317 | line with cursor | | later text |
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000318 +------------------+ +------------------+
319
320The "zt" command puts the cursor line at the top, "zb" at the bottom. There
321are a few more scrolling commands, see |Q_sc|. To always keep a few lines of
322context around the cursor, use the 'scrolloff' option.
323
324==============================================================================
325*03.8* Simple searches
326
327To search for a string, use the "/string" command. To find the word include,
328for example, use the command: >
329
330 /include
331
332You will notice that when you type the "/" the cursor jumps to the last line
333of the Vim window, like with colon commands. That is where you type the word.
334You can press the backspace key (backarrow or <BS>) to make corrections. Use
335the <Left> and <Right> cursor keys when necessary.
336 Pressing <Enter> executes the command.
337
338 Note:
Bram Moolenaar402d2fe2005-04-15 21:00:38 +0000339 The characters .*[]^%/\?~$ have special meanings. If you want to use
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000340 them in a search you must put a \ in front of them. See below.
341
342To find the next occurrence of the same string use the "n" command. Use this
343to find the first #include after the cursor: >
344
345 /#include
346
347And then type "n" several times. You will move to each #include in the text.
348You can also use a count if you know which match you want. Thus "3n" finds
349the third match. Using a count with "/" doesn't work.
350
351The "?" command works like "/" but searches backwards: >
352
353 ?word
354
355The "N" command repeats the last search the opposite direction. Thus using
Bram Moolenaarb6e0ec62017-07-23 22:12:20 +0200356"N" after a "/" command searches backwards, using "N" after "?" searches
Bram Moolenaar0c0734d2019-11-26 21:44:46 +0100357forwards.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000358
359
360IGNORING CASE
361
362Normally you have to type exactly what you want to find. If you don't care
363about upper or lowercase in a word, set the 'ignorecase' option: >
364
365 :set ignorecase
366
367If you now search for "word", it will also match "Word" and "WORD". To match
368case again: >
369
370 :set noignorecase
371
372
373HISTORY
374
375Suppose you do three searches: >
376
377 /one
378 /two
379 /three
380
381Now let's start searching by typing a simple "/" without pressing <Enter>. If
382you press <Up> (the cursor key), Vim puts "/three" on the command line.
383Pressing <Enter> at this point searches for three. If you do not press
384<Enter>, but press <Up> instead, Vim changes the prompt to "/two". Another
385press of <Up> moves you to "/one".
386 You can also use the <Down> cursor key to move through the history of
387search commands in the other direction.
388
389If you know what a previously used pattern starts with, and you want to use it
390again, type that character before pressing <Up>. With the previous example,
391you can type "/o<Up>" and Vim will put "/one" on the command line.
392
393The commands starting with ":" also have a history. That allows you to recall
394a previous command and execute it again. These two histories are separate.
395
396
397SEARCHING FOR A WORD IN THE TEXT
398
399Suppose you see the word "TheLongFunctionName" in the text and you want to
400find the next occurrence of it. You could type "/TheLongFunctionName", but
401that's a lot of typing. And when you make a mistake Vim won't find it.
402 There is an easier way: Position the cursor on the word and use the "*"
403command. Vim will grab the word under the cursor and use it as the search
404string.
405 The "#" command does the same in the other direction. You can prepend a
406count: "3*" searches for the third occurrence of the word under the cursor.
407
408
409SEARCHING FOR WHOLE WORDS
410
411If you type "/the" it will also match "there". To only find words that end
412in "the" use: >
413
414 /the\>
415
416The "\>" item is a special marker that only matches at the end of a word.
Bram Moolenaaracb4f222016-01-10 15:59:26 +0100417Similarly "\<" only matches at the beginning of a word. Thus to search for
418the word "the" only: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000419
420 /\<the\>
421
422This does not match "there" or "soothe". Notice that the "*" and "#" commands
423use these start-of-word and end-of-word markers to only find whole words (you
424can use "g*" and "g#" to match partial words).
425
426
427HIGHLIGHTING MATCHES
428
429While editing a program you see a variable called "nr". You want to check
430where it's used. You could move the cursor to "nr" and use the "*" command
431and press "n" to go along all the matches.
432 There is another way. Type this command: >
433
434 :set hlsearch
435
436If you now search for "nr", Vim will highlight all matches. That is a very
437good way to see where the variable is used, without the need to type commands.
438 To switch this off: >
439
440 :set nohlsearch
441
442Then you need to switch it on again if you want to use it for the next search
443command. If you only want to remove the highlighting, use this command: >
444
445 :nohlsearch
446
447This doesn't reset the option. Instead, it disables the highlighting. As
448soon as you execute a search command, the highlighting will be used again.
449Also for the "n" and "N" commands.
450
451
452TUNING SEARCHES
453
454There are a few options that change how searching works. These are the
455essential ones:
456>
457 :set incsearch
458
459This makes Vim display the match for the string while you are still typing it.
460Use this to check if the right match will be found. Then press <Enter> to
461really jump to that location. Or type more to change the search string.
462>
463 :set nowrapscan
464
465This stops the search at the end of the file. Or, when you are searching
Bram Moolenaar0c0734d2019-11-26 21:44:46 +0100466backwards, it stops the search at the start of the file. The 'wrapscan'
467option is on by default, thus searching wraps around the end of the file.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000468
469
470INTERMEZZO
471
472If you like one of the options mentioned before, and set it each time you use
473Vim, you can put the command in your Vim startup file.
474 Edit the file, as mentioned at |not-compatible|. Or use this command to
475find out where it is: >
476
477 :scriptnames
478
479Edit the file, for example with: >
480
481 :edit ~/.vimrc
482
483Then add a line with the command to set the option, just like you typed it in
484Vim. Example: >
485
486 Go:set hlsearch<Esc>
487
488"G" moves to the end of the file. "o" starts a new line, where you type the
Bram Moolenaar0c0734d2019-11-26 21:44:46 +0100489":set" command. You end insert mode with <Esc>. Then write and close the
490file: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000491
492 ZZ
493
494If you now start Vim again, the 'hlsearch' option will already be set.
495
496==============================================================================
497*03.9* Simple search patterns
498
499The Vim editor uses regular expressions to specify what to search for.
500Regular expressions are an extremely powerful and compact way to specify a
501search pattern. Unfortunately, this power comes at a price, because regular
502expressions are a bit tricky to specify.
503 In this section we mention only a few essential ones. More about search
Bram Moolenaar0c0734d2019-11-26 21:44:46 +0100504patterns and commands can be found in chapter 27 |usr_27.txt|. You can find
505the full explanation here: |pattern|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000506
507
508BEGINNING AND END OF A LINE
509
510The ^ character matches the beginning of a line. On an English-US keyboard
511you find it above the 6. The pattern "include" matches the word include
512anywhere on the line. But the pattern "^include" matches the word include
513only if it is at the beginning of a line.
514 The $ character matches the end of a line. Therefore, "was$" matches the
515word was only if it is at the end of a line.
516
Bram Moolenaarb6e0ec62017-07-23 22:12:20 +0200517Let's mark the places where "/the" matches in this example line with "x"s:
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000518
519 the solder holding one of the chips melted and the ~
520 xxx xxx xxx
521
522Using "/the$" we find this match:
523
524 the solder holding one of the chips melted and the ~
525 xxx
526
527And with "/^the" we find this one:
528 the solder holding one of the chips melted and the ~
529 xxx
530
Bram Moolenaar0c0734d2019-11-26 21:44:46 +0100531You can try searching with "/^the$"; it will only match a single line
532consisting entirely of "the". White space does matter here, thus if a line
533contains a space after the word, like "the ", the pattern will not match.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000534
535
536MATCHING ANY SINGLE CHARACTER
537
538The . (dot) character matches any existing character. For example, the
539pattern "c.m" matches a string whose first character is a c, whose second
Bram Moolenaar8a94d872015-01-25 13:02:57 +0100540character is anything, and whose third character is m. Example:
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000541
542 We use a computer that became the cummin winter. ~
543 xxx xxx xxx
544
545
546MATCHING SPECIAL CHARACTERS
547
548If you really want to match a dot, you must avoid its special meaning by
549putting a backslash before it.
550 If you search for "ter.", you will find these matches:
551
552 We use a computer that became the cummin winter. ~
553 xxxx xxxx
554
555Searching for "ter\." only finds the second match.
556
557==============================================================================
558*03.10* Using marks
559
560When you make a jump to a position with the "G" command, Vim remembers the
561position from before this jump. This position is called a mark. To go back
562where you came from, use this command: >
563
564 ``
565
566This ` is a backtick or open single-quote character.
567 If you use the same command a second time you will jump back again. That's
Bram Moolenaar0c0734d2019-11-26 21:44:46 +0100568because the "`" command is a jump itself, and the position from before this
569jump is remembered.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000570
571Generally, every time you do a command that can move the cursor further than
572within the same line, this is called a jump. This includes the search
573commands "/" and "n" (it doesn't matter how far away the match is). But not
574the character searches with "fx" and "tx" or the word movements "w" and "e".
Bram Moolenaar0c0734d2019-11-26 21:44:46 +0100575 Also, "j" and "k" are not considered to be a jump, even when you use a
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000576count to make them move the cursor quite a long way away.
577
Bram Moolenaar0c0734d2019-11-26 21:44:46 +0100578The "``" command jumps back and forth, between two points. The CTRL-O command
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000579jumps to older positions (Hint: O for older). CTRL-I then jumps back to newer
Bram Moolenaar0c0734d2019-11-26 21:44:46 +0100580positions (Hint: for many common keyboard layouts, I is just next to O).
581Consider this sequence of commands: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000582
583 33G
584 /^The
585 CTRL-O
586
587You first jump to line 33, then search for a line that starts with "The".
588Then with CTRL-O you jump back to line 33. Another CTRL-O takes you back to
589where you started. If you now use CTRL-I you jump to line 33 again. And
590to the match for "The" with another CTRL-I.
591
592
593 | example text ^ |
594 33G | example text | CTRL-O | CTRL-I
595 | example text | |
596 V line 33 text ^ V
597 | example text | |
598 /^The | example text | CTRL-O | CTRL-I
599 V There you are | V
600 example text
601
602 Note:
603 CTRL-I is the same as <Tab>.
604
605The ":jumps" command gives a list of positions you jumped to. The entry which
606you used last is marked with a ">".
607
608
Bram Moolenaar8fef2ad2005-04-23 20:42:23 +0000609NAMED MARKS *bookmark*
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000610
611Vim enables you to place your own marks in the text. The command "ma" marks
612the place under the cursor as mark a. You can place 26 marks (a through z) in
613your text. You can't see them, it's just a position that Vim remembers.
Bram Moolenaar9964e462007-05-05 17:54:07 +0000614 To go to a mark, use the command `{mark}, where {mark} is the mark letter.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000615Thus to move to the a mark:
616>
617 `a
618
Bram Moolenaar0c0734d2019-11-26 21:44:46 +0100619The command "'mark" (single quotation mark, or apostrophe) moves you to the
620beginning of the line containing the mark. This differs from the "`mark"
621command, which also moves you to the marked column.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000622
623The marks can be very useful when working on two related parts in a file.
624Suppose you have some text near the start of the file you need to look at,
625while working on some text near the end of the file.
626 Move to the text at the start and place the s (start) mark there: >
627
628 ms
629
Bram Moolenaar9964e462007-05-05 17:54:07 +0000630Then move to the text you want to work on and put the e (end) mark there: >
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000631
632 me
633
634Now you can move around, and when you want to look at the start of the file,
635you use this to jump there: >
636
637 's
638
639Then you can use '' to jump back to where you were, or 'e to jump to the text
640you were working on at the end.
641 There is nothing special about using s for start and e for end, they are
642just easy to remember.
643
644You can use this command to get a list of marks: >
645
646 :marks
647
648You will notice a few special marks. These include:
649
650 ' The cursor position before doing a jump
651 " The cursor position when last editing the file
652 [ Start of the last change
653 ] End of the last change
654
655==============================================================================
656
657Next chapter: |usr_04.txt| Making small changes
658
Bram Moolenaard473c8c2018-08-11 18:00:22 +0200659Copyright: see |manual-copyright| vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl: