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Bram Moolenaarf4b8e572004-06-24 15:53:16 +00001*eval.txt* For Vim version 7.0aa. Last change: 2004 Jun 22
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002
3
4 VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar
5
6
7Expression evaluation *expression* *expr* *E15* *eval*
8
9Using expressions is introduced in chapter 41 of the user manual |usr_41.txt|.
10
11Note: Expression evaluation can be disabled at compile time. If this has been
12done, the features in this document are not available. See |+eval| and the
13last chapter below.
14
151. Variables |variables|
162. Expression syntax |expression-syntax|
173. Internal variable |internal-variables|
184. Builtin Functions |functions|
195. Defining functions |user-functions|
206. Curly braces names |curly-braces-names|
217. Commands |expression-commands|
228. Exception handling |exception-handling|
239. Examples |eval-examples|
2410. No +eval feature |no-eval-feature|
2511. The sandbox |eval-sandbox|
26
27{Vi does not have any of these commands}
28
29==============================================================================
301. Variables *variables*
31
32There are two types of variables:
33
34Number a 32 bit signed number.
35String a NUL terminated string of 8-bit unsigned characters.
36
37These are converted automatically, depending on how they are used.
38
39Conversion from a Number to a String is by making the ASCII representation of
40the Number. Examples: >
41 Number 123 --> String "123"
42 Number 0 --> String "0"
43 Number -1 --> String "-1"
44
45Conversion from a String to a Number is done by converting the first digits
46to a number. Hexadecimal "0xf9" and Octal "017" numbers are recognized. If
47the String doesn't start with digits, the result is zero. Examples: >
48 String "456" --> Number 456
49 String "6bar" --> Number 6
50 String "foo" --> Number 0
51 String "0xf1" --> Number 241
52 String "0100" --> Number 64
53 String "-8" --> Number -8
54 String "+8" --> Number 0
55
56To force conversion from String to Number, add zero to it: >
57 :echo "0100" + 0
58
59For boolean operators Numbers are used. Zero is FALSE, non-zero is TRUE.
60
61Note that in the command >
62 :if "foo"
63"foo" is converted to 0, which means FALSE. To test for a non-empty string,
64use strlen(): >
65 :if strlen("foo")
66
67If you need to know the type of a variable or expression, use the |type()|
68function.
69
70When the '!' flag is included in the 'viminfo' option, global variables that
71start with an uppercase letter, and don't contain a lowercase letter, are
72stored in the viminfo file |viminfo-file|.
73
74When the 'sessionoptions' option contains "global", global variables that
75start with an uppercase letter and contain at least one lowercase letter are
76stored in the session file |session-file|.
77
78variable name can be stored where ~
79my_var_6 not
80My_Var_6 session file
81MY_VAR_6 viminfo file
82
83
84It's possible to form a variable name with curly braces, see
85|curly-braces-names|.
86
87==============================================================================
882. Expression syntax *expression-syntax*
89
90Expression syntax summary, from least to most significant:
91
92|expr1| expr2 ? expr1 : expr1 if-then-else
93
94|expr2| expr3 || expr3 .. logical OR
95
96|expr3| expr4 && expr4 .. logical AND
97
98|expr4| expr5 == expr5 equal
99 expr5 != expr5 not equal
100 expr5 > expr5 greater than
101 expr5 >= expr5 greater than or equal
102 expr5 < expr5 smaller than
103 expr5 <= expr5 smaller than or equal
104 expr5 =~ expr5 regexp matches
105 expr5 !~ expr5 regexp doesn't match
106
107 expr5 ==? expr5 equal, ignoring case
108 expr5 ==# expr5 equal, match case
109 etc. As above, append ? for ignoring case, # for
110 matching case
111
112|expr5| expr6 + expr6 .. number addition
113 expr6 - expr6 .. number subtraction
114 expr6 . expr6 .. string concatenation
115
116|expr6| expr7 * expr7 .. number multiplication
117 expr7 / expr7 .. number division
118 expr7 % expr7 .. number modulo
119
120|expr7| ! expr7 logical NOT
121 - expr7 unary minus
122 + expr7 unary plus
123 expr8
124
125|expr8| expr9[expr1] index in String
126
127|expr9| number number constant
128 "string" string constant
129 'string' literal string constant
130 &option option value
131 (expr1) nested expression
132 variable internal variable
133 va{ria}ble internal variable with curly braces
134 $VAR environment variable
135 @r contents of register 'r'
136 function(expr1, ...) function call
137 func{ti}on(expr1, ...) function call with curly braces
138
139
140".." indicates that the operations in this level can be concatenated.
141Example: >
142 &nu || &list && &shell == "csh"
143
144All expressions within one level are parsed from left to right.
145
146
147expr1 *expr1* *E109*
148-----
149
150expr2 ? expr1 : expr1
151
152The expression before the '?' is evaluated to a number. If it evaluates to
153non-zero, the result is the value of the expression between the '?' and ':',
154otherwise the result is the value of the expression after the ':'.
155Example: >
156 :echo lnum == 1 ? "top" : lnum
157
158Since the first expression is an "expr2", it cannot contain another ?:. The
159other two expressions can, thus allow for recursive use of ?:.
160Example: >
161 :echo lnum == 1 ? "top" : lnum == 1000 ? "last" : lnum
162
163To keep this readable, using |line-continuation| is suggested: >
164 :echo lnum == 1
165 :\ ? "top"
166 :\ : lnum == 1000
167 :\ ? "last"
168 :\ : lnum
169
170
171expr2 and expr3 *expr2* *expr3*
172---------------
173
174 *expr-barbar* *expr-&&*
175The "||" and "&&" operators take one argument on each side. The arguments
176are (converted to) Numbers. The result is:
177
178 input output ~
179n1 n2 n1 || n2 n1 && n2 ~
180zero zero zero zero
181zero non-zero non-zero zero
182non-zero zero non-zero zero
183non-zero non-zero non-zero non-zero
184
185The operators can be concatenated, for example: >
186
187 &nu || &list && &shell == "csh"
188
189Note that "&&" takes precedence over "||", so this has the meaning of: >
190
191 &nu || (&list && &shell == "csh")
192
193Once the result is known, the expression "short-circuits", that is, further
194arguments are not evaluated. This is like what happens in C. For example: >
195
196 let a = 1
197 echo a || b
198
199This is valid even if there is no variable called "b" because "a" is non-zero,
200so the result must be non-zero. Similarly below: >
201
202 echo exists("b") && b == "yes"
203
204This is valid whether "b" has been defined or not. The second clause will
205only be evaluated if "b" has been defined.
206
207
208expr4 *expr4*
209-----
210
211expr5 {cmp} expr5
212
213Compare two expr5 expressions, resulting in a 0 if it evaluates to false, or 1
214if it evaluates to true.
215
216 *expr-==* *expr-!=* *expr->* *expr->=*
217 *expr-<* *expr-<=* *expr-=~* *expr-!~*
218 *expr-==#* *expr-!=#* *expr->#* *expr->=#*
219 *expr-<#* *expr-<=#* *expr-=~#* *expr-!~#*
220 *expr-==?* *expr-!=?* *expr->?* *expr->=?*
221 *expr-<?* *expr-<=?* *expr-=~?* *expr-!~?*
222 use 'ignorecase' match case ignore case ~
223equal == ==# ==?
224not equal != !=# !=?
225greater than > ># >?
226greater than or equal >= >=# >=?
227smaller than < <# <?
228smaller than or equal <= <=# <=?
229regexp matches =~ =~# =~?
230regexp doesn't match !~ !~# !~?
231
232Examples:
233"abc" ==# "Abc" evaluates to 0
234"abc" ==? "Abc" evaluates to 1
235"abc" == "Abc" evaluates to 1 if 'ignorecase' is set, 0 otherwise
236
237When comparing a String with a Number, the String is converted to a Number,
238and the comparison is done on Numbers. This means that "0 == 'x'" is TRUE,
239because 'x' converted to a Number is zero.
240
241When comparing two Strings, this is done with strcmp() or stricmp(). This
242results in the mathematical difference (comparing byte values), not
243necessarily the alphabetical difference in the local language.
244
245When using the operators with a trailing '#", or the short version and
246'ignorecase' is off, the comparing is done with strcmp().
247
248When using the operators with a trailing '?', or the short version and
249'ignorecase' is set, the comparing is done with stricmp().
250
251The "=~" and "!~" operators match the lefthand argument with the righthand
252argument, which is used as a pattern. See |pattern| for what a pattern is.
253This matching is always done like 'magic' was set and 'cpoptions' is empty, no
254matter what the actual value of 'magic' or 'cpoptions' is. This makes scripts
255portable. To avoid backslashes in the regexp pattern to be doubled, use a
256single-quote string, see |literal-string|.
257Since a string is considered to be a single line, a multi-line pattern
258(containing \n, backslash-n) will not match. However, a literal NL character
259can be matched like an ordinary character. Examples:
260 "foo\nbar" =~ "\n" evaluates to 1
261 "foo\nbar" =~ "\\n" evaluates to 0
262
263
264expr5 and expr6 *expr5* *expr6*
265---------------
266expr6 + expr6 .. number addition *expr-+*
267expr6 - expr6 .. number subtraction *expr--*
268expr6 . expr6 .. string concatenation *expr-.*
269
270expr7 * expr7 .. number multiplication *expr-star*
271expr7 / expr7 .. number division *expr-/*
272expr7 % expr7 .. number modulo *expr-%*
273
274For all, except ".", Strings are converted to Numbers.
275
276Note the difference between "+" and ".":
277 "123" + "456" = 579
278 "123" . "456" = "123456"
279
280When the righthand side of '/' is zero, the result is 0x7fffffff.
281When the righthand side of '%' is zero, the result is 0.
282
283
284expr7 *expr7*
285-----
286! expr7 logical NOT *expr-!*
287- expr7 unary minus *expr-unary--*
288+ expr7 unary plus *expr-unary-+*
289
290For '!' non-zero becomes zero, zero becomes one.
291For '-' the sign of the number is changed.
292For '+' the number is unchanged.
293
294A String will be converted to a Number first.
295
296These three can be repeated and mixed. Examples:
297 !-1 == 0
298 !!8 == 1
299 --9 == 9
300
301
302expr8 *expr8*
303-----
304expr9[expr1] index in String *expr-[]* *E111*
305
306This results in a String that contains the expr1'th single byte from expr9.
307expr9 is used as a String, expr1 as a Number. Note that this doesn't work for
308multi-byte encodings.
309
310Note that index zero gives the first character. This is like it works in C.
311Careful: text column numbers start with one! Example, to get the character
312under the cursor: >
313 :let c = getline(line("."))[col(".") - 1]
314
315If the length of the String is less than the index, the result is an empty
316String.
317
318 *expr9*
319number
320------
321number number constant *expr-number*
322
323Decimal, Hexadecimal (starting with 0x or 0X), or Octal (starting with 0).
324
325
326string *expr-string* *E114*
327------
328"string" string constant *expr-quote*
329
330Note that double quotes are used.
331
332A string constant accepts these special characters:
333\... three-digit octal number (e.g., "\316")
334\.. two-digit octal number (must be followed by non-digit)
335\. one-digit octal number (must be followed by non-digit)
336\x.. byte specified with two hex numbers (e.g., "\x1f")
337\x. byte specified with one hex number (must be followed by non-hex char)
338\X.. same as \x..
339\X. same as \x.
340\u.... character specified with up to 4 hex numbers, stored according to the
341 current value of 'encoding' (e.g., "\u02a4")
342\U.... same as \u....
343\b backspace <BS>
344\e escape <Esc>
345\f formfeed <FF>
346\n newline <NL>
347\r return <CR>
348\t tab <Tab>
349\\ backslash
350\" double quote
351\<xxx> Special key named "xxx". e.g. "\<C-W>" for CTRL-W.
352
353Note that "\000" and "\x00" force the end of the string.
354
355
356literal-string *literal-string* *E115*
357---------------
358'string' literal string constant *expr-'*
359
360Note that single quotes are used.
361
362This string is taken literally. No backslashes are removed or have a special
363meaning. A literal-string cannot contain a single quote. Use a normal string
364for that.
365
366
367option *expr-option* *E112* *E113*
368------
369&option option value, local value if possible
370&g:option global option value
371&l:option local option value
372
373Examples: >
374 echo "tabstop is " . &tabstop
375 if &insertmode
376
377Any option name can be used here. See |options|. When using the local value
378and there is no buffer-local or window-local value, the global value is used
379anyway.
380
381
382register *expr-register*
383--------
384@r contents of register 'r'
385
386The result is the contents of the named register, as a single string.
387Newlines are inserted where required. To get the contents of the unnamed
388register use @" or @@. The '=' register can not be used here. See
389|registers| for an explanation of the available registers.
390
391
392nesting *expr-nesting* *E110*
393-------
394(expr1) nested expression
395
396
397environment variable *expr-env*
398--------------------
399$VAR environment variable
400
401The String value of any environment variable. When it is not defined, the
402result is an empty string.
403 *expr-env-expand*
404Note that there is a difference between using $VAR directly and using
405expand("$VAR"). Using it directly will only expand environment variables that
406are known inside the current Vim session. Using expand() will first try using
407the environment variables known inside the current Vim session. If that
408fails, a shell will be used to expand the variable. This can be slow, but it
409does expand all variables that the shell knows about. Example: >
410 :echo $version
411 :echo expand("$version")
412The first one probably doesn't echo anything, the second echoes the $version
413variable (if your shell supports it).
414
415
416internal variable *expr-variable*
417-----------------
418variable internal variable
419See below |internal-variables|.
420
421
422function call *expr-function* *E116* *E117* *E118* *E119* *E120*
423-------------
424function(expr1, ...) function call
425See below |functions|.
426
427
428==============================================================================
4293. Internal variable *internal-variables* *E121*
430 *E461*
431An internal variable name can be made up of letters, digits and '_'. But it
432cannot start with a digit. It's also possible to use curly braces, see
433|curly-braces-names|.
434
435An internal variable is created with the ":let" command |:let|.
436An internal variable is destroyed with the ":unlet" command |:unlet|.
437Using a name that isn't an internal variable, or an internal variable that has
438been destroyed, results in an error.
439
440There are several name spaces for variables. Which one is to be used is
441specified by what is prepended:
442
443 (nothing) In a function: local to a function; otherwise: global
444|buffer-variable| b: Local to the current buffer.
445|window-variable| w: Local to the current window.
446|global-variable| g: Global.
447|local-variable| l: Local to a function.
448|script-variable| s: Local to a |:source|'ed Vim script.
449|function-argument| a: Function argument (only inside a function).
450|vim-variable| v: Global, predefined by Vim.
451
452 *buffer-variable* *b:var*
453A variable name that is preceded with "b:" is local to the current buffer.
454Thus you can have several "b:foo" variables, one for each buffer.
455This kind of variable is deleted when the buffer is wiped out or deleted with
456|:bdelete|.
457
458One local buffer variable is predefined:
459 *b:changedtick-variable* *changetick*
460b:changedtick The total number of changes to the current buffer. It is
461 incremented for each change. An undo command is also a change
462 in this case. This can be used to perform an action only when
463 the buffer has changed. Example: >
464 :if my_changedtick != b:changedtick
465 : let my_changedtick = b:changedtick
466 : call My_Update()
467 :endif
468<
469 *window-variable* *w:var*
470A variable name that is preceded with "w:" is local to the current window. It
471is deleted when the window is closed.
472
473 *global-variable* *g:var*
474Inside functions global variables are accessed with "g:". Omitting this will
475access a variable local to a function. But "g:" can also be used in any other
476place if you like.
477
478 *local-variable* *l:var*
479Inside functions local variables are accessed without prepending anything.
480But you can also prepend "l:" if you like.
481
482 *script-variable* *s:var*
483In a Vim script variables starting with "s:" can be used. They cannot be
484accessed from outside of the scripts, thus are local to the script.
485
486They can be used in:
487- commands executed while the script is sourced
488- functions defined in the script
489- autocommands defined in the script
490- functions and autocommands defined in functions and autocommands which were
491 defined in the script (recursively)
492- user defined commands defined in the script
493Thus not in:
494- other scripts sourced from this one
495- mappings
496- etc.
497
498script variables can be used to avoid conflicts with global variable names.
499Take this example:
500
501 let s:counter = 0
502 function MyCounter()
503 let s:counter = s:counter + 1
504 echo s:counter
505 endfunction
506 command Tick call MyCounter()
507
508You can now invoke "Tick" from any script, and the "s:counter" variable in
509that script will not be changed, only the "s:counter" in the script where
510"Tick" was defined is used.
511
512Another example that does the same: >
513
514 let s:counter = 0
515 command Tick let s:counter = s:counter + 1 | echo s:counter
516
517When calling a function and invoking a user-defined command, the context for
Bram Moolenaar69a7cb42004-06-20 12:51:53 +0000518script variables is set to the script where the function or command was
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000519defined.
520
521The script variables are also available when a function is defined inside a
522function that is defined in a script. Example: >
523
524 let s:counter = 0
525 function StartCounting(incr)
526 if a:incr
527 function MyCounter()
528 let s:counter = s:counter + 1
529 endfunction
530 else
531 function MyCounter()
532 let s:counter = s:counter - 1
533 endfunction
534 endif
535 endfunction
536
537This defines the MyCounter() function either for counting up or counting down
538when calling StartCounting(). It doesn't matter from where StartCounting() is
539called, the s:counter variable will be accessible in MyCounter().
540
541When the same script is sourced again it will use the same script variables.
542They will remain valid as long as Vim is running. This can be used to
543maintain a counter: >
544
545 if !exists("s:counter")
546 let s:counter = 1
547 echo "script executed for the first time"
548 else
549 let s:counter = s:counter + 1
550 echo "script executed " . s:counter . " times now"
551 endif
552
553Note that this means that filetype plugins don't get a different set of script
554variables for each buffer. Use local buffer variables instead |b:var|.
555
556
557Predefined Vim variables: *vim-variable* *v:var*
558
559 *v:charconvert_from* *charconvert_from-variable*
560v:charconvert_from
561 The name of the character encoding of a file to be converted.
562 Only valid while evaluating the 'charconvert' option.
563
564 *v:charconvert_to* *charconvert_to-variable*
565v:charconvert_to
566 The name of the character encoding of a file after conversion.
567 Only valid while evaluating the 'charconvert' option.
568
569 *v:cmdarg* *cmdarg-variable*
570v:cmdarg This variable is used for two purposes:
571 1. The extra arguments given to a file read/write command.
572 Currently these are "++enc=" and "++ff=". This variable is
573 set before an autocommand event for a file read/write
574 command is triggered. There is a leading space to make it
575 possible to append this variable directly after the
576 read/write command. Note: The "+cmd" argument isn't
577 included here, because it will be executed anyway.
578 2. When printing a PostScript file with ":hardcopy" this is
579 the argument for the ":hardcopy" command. This can be used
580 in 'printexpr'.
581
582 *v:cmdbang* *cmdbang-variable*
583v:cmdbang Set like v:cmdarg for a file read/write command. When a "!"
584 was used the value is 1, otherwise it is 0. Note that this
585 can only be used in autocommands. For user commands |<bang>|
586 can be used.
587
588 *v:count* *count-variable*
589v:count The count given for the last Normal mode command. Can be used
590 to get the count before a mapping. Read-only. Example: >
591 :map _x :<C-U>echo "the count is " . v:count<CR>
592< Note: The <C-U> is required to remove the line range that you
593 get when typing ':' after a count.
594 "count" also works, for backwards compatibility.
595
596 *v:count1* *count1-variable*
597v:count1 Just like "v:count", but defaults to one when no count is
598 used.
599
600 *v:ctype* *ctype-variable*
601v:ctype The current locale setting for characters of the runtime
602 environment. This allows Vim scripts to be aware of the
603 current locale encoding. Technical: it's the value of
604 LC_CTYPE. When not using a locale the value is "C".
605 This variable can not be set directly, use the |:language|
606 command.
607 See |multi-lang|.
608
609 *v:dying* *dying-variable*
610v:dying Normally zero. When a deadly signal is caught it's set to
611 one. When multiple signals are caught the number increases.
612 Can be used in an autocommand to check if Vim didn't
613 terminate normally. {only works on Unix}
614 Example: >
615 :au VimLeave * if v:dying | echo "\nAAAAaaaarrrggghhhh!!!\n" | endif
616<
617 *v:errmsg* *errmsg-variable*
618v:errmsg Last given error message. It's allowed to set this variable.
619 Example: >
620 :let v:errmsg = ""
621 :silent! next
622 :if v:errmsg != ""
623 : ... handle error
624< "errmsg" also works, for backwards compatibility.
625
626 *v:exception* *exception-variable*
627v:exception The value of the exception most recently caught and not
628 finished. See also |v:throwpoint| and |throw-variables|.
629 Example: >
630 :try
631 : throw "oops"
632 :catch /.*/
633 : echo "caught" v:exception
634 :endtry
635< Output: "caught oops".
636
637 *v:fname_in* *fname_in-variable*
638v:fname_in The name of the input file. Only valid while evaluating:
639 option used for ~
640 'charconvert' file to be converted
641 'diffexpr' original file
642 'patchexpr' original file
643 'printexpr' file to be printed
644
645 *v:fname_out* *fname_out-variable*
646v:fname_out The name of the output file. Only valid while
647 evaluating:
648 option used for ~
649 'charconvert' resulting converted file (*)
650 'diffexpr' output of diff
651 'patchexpr' resulting patched file
652 (*) When doing conversion for a write command (e.g., ":w
653 file") it will be equal to v:fname_in. When doing conversion
654 for a read command (e.g., ":e file") it will be a temporary
655 file and different from v:fname_in.
656
657 *v:fname_new* *fname_new-variable*
658v:fname_new The name of the new version of the file. Only valid while
659 evaluating 'diffexpr'.
660
661 *v:fname_diff* *fname_diff-variable*
662v:fname_diff The name of the diff (patch) file. Only valid while
663 evaluating 'patchexpr'.
664
665 *v:folddashes* *folddashes-variable*
666v:folddashes Used for 'foldtext': dashes representing foldlevel of a closed
667 fold.
668 Read-only. |fold-foldtext|
669
670 *v:foldlevel* *foldlevel-variable*
671v:foldlevel Used for 'foldtext': foldlevel of closed fold.
672 Read-only. |fold-foldtext|
673
674 *v:foldend* *foldend-variable*
675v:foldend Used for 'foldtext': last line of closed fold.
676 Read-only. |fold-foldtext|
677
678 *v:foldstart* *foldstart-variable*
679v:foldstart Used for 'foldtext': first line of closed fold.
680 Read-only. |fold-foldtext|
681
682 *v:lang* *lang-variable*
683v:lang The current locale setting for messages of the runtime
684 environment. This allows Vim scripts to be aware of the
685 current language. Technical: it's the value of LC_MESSAGES.
686 The value is system dependent.
687 This variable can not be set directly, use the |:language|
688 command.
689 It can be different from |v:ctype| when messages are desired
690 in a different language than what is used for character
691 encoding. See |multi-lang|.
692
693 *v:lc_time* *lc_time-variable*
694v:lc_time The current locale setting for time messages of the runtime
695 environment. This allows Vim scripts to be aware of the
696 current language. Technical: it's the value of LC_TIME.
697 This variable can not be set directly, use the |:language|
698 command. See |multi-lang|.
699
700 *v:lnum* *lnum-variable*
701v:lnum Line number for the 'foldexpr' and 'indentexpr' expressions.
702 Only valid while one of these expressions is being evaluated.
703 Read-only. |fold-expr| 'indentexpr'
704
705 *v:prevcount* *prevcount-variable*
706v:prevcount The count given for the last but one Normal mode command.
707 This is the v:count value of the previous command. Useful if
708 you want to cancel Visual mode and then use the count. >
709 :vmap % <Esc>:call MyFilter(v:prevcount)<CR>
710< Read-only.
711
712 *v:progname* *progname-variable*
713v:progname Contains the name (with path removed) with which Vim was
714 invoked. Allows you to do special initialisations for "view",
715 "evim" etc., or any other name you might symlink to Vim.
716 Read-only.
717
718 *v:register* *register-variable*
719v:register The name of the register supplied to the last normal mode
720 command. Empty if none were supplied. |getreg()| |setreg()|
721
722 *v:servername* *servername-variable*
723v:servername The resulting registered |x11-clientserver| name if any.
724 Read-only.
725
726 *v:shell_error* *shell_error-variable*
727v:shell_error Result of the last shell command. When non-zero, the last
728 shell command had an error. When zero, there was no problem.
729 This only works when the shell returns the error code to Vim.
730 The value -1 is often used when the command could not be
731 executed. Read-only.
732 Example: >
733 :!mv foo bar
734 :if v:shell_error
735 : echo 'could not rename "foo" to "bar"!'
736 :endif
737< "shell_error" also works, for backwards compatibility.
738
739 *v:statusmsg* *statusmsg-variable*
740v:statusmsg Last given status message. It's allowed to set this variable.
741
742 *v:termresponse* *termresponse-variable*
743v:termresponse The escape sequence returned by the terminal for the |t_RV|
744 termcap entry. It is set when Vim receives an escape sequence
745 that starts with ESC [ or CSI and ends in a 'c', with only
746 digits, ';' and '.' in between.
747 When this option is set, the TermResponse autocommand event is
748 fired, so that you can react to the response from the
749 terminal.
750 The response from a new xterm is: "<Esc>[ Pp ; Pv ; Pc c". Pp
751 is the terminal type: 0 for vt100 and 1 for vt220. Pv is the
752 patch level (since this was introduced in patch 95, it's
753 always 95 or bigger). Pc is always zero.
754 {only when compiled with |+termresponse| feature}
755
756 *v:this_session* *this_session-variable*
757v:this_session Full filename of the last loaded or saved session file. See
758 |:mksession|. It is allowed to set this variable. When no
759 session file has been saved, this variable is empty.
760 "this_session" also works, for backwards compatibility.
761
762 *v:throwpoint* *throwpoint-variable*
763v:throwpoint The point where the exception most recently caught and not
764 finished was thrown. Not set when commands are typed. See
765 also |v:exception| and |throw-variables|.
766 Example: >
767 :try
768 : throw "oops"
769 :catch /.*/
770 : echo "Exception from" v:throwpoint
771 :endtry
772< Output: "Exception from test.vim, line 2"
773
774 *v:version* *version-variable*
775v:version Version number of Vim: Major version number times 100 plus
776 minor version number. Version 5.0 is 500. Version 5.1 (5.01)
777 is 501. Read-only. "version" also works, for backwards
778 compatibility.
779 Use |has()| to check if a certain patch was included, e.g.: >
780 if has("patch123")
781< Note that patch numbers are specific to the version, thus both
782 version 5.0 and 5.1 may have a patch 123, but these are
783 completely different.
784
785 *v:warningmsg* *warningmsg-variable*
786v:warningmsg Last given warning message. It's allowed to set this variable.
787
788==============================================================================
7894. Builtin Functions *functions*
790
791See |function-list| for a list grouped by what the function is used for.
792
793(Use CTRL-] on the function name to jump to the full explanation)
794
795USAGE RESULT DESCRIPTION ~
796
797append( {lnum}, {string}) Number append {string} below line {lnum}
798argc() Number number of files in the argument list
799argidx() Number current index in the argument list
800argv( {nr}) String {nr} entry of the argument list
801browse( {save}, {title}, {initdir}, {default})
802 String put up a file requester
803bufexists( {expr}) Number TRUE if buffer {expr} exists
804buflisted( {expr}) Number TRUE if buffer {expr} is listed
805bufloaded( {expr}) Number TRUE if buffer {expr} is loaded
806bufname( {expr}) String Name of the buffer {expr}
807bufnr( {expr}) Number Number of the buffer {expr}
808bufwinnr( {expr}) Number window number of buffer {expr}
809byte2line( {byte}) Number line number at byte count {byte}
810char2nr( {expr}) Number ASCII value of first char in {expr}
811cindent( {lnum}) Number C indent for line {lnum}
812col( {expr}) Number column nr of cursor or mark
813confirm( {msg} [, {choices} [, {default} [, {type}]]])
814 Number number of choice picked by user
815cscope_connection( [{num} , {dbpath} [, {prepend}]])
816 Number checks existence of cscope connection
817cursor( {lnum}, {col}) Number position cursor at {lnum}, {col}
818delete( {fname}) Number delete file {fname}
819did_filetype() Number TRUE if FileType autocommand event used
820escape( {string}, {chars}) String escape {chars} in {string} with '\'
821eventhandler( ) Number TRUE if inside an event handler
822executable( {expr}) Number 1 if executable {expr} exists
823exists( {expr}) Number TRUE if {expr} exists
824expand( {expr}) String expand special keywords in {expr}
825filereadable( {file}) Number TRUE if {file} is a readable file
826filewritable( {file}) Number TRUE if {file} is a writable file
827fnamemodify( {fname}, {mods}) String modify file name
828foldclosed( {lnum}) Number first line of fold at {lnum} if closed
829foldclosedend( {lnum}) Number last line of fold at {lnum} if closed
830foldlevel( {lnum}) Number fold level at {lnum}
831foldtext( ) String line displayed for closed fold
832foreground( ) Number bring the Vim window to the foreground
833getchar( [expr]) Number get one character from the user
834getcharmod( ) Number modifiers for the last typed character
835getbufvar( {expr}, {varname}) variable {varname} in buffer {expr}
836getcmdline() String return the current command-line
837getcmdpos() Number return cursor position in command-line
838getcwd() String the current working directory
839getfsize( {fname}) Number size in bytes of file
840getftime( {fname}) Number last modification time of file
841getline( {lnum}) String line {lnum} from current buffer
842getreg( [{regname}]) String contents of register
843getregtype( [{regname}]) String type of register
844getwinposx() Number X coord in pixels of GUI Vim window
845getwinposy() Number Y coord in pixels of GUI Vim window
846getwinvar( {nr}, {varname}) variable {varname} in window {nr}
847glob( {expr}) String expand file wildcards in {expr}
848globpath( {path}, {expr}) String do glob({expr}) for all dirs in {path}
849has( {feature}) Number TRUE if feature {feature} supported
850hasmapto( {what} [, {mode}]) Number TRUE if mapping to {what} exists
851histadd( {history},{item}) String add an item to a history
852histdel( {history} [, {item}]) String remove an item from a history
853histget( {history} [, {index}]) String get the item {index} from a history
854histnr( {history}) Number highest index of a history
855hlexists( {name}) Number TRUE if highlight group {name} exists
856hlID( {name}) Number syntax ID of highlight group {name}
857hostname() String name of the machine Vim is running on
858iconv( {expr}, {from}, {to}) String convert encoding of {expr}
859indent( {lnum}) Number indent of line {lnum}
860input( {prompt} [, {text}]) String get input from the user
861inputdialog( {p} [, {t} [, {c}]]) String like input() but in a GUI dialog
862inputrestore() Number restore typeahead
863inputsave() Number save and clear typeahead
864inputsecret( {prompt} [, {text}]) String like input() but hiding the text
865isdirectory( {directory}) Number TRUE if {directory} is a directory
866libcall( {lib}, {func}, {arg}) String call {func} in library {lib} with {arg}
867libcallnr( {lib}, {func}, {arg}) Number idem, but return a Number
868line( {expr}) Number line nr of cursor, last line or mark
869line2byte( {lnum}) Number byte count of line {lnum}
870lispindent( {lnum}) Number Lisp indent for line {lnum}
871localtime() Number current time
872maparg( {name}[, {mode}]) String rhs of mapping {name} in mode {mode}
873mapcheck( {name}[, {mode}]) String check for mappings matching {name}
874match( {expr}, {pat}[, {start}])
875 Number position where {pat} matches in {expr}
876matchend( {expr}, {pat}[, {start}])
877 Number position where {pat} ends in {expr}
878matchstr( {expr}, {pat}[, {start}])
879 String match of {pat} in {expr}
880mode() String current editing mode
881nextnonblank( {lnum}) Number line nr of non-blank line >= {lnum}
882nr2char( {expr}) String single char with ASCII value {expr}
883prevnonblank( {lnum}) Number line nr of non-blank line <= {lnum}
884remote_expr( {server}, {string} [, {idvar}])
885 String send expression
886remote_foreground( {server}) Number bring Vim server to the foreground
887remote_peek( {serverid} [, {retvar}])
888 Number check for reply string
889remote_read( {serverid}) String read reply string
890remote_send( {server}, {string} [, {idvar}])
891 String send key sequence
892rename( {from}, {to}) Number rename (move) file from {from} to {to}
893resolve( {filename}) String get filename a shortcut points to
894search( {pattern} [, {flags}]) Number search for {pattern}
895searchpair( {start}, {middle}, {end} [, {flags} [, {skip}]])
896 Number search for other end of start/end pair
897server2client( {clientid}, {string})
898 Number send reply string
899serverlist() String get a list of available servers
900setbufvar( {expr}, {varname}, {val}) set {varname} in buffer {expr} to {val}
901setcmdpos( {pos}) Number set cursor position in command-line
902setline( {lnum}, {line}) Number set line {lnum} to {line}
903setreg( {n}, {v}[, {opt}]) Number set register to value and type
904setwinvar( {nr}, {varname}, {val}) set {varname} in window {nr} to {val}
905simplify( {filename}) String simplify filename as much as possible
906strftime( {format}[, {time}]) String time in specified format
907stridx( {haystack}, {needle}) Number first index of {needle} in {haystack}
908strlen( {expr}) Number length of the String {expr}
909strpart( {src}, {start}[, {len}])
910 String {len} characters of {src} at {start}
911strridx( {haystack}, {needle}) Number last index of {needle} in {haystack}
912strtrans( {expr}) String translate string to make it printable
913submatch( {nr}) String specific match in ":substitute"
914substitute( {expr}, {pat}, {sub}, {flags})
915 String all {pat} in {expr} replaced with {sub}
916synID( {line}, {col}, {trans}) Number syntax ID at {line} and {col}
917synIDattr( {synID}, {what} [, {mode}])
918 String attribute {what} of syntax ID {synID}
919synIDtrans( {synID}) Number translated syntax ID of {synID}
920system( {expr}) String output of shell command {expr}
921tempname() String name for a temporary file
922tolower( {expr}) String the String {expr} switched to lowercase
923toupper( {expr}) String the String {expr} switched to uppercase
924type( {name}) Number type of variable {name}
925virtcol( {expr}) Number screen column of cursor or mark
926visualmode( [expr]) String last visual mode used
927winbufnr( {nr}) Number buffer number of window {nr}
928wincol() Number window column of the cursor
929winheight( {nr}) Number height of window {nr}
930winline() Number window line of the cursor
931winnr() Number number of current window
932winrestcmd() String returns command to restore window sizes
933winwidth( {nr}) Number width of window {nr}
934
935append({lnum}, {string}) *append()*
936 Append the text {string} after line {lnum} in the current
937 buffer. {lnum} can be zero, to insert a line before the first
938 one. Returns 1 for failure ({lnum} out of range) or 0 for
939 success.
940
941 *argc()*
942argc() The result is the number of files in the argument list of the
943 current window. See |arglist|.
944
945 *argidx()*
946argidx() The result is the current index in the argument list. 0 is
947 the first file. argc() - 1 is the last one. See |arglist|.
948
949 *argv()*
950argv({nr}) The result is the {nr}th file in the argument list of the
951 current window. See |arglist|. "argv(0)" is the first one.
952 Example: >
953 :let i = 0
954 :while i < argc()
955 : let f = escape(argv(i), '. ')
956 : exe 'amenu Arg.' . f . ' :e ' . f . '<CR>'
957 : let i = i + 1
958 :endwhile
959<
960 *browse()*
961browse({save}, {title}, {initdir}, {default})
962 Put up a file requester. This only works when "has("browse")"
963 returns non-zero (only in some GUI versions).
964 The input fields are:
965 {save} when non-zero, select file to write
966 {title} title for the requester
967 {initdir} directory to start browsing in
968 {default} default file name
969 When the "Cancel" button is hit, something went wrong, or
970 browsing is not possible, an empty string is returned.
971
972bufexists({expr}) *bufexists()*
973 The result is a Number, which is non-zero if a buffer called
974 {expr} exists.
Bram Moolenaar69a7cb42004-06-20 12:51:53 +0000975 If the {expr} argument is a number, buffer numbers are used.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000976 If the {expr} argument is a string it must match a buffer name
Bram Moolenaar69a7cb42004-06-20 12:51:53 +0000977 exactly. The name can be:
978 - Relative to the current directory.
979 - A full path.
980 - The name of a buffer with 'filetype' set to "nofile".
981 - A URL name.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000982 Unlisted buffers will be found.
983 Note that help files are listed by their short name in the
984 output of |:buffers|, but bufexists() requires using their
985 long name to be able to find them.
986 Use "bufexists(0)" to test for the existence of an alternate
987 file name.
988 *buffer_exists()*
989 Obsolete name: buffer_exists().
990
991buflisted({expr}) *buflisted()*
992 The result is a Number, which is non-zero if a buffer called
993 {expr} exists and is listed (has the 'buflisted' option set).
Bram Moolenaar69a7cb42004-06-20 12:51:53 +0000994 The {expr} argument is used like with |bufexists()|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +0000995
996bufloaded({expr}) *bufloaded()*
997 The result is a Number, which is non-zero if a buffer called
998 {expr} exists and is loaded (shown in a window or hidden).
Bram Moolenaar69a7cb42004-06-20 12:51:53 +0000999 The {expr} argument is used like with |bufexists()|.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001000
1001bufname({expr}) *bufname()*
1002 The result is the name of a buffer, as it is displayed by the
1003 ":ls" command.
1004 If {expr} is a Number, that buffer number's name is given.
1005 Number zero is the alternate buffer for the current window.
1006 If {expr} is a String, it is used as a |file-pattern| to match
1007 with the buffer names. This is always done like 'magic' is
1008 set and 'cpoptions' is empty. When there is more than one
1009 match an empty string is returned.
1010 "" or "%" can be used for the current buffer, "#" for the
1011 alternate buffer.
1012 A full match is preferred, otherwise a match at the start, end
1013 or middle of the buffer name is accepted.
1014 Listed buffers are found first. If there is a single match
1015 with a listed buffer, that one is returned. Next unlisted
1016 buffers are searched for.
1017 If the {expr} is a String, but you want to use it as a buffer
1018 number, force it to be a Number by adding zero to it: >
1019 :echo bufname("3" + 0)
1020< If the buffer doesn't exist, or doesn't have a name, an empty
1021 string is returned. >
1022 bufname("#") alternate buffer name
1023 bufname(3) name of buffer 3
1024 bufname("%") name of current buffer
1025 bufname("file2") name of buffer where "file2" matches.
1026< *buffer_name()*
1027 Obsolete name: buffer_name().
1028
1029 *bufnr()*
1030bufnr({expr}) The result is the number of a buffer, as it is displayed by
1031 the ":ls" command. For the use of {expr}, see |bufname()|
1032 above. If the buffer doesn't exist, -1 is returned.
1033 bufnr("$") is the last buffer: >
1034 :let last_buffer = bufnr("$")
1035< The result is a Number, which is the highest buffer number
1036 of existing buffers. Note that not all buffers with a smaller
1037 number necessarily exist, because ":bwipeout" may have removed
1038 them. Use bufexists() to test for the existence of a buffer.
1039 *buffer_number()*
1040 Obsolete name: buffer_number().
1041 *last_buffer_nr()*
1042 Obsolete name for bufnr("$"): last_buffer_nr().
1043
1044bufwinnr({expr}) *bufwinnr()*
1045 The result is a Number, which is the number of the first
1046 window associated with buffer {expr}. For the use of {expr},
1047 see |bufname()| above. If buffer {expr} doesn't exist or
1048 there is no such window, -1 is returned. Example: >
1049
1050 echo "A window containing buffer 1 is " . (bufwinnr(1))
1051
1052< The number can be used with |CTRL-W_w| and ":wincmd w"
1053 |:wincmd|.
1054
1055
1056byte2line({byte}) *byte2line()*
1057 Return the line number that contains the character at byte
1058 count {byte} in the current buffer. This includes the
1059 end-of-line character, depending on the 'fileformat' option
1060 for the current buffer. The first character has byte count
1061 one.
1062 Also see |line2byte()|, |go| and |:goto|.
1063 {not available when compiled without the |+byte_offset|
1064 feature}
1065
1066char2nr({expr}) *char2nr()*
1067 Return number value of the first char in {expr}. Examples: >
1068 char2nr(" ") returns 32
1069 char2nr("ABC") returns 65
1070< The current 'encoding' is used. Example for "utf-8": >
1071 char2nr("á") returns 225
1072 char2nr("á"[0]) returns 195
1073
1074cindent({lnum}) *cindent()*
1075 Get the amount of indent for line {lnum} according the C
1076 indenting rules, as with 'cindent'.
1077 The indent is counted in spaces, the value of 'tabstop' is
1078 relevant. {lnum} is used just like in |getline()|.
1079 When {lnum} is invalid or Vim was not compiled the |+cindent|
1080 feature, -1 is returned.
1081
1082 *col()*
1083col({expr}) The result is a Number, which is the column of the file
1084 position given with {expr}. The accepted positions are:
1085 . the cursor position
1086 $ the end of the cursor line (the result is the
1087 number of characters in the cursor line plus one)
1088 'x position of mark x (if the mark is not set, 0 is
1089 returned)
1090 For the screen column position use |virtcol()|.
1091 Note that only marks in the current file can be used.
1092 Examples: >
1093 col(".") column of cursor
1094 col("$") length of cursor line plus one
1095 col("'t") column of mark t
1096 col("'" . markname) column of mark markname
1097< The first column is 1. 0 is returned for an error.
1098 For the cursor position, when 'virtualedit' is active, the
1099 column is one higher if the cursor is after the end of the
1100 line. This can be used to obtain the column in Insert mode: >
1101 :imap <F2> <C-O>:let save_ve = &ve<CR>
1102 \<C-O>:set ve=all<CR>
1103 \<C-O>:echo col(".") . "\n" <Bar>
1104 \let &ve = save_ve<CR>
1105<
1106 *confirm()*
1107confirm({msg} [, {choices} [, {default} [, {type}]]])
1108 Confirm() offers the user a dialog, from which a choice can be
1109 made. It returns the number of the choice. For the first
1110 choice this is 1.
1111 Note: confirm() is only supported when compiled with dialog
1112 support, see |+dialog_con| and |+dialog_gui|.
1113 {msg} is displayed in a |dialog| with {choices} as the
1114 alternatives. When {choices} is missing or empty, "&OK" is
1115 used (and translated).
1116 {msg} is a String, use '\n' to include a newline. Only on
1117 some systems the string is wrapped when it doesn't fit.
1118 {choices} is a String, with the individual choices separated
1119 by '\n', e.g. >
1120 confirm("Save changes?", "&Yes\n&No\n&Cancel")
1121< The letter after the '&' is the shortcut key for that choice.
1122 Thus you can type 'c' to select "Cancel". The shortcut does
1123 not need to be the first letter: >
1124 confirm("file has been modified", "&Save\nSave &All")
1125< For the console, the first letter of each choice is used as
1126 the default shortcut key.
1127 The optional {default} argument is the number of the choice
1128 that is made if the user hits <CR>. Use 1 to make the first
1129 choice the default one. Use 0 to not set a default. If
1130 {default} is omitted, 1 is used.
1131 The optional {type} argument gives the type of dialog. This
1132 is only used for the icon of the Win32 GUI. It can be one of
1133 these values: "Error", "Question", "Info", "Warning" or
1134 "Generic". Only the first character is relevant. When {type}
1135 is omitted, "Generic" is used.
1136 If the user aborts the dialog by pressing <Esc>, CTRL-C,
1137 or another valid interrupt key, confirm() returns 0.
1138
1139 An example: >
1140 :let choice = confirm("What do you want?", "&Apples\n&Oranges\n&Bananas", 2)
1141 :if choice == 0
1142 : echo "make up your mind!"
1143 :elseif choice == 3
1144 : echo "tasteful"
1145 :else
1146 : echo "I prefer bananas myself."
1147 :endif
1148< In a GUI dialog, buttons are used. The layout of the buttons
1149 depends on the 'v' flag in 'guioptions'. If it is included,
1150 the buttons are always put vertically. Otherwise, confirm()
1151 tries to put the buttons in one horizontal line. If they
1152 don't fit, a vertical layout is used anyway. For some systems
1153 the horizontal layout is always used.
1154
1155 *cscope_connection()*
1156cscope_connection([{num} , {dbpath} [, {prepend}]])
1157 Checks for the existence of a |cscope| connection. If no
1158 parameters are specified, then the function returns:
1159 0, if cscope was not available (not compiled in), or
1160 if there are no cscope connections;
1161 1, if there is at least one cscope connection.
1162
1163 If parameters are specified, then the value of {num}
1164 determines how existence of a cscope connection is checked:
1165
1166 {num} Description of existence check
1167 ----- ------------------------------
1168 0 Same as no parameters (e.g., "cscope_connection()").
1169 1 Ignore {prepend}, and use partial string matches for
1170 {dbpath}.
1171 2 Ignore {prepend}, and use exact string matches for
1172 {dbpath}.
1173 3 Use {prepend}, use partial string matches for both
1174 {dbpath} and {prepend}.
1175 4 Use {prepend}, use exact string matches for both
1176 {dbpath} and {prepend}.
1177
1178 Note: All string comparisons are case sensitive!
1179
1180 Examples. Suppose we had the following (from ":cs show"): >
1181
1182 # pid database name prepend path
1183 0 27664 cscope.out /usr/local
1184<
1185 Invocation Return Val ~
1186 ---------- ---------- >
1187 cscope_connection() 1
1188 cscope_connection(1, "out") 1
1189 cscope_connection(2, "out") 0
1190 cscope_connection(3, "out") 0
1191 cscope_connection(3, "out", "local") 1
1192 cscope_connection(4, "out") 0
1193 cscope_connection(4, "out", "local") 0
1194 cscope_connection(4, "cscope.out", "/usr/local") 1
1195<
1196cursor({lnum}, {col}) *cursor()*
1197 Positions the cursor at the column {col} in the line {lnum}.
1198 Does not change the jumplist.
1199 If {lnum} is greater than the number of lines in the buffer,
1200 the cursor will be positioned at the last line in the buffer.
1201 If {lnum} is zero, the cursor will stay in the current line.
1202 If {col} is greater than the number of characters in the line,
1203 the cursor will be positioned at the last character in the
1204 line.
1205 If {col} is zero, the cursor will stay in the current column.
1206
1207 *delete()*
1208delete({fname}) Deletes the file by the name {fname}. The result is a Number,
1209 which is 0 if the file was deleted successfully, and non-zero
1210 when the deletion failed.
1211
1212 *did_filetype()*
1213did_filetype() Returns non-zero when autocommands are being executed and the
1214 FileType event has been triggered at least once. Can be used
1215 to avoid triggering the FileType event again in the scripts
1216 that detect the file type. |FileType|
1217 When editing another file, the counter is reset, thus this
1218 really checks if the FileType event has been triggered for the
1219 current buffer. This allows an autocommand that starts
1220 editing another buffer to set 'filetype' and load a syntax
1221 file.
1222
1223escape({string}, {chars}) *escape()*
1224 Escape the characters in {chars} that occur in {string} with a
1225 backslash. Example: >
1226 :echo escape('c:\program files\vim', ' \')
1227< results in: >
1228 c:\\program\ files\\vim
1229<
1230eventhandler() *eventhandler()*
1231 Returns 1 when inside an event handler. That is that Vim got
1232 interrupted while waiting for the user to type a character,
1233 e.g., when dropping a file on Vim. This means interactive
1234 commands cannot be used. Otherwise zero is returned.
1235
1236executable({expr}) *executable()*
1237 This function checks if an executable with the name {expr}
1238 exists. {expr} must be the name of the program without any
Bram Moolenaarf4b8e572004-06-24 15:53:16 +00001239 arguments.
1240 executable() uses the value of $PATH and/or the normal
1241 searchpath for programs. *PATHEXT*
1242 On MS-DOS and MS-Windows the ".exe", ".bat", etc. can
1243 optionally be included. Then the extensions in $PATHEXT are
1244 tried. Thus if "foo.exe" does not exist, "foo.exe.bat" can be
1245 found. If $PATHEXT is not set then ".exe;.com;.bat;.cmd" is
1246 used. A dot by itself can be used in $PATHEXT to try using
1247 the name without an extension. When 'shell' looks like a
1248 Unix shell, then the name is also tried without adding an
1249 extension.
1250 On MS-DOS and MS-Windows it only checks if the file exists and
1251 is not a directory, not if it's really executable.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001252 The result is a Number:
1253 1 exists
1254 0 does not exist
1255 -1 not implemented on this system
1256
1257 *exists()*
1258exists({expr}) The result is a Number, which is non-zero if {expr} is
1259 defined, zero otherwise. The {expr} argument is a string,
1260 which contains one of these:
1261 &option-name Vim option (only checks if it exists,
1262 not if it really works)
1263 +option-name Vim option that works.
1264 $ENVNAME environment variable (could also be
1265 done by comparing with an empty
1266 string)
1267 *funcname built-in function (see |functions|)
1268 or user defined function (see
1269 |user-functions|).
1270 varname internal variable (see
1271 |internal-variables|). Does not work
1272 for |curly-braces-names|.
1273 :cmdname Ex command: built-in command, user
1274 command or command modifier |:command|.
1275 Returns:
1276 1 for match with start of a command
1277 2 full match with a command
1278 3 matches several user commands
1279 To check for a supported command
1280 always check the return value to be 2.
1281 #event autocommand defined for this event
1282 #event#pattern autocommand defined for this event and
1283 pattern (the pattern is taken
1284 literally and compared to the
1285 autocommand patterns character by
1286 character)
1287 For checking for a supported feature use |has()|.
1288
1289 Examples: >
1290 exists("&shortname")
1291 exists("$HOSTNAME")
1292 exists("*strftime")
1293 exists("*s:MyFunc")
1294 exists("bufcount")
1295 exists(":Make")
1296 exists("#CursorHold");
1297 exists("#BufReadPre#*.gz")
1298< There must be no space between the symbol (&/$/*/#) and the
1299 name.
1300 Note that the argument must be a string, not the name of the
1301 variable itself! For example: >
1302 exists(bufcount)
1303< This doesn't check for existence of the "bufcount" variable,
1304 but gets the contents of "bufcount", and checks if that
1305 exists.
1306
1307expand({expr} [, {flag}]) *expand()*
1308 Expand wildcards and the following special keywords in {expr}.
1309 The result is a String.
1310
1311 When there are several matches, they are separated by <NL>
1312 characters. [Note: in version 5.0 a space was used, which
1313 caused problems when a file name contains a space]
1314
1315 If the expansion fails, the result is an empty string. A name
1316 for a non-existing file is not included.
1317
1318 When {expr} starts with '%', '#' or '<', the expansion is done
1319 like for the |cmdline-special| variables with their associated
1320 modifiers. Here is a short overview:
1321
1322 % current file name
1323 # alternate file name
1324 #n alternate file name n
1325 <cfile> file name under the cursor
1326 <afile> autocmd file name
1327 <abuf> autocmd buffer number (as a String!)
1328 <amatch> autocmd matched name
1329 <sfile> sourced script file name
1330 <cword> word under the cursor
1331 <cWORD> WORD under the cursor
1332 <client> the {clientid} of the last received
1333 message |server2client()|
1334 Modifiers:
1335 :p expand to full path
1336 :h head (last path component removed)
1337 :t tail (last path component only)
1338 :r root (one extension removed)
1339 :e extension only
1340
1341 Example: >
1342 :let &tags = expand("%:p:h") . "/tags"
1343< Note that when expanding a string that starts with '%', '#' or
1344 '<', any following text is ignored. This does NOT work: >
1345 :let doesntwork = expand("%:h.bak")
1346< Use this: >
1347 :let doeswork = expand("%:h") . ".bak"
1348< Also note that expanding "<cfile>" and others only returns the
1349 referenced file name without further expansion. If "<cfile>"
1350 is "~/.cshrc", you need to do another expand() to have the
1351 "~/" expanded into the path of the home directory: >
1352 :echo expand(expand("<cfile>"))
1353<
1354 There cannot be white space between the variables and the
1355 following modifier. The |fnamemodify()| function can be used
1356 to modify normal file names.
1357
1358 When using '%' or '#', and the current or alternate file name
1359 is not defined, an empty string is used. Using "%:p" in a
1360 buffer with no name, results in the current directory, with a
1361 '/' added.
1362
1363 When {expr} does not start with '%', '#' or '<', it is
1364 expanded like a file name is expanded on the command line.
1365 'suffixes' and 'wildignore' are used, unless the optional
1366 {flag} argument is given and it is non-zero. Names for
1367 non-existing files are included.
1368
1369 Expand() can also be used to expand variables and environment
1370 variables that are only known in a shell. But this can be
1371 slow, because a shell must be started. See |expr-env-expand|.
1372 The expanded variable is still handled like a list of file
1373 names. When an environment variable cannot be expanded, it is
1374 left unchanged. Thus ":echo expand('$FOOBAR')" results in
1375 "$FOOBAR".
1376
1377 See |glob()| for finding existing files. See |system()| for
1378 getting the raw output of an external command.
1379
1380filereadable({file}) *filereadable()*
1381 The result is a Number, which is TRUE when a file with the
1382 name {file} exists, and can be read. If {file} doesn't exist,
1383 or is a directory, the result is FALSE. {file} is any
1384 expression, which is used as a String.
1385 *file_readable()*
1386 Obsolete name: file_readable().
1387
1388filewritable({file}) *filewritable()*
1389 The result is a Number, which is 1 when a file with the
1390 name {file} exists, and can be written. If {file} doesn't
1391 exist, or is not writable, the result is 0. If (file) is a
1392 directory, and we can write to it, the result is 2.
1393
1394fnamemodify({fname}, {mods}) *fnamemodify()*
1395 Modify file name {fname} according to {mods}. {mods} is a
1396 string of characters like it is used for file names on the
1397 command line. See |filename-modifiers|.
1398 Example: >
1399 :echo fnamemodify("main.c", ":p:h")
1400< results in: >
1401 /home/mool/vim/vim/src
1402< Note: Environment variables and "~" don't work in {fname}, use
1403 |expand()| first then.
1404
1405foldclosed({lnum}) *foldclosed()*
1406 The result is a Number. If the line {lnum} is in a closed
1407 fold, the result is the number of the first line in that fold.
1408 If the line {lnum} is not in a closed fold, -1 is returned.
1409
1410foldclosedend({lnum}) *foldclosedend()*
1411 The result is a Number. If the line {lnum} is in a closed
1412 fold, the result is the number of the last line in that fold.
1413 If the line {lnum} is not in a closed fold, -1 is returned.
1414
1415foldlevel({lnum}) *foldlevel()*
1416 The result is a Number, which is the foldlevel of line {lnum}
1417 in the current buffer. For nested folds the deepest level is
1418 returned. If there is no fold at line {lnum}, zero is
1419 returned. It doesn't matter if the folds are open or closed.
1420 When used while updating folds (from 'foldexpr') -1 is
1421 returned for lines where folds are still to be updated and the
1422 foldlevel is unknown. As a special case the level of the
1423 previous line is usually available.
1424
1425 *foldtext()*
1426foldtext() Returns a String, to be displayed for a closed fold. This is
1427 the default function used for the 'foldtext' option and should
1428 only be called from evaluating 'foldtext'. It uses the
1429 |v:foldstart|, |v:foldend| and |v:folddashes| variables.
1430 The returned string looks like this: >
1431 +-- 45 lines: abcdef
1432< The number of dashes depends on the foldlevel. The "45" is
1433 the number of lines in the fold. "abcdef" is the text in the
1434 first non-blank line of the fold. Leading white space, "//"
1435 or "/*" and the text from the 'foldmarker' and 'commentstring'
1436 options is removed.
1437 {not available when compiled without the |+folding| feature}
1438
1439 *foreground()*
1440foreground() Move the Vim window to the foreground. Useful when sent from
1441 a client to a Vim server. |remote_send()|
1442 On Win32 systems this might not work, the OS does not always
1443 allow a window to bring itself to the foreground. Use
1444 |remote_foreground()| instead.
1445 {only in the Win32, Athena, Motif and GTK GUI versions and the
1446 Win32 console version}
1447
1448getchar([expr]) *getchar()*
1449 Get a single character from the user. If it is an 8-bit
1450 character, the result is a number. Otherwise a String is
1451 returned with the encoded character. For a special key it's a
1452 sequence of bytes starting with 0x80 (decimal: 128).
1453 If [expr] is omitted, wait until a character is available.
1454 If [expr] is 0, only get a character when one is available.
1455 If [expr] is 1, only check if a character is available, it is
1456 not consumed. If a normal character is
1457 available, it is returned, otherwise a
1458 non-zero value is returned.
1459 If a normal character available, it is returned as a Number.
1460 Use nr2char() to convert it to a String.
1461 The returned value is zero if no character is available.
1462 The returned value is a string of characters for special keys
1463 and when a modifier (shift, control, alt) was used.
1464 There is no prompt, you will somehow have to make clear to the
1465 user that a character has to be typed.
1466 There is no mapping for the character.
1467 Key codes are replaced, thus when the user presses the <Del>
1468 key you get the code for the <Del> key, not the raw character
1469 sequence. Examples: >
1470 getchar() == "\<Del>"
1471 getchar() == "\<S-Left>"
1472< This example redefines "f" to ignore case: >
1473 :nmap f :call FindChar()<CR>
1474 :function FindChar()
1475 : let c = nr2char(getchar())
1476 : while col('.') < col('$') - 1
1477 : normal l
1478 : if getline('.')[col('.') - 1] ==? c
1479 : break
1480 : endif
1481 : endwhile
1482 :endfunction
1483
1484getcharmod() *getcharmod()*
1485 The result is a Number which is the state of the modifiers for
1486 the last obtained character with getchar() or in another way.
1487 These values are added together:
1488 2 shift
1489 4 control
1490 8 alt (meta)
1491 16 mouse double click
1492 32 mouse triple click
1493 64 mouse quadruple click
1494 128 Macintosh only: command
1495 Only the modifiers that have not been included in the
1496 character itself are obtained. Thus Shift-a results in "A"
1497 with no modifier.
1498
1499getbufvar({expr}, {varname}) *getbufvar()*
1500 The result is the value of option or local buffer variable
1501 {varname} in buffer {expr}. Note that the name without "b:"
1502 must be used.
1503 This also works for a global or local window option, but it
1504 doesn't work for a global or local window variable.
1505 For the use of {expr}, see |bufname()| above.
1506 When the buffer or variable doesn't exist an empty string is
1507 returned, there is no error message.
1508 Examples: >
1509 :let bufmodified = getbufvar(1, "&mod")
1510 :echo "todo myvar = " . getbufvar("todo", "myvar")
1511<
1512getcmdline() *getcmdline()*
1513 Return the current command-line. Only works when the command
1514 line is being edited, thus requires use of |c_CTRL-\_e| or
1515 |c_CTRL-R_=|.
1516 Example: >
1517 :cmap <F7> <C-\>eescape(getcmdline(), ' \')<CR>
1518< Also see |getcmdpos()| and |setcmdpos()|.
1519
1520getcmdpos({pos}) *getcmdpos()*
1521 Return the position of the cursor in the command line as a
1522 byte count. The first column is 1.
1523 Only works when editing the command line, thus requires use of
1524 |c_CTRL-\_e| or |c_CTRL-R_=|. Returns 0 otherwise.
1525 Also see |setcmdpos()| and |getcmdline()|.
1526
1527 *getcwd()*
1528getcwd() The result is a String, which is the name of the current
1529 working directory.
1530
1531getfsize({fname}) *getfsize()*
1532 The result is a Number, which is the size in bytes of the
1533 given file {fname}.
1534 If {fname} is a directory, 0 is returned.
1535 If the file {fname} can't be found, -1 is returned.
1536
1537getftime({fname}) *getftime()*
1538 The result is a Number, which is the last modification time of
1539 the given file {fname}. The value is measured as seconds
1540 since 1st Jan 1970, and may be passed to strftime(). See also
1541 |localtime()| and |strftime()|.
1542 If the file {fname} can't be found -1 is returned.
1543
1544 *getline()*
1545getline({lnum}) The result is a String, which is line {lnum} from the current
1546 buffer. Example: >
1547 getline(1)
1548< When {lnum} is a String that doesn't start with a
1549 digit, line() is called to translate the String into a Number.
1550 To get the line under the cursor: >
1551 getline(".")
1552< When {lnum} is smaller than 1 or bigger than the number of
1553 lines in the buffer, an empty string is returned.
1554
1555getreg([{regname}]) *getreg()*
1556 The result is a String, which is the contents of register
1557 {regname}. Example: >
1558 :let cliptext = getreg('*')
1559< getreg('=') returns the last evaluated value of the expression
1560 register. (For use in maps).
1561 If {regname} is not specified, |v:register| is used.
1562
1563getregtype([{regname}]) *getregtype()*
1564 The result is a String, which is type of register {regname}.
1565 The value will be one of:
1566 "v" for |characterwise| text
1567 "V" for |linewise| text
1568 "<CTRL-V>{width}" for |blockwise-visual| text
1569 0 for an empty or unknown register
1570 <CTRL-V> is one character with value 0x16.
1571 If {regname} is not specified, |v:register| is used.
1572
1573 *getwinposx()*
1574getwinposx() The result is a Number, which is the X coordinate in pixels of
1575 the left hand side of the GUI Vim window. The result will be
1576 -1 if the information is not available.
1577
1578 *getwinposy()*
1579getwinposy() The result is a Number, which is the Y coordinate in pixels of
1580 the top of the GUI Vim window. The result will be -1 if the
1581 information is not available.
1582
1583getwinvar({nr}, {varname}) *getwinvar()*
1584 The result is the value of option or local window variable
1585 {varname} in window {nr}.
1586 This also works for a global or local buffer option, but it
1587 doesn't work for a global or local buffer variable.
1588 Note that the name without "w:" must be used.
1589 Examples: >
1590 :let list_is_on = getwinvar(2, '&list')
1591 :echo "myvar = " . getwinvar(1, 'myvar')
1592<
1593 *glob()*
1594glob({expr}) Expand the file wildcards in {expr}. The result is a String.
1595 When there are several matches, they are separated by <NL>
1596 characters.
1597 If the expansion fails, the result is an empty string.
1598 A name for a non-existing file is not included.
1599
1600 For most systems backticks can be used to get files names from
1601 any external command. Example: >
1602 :let tagfiles = glob("`find . -name tags -print`")
1603 :let &tags = substitute(tagfiles, "\n", ",", "g")
1604< The result of the program inside the backticks should be one
1605 item per line. Spaces inside an item are allowed.
1606
1607 See |expand()| for expanding special Vim variables. See
1608 |system()| for getting the raw output of an external command.
1609
1610globpath({path}, {expr}) *globpath()*
1611 Perform glob() on all directories in {path} and concatenate
1612 the results. Example: >
1613 :echo globpath(&rtp, "syntax/c.vim")
1614< {path} is a comma-separated list of directory names. Each
1615 directory name is prepended to {expr} and expanded like with
1616 glob(). A path separator is inserted when needed.
1617 To add a comma inside a directory name escape it with a
1618 backslash. Note that on MS-Windows a directory may have a
1619 trailing backslash, remove it if you put a comma after it.
1620 If the expansion fails for one of the directories, there is no
1621 error message.
1622 The 'wildignore' option applies: Names matching one of the
1623 patterns in 'wildignore' will be skipped.
1624
1625 *has()*
1626has({feature}) The result is a Number, which is 1 if the feature {feature} is
1627 supported, zero otherwise. The {feature} argument is a
1628 string. See |feature-list| below.
1629 Also see |exists()|.
1630
1631hasmapto({what} [, {mode}]) *hasmapto()*
1632 The result is a Number, which is 1 if there is a mapping that
1633 contains {what} in somewhere in the rhs (what it is mapped to)
1634 and this mapping exists in one of the modes indicated by
1635 {mode}.
1636 Both the global mappings and the mappings local to the current
1637 buffer are checked for a match.
1638 If no matching mapping is found 0 is returned.
1639 The following characters are recognized in {mode}:
1640 n Normal mode
1641 v Visual mode
1642 o Operator-pending mode
1643 i Insert mode
1644 l Language-Argument ("r", "f", "t", etc.)
1645 c Command-line mode
1646 When {mode} is omitted, "nvo" is used.
1647
1648 This function is useful to check if a mapping already exists
1649 to a function in a Vim script. Example: >
1650 :if !hasmapto('\ABCdoit')
1651 : map <Leader>d \ABCdoit
1652 :endif
1653< This installs the mapping to "\ABCdoit" only if there isn't
1654 already a mapping to "\ABCdoit".
1655
1656histadd({history}, {item}) *histadd()*
1657 Add the String {item} to the history {history} which can be
1658 one of: *hist-names*
1659 "cmd" or ":" command line history
1660 "search" or "/" search pattern history
1661 "expr" or "=" typed expression history
1662 "input" or "@" input line history
1663 If {item} does already exist in the history, it will be
1664 shifted to become the newest entry.
1665 The result is a Number: 1 if the operation was successful,
1666 otherwise 0 is returned.
1667
1668 Example: >
1669 :call histadd("input", strftime("%Y %b %d"))
1670 :let date=input("Enter date: ")
1671< This function is not available in the |sandbox|.
1672
1673histdel({history} [, {item}]) *histdel()*
1674 Clear {history}, ie. delete all its entries. See |hist-names|
1675 for the possible values of {history}.
1676
1677 If the parameter {item} is given as String, this is seen
1678 as regular expression. All entries matching that expression
1679 will be removed from the history (if there are any).
1680 Upper/lowercase must match, unless "\c" is used |/\c|.
1681 If {item} is a Number, it will be interpreted as index, see
1682 |:history-indexing|. The respective entry will be removed
1683 if it exists.
1684
1685 The result is a Number: 1 for a successful operation,
1686 otherwise 0 is returned.
1687
1688 Examples:
1689 Clear expression register history: >
1690 :call histdel("expr")
1691<
1692 Remove all entries starting with "*" from the search history: >
1693 :call histdel("/", '^\*')
1694<
1695 The following three are equivalent: >
1696 :call histdel("search", histnr("search"))
1697 :call histdel("search", -1)
1698 :call histdel("search", '^'.histget("search", -1).'$')
1699<
1700 To delete the last search pattern and use the last-but-one for
1701 the "n" command and 'hlsearch': >
1702 :call histdel("search", -1)
1703 :let @/ = histget("search", -1)
1704
1705histget({history} [, {index}]) *histget()*
1706 The result is a String, the entry with Number {index} from
1707 {history}. See |hist-names| for the possible values of
1708 {history}, and |:history-indexing| for {index}. If there is
1709 no such entry, an empty String is returned. When {index} is
1710 omitted, the most recent item from the history is used.
1711
1712 Examples:
1713 Redo the second last search from history. >
1714 :execute '/' . histget("search", -2)
1715
1716< Define an Ex command ":H {num}" that supports re-execution of
1717 the {num}th entry from the output of |:history|. >
1718 :command -nargs=1 H execute histget("cmd", 0+<args>)
1719<
1720histnr({history}) *histnr()*
1721 The result is the Number of the current entry in {history}.
1722 See |hist-names| for the possible values of {history}.
1723 If an error occurred, -1 is returned.
1724
1725 Example: >
1726 :let inp_index = histnr("expr")
1727<
1728hlexists({name}) *hlexists()*
1729 The result is a Number, which is non-zero if a highlight group
1730 called {name} exists. This is when the group has been
1731 defined in some way. Not necessarily when highlighting has
1732 been defined for it, it may also have been used for a syntax
1733 item.
1734 *highlight_exists()*
1735 Obsolete name: highlight_exists().
1736
1737 *hlID()*
1738hlID({name}) The result is a Number, which is the ID of the highlight group
1739 with name {name}. When the highlight group doesn't exist,
1740 zero is returned.
1741 This can be used to retrieve information about the highlight
1742 group. For example, to get the background color of the
1743 "Comment" group: >
1744 :echo synIDattr(synIDtrans(hlID("Comment")), "bg")
1745< *highlightID()*
1746 Obsolete name: highlightID().
1747
1748hostname() *hostname()*
1749 The result is a String, which is the name of the machine on
1750 which Vim is currently running. Machine names greater than
1751 256 characters long are truncated.
1752
1753iconv({expr}, {from}, {to}) *iconv()*
1754 The result is a String, which is the text {expr} converted
1755 from encoding {from} to encoding {to}.
1756 When the conversion fails an empty string is returned.
1757 The encoding names are whatever the iconv() library function
1758 can accept, see ":!man 3 iconv".
1759 Most conversions require Vim to be compiled with the |+iconv|
1760 feature. Otherwise only UTF-8 to latin1 conversion and back
1761 can be done.
1762 This can be used to display messages with special characters,
1763 no matter what 'encoding' is set to. Write the message in
1764 UTF-8 and use: >
1765 echo iconv(utf8_str, "utf-8", &enc)
1766< Note that Vim uses UTF-8 for all Unicode encodings, conversion
1767 from/to UCS-2 is automatically changed to use UTF-8. You
1768 cannot use UCS-2 in a string anyway, because of the NUL bytes.
1769 {only available when compiled with the +multi_byte feature}
1770
1771 *indent()*
1772indent({lnum}) The result is a Number, which is indent of line {lnum} in the
1773 current buffer. The indent is counted in spaces, the value
1774 of 'tabstop' is relevant. {lnum} is used just like in
1775 |getline()|.
1776 When {lnum} is invalid -1 is returned.
1777
1778input({prompt} [, {text}]) *input()*
1779 The result is a String, which is whatever the user typed on
1780 the command-line. The parameter is either a prompt string, or
1781 a blank string (for no prompt). A '\n' can be used in the
1782 prompt to start a new line. The highlighting set with
1783 |:echohl| is used for the prompt. The input is entered just
1784 like a command-line, with the same editing commands and
1785 mappings. There is a separate history for lines typed for
1786 input().
1787 If the optional {text} is present, this is used for the
1788 default reply, as if the user typed this.
1789 NOTE: This must not be used in a startup file, for the
1790 versions that only run in GUI mode (e.g., the Win32 GUI).
1791 Note: When input() is called from within a mapping it will
1792 consume remaining characters from that mapping, because a
1793 mapping is handled like the characters were typed.
1794 Use |inputsave()| before input() and |inputrestore()|
1795 after input() to avoid that. Another solution is to avoid
1796 that further characters follow in the mapping, e.g., by using
1797 |:execute| or |:normal|.
1798
1799 Example: >
1800 :if input("Coffee or beer? ") == "beer"
1801 : echo "Cheers!"
1802 :endif
1803< Example with default text: >
1804 :let color = input("Color? ", "white")
1805< Example with a mapping: >
1806 :nmap \x :call GetFoo()<CR>:exe "/" . Foo<CR>
1807 :function GetFoo()
1808 : call inputsave()
1809 : let g:Foo = input("enter search pattern: ")
1810 : call inputrestore()
1811 :endfunction
1812
1813inputdialog({prompt} [, {text} [, {cancelreturn}]]) *inputdialog()*
1814 Like input(), but when the GUI is running and text dialogs are
1815 supported, a dialog window pops up to input the text.
1816 Example: >
1817 :let n = inputdialog("value for shiftwidth", &sw)
1818 :if n != ""
1819 : let &sw = n
1820 :endif
1821< When the dialog is cancelled {cancelreturn} is returned. When
1822 omitted an empty string is returned.
1823 Hitting <Enter> works like pressing the OK button. Hitting
1824 <Esc> works like pressing the Cancel button.
1825
1826inputrestore() *inputrestore()*
1827 Restore typeahead that was saved with a previous inputsave().
1828 Should be called the same number of times inputsave() is
1829 called. Calling it more often is harmless though.
1830 Returns 1 when there is nothing to restore, 0 otherwise.
1831
1832inputsave() *inputsave()*
1833 Preserve typeahead (also from mappings) and clear it, so that
1834 a following prompt gets input from the user. Should be
1835 followed by a matching inputrestore() after the prompt. Can
1836 be used several times, in which case there must be just as
1837 many inputrestore() calls.
1838 Returns 1 when out of memory, 0 otherwise.
1839
1840inputsecret({prompt} [, {text}]) *inputsecret()*
1841 This function acts much like the |input()| function with but
1842 two exceptions:
1843 a) the user's response will be displayed as a sequence of
1844 asterisks ("*") thereby keeping the entry secret, and
1845 b) the user's response will not be recorded on the input
1846 |history| stack.
1847 The result is a String, which is whatever the user actually
1848 typed on the command-line in response to the issued prompt.
1849
1850isdirectory({directory}) *isdirectory()*
1851 The result is a Number, which is non-zero when a directory
1852 with the name {directory} exists. If {directory} doesn't
1853 exist, or isn't a directory, the result is FALSE. {directory}
1854 is any expression, which is used as a String.
1855
1856 *libcall()* *E364* *E368*
1857libcall({libname}, {funcname}, {argument})
1858 Call function {funcname} in the run-time library {libname}
1859 with single argument {argument}.
1860 This is useful to call functions in a library that you
1861 especially made to be used with Vim. Since only one argument
1862 is possible, calling standard library functions is rather
1863 limited.
1864 The result is the String returned by the function. If the
1865 function returns NULL, this will appear as an empty string ""
1866 to Vim.
1867 If the function returns a number, use libcallnr()!
1868 If {argument} is a number, it is passed to the function as an
1869 int; if {argument} is a string, it is passed as a
1870 null-terminated string.
1871 This function will fail in |restricted-mode|.
1872
1873 libcall() allows you to write your own 'plug-in' extensions to
1874 Vim without having to recompile the program. It is NOT a
1875 means to call system functions! If you try to do so Vim will
1876 very probably crash.
1877
1878 For Win32, the functions you write must be placed in a DLL
1879 and use the normal C calling convention (NOT Pascal which is
1880 used in Windows System DLLs). The function must take exactly
1881 one parameter, either a character pointer or a long integer,
1882 and must return a character pointer or NULL. The character
1883 pointer returned must point to memory that will remain valid
1884 after the function has returned (e.g. in static data in the
1885 DLL). If it points to allocated memory, that memory will
1886 leak away. Using a static buffer in the function should work,
1887 it's then freed when the DLL is unloaded.
1888
1889 WARNING: If the function returns a non-valid pointer, Vim may
1890 crash! This also happens if the function returns a number,
1891 because Vim thinks it's a pointer.
1892 For Win32 systems, {libname} should be the filename of the DLL
1893 without the ".DLL" suffix. A full path is only required if
1894 the DLL is not in the usual places.
1895 For Unix: When compiling your own plugins, remember that the
1896 object code must be compiled as position-independent ('PIC').
1897 {only in Win32 on some Unix versions, when the |+libcall|
1898 feature is present}
1899 Examples: >
1900 :echo libcall("libc.so", "getenv", "HOME")
1901 :echo libcallnr("/usr/lib/libc.so", "getpid", "")
1902<
1903 *libcallnr()*
1904libcallnr({libname}, {funcname}, {argument})
1905 Just like libcall(), but used for a function that returns an
1906 int instead of a string.
1907 {only in Win32 on some Unix versions, when the |+libcall|
1908 feature is present}
1909 Example (not very useful...): >
1910 :call libcallnr("libc.so", "printf", "Hello World!\n")
1911 :call libcallnr("libc.so", "sleep", 10)
1912<
1913 *line()*
1914line({expr}) The result is a Number, which is the line number of the file
1915 position given with {expr}. The accepted positions are:
1916 . the cursor position
1917 $ the last line in the current buffer
1918 'x position of mark x (if the mark is not set, 0 is
1919 returned)
1920 Note that only marks in the current file can be used.
1921 Examples: >
1922 line(".") line number of the cursor
1923 line("'t") line number of mark t
1924 line("'" . marker) line number of mark marker
1925< *last-position-jump*
1926 This autocommand jumps to the last known position in a file
1927 just after opening it, if the '" mark is set: >
1928 :au BufReadPost * if line("'\"") > 0 && line("'\"") <= line("$") | exe "normal g'\"" | endif
Bram Moolenaar69a7cb42004-06-20 12:51:53 +00001929
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00001930line2byte({lnum}) *line2byte()*
1931 Return the byte count from the start of the buffer for line
1932 {lnum}. This includes the end-of-line character, depending on
1933 the 'fileformat' option for the current buffer. The first
1934 line returns 1.
1935 This can also be used to get the byte count for the line just
1936 below the last line: >
1937 line2byte(line("$") + 1)
1938< This is the file size plus one.
1939 When {lnum} is invalid, or the |+byte_offset| feature has been
1940 disabled at compile time, -1 is returned.
1941 Also see |byte2line()|, |go| and |:goto|.
1942
1943lispindent({lnum}) *lispindent()*
1944 Get the amount of indent for line {lnum} according the lisp
1945 indenting rules, as with 'lisp'.
1946 The indent is counted in spaces, the value of 'tabstop' is
1947 relevant. {lnum} is used just like in |getline()|.
1948 When {lnum} is invalid or Vim was not compiled the
1949 |+lispindent| feature, -1 is returned.
1950
1951localtime() *localtime()*
1952 Return the current time, measured as seconds since 1st Jan
1953 1970. See also |strftime()| and |getftime()|.
1954
1955maparg({name}[, {mode}]) *maparg()*
1956 Return the rhs of mapping {name} in mode {mode}. When there
1957 is no mapping for {name}, an empty String is returned.
1958 These characters can be used for {mode}:
1959 "n" Normal
1960 "v" Visual
1961 "o" Operator-pending
1962 "i" Insert
1963 "c" Cmd-line
1964 "l" langmap |language-mapping|
1965 "" Normal, Visual and Operator-pending
1966 When {mode} is omitted, the modes from "" are used.
1967 The {name} can have special key names, like in the ":map"
1968 command. The returned String has special characters
1969 translated like in the output of the ":map" command listing.
1970 The mappings local to the current buffer are checked first,
1971 then the global mappings.
1972
1973mapcheck({name}[, {mode}]) *mapcheck()*
1974 Check if there is a mapping that matches with {name} in mode
1975 {mode}. See |maparg()| for {mode} and special names in
1976 {name}.
1977 A match happens with a mapping that starts with {name} and
1978 with a mapping which is equal to the start of {name}.
1979
1980 matches mapping "a" "ab" "abc" ~
1981 mapcheck("a") yes yes yes
1982 mapcheck("abc") yes yes yes
1983 mapcheck("ax") yes no no
1984 mapcheck("b") no no no
1985
1986 The difference with maparg() is that mapcheck() finds a
1987 mapping that matches with {name}, while maparg() only finds a
1988 mapping for {name} exactly.
1989 When there is no mapping that starts with {name}, an empty
1990 String is returned. If there is one, the rhs of that mapping
1991 is returned. If there are several mappings that start with
1992 {name}, the rhs of one of them is returned.
1993 The mappings local to the current buffer are checked first,
1994 then the global mappings.
1995 This function can be used to check if a mapping can be added
1996 without being ambiguous. Example: >
1997 :if mapcheck("_vv") == ""
1998 : map _vv :set guifont=7x13<CR>
1999 :endif
2000< This avoids adding the "_vv" mapping when there already is a
2001 mapping for "_v" or for "_vvv".
2002
2003match({expr}, {pat}[, {start}]) *match()*
2004 The result is a Number, which gives the index (byte offset) in
2005 {expr} where {pat} matches. A match at the first character
2006 returns zero. If there is no match -1 is returned. Example: >
2007 :echo match("testing", "ing")
2008< results in "4".
2009 See |string-match| for how {pat} is used.
2010 If {start} is given, the search starts from index {start}.
2011 The result, however, is still the index counted from the
2012 first character. Example: >
2013 :echo match("testing", "ing", 2)
2014< result is again "4". >
2015 :echo match("testing", "ing", 4)
2016< result is again "4". >
2017 :echo match("testing", "t", 2)
2018< result is "3".
2019 If {start} < 0, it will be set to 0.
2020 If {start} > strlen({expr}) -1 is returned.
2021 See |pattern| for the patterns that are accepted.
2022 The 'ignorecase' option is used to set the ignore-caseness of
2023 the pattern. 'smartcase' is NOT used. The matching is always
2024 done like 'magic' is set and 'cpoptions' is empty.
2025
2026matchend({expr}, {pat}[, {start}]) *matchend()*
2027 Same as match(), but return the index of first character after
2028 the match. Example: >
2029 :echo matchend("testing", "ing")
2030< results in "7".
2031 The {start}, if given, has the same meaning as for match(). >
2032 :echo matchend("testing", "ing", 2)
2033< results in "7". >
2034 :echo matchend("testing", "ing", 5)
2035< result is "-1".
2036
2037matchstr({expr}, {pat}[, {start}]) *matchstr()*
2038 Same as match(), but return the matched string. Example: >
2039 :echo matchstr("testing", "ing")
2040< results in "ing".
2041 When there is no match "" is returned.
2042 The {start}, if given, has the same meaning as for match(). >
2043 :echo matchstr("testing", "ing", 2)
2044< results in "ing". >
2045 :echo matchstr("testing", "ing", 5)
2046< result is "".
2047
2048 *mode()*
2049mode() Return a string that indicates the current mode:
2050 n Normal
2051 v Visual by character
2052 V Visual by line
2053 CTRL-V Visual blockwise
2054 s Select by character
2055 S Select by line
2056 CTRL-S Select blockwise
2057 i Insert
2058 R Replace
2059 c Command-line
2060 r Hit-enter prompt
2061 This is useful in the 'statusline' option. In most other
2062 places it always returns "c" or "n".
2063
2064nextnonblank({lnum}) *nextnonblank()*
2065 Return the line number of the first line at or below {lnum}
2066 that is not blank. Example: >
2067 if getline(nextnonblank(1)) =~ "Java"
2068< When {lnum} is invalid or there is no non-blank line at or
2069 below it, zero is returned.
2070 See also |prevnonblank()|.
2071
2072nr2char({expr}) *nr2char()*
2073 Return a string with a single character, which has the number
2074 value {expr}. Examples: >
2075 nr2char(64) returns "@"
2076 nr2char(32) returns " "
2077< The current 'encoding' is used. Example for "utf-8": >
2078 nr2char(300) returns I with bow character
2079< Note that a NUL character in the file is specified with
2080 nr2char(10), because NULs are represented with newline
2081 characters. nr2char(0) is a real NUL and terminates the
2082 string, thus isn't very useful.
2083
2084prevnonblank({lnum}) *prevnonblank()*
2085 Return the line number of the first line at or above {lnum}
2086 that is not blank. Example: >
2087 let ind = indent(prevnonblank(v:lnum - 1))
2088< When {lnum} is invalid or there is no non-blank line at or
2089 above it, zero is returned.
2090 Also see |nextnonblank()|.
2091
2092 *remote_expr()* *E449*
2093remote_expr({server}, {string} [, {idvar}])
2094 Send the {string} to {server}. The string is sent as an
2095 expression and the result is returned after evaluation.
2096 If {idvar} is present, it is taken as the name of a
2097 variable and a {serverid} for later use with
2098 remote_read() is stored there.
2099 See also |clientserver| |RemoteReply|.
2100 This function is not available in the |sandbox|.
2101 {only available when compiled with the |+clientserver| feature}
2102 Note: Any errors will cause a local error message to be issued
2103 and the result will be the empty string.
2104 Examples: >
2105 :echo remote_expr("gvim", "2+2")
2106 :echo remote_expr("gvim1", "b:current_syntax")
2107<
2108
2109remote_foreground({server}) *remote_foreground()*
2110 Move the Vim server with the name {server} to the foreground.
2111 This works like: >
2112 remote_expr({server}, "foreground()")
2113< Except that on Win32 systems the client does the work, to work
2114 around the problem that the OS doesn't always allow the server
2115 to bring itself to the foreground.
2116 This function is not available in the |sandbox|.
2117 {only in the Win32, Athena, Motif and GTK GUI versions and the
2118 Win32 console version}
2119
2120
2121remote_peek({serverid} [, {retvar}]) *remote_peek()*
2122 Returns a positive number if there are available strings
2123 from {serverid}. Copies any reply string into the variable
2124 {retvar} if specified. {retvar} must be a string with the
2125 name of a variable.
2126 Returns zero if none are available.
2127 Returns -1 if something is wrong.
2128 See also |clientserver|.
2129 This function is not available in the |sandbox|.
2130 {only available when compiled with the |+clientserver| feature}
2131 Examples: >
2132 :let repl = ""
2133 :echo "PEEK: ".remote_peek(id, "repl").": ".repl
2134
2135remote_read({serverid}) *remote_read()*
2136 Return the oldest available reply from {serverid} and consume
2137 it. It blocks until a reply is available.
2138 See also |clientserver|.
2139 This function is not available in the |sandbox|.
2140 {only available when compiled with the |+clientserver| feature}
2141 Example: >
2142 :echo remote_read(id)
2143<
2144 *remote_send()* *E241*
2145remote_send({server}, {string} [, {idvar}])
2146 Send the {string} to {server}. The string is sent as
2147 input keys and the function returns immediately.
2148 If {idvar} is present, it is taken as the name of a
2149 variable and a {serverid} for later use with
2150 remote_read() is stored there.
2151 See also |clientserver| |RemoteReply|.
2152 This function is not available in the |sandbox|.
2153 {only available when compiled with the |+clientserver| feature}
2154 Note: Any errors will be reported in the server and may mess
2155 up the display.
2156 Examples: >
2157 :echo remote_send("gvim", ":DropAndReply ".file, "serverid").
2158 \ remote_read(serverid)
2159
2160 :autocmd NONE RemoteReply *
2161 \ echo remote_read(expand("<amatch>"))
2162 :echo remote_send("gvim", ":sleep 10 | echo ".
2163 \ 'server2client(expand("<client>"), "HELLO")<CR>')
2164
2165
2166rename({from}, {to}) *rename()*
2167 Rename the file by the name {from} to the name {to}. This
2168 should also work to move files across file systems. The
2169 result is a Number, which is 0 if the file was renamed
2170 successfully, and non-zero when the renaming failed.
2171 This function is not available in the |sandbox|.
2172
2173resolve({filename}) *resolve()* *E655*
2174 On MS-Windows, when {filename} is a shortcut (a .lnk file),
2175 returns the path the shortcut points to in a simplified form.
2176 On Unix, repeat resolving symbolic links in all path
2177 components of {filename} and return the simplified result.
2178 To cope with link cycles, resolving of symbolic links is
2179 stopped after 100 iterations.
2180 On other systems, return the simplified {filename}.
2181 The simplification step is done as by |simplify()|.
2182 resolve() keeps a leading path component specifying the
2183 current directory (provided the result is still a relative
2184 path name) and also keeps a trailing path separator.
2185
2186search({pattern} [, {flags}]) *search()*
2187 Search for regexp pattern {pattern}. The search starts at the
2188 cursor position.
2189 {flags} is a String, which can contain these character flags:
2190 'b' search backward instead of forward
2191 'w' wrap around the end of the file
2192 'W' don't wrap around the end of the file
2193 If neither 'w' or 'W' is given, the 'wrapscan' option applies.
2194
2195 When a match has been found its line number is returned, and
2196 the cursor will be positioned at the match. If there is no
2197 match a 0 is returned and the cursor doesn't move. No error
2198 message is given.
2199
2200 Example (goes over all files in the argument list): >
2201 :let n = 1
2202 :while n <= argc() " loop over all files in arglist
2203 : exe "argument " . n
2204 : " start at the last char in the file and wrap for the
2205 : " first search to find match at start of file
2206 : normal G$
2207 : let flags = "w"
2208 : while search("foo", flags) > 0
2209 : s/foo/bar/g
2210 : let flags = "W"
2211 : endwhile
2212 : update " write the file if modified
2213 : let n = n + 1
2214 :endwhile
2215<
2216 *searchpair()*
2217searchpair({start}, {middle}, {end} [, {flags} [, {skip}]])
2218 Search for the match of a nested start-end pair. This can be
2219 used to find the "endif" that matches an "if", while other
2220 if/endif pairs in between are ignored.
2221 The search starts at the cursor. If a match is found, the
2222 cursor is positioned at it and the line number is returned.
2223 If no match is found 0 or -1 is returned and the cursor
2224 doesn't move. No error message is given.
2225
2226 {start}, {middle} and {end} are patterns, see |pattern|. They
2227 must not contain \( \) pairs. Use of \%( \) is allowed. When
2228 {middle} is not empty, it is found when searching from either
2229 direction, but only when not in a nested start-end pair. A
2230 typical use is: >
2231 searchpair('\<if\>', '\<else\>', '\<endif\>')
2232< By leaving {middle} empty the "else" is skipped.
2233
2234 {flags} are used like with |search()|. Additionally:
2235 'n' do Not move the cursor
2236 'r' Repeat until no more matches found; will find the
2237 outer pair
2238 'm' return number of Matches instead of line number with
2239 the match; will only be > 1 when 'r' is used.
2240
2241 When a match for {start}, {middle} or {end} is found, the
2242 {skip} expression is evaluated with the cursor positioned on
2243 the start of the match. It should return non-zero if this
2244 match is to be skipped. E.g., because it is inside a comment
2245 or a string.
2246 When {skip} is omitted or empty, every match is accepted.
2247 When evaluating {skip} causes an error the search is aborted
2248 and -1 returned.
2249
2250 The value of 'ignorecase' is used. 'magic' is ignored, the
2251 patterns are used like it's on.
2252
2253 The search starts exactly at the cursor. A match with
2254 {start}, {middle} or {end} at the next character, in the
2255 direction of searching, is the first one found. Example: >
2256 if 1
2257 if 2
2258 endif 2
2259 endif 1
2260< When starting at the "if 2", with the cursor on the "i", and
2261 searching forwards, the "endif 2" is found. When starting on
2262 the character just before the "if 2", the "endif 1" will be
2263 found. That's because the "if 2" will be found first, and
2264 then this is considered to be a nested if/endif from "if 2" to
2265 "endif 2".
2266 When searching backwards and {end} is more than one character,
2267 it may be useful to put "\zs" at the end of the pattern, so
2268 that when the cursor is inside a match with the end it finds
2269 the matching start.
2270
2271 Example, to find the "endif" command in a Vim script: >
2272
2273 :echo searchpair('\<if\>', '\<el\%[seif]\>', '\<en\%[dif]\>', 'W',
2274 \ 'getline(".") =~ "^\\s*\""')
2275
2276< The cursor must be at or after the "if" for which a match is
2277 to be found. Note that single-quote strings are used to avoid
2278 having to double the backslashes. The skip expression only
2279 catches comments at the start of a line, not after a command.
2280 Also, a word "en" or "if" halfway a line is considered a
2281 match.
2282 Another example, to search for the matching "{" of a "}": >
2283
2284 :echo searchpair('{', '', '}', 'bW')
2285
2286< This works when the cursor is at or before the "}" for which a
2287 match is to be found. To reject matches that syntax
2288 highlighting recognized as strings: >
2289
2290 :echo searchpair('{', '', '}', 'bW',
2291 \ 'synIDattr(synID(line("."), col("."), 0), "name") =~? "string"')
2292<
2293server2client( {clientid}, {string}) *server2client()*
2294 Send a reply string to {clientid}. The most recent {clientid}
2295 that sent a string can be retrieved with expand("<client>").
2296 {only available when compiled with the |+clientserver| feature}
2297 Note:
2298 This id has to be stored before the next command can be
2299 received. Ie. before returning from the received command and
2300 before calling any commands that waits for input.
2301 See also |clientserver|.
2302 Example: >
2303 :echo server2client(expand("<client>"), "HELLO")
2304<
2305serverlist() *serverlist()*
2306 Return a list of available server names, one per line.
2307 When there are no servers or the information is not available
2308 an empty string is returned. See also |clientserver|.
2309 {only available when compiled with the |+clientserver| feature}
2310 Example: >
2311 :echo serverlist()
2312<
2313setbufvar({expr}, {varname}, {val}) *setbufvar()*
2314 Set option or local variable {varname} in buffer {expr} to
2315 {val}.
2316 This also works for a global or local window option, but it
2317 doesn't work for a global or local window variable.
2318 For a local window option the global value is unchanged.
2319 For the use of {expr}, see |bufname()| above.
2320 Note that the variable name without "b:" must be used.
2321 Examples: >
2322 :call setbufvar(1, "&mod", 1)
2323 :call setbufvar("todo", "myvar", "foobar")
2324< This function is not available in the |sandbox|.
2325
2326setcmdpos({pos}) *setcmdpos()*
2327 Set the cursor position in the command line to byte position
2328 {pos}. The first position is 1.
2329 Use |getcmdpos()| to obtain the current position.
2330 Only works while editing the command line, thus you must use
2331 |c_CTRL-\_e| or |c_CTRL-R_=|. The position is set after the
2332 command line is set to the expression.
2333 When the number is too big the cursor is put at the end of the
2334 line. A number smaller than one has undefined results.
2335 Returns 0 when successful, 1 when not editing the command
2336 line.
2337
2338setline({lnum}, {line}) *setline()*
2339 Set line {lnum} of the current buffer to {line}. If this
2340 succeeds, 0 is returned. If this fails (most likely because
2341 {lnum} is invalid) 1 is returned. Example: >
2342 :call setline(5, strftime("%c"))
2343< Note: The '[ and '] marks are not set.
2344
2345 *setreg()*
2346setreg({regname}, {value} [,{options}])
2347 Set the register {regname} to {value}.
2348 If {options} contains "a" or {regname} is upper case,
2349 then the value is appended.
2350 {options} can also contains a register type specification:
2351 "c" or "v" |characterwise| mode
2352 "l" or "V" |linewise| mode
2353 "b" or "<CTRL-V>" |blockwise-visual| mode
2354 If a number immediately follows "b" or "<CTRL-V>" then this is
2355 used as the width of the selection - if it is not specified
2356 then the width of the block is set to the number of characters
2357 in the longest line (counting a <TAB> as 1 character).
2358
2359 If {options} contains no register settings, then the default
2360 is to use character mode unless {value} ends in a <NL>.
2361 Setting the '=' register is not possible.
2362 Returns zero for success, non-zero for failure.
2363
2364 Examples: >
2365 :call setreg(v:register, @*)
2366 :call setreg('*', @%, 'ac')
2367 :call setreg('a', "1\n2\n3", 'b5')
2368
2369< This example shows using the functions to save and restore a
2370 register. >
2371 :let var_a = getreg('a')
2372 :let var_amode = getregtype('a')
2373 ....
2374 :call setreg('a', var_a, var_amode)
2375
2376< You can also change the type of a register by appending
2377 nothing: >
2378 :call setreg('a', '', 'al')
2379
2380setwinvar({nr}, {varname}, {val}) *setwinvar()*
2381 Set option or local variable {varname} in window {nr} to
2382 {val}.
2383 This also works for a global or local buffer option, but it
2384 doesn't work for a global or local buffer variable.
2385 For a local buffer option the global value is unchanged.
2386 Note that the variable name without "w:" must be used.
2387 Examples: >
2388 :call setwinvar(1, "&list", 0)
2389 :call setwinvar(2, "myvar", "foobar")
2390< This function is not available in the |sandbox|.
2391
2392simplify({filename}) *simplify()*
2393 Simplify the file name as much as possible without changing
2394 the meaning. Shortcuts (on MS-Windows) or symbolic links (on
2395 Unix) are not resolved. If the first path component in
2396 {filename} designates the current directory, this will be
2397 valid for the result as well. A trailing path separator is
2398 not removed either.
2399 Example: >
2400 simplify("./dir/.././/file/") == "./file/"
2401< Note: The combination "dir/.." is only removed if "dir" is
2402 a searchable directory or does not exist. On Unix, it is also
2403 removed when "dir" is a symbolic link within the same
2404 directory. In order to resolve all the involved symbolic
2405 links before simplifying the path name, use |resolve()|.
2406
2407strftime({format} [, {time}]) *strftime()*
2408 The result is a String, which is a formatted date and time, as
2409 specified by the {format} string. The given {time} is used,
2410 or the current time if no time is given. The accepted
2411 {format} depends on your system, thus this is not portable!
2412 See the manual page of the C function strftime() for the
2413 format. The maximum length of the result is 80 characters.
2414 See also |localtime()| and |getftime()|.
2415 The language can be changed with the |:language| command.
2416 Examples: >
2417 :echo strftime("%c") Sun Apr 27 11:49:23 1997
2418 :echo strftime("%Y %b %d %X") 1997 Apr 27 11:53:25
2419 :echo strftime("%y%m%d %T") 970427 11:53:55
2420 :echo strftime("%H:%M") 11:55
2421 :echo strftime("%c", getftime("file.c"))
2422 Show mod time of file.c.
2423<
2424stridx({haystack}, {needle}) *stridx()*
2425 The result is a Number, which gives the index in {haystack} of
2426 the first occurrence of the String {needle} in the String
2427 {haystack}. The search is done case-sensitive. For advanced
2428 searches use |match()|.
2429 If the {needle} does not occur in {haystack} it returns -1.
2430 See also |strridx()|. Examples: >
2431 :echo stridx("An Example", "Example") 3
2432 :echo stridx("Starting point", "Start") 0
2433 :echo stridx("Starting point", "start") -1
2434<
2435 *strlen()*
2436strlen({expr}) The result is a Number, which is the length of the String
2437 {expr} in bytes. If you want to count the number of
2438 multi-byte characters use something like this: >
2439
2440 :let len = strlen(substitute(str, ".", "x", "g"))
2441
2442< Composing characters are not counted.
2443
2444strpart({src}, {start}[, {len}]) *strpart()*
2445 The result is a String, which is part of {src}, starting from
2446 byte {start}, with the length {len}.
2447 When non-existing bytes are included, this doesn't result in
2448 an error, the bytes are simply omitted.
2449 If {len} is missing, the copy continues from {start} till the
2450 end of the {src}. >
2451 strpart("abcdefg", 3, 2) == "de"
2452 strpart("abcdefg", -2, 4) == "ab"
2453 strpart("abcdefg", 5, 4) == "fg"
2454 strpart("abcdefg", 3) == "defg"
2455< Note: To get the first character, {start} must be 0. For
2456 example, to get three bytes under and after the cursor: >
2457 strpart(getline(line(".")), col(".") - 1, 3)
2458<
2459strridx({haystack}, {needle}) *strridx()*
2460 The result is a Number, which gives the index in {haystack} of
2461 the last occurrence of the String {needle} in the String
2462 {haystack}. The search is done case-sensitive. For advanced
2463 searches use |match()|.
2464 If the {needle} does not occur in {haystack} it returns -1.
2465 See also |stridx()|. Examples: >
2466 :echo strridx("an angry armadillo", "an") 3
2467<
2468strtrans({expr}) *strtrans()*
2469 The result is a String, which is {expr} with all unprintable
2470 characters translated into printable characters |'isprint'|.
2471 Like they are shown in a window. Example: >
2472 echo strtrans(@a)
2473< This displays a newline in register a as "^@" instead of
2474 starting a new line.
2475
2476submatch({nr}) *submatch()*
2477 Only for an expression in a |:substitute| command. Returns
2478 the {nr}'th submatch of the matched text. When {nr} is 0
2479 the whole matched text is returned.
2480 Example: >
2481 :s/\d\+/\=submatch(0) + 1/
2482< This finds the first number in the line and adds one to it.
2483 A line break is included as a newline character.
2484
2485substitute({expr}, {pat}, {sub}, {flags}) *substitute()*
2486 The result is a String, which is a copy of {expr}, in which
2487 the first match of {pat} is replaced with {sub}. This works
2488 like the ":substitute" command (without any flags). But the
2489 matching with {pat} is always done like the 'magic' option is
2490 set and 'cpoptions' is empty (to make scripts portable).
2491 See |string-match| for how {pat} is used.
2492 And a "~" in {sub} is not replaced with the previous {sub}.
2493 Note that some codes in {sub} have a special meaning
2494 |sub-replace-special|. For example, to replace something with
2495 "\n" (two characters), use "\\\\n" or '\\n'.
2496 When {pat} does not match in {expr}, {expr} is returned
2497 unmodified.
2498 When {flags} is "g", all matches of {pat} in {expr} are
2499 replaced. Otherwise {flags} should be "".
2500 Example: >
2501 :let &path = substitute(&path, ",\\=[^,]*$", "", "")
2502< This removes the last component of the 'path' option. >
2503 :echo substitute("testing", ".*", "\\U\\0", "")
2504< results in "TESTING".
2505
2506synID({line}, {col}, {trans}) *synID()*
2507 The result is a Number, which is the syntax ID at the position
2508 {line} and {col} in the current window.
2509 The syntax ID can be used with |synIDattr()| and
2510 |synIDtrans()| to obtain syntax information about text.
2511 {col} is 1 for the leftmost column, {line} is 1 for the first
2512 line.
2513 When {trans} is non-zero, transparent items are reduced to the
2514 item that they reveal. This is useful when wanting to know
2515 the effective color. When {trans} is zero, the transparent
2516 item is returned. This is useful when wanting to know which
2517 syntax item is effective (e.g. inside parens).
2518 Warning: This function can be very slow. Best speed is
2519 obtained by going through the file in forward direction.
2520
2521 Example (echoes the name of the syntax item under the cursor): >
2522 :echo synIDattr(synID(line("."), col("."), 1), "name")
2523<
2524synIDattr({synID}, {what} [, {mode}]) *synIDattr()*
2525 The result is a String, which is the {what} attribute of
2526 syntax ID {synID}. This can be used to obtain information
2527 about a syntax item.
2528 {mode} can be "gui", "cterm" or "term", to get the attributes
2529 for that mode. When {mode} is omitted, or an invalid value is
2530 used, the attributes for the currently active highlighting are
2531 used (GUI, cterm or term).
2532 Use synIDtrans() to follow linked highlight groups.
2533 {what} result
2534 "name" the name of the syntax item
2535 "fg" foreground color (GUI: color name used to set
2536 the color, cterm: color number as a string,
2537 term: empty string)
2538 "bg" background color (like "fg")
2539 "fg#" like "fg", but for the GUI and the GUI is
2540 running the name in "#RRGGBB" form
2541 "bg#" like "fg#" for "bg"
2542 "bold" "1" if bold
2543 "italic" "1" if italic
2544 "reverse" "1" if reverse
2545 "inverse" "1" if inverse (= reverse)
2546 "underline" "1" if underlined
2547
2548 Example (echoes the color of the syntax item under the
2549 cursor): >
2550 :echo synIDattr(synIDtrans(synID(line("."), col("."), 1)), "fg")
2551<
2552synIDtrans({synID}) *synIDtrans()*
2553 The result is a Number, which is the translated syntax ID of
2554 {synID}. This is the syntax group ID of what is being used to
2555 highlight the character. Highlight links given with
2556 ":highlight link" are followed.
2557
2558 *system()*
2559system({expr}) Get the output of the shell command {expr}. Note: newlines
2560 in {expr} may cause the command to fail. The characters in
2561 'shellquote' and 'shellxquote' may also cause trouble.
2562 This is not to be used for interactive commands.
2563 The result is a String. Example: >
2564
2565 :let files = system("ls")
2566
2567< To make the result more system-independent, the shell output
2568 is filtered to replace <CR> with <NL> for Macintosh, and
2569 <CR><NL> with <NL> for DOS-like systems.
2570 The command executed is constructed using several options:
2571 'shell' 'shellcmdflag' 'shellxquote' {expr} 'shellredir' {tmp} 'shellxquote'
2572 ({tmp} is an automatically generated file name).
2573 For Unix and OS/2 braces are put around {expr} to allow for
2574 concatenated commands.
2575
2576 The resulting error code can be found in |v:shell_error|.
2577 This function will fail in |restricted-mode|.
2578 Unlike ":!cmd" there is no automatic check for changed files.
2579 Use |:checktime| to force a check.
2580
2581tempname() *tempname()* *temp-file-name*
2582 The result is a String, which is the name of a file that
2583 doesn't exist. It can be used for a temporary file. The name
2584 is different for at least 26 consecutive calls. Example: >
2585 :let tmpfile = tempname()
2586 :exe "redir > " . tmpfile
2587< For Unix, the file will be in a private directory (only
2588 accessible by the current user) to avoid security problems
2589 (e.g., a symlink attack or other people reading your file).
2590 When Vim exits the directory and all files in it are deleted.
2591 For MS-Windows forward slashes are used when the 'shellslash'
2592 option is set or when 'shellcmdflag' starts with '-'.
2593
2594tolower({expr}) *tolower()*
2595 The result is a copy of the String given, with all uppercase
2596 characters turned into lowercase (just like applying |gu| to
2597 the string).
2598
2599toupper({expr}) *toupper()*
2600 The result is a copy of the String given, with all lowercase
2601 characters turned into uppercase (just like applying |gU| to
2602 the string).
2603
2604type({expr}) *type()*
2605 The result is a Number:
2606 0 if {expr} has the type Number
2607 1 if {expr} has the type String
2608
2609virtcol({expr}) *virtcol()*
2610 The result is a Number, which is the screen column of the file
2611 position given with {expr}. That is, the last screen position
2612 occupied by the character at that position, when the screen
2613 would be of unlimited width. When there is a <Tab> at the
2614 position, the returned Number will be the column at the end of
2615 the <Tab>. For example, for a <Tab> in column 1, with 'ts'
2616 set to 8, it returns 8.
2617 For the byte position use |col()|.
2618 When Virtual editing is active in the current mode, a position
2619 beyond the end of the line can be returned. |'virtualedit'|
2620 The accepted positions are:
2621 . the cursor position
2622 $ the end of the cursor line (the result is the
2623 number of displayed characters in the cursor line
2624 plus one)
2625 'x position of mark x (if the mark is not set, 0 is
2626 returned)
2627 Note that only marks in the current file can be used.
2628 Examples: >
2629 virtcol(".") with text "foo^Lbar", with cursor on the "^L", returns 5
2630 virtcol("$") with text "foo^Lbar", returns 9
2631 virtcol("'t") with text " there", with 't at 'h', returns 6
2632< The first column is 1. 0 is returned for an error.
2633
2634visualmode([expr]) *visualmode()*
2635 The result is a String, which describes the last Visual mode
2636 used. Initially it returns an empty string, but once Visual
2637 mode has been used, it returns "v", "V", or "<CTRL-V>" (a
2638 single CTRL-V character) for character-wise, line-wise, or
2639 block-wise Visual mode respectively.
2640 Example: >
2641 :exe "normal " . visualmode()
2642< This enters the same Visual mode as before. It is also useful
2643 in scripts if you wish to act differently depending on the
2644 Visual mode that was used.
2645
2646 If an expression is supplied that results in a non-zero number
2647 or a non-empty string, then the Visual mode will be cleared
2648 and the old value is returned. Note that " " and "0" are also
2649 non-empty strings, thus cause the mode to be cleared.
2650
2651 *winbufnr()*
2652winbufnr({nr}) The result is a Number, which is the number of the buffer
2653 associated with window {nr}. When {nr} is zero, the number of
2654 the buffer in the current window is returned. When window
2655 {nr} doesn't exist, -1 is returned.
2656 Example: >
2657 :echo "The file in the current window is " . bufname(winbufnr(0))
2658<
2659 *wincol()*
2660wincol() The result is a Number, which is the virtual column of the
2661 cursor in the window. This is counting screen cells from the
2662 left side of the window. The leftmost column is one.
2663
2664winheight({nr}) *winheight()*
2665 The result is a Number, which is the height of window {nr}.
2666 When {nr} is zero, the height of the current window is
2667 returned. When window {nr} doesn't exist, -1 is returned.
2668 An existing window always has a height of zero or more.
2669 Examples: >
2670 :echo "The current window has " . winheight(0) . " lines."
2671<
2672 *winline()*
2673winline() The result is a Number, which is the screen line of the cursor
2674 in the window. This is counting screen lines from the top of
2675 the window. The first line is one.
2676
2677 *winnr()*
2678winnr() The result is a Number, which is the number of the current
2679 window. The top window has number 1. The number can be used
2680 with |CTRL-W_w| and ":wincmd w" |:wincmd|.
2681
2682 *winrestcmd()*
2683winrestcmd() Returns a sequence of |:resize| commands that should restore
2684 the current window sizes. Only works properly when no windows
2685 are opened or closed and the current window is unchanged.
2686 Example: >
2687 :let cmd = winrestcmd()
2688 :call MessWithWindowSizes()
2689 :exe cmd
2690
2691winwidth({nr}) *winwidth()*
2692 The result is a Number, which is the width of window {nr}.
2693 When {nr} is zero, the width of the current window is
2694 returned. When window {nr} doesn't exist, -1 is returned.
2695 An existing window always has a width of zero or more.
2696 Examples: >
2697 :echo "The current window has " . winwidth(0) . " columns."
2698 :if winwidth(0) <= 50
2699 : exe "normal 50\<C-W>|"
2700 :endif
2701<
2702
2703 *feature-list*
2704There are three types of features:
27051. Features that are only supported when they have been enabled when Vim
2706 was compiled |+feature-list|. Example: >
2707 :if has("cindent")
27082. Features that are only supported when certain conditions have been met.
2709 Example: >
2710 :if has("gui_running")
2711< *has-patch*
27123. Included patches. First check |v:version| for the version of Vim.
2713 Then the "patch123" feature means that patch 123 has been included for
2714 this version. Example (checking version 6.2.148 or later): >
2715 :if v:version > 602 || v:version == 602 && has("patch148")
2716
2717all_builtin_terms Compiled with all builtin terminals enabled.
2718amiga Amiga version of Vim.
2719arabic Compiled with Arabic support |Arabic|.
2720arp Compiled with ARP support (Amiga).
2721autocmd Compiled with autocommands support.
2722balloon_eval Compiled with |balloon-eval| support.
2723beos BeOS version of Vim.
2724browse Compiled with |:browse| support, and browse() will
2725 work.
2726builtin_terms Compiled with some builtin terminals.
2727byte_offset Compiled with support for 'o' in 'statusline'
2728cindent Compiled with 'cindent' support.
2729clientserver Compiled with remote invocation support |clientserver|.
2730clipboard Compiled with 'clipboard' support.
2731cmdline_compl Compiled with |cmdline-completion| support.
2732cmdline_hist Compiled with |cmdline-history| support.
2733cmdline_info Compiled with 'showcmd' and 'ruler' support.
2734comments Compiled with |'comments'| support.
2735cryptv Compiled with encryption support |encryption|.
2736cscope Compiled with |cscope| support.
2737compatible Compiled to be very Vi compatible.
2738debug Compiled with "DEBUG" defined.
2739dialog_con Compiled with console dialog support.
2740dialog_gui Compiled with GUI dialog support.
2741diff Compiled with |vimdiff| and 'diff' support.
2742digraphs Compiled with support for digraphs.
2743dnd Compiled with support for the "~ register |quote_~|.
2744dos32 32 bits DOS (DJGPP) version of Vim.
2745dos16 16 bits DOS version of Vim.
2746ebcdic Compiled on a machine with ebcdic character set.
2747emacs_tags Compiled with support for Emacs tags.
2748eval Compiled with expression evaluation support. Always
2749 true, of course!
2750ex_extra Compiled with extra Ex commands |+ex_extra|.
2751extra_search Compiled with support for |'incsearch'| and
2752 |'hlsearch'|
2753farsi Compiled with Farsi support |farsi|.
2754file_in_path Compiled with support for |gf| and |<cfile>|
2755find_in_path Compiled with support for include file searches
2756 |+find_in_path|.
2757fname_case Case in file names matters (for Amiga, MS-DOS, and
2758 Windows this is not present).
2759folding Compiled with |folding| support.
2760footer Compiled with GUI footer support. |gui-footer|
2761fork Compiled to use fork()/exec() instead of system().
2762gettext Compiled with message translation |multi-lang|
2763gui Compiled with GUI enabled.
2764gui_athena Compiled with Athena GUI.
Bram Moolenaar69a7cb42004-06-20 12:51:53 +00002765gui_beos Compiled with BeOS GUI.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002766gui_gtk Compiled with GTK+ GUI (any version).
2767gui_gtk2 Compiled with GTK+ 2 GUI (gui_gtk is also defined).
2768gui_mac Compiled with Macintosh GUI.
2769gui_motif Compiled with Motif GUI.
2770gui_photon Compiled with Photon GUI.
2771gui_win32 Compiled with MS Windows Win32 GUI.
2772gui_win32s idem, and Win32s system being used (Windows 3.1)
2773gui_running Vim is running in the GUI, or it will start soon.
2774hangul_input Compiled with Hangul input support. |hangul|
2775iconv Can use iconv() for conversion.
2776insert_expand Compiled with support for CTRL-X expansion commands in
2777 Insert mode.
2778jumplist Compiled with |jumplist| support.
2779keymap Compiled with 'keymap' support.
2780langmap Compiled with 'langmap' support.
2781libcall Compiled with |libcall()| support.
2782linebreak Compiled with 'linebreak', 'breakat' and 'showbreak'
2783 support.
2784lispindent Compiled with support for lisp indenting.
2785listcmds Compiled with commands for the buffer list |:files|
2786 and the argument list |arglist|.
2787localmap Compiled with local mappings and abbr. |:map-local|
2788mac Macintosh version of Vim.
2789macunix Macintosh version of Vim, using Unix files (OS-X).
2790menu Compiled with support for |:menu|.
2791mksession Compiled with support for |:mksession|.
2792modify_fname Compiled with file name modifiers. |filename-modifiers|
2793mouse Compiled with support mouse.
2794mouseshape Compiled with support for 'mouseshape'.
2795mouse_dec Compiled with support for Dec terminal mouse.
2796mouse_gpm Compiled with support for gpm (Linux console mouse)
2797mouse_netterm Compiled with support for netterm mouse.
2798mouse_pterm Compiled with support for qnx pterm mouse.
2799mouse_xterm Compiled with support for xterm mouse.
2800multi_byte Compiled with support for editing Korean et al.
2801multi_byte_ime Compiled with support for IME input method.
2802multi_lang Compiled with support for multiple languages.
2803netbeans_intg Compiled with support for |netbeans|.
2804ole Compiled with OLE automation support for Win32.
2805os2 OS/2 version of Vim.
2806osfiletype Compiled with support for osfiletypes |+osfiletype|
2807path_extra Compiled with up/downwards search in 'path' and 'tags'
2808perl Compiled with Perl interface.
2809postscript Compiled with PostScript file printing.
2810printer Compiled with |:hardcopy| support.
2811python Compiled with Python interface.
2812qnx QNX version of Vim.
2813quickfix Compiled with |quickfix| support.
2814rightleft Compiled with 'rightleft' support.
2815ruby Compiled with Ruby interface |ruby|.
2816scrollbind Compiled with 'scrollbind' support.
2817showcmd Compiled with 'showcmd' support.
2818signs Compiled with |:sign| support.
2819smartindent Compiled with 'smartindent' support.
Bram Moolenaar69a7cb42004-06-20 12:51:53 +00002820sniff Compiled with SNiFF interface support.
Bram Moolenaar071d4272004-06-13 20:20:40 +00002821statusline Compiled with support for 'statusline', 'rulerformat'
2822 and special formats of 'titlestring' and 'iconstring'.
2823sun_workshop Compiled with support for Sun |workshop|.
2824syntax Compiled with syntax highlighting support.
2825syntax_items There are active syntax highlighting items for the
2826 current buffer.
2827system Compiled to use system() instead of fork()/exec().
2828tag_binary Compiled with binary searching in tags files
2829 |tag-binary-search|.
2830tag_old_static Compiled with support for old static tags
2831 |tag-old-static|.
2832tag_any_white Compiled with support for any white characters in tags
2833 files |tag-any-white|.
2834tcl Compiled with Tcl interface.
2835terminfo Compiled with terminfo instead of termcap.
2836termresponse Compiled with support for |t_RV| and |v:termresponse|.
2837textobjects Compiled with support for |text-objects|.
2838tgetent Compiled with tgetent support, able to use a termcap
2839 or terminfo file.
2840title Compiled with window title support |'title'|.
2841toolbar Compiled with support for |gui-toolbar|.
2842unix Unix version of Vim.
2843user_commands User-defined commands.
2844viminfo Compiled with viminfo support.
2845vim_starting True while initial source'ing takes place.
2846vertsplit Compiled with vertically split windows |:vsplit|.
2847virtualedit Compiled with 'virtualedit' option.
2848visual Compiled with Visual mode.
2849visualextra Compiled with extra Visual mode commands.
2850 |blockwise-operators|.
2851vms VMS version of Vim.
2852vreplace Compiled with |gR| and |gr| commands.
2853wildignore Compiled with 'wildignore' option.
2854wildmenu Compiled with 'wildmenu' option.
2855windows Compiled with support for more than one window.
2856winaltkeys Compiled with 'winaltkeys' option.
2857win16 Win16 version of Vim (MS-Windows 3.1).
2858win32 Win32 version of Vim (MS-Windows 95/98/ME/NT/2000/XP).
2859win64 Win64 version of Vim (MS-Windows 64 bit).
2860win32unix Win32 version of Vim, using Unix files (Cygwin)
2861win95 Win32 version for MS-Windows 95/98/ME.
2862writebackup Compiled with 'writebackup' default on.
2863xfontset Compiled with X fontset support |xfontset|.
2864xim Compiled with X input method support |xim|.
2865xsmp Compiled with X session management support.
2866xsmp_interact Compiled with interactive X session management support.
2867xterm_clipboard Compiled with support for xterm clipboard.
2868xterm_save Compiled with support for saving and restoring the
2869 xterm screen.
2870x11 Compiled with X11 support.
2871
2872 *string-match*
2873Matching a pattern in a String
2874
2875A regexp pattern as explained at |pattern| is normally used to find a match in
2876the buffer lines. When a pattern is used to find a match in a String, almost
2877everything works in the same way. The difference is that a String is handled
2878like it is one line. When it contains a "\n" character, this is not seen as a
2879line break for the pattern. It can be matched with a "\n" in the pattern, or
2880with ".". Example: >
2881 :let a = "aaaa\nxxxx"
2882 :echo matchstr(a, "..\n..")
2883 aa
2884 xx
2885 :echo matchstr(a, "a.x")
2886 a
2887 x
2888
2889Don't forget that "^" will only match at the first character of the String and
2890"$" at the last character of the string. They don't match after or before a
2891"\n".
2892
2893==============================================================================
28945. Defining functions *user-functions*
2895
2896New functions can be defined. These can be called just like builtin
2897functions. The function executes a sequence of Ex commands. Normal mode
2898commands can be executed with the |:normal| command.
2899
2900The function name must start with an uppercase letter, to avoid confusion with
2901builtin functions. To prevent from using the same name in different scripts
2902avoid obvious, short names. A good habit is to start the function name with
2903the name of the script, e.g., "HTMLcolor()".
2904
2905It's also possible to use curly braces, see |curly-braces-names|.
2906
2907 *local-function*
2908A function local to a script must start with "s:". A local script function
2909can only be called from within the script and from functions, user commands
2910and autocommands defined in the script. It is also possible to call the
2911function from a mappings defined in the script, but then |<SID>| must be used
2912instead of "s:" when the mapping is expanded outside of the script.
2913
2914 *:fu* *:function* *E128* *E129* *E123*
2915:fu[nction] List all functions and their arguments.
2916
2917:fu[nction] {name} List function {name}.
2918 *E124* *E125*
2919:fu[nction][!] {name}([arguments]) [range] [abort]
2920 Define a new function by the name {name}. The name
2921 must be made of alphanumeric characters and '_', and
2922 must start with a capital or "s:" (see above).
2923 *function-argument* *a:var*
2924 An argument can be defined by giving its name. In the
2925 function this can then be used as "a:name" ("a:" for
2926 argument).
2927 Up to 20 arguments can be given, separated by commas.
2928 Finally, an argument "..." can be specified, which
2929 means that more arguments may be following. In the
2930 function they can be used as "a:1", "a:2", etc. "a:0"
2931 is set to the number of extra arguments (which can be
2932 0).
2933 When not using "...", the number of arguments in a
2934 function call must be equal to the number of named
2935 arguments. When using "...", the number of arguments
2936 may be larger.
2937 It is also possible to define a function without any
2938 arguments. You must still supply the () then.
2939 The body of the function follows in the next lines,
2940 until the matching |:endfunction|. It is allowed to
2941 define another function inside a function body.
2942 *E127* *E122*
2943 When a function by this name already exists and [!] is
2944 not used an error message is given. When [!] is used,
2945 an existing function is silently replaced. Unless it
2946 is currently being executed, that is an error.
2947 *a:firstline* *a:lastline*
2948 When the [range] argument is added, the function is
2949 expected to take care of a range itself. The range is
2950 passed as "a:firstline" and "a:lastline". If [range]
2951 is excluded, ":{range}call" will call the function for
2952 each line in the range, with the cursor on the start
2953 of each line. See |function-range-example|.
2954 When the [abort] argument is added, the function will
2955 abort as soon as an error is detected.
2956 The last used search pattern and the redo command "."
2957 will not be changed by the function.
2958
2959 *:endf* *:endfunction* *E126* *E193*
2960:endf[unction] The end of a function definition. Must be on a line
2961 by its own, without other commands.
2962
2963 *:delf* *:delfunction* *E130* *E131*
2964:delf[unction] {name} Delete function {name}.
2965
2966 *:retu* *:return* *E133*
2967:retu[rn] [expr] Return from a function. When "[expr]" is given, it is
2968 evaluated and returned as the result of the function.
2969 If "[expr]" is not given, the number 0 is returned.
2970 When a function ends without an explicit ":return",
2971 the number 0 is returned.
2972 Note that there is no check for unreachable lines,
2973 thus there is no warning if commands follow ":return".
2974
2975 If the ":return" is used after a |:try| but before the
2976 matching |:finally| (if present), the commands
2977 following the ":finally" up to the matching |:endtry|
2978 are executed first. This process applies to all
2979 nested ":try"s inside the function. The function
2980 returns at the outermost ":endtry".
2981
2982
2983Inside a function variables can be used. These are local variables, which
2984will disappear when the function returns. Global variables need to be
2985accessed with "g:".
2986
2987Example: >
2988 :function Table(title, ...)
2989 : echohl Title
2990 : echo a:title
2991 : echohl None
2992 : let idx = 1
2993 : while idx <= a:0
2994 : echo a:{idx} . ' '
2995 : let idx = idx + 1
2996 : endwhile
2997 : return idx
2998 :endfunction
2999
3000This function can then be called with: >
3001 let lines = Table("Table", "line1", "line2")
3002 let lines = Table("Empty Table")
3003
3004To return more than one value, pass the name of a global variable: >
3005 :function Compute(n1, n2, divname)
3006 : if a:n2 == 0
3007 : return "fail"
3008 : endif
3009 : let g:{a:divname} = a:n1 / a:n2
3010 : return "ok"
3011 :endfunction
3012
3013This function can then be called with: >
3014 :let success = Compute(13, 1324, "div")
3015 :if success == "ok"
3016 : echo div
3017 :endif
3018
3019An alternative is to return a command that can be executed. This also works
3020with local variables in a calling function. Example: >
3021 :function Foo()
3022 : execute Bar()
3023 : echo "line " . lnum . " column " . col
3024 :endfunction
3025
3026 :function Bar()
3027 : return "let lnum = " . line(".") . " | let col = " . col(".")
3028 :endfunction
3029
3030The names "lnum" and "col" could also be passed as argument to Bar(), to allow
3031the caller to set the names.
3032
3033 *:cal* *:call* *E107*
3034:[range]cal[l] {name}([arguments])
3035 Call a function. The name of the function and its arguments
3036 are as specified with |:function|. Up to 20 arguments can be
3037 used.
3038 Without a range and for functions that accept a range, the
3039 function is called once. When a range is given the cursor is
3040 positioned at the start of the first line before executing the
3041 function.
3042 When a range is given and the function doesn't handle it
3043 itself, the function is executed for each line in the range,
3044 with the cursor in the first column of that line. The cursor
3045 is left at the last line (possibly moved by the last function
3046 call). The arguments are re-evaluated for each line. Thus
3047 this works:
3048 *function-range-example* >
3049 :function Mynumber(arg)
3050 : echo line(".") . " " . a:arg
3051 :endfunction
3052 :1,5call Mynumber(getline("."))
3053<
3054 The "a:firstline" and "a:lastline" are defined anyway, they
3055 can be used to do something different at the start or end of
3056 the range.
3057
3058 Example of a function that handles the range itself: >
3059
3060 :function Cont() range
3061 : execute (a:firstline + 1) . "," . a:lastline . 's/^/\t\\ '
3062 :endfunction
3063 :4,8call Cont()
3064<
3065 This function inserts the continuation character "\" in front
3066 of all the lines in the range, except the first one.
3067
3068 *E132*
3069The recursiveness of user functions is restricted with the |'maxfuncdepth'|
3070option.
3071
3072 *autoload-functions*
3073When using many or large functions, it's possible to automatically define them
3074only when they are used. Use the FuncUndefined autocommand event with a
3075pattern that matches the function(s) to be defined. Example: >
3076
3077 :au FuncUndefined BufNet* source ~/vim/bufnetfuncs.vim
3078
3079The file "~/vim/bufnetfuncs.vim" should then define functions that start with
3080"BufNet". Also see |FuncUndefined|.
3081
3082==============================================================================
30836. Curly braces names *curly-braces-names*
3084
3085Wherever you can use a variable, you can use a "curly braces name" variable.
3086This is a regular variable name with one or more expressions wrapped in braces
3087{} like this: >
3088 my_{adjective}_variable
3089
3090When Vim encounters this, it evaluates the expression inside the braces, puts
3091that in place of the expression, and re-interprets the whole as a variable
3092name. So in the above example, if the variable "adjective" was set to
3093"noisy", then the reference would be to "my_noisy_variable", whereas if
3094"adjective" was set to "quiet", then it would be to "my_quiet_variable".
3095
3096One application for this is to create a set of variables governed by an option
3097value. For example, the statement >
3098 echo my_{&background}_message
3099
3100would output the contents of "my_dark_message" or "my_light_message" depending
3101on the current value of 'background'.
3102
3103You can use multiple brace pairs: >
3104 echo my_{adverb}_{adjective}_message
3105..or even nest them: >
3106 echo my_{ad{end_of_word}}_message
3107where "end_of_word" is either "verb" or "jective".
3108
3109However, the expression inside the braces must evaluate to a valid single
3110variable name. e.g. this is invalid: >
3111 :let foo='a + b'
3112 :echo c{foo}d
3113.. since the result of expansion is "ca + bd", which is not a variable name.
3114
3115 *curly-braces-function-names*
3116You can call and define functions by an evaluated name in a similar way.
3117Example: >
3118 :let func_end='whizz'
3119 :call my_func_{func_end}(parameter)
3120
3121This would call the function "my_func_whizz(parameter)".
3122
3123==============================================================================
31247. Commands *expression-commands*
3125
3126:let {var-name} = {expr1} *:let* *E18*
3127 Set internal variable {var-name} to the result of the
3128 expression {expr1}. The variable will get the type
3129 from the {expr}. If {var-name} didn't exist yet, it
3130 is created.
3131
3132:let ${env-name} = {expr1} *:let-environment* *:let-$*
3133 Set environment variable {env-name} to the result of
3134 the expression {expr1}. The type is always String.
3135
3136:let @{reg-name} = {expr1} *:let-register* *:let-@*
3137 Write the result of the expression {expr1} in register
3138 {reg-name}. {reg-name} must be a single letter, and
3139 must be the name of a writable register (see
3140 |registers|). "@@" can be used for the unnamed
3141 register, "@/" for the search pattern.
3142 If the result of {expr1} ends in a <CR> or <NL>, the
3143 register will be linewise, otherwise it will be set to
3144 characterwise.
3145 This can be used to clear the last search pattern: >
3146 :let @/ = ""
3147< This is different from searching for an empty string,
3148 that would match everywhere.
3149
3150:let &{option-name} = {expr1} *:let-option* *:let-star*
3151 Set option {option-name} to the result of the
3152 expression {expr1}. The value is always converted to
3153 the type of the option.
3154 For an option local to a window or buffer the effect
3155 is just like using the |:set| command: both the local
3156 value and the global value is changed.
3157
3158:let &l:{option-name} = {expr1}
3159 Like above, but only set the local value of an option
3160 (if there is one). Works like |:setlocal|.
3161
3162:let &g:{option-name} = {expr1}
3163 Like above, but only set the global value of an option
3164 (if there is one). Works like |:setglobal|.
3165
3166 *E106*
3167:let {var-name} .. List the value of variable {var-name}. Several
3168 variable names may be given.
3169
3170:let List the values of all variables.
3171
3172 *:unlet* *:unl* *E108*
3173:unl[et][!] {var-name} ...
3174 Remove the internal variable {var-name}. Several
3175 variable names can be given, they are all removed.
3176 With [!] no error message is given for non-existing
3177 variables.
3178
3179:if {expr1} *:if* *:endif* *:en* *E171* *E579* *E580*
3180:en[dif] Execute the commands until the next matching ":else"
3181 or ":endif" if {expr1} evaluates to non-zero.
3182
3183 From Vim version 4.5 until 5.0, every Ex command in
3184 between the ":if" and ":endif" is ignored. These two
3185 commands were just to allow for future expansions in a
3186 backwards compatible way. Nesting was allowed. Note
3187 that any ":else" or ":elseif" was ignored, the "else"
3188 part was not executed either.
3189
3190 You can use this to remain compatible with older
3191 versions: >
3192 :if version >= 500
3193 : version-5-specific-commands
3194 :endif
3195< The commands still need to be parsed to find the
3196 "endif". Sometimes an older Vim has a problem with a
3197 new command. For example, ":silent" is recognized as
3198 a ":substitute" command. In that case ":execute" can
3199 avoid problems: >
3200 :if version >= 600
3201 : execute "silent 1,$delete"
3202 :endif
3203<
3204 NOTE: The ":append" and ":insert" commands don't work
3205 properly in between ":if" and ":endif".
3206
3207 *:else* *:el* *E581* *E583*
3208:el[se] Execute the commands until the next matching ":else"
3209 or ":endif" if they previously were not being
3210 executed.
3211
3212 *:elseif* *:elsei* *E582* *E584*
3213:elsei[f] {expr1} Short for ":else" ":if", with the addition that there
3214 is no extra ":endif".
3215
3216:wh[ile] {expr1} *:while* *:endwhile* *:wh* *:endw*
3217 *E170* *E585* *E588*
3218:endw[hile] Repeat the commands between ":while" and ":endwhile",
3219 as long as {expr1} evaluates to non-zero.
3220 When an error is detected from a command inside the
3221 loop, execution continues after the "endwhile".
3222
3223 NOTE: The ":append" and ":insert" commands don't work
3224 properly inside a ":while" loop.
3225
3226 *:continue* *:con* *E586*
3227:con[tinue] When used inside a ":while", jumps back to the
3228 ":while". If it is used after a |:try| inside the
3229 ":while" but before the matching |:finally| (if
3230 present), the commands following the ":finally" up to
3231 the matching |:endtry| are executed first. This
3232 process applies to all nested ":try"s inside the
3233 ":while". The outermost ":endtry" then jumps back to
3234 the ":while".
3235
3236 *:break* *:brea* *E587*
3237:brea[k] When used inside a ":while", skips to the command
3238 after the matching ":endwhile". If it is used after
3239 a |:try| inside the ":while" but before the matching
3240 |:finally| (if present), the commands following the
3241 ":finally" up to the matching |:endtry| are executed
3242 first. This process applies to all nested ":try"s
3243 inside the ":while". The outermost ":endtry" then
3244 jumps to the command after the ":endwhile".
3245
3246:try *:try* *:endt* *:endtry* *E600* *E601* *E602*
3247:endt[ry] Change the error handling for the commands between
3248 ":try" and ":endtry" including everything being
3249 executed across ":source" commands, function calls,
3250 or autocommand invocations.
3251
3252 When an error or interrupt is detected and there is
3253 a |:finally| command following, execution continues
3254 after the ":finally". Otherwise, or when the
3255 ":endtry" is reached thereafter, the next
3256 (dynamically) surrounding ":try" is checked for
3257 a corresponding ":finally" etc. Then the script
3258 processing is terminated. (Whether a function
3259 definition has an "abort" argument does not matter.)
3260 Example: >
3261 :try | edit too much | finally | echo "cleanup" | endtry
3262 :echo "impossible" " not reached, script terminated above
3263<
3264 Moreover, an error or interrupt (dynamically) inside
3265 ":try" and ":endtry" is converted to an exception. It
3266 can be caught as if it were thrown by a |:throw|
3267 command (see |:catch|). In this case, the script
3268 processing is not terminated.
3269
3270 The value "Vim:Interrupt" is used for an interrupt
3271 exception. An error in a Vim command is converted
3272 to a value of the form "Vim({command}):{errmsg}",
3273 other errors are converted to a value of the form
3274 "Vim:{errmsg}". {command} is the full command name,
3275 and {errmsg} is the message that is displayed if the
3276 error exception is not caught, always beginning with
3277 the error number.
3278 Examples: >
3279 :try | sleep 100 | catch /^Vim:Interrupt$/ | endtry
3280 :try | edit | catch /^Vim(edit):E\d\+/ | echo "error" | endtry
3281<
3282 *:cat* *:catch* *E603* *E604* *E605*
3283:cat[ch] /{pattern}/ The following commands until the next ":catch",
3284 |:finally|, or |:endtry| that belongs to the same
3285 |:try| as the ":catch" are executed when an exception
3286 matching {pattern} is being thrown and has not yet
3287 been caught by a previous ":catch". Otherwise, these
3288 commands are skipped.
3289 When {pattern} is omitted all errors are caught.
3290 Examples: >
3291 :catch /^Vim:Interrupt$/ " catch interrupts (CTRL-C)
3292 :catch /^Vim\%((\a\+)\)\=:E/ " catch all Vim errors
3293 :catch /^Vim\%((\a\+)\)\=:/ " catch errors and interrupts
3294 :catch /^Vim(write):/ " catch all errors in :write
3295 :catch /^Vim\%((\a\+)\)\=:E123/ " catch error E123
3296 :catch /my-exception/ " catch user exception
3297 :catch /.*/ " catch everything
3298 :catch " same as /.*/
3299<
3300 Another character can be used instead of / around the
3301 {pattern}, so long as it does not have a special
3302 meaning (e.g., '|' or '"') and doesn't occur inside
3303 {pattern}.
3304 NOTE: It is not reliable to ":catch" the TEXT of
3305 an error message because it may vary in different
3306 locales.
3307
3308 *:fina* *:finally* *E606* *E607*
3309:fina[lly] The following commands until the matching |:endtry|
3310 are executed whenever the part between the matching
3311 |:try| and the ":finally" is left: either by falling
3312 through to the ":finally" or by a |:continue|,
3313 |:break|, |:finish|, or |:return|, or by an error or
3314 interrupt or exception (see |:throw|).
3315
3316 *:th* *:throw* *E608*
3317:th[row] {expr1} The {expr1} is evaluated and thrown as an exception.
3318 If the ":throw" is used after a |:try| but before the
3319 first corresponding |:catch|, commands are skipped
3320 until the first ":catch" matching {expr1} is reached.
3321 If there is no such ":catch" or if the ":throw" is
3322 used after a ":catch" but before the |:finally|, the
3323 commands following the ":finally" (if present) up to
3324 the matching |:endtry| are executed. If the ":throw"
3325 is after the ":finally", commands up to the ":endtry"
3326 are skipped. At the ":endtry", this process applies
3327 again for the next dynamically surrounding ":try"
3328 (which may be found in a calling function or sourcing
3329 script), until a matching ":catch" has been found.
3330 If the exception is not caught, the command processing
3331 is terminated.
3332 Example: >
3333 :try | throw "oops" | catch /^oo/ | echo "caught" | endtry
3334<
3335
3336 *:ec* *:echo*
3337:ec[ho] {expr1} .. Echoes each {expr1}, with a space in between. The
3338 first {expr1} starts on a new line.
3339 Also see |:comment|.
3340 Use "\n" to start a new line. Use "\r" to move the
3341 cursor to the first column.
3342 Uses the highlighting set by the |:echohl| command.
3343 Cannot be followed by a comment.
3344 Example: >
3345 :echo "the value of 'shell' is" &shell
3346< A later redraw may make the message disappear again.
3347 To avoid that a command from before the ":echo" causes
3348 a redraw afterwards (redraws are often postponed until
3349 you type something), force a redraw with the |:redraw|
3350 command. Example: >
3351 :new | redraw | echo "there is a new window"
3352<
3353 *:echon*
3354:echon {expr1} .. Echoes each {expr1}, without anything added. Also see
3355 |:comment|.
3356 Uses the highlighting set by the |:echohl| command.
3357 Cannot be followed by a comment.
3358 Example: >
3359 :echon "the value of 'shell' is " &shell
3360<
3361 Note the difference between using ":echo", which is a
3362 Vim command, and ":!echo", which is an external shell
3363 command: >
3364 :!echo % --> filename
3365< The arguments of ":!" are expanded, see |:_%|. >
3366 :!echo "%" --> filename or "filename"
3367< Like the previous example. Whether you see the double
3368 quotes or not depends on your 'shell'. >
3369 :echo % --> nothing
3370< The '%' is an illegal character in an expression. >
3371 :echo "%" --> %
3372< This just echoes the '%' character. >
3373 :echo expand("%") --> filename
3374< This calls the expand() function to expand the '%'.
3375
3376 *:echoh* *:echohl*
3377:echoh[l] {name} Use the highlight group {name} for the following
3378 |:echo|, |:echon| and |:echomsg| commands. Also used
3379 for the |input()| prompt. Example: >
3380 :echohl WarningMsg | echo "Don't panic!" | echohl None
3381< Don't forget to set the group back to "None",
3382 otherwise all following echo's will be highlighted.
3383
3384 *:echom* *:echomsg*
3385:echom[sg] {expr1} .. Echo the expression(s) as a true message, saving the
3386 message in the |message-history|.
3387 Spaces are placed between the arguments as with the
3388 |:echo| command. But unprintable characters are
3389 displayed, not interpreted.
3390 Uses the highlighting set by the |:echohl| command.
3391 Example: >
3392 :echomsg "It's a Zizzer Zazzer Zuzz, as you can plainly see."
3393<
3394 *:echoe* *:echoerr*
3395:echoe[rr] {expr1} .. Echo the expression(s) as an error message, saving the
3396 message in the |message-history|. When used in a
3397 script or function the line number will be added.
3398 Spaces are placed between the arguments as with the
3399 :echo command. When used inside a try conditional,
3400 the message is raised as an error exception instead
3401 (see |try-echoerr|).
3402 Example: >
3403 :echoerr "This script just failed!"
3404< If you just want a highlighted message use |:echohl|.
3405 And to get a beep: >
3406 :exe "normal \<Esc>"
3407<
3408 *:exe* *:execute*
3409:exe[cute] {expr1} .. Executes the string that results from the evaluation
3410 of {expr1} as an Ex command. Multiple arguments are
3411 concatenated, with a space in between. {expr1} is
3412 used as the processed command, command line editing
3413 keys are not recognized.
3414 Cannot be followed by a comment.
3415 Examples: >
3416 :execute "buffer " nextbuf
3417 :execute "normal " count . "w"
3418<
3419 ":execute" can be used to append a command to commands
3420 that don't accept a '|'. Example: >
3421 :execute '!ls' | echo "theend"
3422
3423< ":execute" is also a nice way to avoid having to type
3424 control characters in a Vim script for a ":normal"
3425 command: >
3426 :execute "normal ixxx\<Esc>"
3427< This has an <Esc> character, see |expr-string|.
3428
3429 Note: The executed string may be any command-line, but
3430 you cannot start or end a "while" or "if" command.
3431 Thus this is illegal: >
3432 :execute 'while i > 5'
3433 :execute 'echo "test" | break'
3434<
3435 It is allowed to have a "while" or "if" command
3436 completely in the executed string: >
3437 :execute 'while i < 5 | echo i | let i = i + 1 | endwhile'
3438<
3439
3440 *:comment*
3441 ":execute", ":echo" and ":echon" cannot be followed by
3442 a comment directly, because they see the '"' as the
3443 start of a string. But, you can use '|' followed by a
3444 comment. Example: >
3445 :echo "foo" | "this is a comment
3446
3447==============================================================================
34488. Exception handling *exception-handling*
3449
3450The Vim script language comprises an exception handling feature. This section
3451explains how it can be used in a Vim script.
3452
3453Exceptions may be raised by Vim on an error or on interrupt, see
3454|catch-errors| and |catch-interrupt|. You can also explicitly throw an
3455exception by using the ":throw" command, see |throw-catch|.
3456
3457
3458TRY CONDITIONALS *try-conditionals*
3459
3460Exceptions can be caught or can cause cleanup code to be executed. You can
3461use a try conditional to specify catch clauses (that catch exceptions) and/or
3462a finally clause (to be executed for cleanup).
3463 A try conditional begins with a |:try| command and ends at the matching
3464|:endtry| command. In between, you can use a |:catch| command to start
3465a catch clause, or a |:finally| command to start a finally clause. There may
3466be none or multiple catch clauses, but there is at most one finally clause,
3467which must not be followed by any catch clauses. The lines before the catch
3468clauses and the finally clause is called a try block. >
3469
3470 :try
3471 : ...
3472 : ... TRY BLOCK
3473 : ...
3474 :catch /{pattern}/
3475 : ...
3476 : ... CATCH CLAUSE
3477 : ...
3478 :catch /{pattern}/
3479 : ...
3480 : ... CATCH CLAUSE
3481 : ...
3482 :finally
3483 : ...
3484 : ... FINALLY CLAUSE
3485 : ...
3486 :endtry
3487
3488The try conditional allows to watch code for exceptions and to take the
3489appropriate actions. Exceptions from the try block may be caught. Exceptions
3490from the try block and also the catch clauses may cause cleanup actions.
3491 When no exception is thrown during execution of the try block, the control
3492is transferred to the finally clause, if present. After its execution, the
3493script continues with the line following the ":endtry".
3494 When an exception occurs during execution of the try block, the remaining
3495lines in the try block are skipped. The exception is matched against the
3496patterns specified as arguments to the ":catch" commands. The catch clause
3497after the first matching ":catch" is taken, other catch clauses are not
3498executed. The catch clause ends when the next ":catch", ":finally", or
3499":endtry" command is reached - whatever is first. Then, the finally clause
3500(if present) is executed. When the ":endtry" is reached, the script execution
3501continues in the following line as usual.
3502 When an exception that does not match any of the patterns specified by the
3503":catch" commands is thrown in the try block, the exception is not caught by
3504that try conditional and none of the catch clauses is executed. Only the
3505finally clause, if present, is taken. The exception pends during execution of
3506the finally clause. It is resumed at the ":endtry", so that commands after
3507the ":endtry" are not executed and the exception might be caught elsewhere,
3508see |try-nesting|.
3509 When during execution of a catch clause another exception is thrown, the
3510remaining lines in that catch clause are not executed. The new exception is
3511not matched against the patterns in any of the ":catch" commands of the same
3512try conditional and none of its catch clauses is taken. If there is, however,
3513a finally clause, it is executed, and the exception pends during its
3514execution. The commands following the ":endtry" are not executed. The new
3515exception might, however, be caught elsewhere, see |try-nesting|.
3516 When during execution of the finally clause (if present) an exception is
3517thrown, the remaining lines in the finally clause are skipped. If the finally
3518clause has been taken because of an exception from the try block or one of the
3519catch clauses, the original (pending) exception is discarded. The commands
3520following the ":endtry" are not executed, and the exception from the finally
3521clause is propagated and can be caught elsewhere, see |try-nesting|.
3522
3523The finally clause is also executed, when a ":break" or ":continue" for
3524a ":while" loop enclosing the complete try conditional is executed from the
3525try block or a catch clause. Or when a ":return" or ":finish" is executed
3526from the try block or a catch clause of a try conditional in a function or
3527sourced script, respectively. The ":break", ":continue", ":return", or
3528":finish" pends during execution of the finally clause and is resumed when the
3529":endtry" is reached. It is, however, discarded when an exception is thrown
3530from the finally clause.
3531 When a ":break" or ":continue" for a ":while" loop enclosing the complete
3532try conditional or when a ":return" or ":finish" is encountered in the finally
3533clause, the rest of the finally clause is skipped, and the ":break",
3534":continue", ":return" or ":finish" is executed as usual. If the finally
3535clause has been taken because of an exception or an earlier ":break",
3536":continue", ":return", or ":finish" from the try block or a catch clause,
3537this pending exception or command is discarded.
3538
3539For examples see |throw-catch| and |try-finally|.
3540
3541
3542NESTING OF TRY CONDITIONALS *try-nesting*
3543
3544Try conditionals can be nested arbitrarily. That is, a complete try
3545conditional can be put into the try block, a catch clause, or the finally
3546clause of another try conditional. If the inner try conditional does not
3547catch an exception thrown in its try block or throws a new exception from one
3548of its catch clauses or its finally clause, the outer try conditional is
3549checked according to the rules above. If the inner try conditional is in the
3550try block of the outer try conditional, its catch clauses are checked, but
3551otherwise only the finally clause is executed. It does not matter for
3552nesting, whether the inner try conditional is directly contained in the outer
3553one, or whether the outer one sources a script or calls a function containing
3554the inner try conditional.
3555
3556When none of the active try conditionals catches an exception, just their
3557finally clauses are executed. Thereafter, the script processing terminates.
3558An error message is displayed in case of an uncaught exception explicitly
3559thrown by a ":throw" command. For uncaught error and interrupt exceptions
3560implicitly raised by Vim, the error message(s) or interrupt message are shown
3561as usual.
3562
3563For examples see |throw-catch|.
3564
3565
3566EXAMINING EXCEPTION HANDLING CODE *except-examine*
3567
3568Exception handling code can get tricky. If you are in doubt what happens, set
3569'verbose' to 13 or use the ":13verbose" command modifier when sourcing your
3570script file. Then you see when an exception is thrown, discarded, caught, or
3571finished. When using a verbosity level of at least 14, things pending in
3572a finally clause are also shown. This information is also given in debug mode
3573(see |debug-scripts|).
3574
3575
3576THROWING AND CATCHING EXCEPTIONS *throw-catch*
3577
3578You can throw any number or string as an exception. Use the |:throw| command
3579and pass the value to be thrown as argument: >
3580 :throw 4711
3581 :throw "string"
3582< *throw-expression*
3583You can also specify an expression argument. The expression is then evaluated
3584first, and the result is thrown: >
3585 :throw 4705 + strlen("string")
3586 :throw strpart("strings", 0, 6)
3587
3588An exception might be thrown during evaluation of the argument of the ":throw"
3589command. Unless it is caught there, the expression evaluation is abandoned.
3590The ":throw" command then does not throw a new exception.
3591 Example: >
3592
3593 :function! Foo(arg)
3594 : try
3595 : throw a:arg
3596 : catch /foo/
3597 : endtry
3598 : return 1
3599 :endfunction
3600 :
3601 :function! Bar()
3602 : echo "in Bar"
3603 : return 4710
3604 :endfunction
3605 :
3606 :throw Foo("arrgh") + Bar()
3607
3608This throws "arrgh", and "in Bar" is not displayed since Bar() is not
3609executed. >
3610 :throw Foo("foo") + Bar()
3611however displays "in Bar" and throws 4711.
3612
3613Any other command that takes an expression as argument might also be
3614abandoned by an (uncaught) exception during the expression evaluation. The
3615exception is then propagated to the caller of the command.
3616 Example: >
3617
3618 :if Foo("arrgh")
3619 : echo "then"
3620 :else
3621 : echo "else"
3622 :endif
3623
3624Here neither of "then" or "else" is displayed.
3625
3626 *catch-order*
3627Exceptions can be caught by a try conditional with one or more |:catch|
3628commands, see |try-conditionals|. The values to be caught by each ":catch"
3629command can be specified as a pattern argument. The subsequent catch clause
3630gets executed when a matching exception is caught.
3631 Example: >
3632
3633 :function! Foo(value)
3634 : try
3635 : throw a:value
3636 : catch /^\d\+$/
3637 : echo "Number thrown"
3638 : catch /.*/
3639 : echo "String thrown"
3640 : endtry
3641 :endfunction
3642 :
3643 :call Foo(0x1267)
3644 :call Foo('string')
3645
3646The first call to Foo() displays "Number thrown", the second "String thrown".
3647An exception is matched against the ":catch" commands in the order they are
3648specified. Only the first match counts. So you should place the more
3649specific ":catch" first. The following order does not make sense: >
3650
3651 : catch /.*/
3652 : echo "String thrown"
3653 : catch /^\d\+$/
3654 : echo "Number thrown"
3655
3656The first ":catch" here matches always, so that the second catch clause is
3657never taken.
3658
3659 *throw-variables*
3660If you catch an exception by a general pattern, you may access the exact value
3661in the variable |v:exception|: >
3662
3663 : catch /^\d\+$/
3664 : echo "Number thrown. Value is" v:exception
3665
3666You may also be interested where an exception was thrown. This is stored in
3667|v:throwpoint|. Note that "v:exception" and "v:throwpoint" are valid for the
3668exception most recently caught as long it is not finished.
3669 Example: >
3670
3671 :function! Caught()
3672 : if v:exception != ""
3673 : echo 'Caught "' . v:exception . '" in ' . v:throwpoint
3674 : else
3675 : echo 'Nothing caught'
3676 : endif
3677 :endfunction
3678 :
3679 :function! Foo()
3680 : try
3681 : try
3682 : try
3683 : throw 4711
3684 : finally
3685 : call Caught()
3686 : endtry
3687 : catch /.*/
3688 : call Caught()
3689 : throw "oops"
3690 : endtry
3691 : catch /.*/
3692 : call Caught()
3693 : finally
3694 : call Caught()
3695 : endtry
3696 :endfunction
3697 :
3698 :call Foo()
3699
3700This displays >
3701
3702 Nothing caught
3703 Caught "4711" in function Foo, line 4
3704 Caught "oops" in function Foo, line 10
3705 Nothing caught
3706
3707A practical example: The following command ":LineNumber" displays the line
3708number in the script or function where it has been used: >
3709
3710 :function! LineNumber()
3711 : return substitute(v:throwpoint, '.*\D\(\d\+\).*', '\1', "")
3712 :endfunction
3713 :command! LineNumber try | throw "" | catch | echo LineNumber() | endtry
3714<
3715 *try-nested*
3716An exception that is not caught by a try conditional can be caught by
3717a surrounding try conditional: >
3718
3719 :try
3720 : try
3721 : throw "foo"
3722 : catch /foobar/
3723 : echo "foobar"
3724 : finally
3725 : echo "inner finally"
3726 : endtry
3727 :catch /foo/
3728 : echo "foo"
3729 :endtry
3730
3731The inner try conditional does not catch the exception, just its finally
3732clause is executed. The exception is then caught by the outer try
3733conditional. The example displays "inner finally" and then "foo".
3734
3735 *throw-from-catch*
3736You can catch an exception and throw a new one to be caught elsewhere from the
3737catch clause: >
3738
3739 :function! Foo()
3740 : throw "foo"
3741 :endfunction
3742 :
3743 :function! Bar()
3744 : try
3745 : call Foo()
3746 : catch /foo/
3747 : echo "Caught foo, throw bar"
3748 : throw "bar"
3749 : endtry
3750 :endfunction
3751 :
3752 :try
3753 : call Bar()
3754 :catch /.*/
3755 : echo "Caught" v:exception
3756 :endtry
3757
3758This displays "Caught foo, throw bar" and then "Caught bar".
3759
3760 *rethrow*
3761There is no real rethrow in the Vim script language, but you may throw
3762"v:exception" instead: >
3763
3764 :function! Bar()
3765 : try
3766 : call Foo()
3767 : catch /.*/
3768 : echo "Rethrow" v:exception
3769 : throw v:exception
3770 : endtry
3771 :endfunction
3772< *try-echoerr*
3773Note that this method cannot be used to "rethrow" Vim error or interrupt
3774exceptions, because it is not possible to fake Vim internal exceptions.
3775Trying so causes an error exception. You should throw your own exception
3776denoting the situation. If you want to cause a Vim error exception containing
3777the original error exception value, you can use the |:echoerr| command: >
3778
3779 :try
3780 : try
3781 : asdf
3782 : catch /.*/
3783 : echoerr v:exception
3784 : endtry
3785 :catch /.*/
3786 : echo v:exception
3787 :endtry
3788
3789This code displays
3790
3791 Vim(echoerr):Vim:E492: Not an editor command: asdf ~
3792
3793
3794CLEANUP CODE *try-finally*
3795
3796Scripts often change global settings and restore them at their end. If the
3797user however interrupts the script by pressing CTRL-C, the settings remain in
3798an inconsistent state. The same may happen to you in the development phase of
3799a script when an error occurs or you explicitly throw an exception without
3800catching it. You can solve these problems by using a try conditional with
3801a finally clause for restoring the settings. Its execution is guaranteed on
3802normal control flow, on error, on an explicit ":throw", and on interrupt.
3803(Note that errors and interrupts from inside the try conditional are converted
3804to exceptions. When not caught, they terminate the script after the finally
3805clause has been executed.)
3806Example: >
3807
3808 :try
3809 : let s:saved_ts = &ts
3810 : set ts=17
3811 :
3812 : " Do the hard work here.
3813 :
3814 :finally
3815 : let &ts = s:saved_ts
3816 : unlet s:saved_ts
3817 :endtry
3818
3819This method should be used locally whenever a function or part of a script
3820changes global settings which need to be restored on failure or normal exit of
3821that function or script part.
3822
3823 *break-finally*
3824Cleanup code works also when the try block or a catch clause is left by
3825a ":continue", ":break", ":return", or ":finish".
3826 Example: >
3827
3828 :let first = 1
3829 :while 1
3830 : try
3831 : if first
3832 : echo "first"
3833 : let first = 0
3834 : continue
3835 : else
3836 : throw "second"
3837 : endif
3838 : catch /.*/
3839 : echo v:exception
3840 : break
3841 : finally
3842 : echo "cleanup"
3843 : endtry
3844 : echo "still in while"
3845 :endwhile
3846 :echo "end"
3847
3848This displays "first", "cleanup", "second", "cleanup", and "end". >
3849
3850 :function! Foo()
3851 : try
3852 : return 4711
3853 : finally
3854 : echo "cleanup\n"
3855 : endtry
3856 : echo "Foo still active"
3857 :endfunction
3858 :
3859 :echo Foo() "returned by Foo"
3860
3861This displays "cleanup" and "4711 returned by Foo". You don't need to add an
3862extra ":return" in the finally clause. (Above all, this would override the
3863return value.)
3864
3865 *except-from-finally*
3866Using either of ":continue", ":break", ":return", ":finish", or ":throw" in
3867a finally clause is possible, but not recommended since it abandons the
3868cleanup actions for the try conditional. But, of course, interrupt and error
3869exceptions might get raised from a finally clause.
3870 Example where an error in the finally clause stops an interrupt from
3871working correctly: >
3872
3873 :try
3874 : try
3875 : echo "Press CTRL-C for interrupt"
3876 : while 1
3877 : endwhile
3878 : finally
3879 : unlet novar
3880 : endtry
3881 :catch /novar/
3882 :endtry
3883 :echo "Script still running"
3884 :sleep 1
3885
3886If you need to put commands that could fail into a finally clause, you should
3887think about catching or ignoring the errors in these commands, see
3888|catch-errors| and |ignore-errors|.
3889
3890
3891CATCHING ERRORS *catch-errors*
3892
3893If you want to catch specific errors, you just have to put the code to be
3894watched in a try block and add a catch clause for the error message. The
3895presence of the try conditional causes all errors to be converted to an
3896exception. No message is displayed and |v:errmsg| is not set then. To find
3897the right pattern for the ":catch" command, you have to know how the format of
3898the error exception is.
3899 Error exceptions have the following format: >
3900
3901 Vim({cmdname}):{errmsg}
3902or >
3903 Vim:{errmsg}
3904
3905{cmdname} is the name of the command that failed; the second form is used when
3906the command name is not known. {errmsg} is the error message usually produced
3907when the error occurs outside try conditionals. It always begins with
3908a capital "E", followed by a two or three-digit error number, a colon, and
3909a space.
3910
3911Examples:
3912
3913The command >
3914 :unlet novar
3915normally produces the error message >
3916 E108: No such variable: "novar"
3917which is converted inside try conditionals to an exception >
3918 Vim(unlet):E108: No such variable: "novar"
3919
3920The command >
3921 :dwim
3922normally produces the error message >
3923 E492: Not an editor command: dwim
3924which is converted inside try conditionals to an exception >
3925 Vim:E492: Not an editor command: dwim
3926
3927You can catch all ":unlet" errors by a >
3928 :catch /^Vim(unlet):/
3929or all errors for misspelled command names by a >
3930 :catch /^Vim:E492:/
3931
3932Some error messages may be produced by different commands: >
3933 :function nofunc
3934and >
3935 :delfunction nofunc
3936both produce the error message >
3937 E128: Function name must start with a capital: nofunc
3938which is converted inside try conditionals to an exception >
3939 Vim(function):E128: Function name must start with a capital: nofunc
3940or >
3941 Vim(delfunction):E128: Function name must start with a capital: nofunc
3942respectively. You can catch the error by its number independently on the
3943command that caused it if you use the following pattern: >
3944 :catch /^Vim(\a\+):E128:/
3945
3946Some commands like >
3947 :let x = novar
3948produce multiple error messages, here: >
3949 E121: Undefined variable: novar
3950 E15: Invalid expression: novar
3951Only the first is used for the exception value, since it is the most specific
3952one (see |except-several-errors|). So you can catch it by >
3953 :catch /^Vim(\a\+):E121:/
3954
3955You can catch all errors related to the name "nofunc" by >
3956 :catch /\<nofunc\>/
3957
3958You can catch all Vim errors in the ":write" and ":read" commands by >
3959 :catch /^Vim(\(write\|read\)):E\d\+:/
3960
3961You can catch all Vim errors by the pattern >
3962 :catch /^Vim\((\a\+)\)\=:E\d\+:/
3963<
3964 *catch-text*
3965NOTE: You should never catch the error message text itself: >
3966 :catch /No such variable/
3967only works in the english locale, but not when the user has selected
3968a different language by the |:language| command. It is however helpful to
3969cite the message text in a comment: >
3970 :catch /^Vim(\a\+):E108:/ " No such variable
3971
3972
3973IGNORING ERRORS *ignore-errors*
3974
3975You can ignore errors in a specific Vim command by catching them locally: >
3976
3977 :try
3978 : write
3979 :catch
3980 :endtry
3981
3982But you are strongly recommended NOT to use this simple form, since it could
3983catch more than you want. With the ":write" command, some autocommands could
3984be executed and cause errors not related to writing, for instance: >
3985
3986 :au BufWritePre * unlet novar
3987
3988There could even be such errors you are not responsible for as a script
3989writer: a user of your script might have defined such autocommands. You would
3990then hide the error from the user.
3991 It is much better to use >
3992
3993 :try
3994 : write
3995 :catch /^Vim(write):/
3996 :endtry
3997
3998which only catches real write errors. So catch only what you'd like to ignore
3999intentionally.
4000
4001For a single command that does not cause execution of autocommands, you could
4002even suppress the conversion of errors to exceptions by the ":silent!"
4003command: >
4004 :silent! nunmap k
4005This works also when a try conditional is active.
4006
4007
4008CATCHING INTERRUPTS *catch-interrupt*
4009
4010When there are active try conditionals, an interrupt (CTRL-C) is converted to
4011the exception "Vim:Interrupt". You can catch it like every exception. The
4012script is not terminated, then.
4013 Example: >
4014
4015 :function! TASK1()
4016 : sleep 10
4017 :endfunction
4018
4019 :function! TASK2()
4020 : sleep 20
4021 :endfunction
4022
4023 :while 1
4024 : let command = input("Type a command: ")
4025 : try
4026 : if command == ""
4027 : continue
4028 : elseif command == "END"
4029 : break
4030 : elseif command == "TASK1"
4031 : call TASK1()
4032 : elseif command == "TASK2"
4033 : call TASK2()
4034 : else
4035 : echo "\nIllegal command:" command
4036 : continue
4037 : endif
4038 : catch /^Vim:Interrupt$/
4039 : echo "\nCommand interrupted"
4040 : " Caught the interrupt. Continue with next prompt.
4041 : endtry
4042 :endwhile
4043
4044You can interrupt a task here by pressing CTRL-C; the script then asks for
4045a new command. If you press CTRL-C at the prompt, the script is terminated.
4046
4047For testing what happens when CTRL-C would be pressed on a specific line in
4048your script, use the debug mode and execute the |>quit| or |>interrupt|
4049command on that line. See |debug-scripts|.
4050
4051
4052CATCHING ALL *catch-all*
4053
4054The commands >
4055
4056 :catch /.*/
4057 :catch //
4058 :catch
4059
4060catch everything, error exceptions, interrupt exceptions and exceptions
4061explicitly thrown by the |:throw| command. This is useful at the top level of
4062a script in order to catch unexpected things.
4063 Example: >
4064
4065 :try
4066 :
4067 : " do the hard work here
4068 :
4069 :catch /MyException/
4070 :
4071 : " handle known problem
4072 :
4073 :catch /^Vim:Interrupt$/
4074 : echo "Script interrupted"
4075 :catch /.*/
4076 : echo "Internal error (" . v:exception . ")"
4077 : echo " - occurred at " . v:throwpoint
4078 :endtry
4079 :" end of script
4080
4081Note: Catching all might catch more things than you want. Thus, you are
4082strongly encouraged to catch only for problems that you can really handle by
4083specifying a pattern argument to the ":catch".
4084 Example: Catching all could make it nearly impossible to interrupt a script
4085by pressing CTRL-C: >
4086
4087 :while 1
4088 : try
4089 : sleep 1
4090 : catch
4091 : endtry
4092 :endwhile
4093
4094
4095EXCEPTIONS AND AUTOCOMMANDS *except-autocmd*
4096
4097Exceptions may be used during execution of autocommands. Example: >
4098
4099 :autocmd User x try
4100 :autocmd User x throw "Oops!"
4101 :autocmd User x catch
4102 :autocmd User x echo v:exception
4103 :autocmd User x endtry
4104 :autocmd User x throw "Arrgh!"
4105 :autocmd User x echo "Should not be displayed"
4106 :
4107 :try
4108 : doautocmd User x
4109 :catch
4110 : echo v:exception
4111 :endtry
4112
4113This displays "Oops!" and "Arrgh!".
4114
4115 *except-autocmd-Pre*
4116For some commands, autocommands get executed before the main action of the
4117command takes place. If an exception is thrown and not caught in the sequence
4118of autocommands, the sequence and the command that caused its execution are
4119abandoned and the exception is propagated to the caller of the command.
4120 Example: >
4121
4122 :autocmd BufWritePre * throw "FAIL"
4123 :autocmd BufWritePre * echo "Should not be displayed"
4124 :
4125 :try
4126 : write
4127 :catch
4128 : echo "Caught:" v:exception "from" v:throwpoint
4129 :endtry
4130
4131Here, the ":write" command does not write the file currently being edited (as
4132you can see by checking 'modified'), since the exception from the BufWritePre
4133autocommand abandons the ":write". The exception is then caught and the
4134script displays: >
4135
4136 Caught: FAIL from BufWrite Auto commands for "*"
4137<
4138 *except-autocmd-Post*
4139For some commands, autocommands get executed after the main action of the
4140command has taken place. If this main action fails and the command is inside
4141an active try conditional, the autocommands are skipped and an error exception
4142is thrown that can be caught by the caller of the command.
4143 Example: >
4144
4145 :autocmd BufWritePost * echo "File successfully written!"
4146 :
4147 :try
4148 : write /i/m/p/o/s/s/i/b/l/e
4149 :catch
4150 : echo v:exception
4151 :endtry
4152
4153This just displays: >
4154
4155 Vim(write):E212: Can't open file for writing (/i/m/p/o/s/s/i/b/l/e)
4156
4157If you really need to execute the autocommands even when the main action
4158fails, trigger the event from the catch clause.
4159 Example: >
4160
4161 :autocmd BufWritePre * set noreadonly
4162 :autocmd BufWritePost * set readonly
4163 :
4164 :try
4165 : write /i/m/p/o/s/s/i/b/l/e
4166 :catch
4167 : doautocmd BufWritePost /i/m/p/o/s/s/i/b/l/e
4168 :endtry
4169<
4170You can also use ":silent!": >
4171
4172 :let x = "ok"
4173 :let v:errmsg = ""
4174 :autocmd BufWritePost * if v:errmsg != ""
4175 :autocmd BufWritePost * let x = "after fail"
4176 :autocmd BufWritePost * endif
4177 :try
4178 : silent! write /i/m/p/o/s/s/i/b/l/e
4179 :catch
4180 :endtry
4181 :echo x
4182
4183This displays "after fail".
4184
4185If the main action of the command does not fail, exceptions from the
4186autocommands will be catchable by the caller of the command: >
4187
4188 :autocmd BufWritePost * throw ":-("
4189 :autocmd BufWritePost * echo "Should not be displayed"
4190 :
4191 :try
4192 : write
4193 :catch
4194 : echo v:exception
4195 :endtry
4196<
4197 *except-autocmd-Cmd*
4198For some commands, the normal action can be replaced by a sequence of
4199autocommands. Exceptions from that sequence will be catchable by the caller
4200of the command.
4201 Example: For the ":write" command, the caller cannot know whether the file
4202had actually been written when the exception occurred. You need to tell it in
4203some way. >
4204
4205 :if !exists("cnt")
4206 : let cnt = 0
4207 :
4208 : autocmd BufWriteCmd * if &modified
4209 : autocmd BufWriteCmd * let cnt = cnt + 1
4210 : autocmd BufWriteCmd * if cnt % 3 == 2
4211 : autocmd BufWriteCmd * throw "BufWriteCmdError"
4212 : autocmd BufWriteCmd * endif
4213 : autocmd BufWriteCmd * write | set nomodified
4214 : autocmd BufWriteCmd * if cnt % 3 == 0
4215 : autocmd BufWriteCmd * throw "BufWriteCmdError"
4216 : autocmd BufWriteCmd * endif
4217 : autocmd BufWriteCmd * echo "File successfully written!"
4218 : autocmd BufWriteCmd * endif
4219 :endif
4220 :
4221 :try
4222 : write
4223 :catch /^BufWriteCmdError$/
4224 : if &modified
4225 : echo "Error on writing (file contents not changed)"
4226 : else
4227 : echo "Error after writing"
4228 : endif
4229 :catch /^Vim(write):/
4230 : echo "Error on writing"
4231 :endtry
4232
4233When this script is sourced several times after making changes, it displays
4234first >
4235 File successfully written!
4236then >
4237 Error on writing (file contents not changed)
4238then >
4239 Error after writing
4240etc.
4241
4242 *except-autocmd-ill*
4243You cannot spread a try conditional over autocommands for different events.
4244The following code is ill-formed: >
4245
4246 :autocmd BufWritePre * try
4247 :
4248 :autocmd BufWritePost * catch
4249 :autocmd BufWritePost * echo v:exception
4250 :autocmd BufWritePost * endtry
4251 :
4252 :write
4253
4254
4255EXCEPTION HIERARCHIES AND PARAMETERIZED EXCEPTIONS *except-hier-param*
4256
4257Some programming languages allow to use hierarchies of exception classes or to
4258pass additional information with the object of an exception class. You can do
4259similar things in Vim.
4260 In order to throw an exception from a hierarchy, just throw the complete
4261class name with the components separated by a colon, for instance throw the
4262string "EXCEPT:MATHERR:OVERFLOW" for an overflow in a mathematical library.
4263 When you want to pass additional information with your exception class, add
4264it in parentheses, for instance throw the string "EXCEPT:IO:WRITEERR(myfile)"
4265for an error when writing "myfile".
4266 With the appropriate patterns in the ":catch" command, you can catch for
4267base classes or derived classes of your hierarchy. Additional information in
4268parentheses can be cut out from |v:exception| with the ":substitute" command.
4269 Example: >
4270
4271 :function! CheckRange(a, func)
4272 : if a:a < 0
4273 : throw "EXCEPT:MATHERR:RANGE(" . a:func . ")"
4274 : endif
4275 :endfunction
4276 :
4277 :function! Add(a, b)
4278 : call CheckRange(a:a, "Add")
4279 : call CheckRange(a:b, "Add")
4280 : let c = a:a + a:b
4281 : if c < 0
4282 : throw "EXCEPT:MATHERR:OVERFLOW"
4283 : endif
4284 : return c
4285 :endfunction
4286 :
4287 :function! Div(a, b)
4288 : call CheckRange(a:a, "Div")
4289 : call CheckRange(a:b, "Div")
4290 : if (a:b == 0)
4291 : throw "EXCEPT:MATHERR:ZERODIV"
4292 : endif
4293 : return a:a / a:b
4294 :endfunction
4295 :
4296 :function! Write(file)
4297 : try
4298 : execute "write" a:file
4299 : catch /^Vim(write):/
4300 : throw "EXCEPT:IO(" . getcwd() . ", " . a:file . "):WRITEERR"
4301 : endtry
4302 :endfunction
4303 :
4304 :try
4305 :
4306 : " something with arithmetics and I/O
4307 :
4308 :catch /^EXCEPT:MATHERR:RANGE/
4309 : let function = substitute(v:exception, '.*(\(\a\+\)).*', '\1', "")
4310 : echo "Range error in" function
4311 :
4312 :catch /^EXCEPT:MATHERR/ " catches OVERFLOW and ZERODIV
4313 : echo "Math error"
4314 :
4315 :catch /^EXCEPT:IO/
4316 : let dir = substitute(v:exception, '.*(\(.\+\),\s*.\+).*', '\1', "")
4317 : let file = substitute(v:exception, '.*(.\+,\s*\(.\+\)).*', '\1', "")
4318 : if file !~ '^/'
4319 : let file = dir . "/" . file
4320 : endif
4321 : echo 'I/O error for "' . file . '"'
4322 :
4323 :catch /^EXCEPT/
4324 : echo "Unspecified error"
4325 :
4326 :endtry
4327
4328The exceptions raised by Vim itself (on error or when pressing CTRL-C) use
4329a flat hierarchy: they are all in the "Vim" class. You cannot throw yourself
4330exceptions with the "Vim" prefix; they are reserved for Vim.
4331 Vim error exceptions are parameterized with the name of the command that
4332failed, if known. See |catch-errors|.
4333
4334
4335PECULIARITIES
4336 *except-compat*
4337The exception handling concept requires that the command sequence causing the
4338exception is aborted immediately and control is transferred to finally clauses
4339and/or a catch clause.
4340
4341In the Vim script language there are cases where scripts and functions
4342continue after an error: in functions without the "abort" flag or in a command
4343after ":silent!", control flow goes to the following line, and outside
4344functions, control flow goes to the line following the outermost ":endwhile"
4345or ":endif". On the other hand, errors should be catchable as exceptions
4346(thus, requiring the immediate abortion).
4347
4348This problem has been solved by converting errors to exceptions and using
4349immediate abortion (if not suppressed by ":silent!") only when a try
4350conditional is active. This is no restriction since an (error) exception can
4351be caught only from an active try conditional. If you want an immediate
4352termination without catching the error, just use a try conditional without
4353catch clause. (You can cause cleanup code being executed before termination
4354by specifying a finally clause.)
4355
4356When no try conditional is active, the usual abortion and continuation
4357behavior is used instead of immediate abortion. This ensures compatibility of
4358scripts written for Vim 6.1 and earlier.
4359
4360However, when sourcing an existing script that does not use exception handling
4361commands (or when calling one of its functions) from inside an active try
4362conditional of a new script, you might change the control flow of the existing
4363script on error. You get the immediate abortion on error and can catch the
4364error in the new script. If however the sourced script suppresses error
4365messages by using the ":silent!" command (checking for errors by testing
4366|v:errmsg| if appropriate), its execution path is not changed. The error is
4367not converted to an exception. (See |:silent|.) So the only remaining cause
4368where this happens is for scripts that don't care about errors and produce
4369error messages. You probably won't want to use such code from your new
4370scripts.
4371
4372 *except-syntax-err*
4373Syntax errors in the exception handling commands are never caught by any of
4374the ":catch" commands of the try conditional they belong to. Its finally
4375clauses, however, is executed.
4376 Example: >
4377
4378 :try
4379 : try
4380 : throw 4711
4381 : catch /\(/
4382 : echo "in catch with syntax error"
4383 : catch
4384 : echo "inner catch-all"
4385 : finally
4386 : echo "inner finally"
4387 : endtry
4388 :catch
4389 : echo 'outer catch-all caught "' . v:exception . '"'
4390 : finally
4391 : echo "outer finally"
4392 :endtry
4393
4394This displays: >
4395 inner finally
4396 outer catch-all caught "Vim(catch):E54: Unmatched \("
4397 outer finally
4398The original exception is discarded and an error exception is raised, instead.
4399
4400 *except-single-line*
4401The ":try", ":catch", ":finally", and ":endtry" commands can be put on
4402a single line, but then syntax errors may make it difficult to recognize the
4403"catch" line, thus you better avoid this.
4404 Example: >
4405 :try | unlet! foo # | catch | endtry
4406raises an error exception for the trailing characters after the ":unlet!"
4407argument, but does not see the ":catch" and ":endtry" commands, so that the
4408error exception is discarded and the "E488: Trailing characters" message gets
4409displayed.
4410
4411 *except-several-errors*
4412When several errors appear in a single command, the first error message is
4413usually the most specific one and therefor converted to the error exception.
4414 Example: >
4415 echo novar
4416causes >
4417 E121: Undefined variable: novar
4418 E15: Invalid expression: novar
4419The value of the error exception inside try conditionals is: >
4420 Vim(echo):E121: Undefined variable: novar
4421< *except-syntax-error*
4422But when a syntax error is detected after a normal error in the same command,
4423the syntax error is used for the exception being thrown.
4424 Example: >
4425 unlet novar #
4426causes >
4427 E108: No such variable: "novar"
4428 E488: Trailing characters
4429The value of the error exception inside try conditionals is: >
4430 Vim(unlet):E488: Trailing characters
4431This is done because the syntax error might change the execution path in a way
4432not intended by the user. Example: >
4433 try
4434 try | unlet novar # | catch | echo v:exception | endtry
4435 catch /.*/
4436 echo "outer catch:" v:exception
4437 endtry
4438This displays "outer catch: Vim(unlet):E488: Trailing characters", and then
4439a "E600: Missing :endtry" error message is given, see |except-single-line|.
4440
4441==============================================================================
44429. Examples *eval-examples*
4443
4444Printing in Hex ~
4445>
4446 :" The function Nr2Hex() returns the Hex string of a number.
4447 :func Nr2Hex(nr)
4448 : let n = a:nr
4449 : let r = ""
4450 : while n
4451 : let r = '0123456789ABCDEF'[n % 16] . r
4452 : let n = n / 16
4453 : endwhile
4454 : return r
4455 :endfunc
4456
4457 :" The function String2Hex() converts each character in a string to a two
4458 :" character Hex string.
4459 :func String2Hex(str)
4460 : let out = ''
4461 : let ix = 0
4462 : while ix < strlen(a:str)
4463 : let out = out . Nr2Hex(char2nr(a:str[ix]))
4464 : let ix = ix + 1
4465 : endwhile
4466 : return out
4467 :endfunc
4468
4469Example of its use: >
4470 :echo Nr2Hex(32)
4471result: "20" >
4472 :echo String2Hex("32")
4473result: "3332"
4474
4475
4476Sorting lines (by Robert Webb) ~
4477
4478Here is a Vim script to sort lines. Highlight the lines in Vim and type
4479":Sort". This doesn't call any external programs so it'll work on any
4480platform. The function Sort() actually takes the name of a comparison
4481function as its argument, like qsort() does in C. So you could supply it
4482with different comparison functions in order to sort according to date etc.
4483>
4484 :" Function for use with Sort(), to compare two strings.
4485 :func! Strcmp(str1, str2)
4486 : if (a:str1 < a:str2)
4487 : return -1
4488 : elseif (a:str1 > a:str2)
4489 : return 1
4490 : else
4491 : return 0
4492 : endif
4493 :endfunction
4494
4495 :" Sort lines. SortR() is called recursively.
4496 :func! SortR(start, end, cmp)
4497 : if (a:start >= a:end)
4498 : return
4499 : endif
4500 : let partition = a:start - 1
4501 : let middle = partition
4502 : let partStr = getline((a:start + a:end) / 2)
4503 : let i = a:start
4504 : while (i <= a:end)
4505 : let str = getline(i)
4506 : exec "let result = " . a:cmp . "(str, partStr)"
4507 : if (result <= 0)
4508 : " Need to put it before the partition. Swap lines i and partition.
4509 : let partition = partition + 1
4510 : if (result == 0)
4511 : let middle = partition
4512 : endif
4513 : if (i != partition)
4514 : let str2 = getline(partition)
4515 : call setline(i, str2)
4516 : call setline(partition, str)
4517 : endif
4518 : endif
4519 : let i = i + 1
4520 : endwhile
4521
4522 : " Now we have a pointer to the "middle" element, as far as partitioning
4523 : " goes, which could be anywhere before the partition. Make sure it is at
4524 : " the end of the partition.
4525 : if (middle != partition)
4526 : let str = getline(middle)
4527 : let str2 = getline(partition)
4528 : call setline(middle, str2)
4529 : call setline(partition, str)
4530 : endif
4531 : call SortR(a:start, partition - 1, a:cmp)
4532 : call SortR(partition + 1, a:end, a:cmp)
4533 :endfunc
4534
4535 :" To Sort a range of lines, pass the range to Sort() along with the name of a
4536 :" function that will compare two lines.
4537 :func! Sort(cmp) range
4538 : call SortR(a:firstline, a:lastline, a:cmp)
4539 :endfunc
4540
4541 :" :Sort takes a range of lines and sorts them.
4542 :command! -nargs=0 -range Sort <line1>,<line2>call Sort("Strcmp")
4543<
4544 *sscanf*
4545There is no sscanf() function in Vim. If you need to extract parts from a
4546line, you can use matchstr() and substitute() to do it. This example shows
4547how to get the file name, line number and column number out of a line like
4548"foobar.txt, 123, 45". >
4549 :" Set up the match bit
4550 :let mx='\(\f\+\),\s*\(\d\+\),\s*\(\d\+\)'
4551 :"get the part matching the whole expression
4552 :let l = matchstr(line, mx)
4553 :"get each item out of the match
4554 :let file = substitute(l, mx, '\1', '')
4555 :let lnum = substitute(l, mx, '\2', '')
4556 :let col = substitute(l, mx, '\3', '')
4557
4558The input is in the variable "line", the results in the variables "file",
4559"lnum" and "col". (idea from Michael Geddes)
4560
4561==============================================================================
456210. No +eval feature *no-eval-feature*
4563
4564When the |+eval| feature was disabled at compile time, none of the expression
4565evaluation commands are available. To prevent this from causing Vim scripts
4566to generate all kinds of errors, the ":if" and ":endif" commands are still
4567recognized, though the argument of the ":if" and everything between the ":if"
4568and the matching ":endif" is ignored. Nesting of ":if" blocks is allowed, but
4569only if the commands are at the start of the line. The ":else" command is not
4570recognized.
4571
4572Example of how to avoid executing commands when the |+eval| feature is
4573missing: >
4574
4575 :if 1
4576 : echo "Expression evaluation is compiled in"
4577 :else
4578 : echo "You will _never_ see this message"
4579 :endif
4580
4581==============================================================================
458211. The sandbox *eval-sandbox* *sandbox* *E48*
4583
4584The 'foldexpr', 'includeexpr', 'indentexpr', 'statusline' and 'foldtext'
4585options are evaluated in a sandbox. This means that you are protected from
4586these expressions having nasty side effects. This gives some safety for when
4587these options are set from a modeline. It is also used when the command from
4588a tags file is executed.
4589This is not guaranteed 100% secure, but it should block most attacks.
4590
4591These items are not allowed in the sandbox:
4592 - changing the buffer text
4593 - defining or changing mapping, autocommands, functions, user commands
4594 - setting certain options (see |option-summary|)
4595 - executing a shell command
4596 - reading or writing a file
4597 - jumping to another buffer or editing a file
4598
4599 vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl: