Mercurial > vim
annotate runtime/doc/message.txt @ 8511:2712bfe5d62e
Added tag v7.4.1545 for changeset 9f5bd031530d829262abac038244bfa7f3057abb
author | Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org> |
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date | Sat, 12 Mar 2016 16:30:04 +0100 |
parents | 88207f4b861a |
children | a410390e340b |
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1 *message.txt* For Vim version 7.4. Last change: 2016 Feb 27 |
7 | 2 |
3 | |
4 VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar | |
5 | |
6 | |
7 This file contains an alphabetical list of messages and error messages that | |
8 Vim produces. You can use this if you don't understand what the message | |
9 means. It is not complete though. | |
10 | |
11 1. Old messages |:messages| | |
12 2. Error messages |error-messages| | |
13 3. Messages |messages| | |
14 | |
15 ============================================================================== | |
16 1. Old messages *:messages* *:mes* *message-history* | |
17 | |
18 The ":messages" command can be used to view previously given messages. This | |
19 is especially useful when messages have been overwritten or truncated. This | |
20 depends on the 'shortmess' option. | |
21 | |
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22 The number of remembered messages is fixed at 20 for the tiny version and 200 |
625 | 23 for other versions. |
7 | 24 |
447 | 25 *g<* |
26 The "g<" command can be used to see the last page of previous command output. | |
532 | 27 This is especially useful if you accidentally typed <Space> at the hit-enter |
1118 | 28 prompt. You are then back at the hit-enter prompt and can then scroll further |
29 back. | |
2826 | 30 Note: If the output has been stopped with "q" at the more prompt, it will only |
31 be displayed up to this point. | |
447 | 32 The previous command output is cleared when another command produces output. |
33 | |
7 | 34 If you are using translated messages, the first printed line tells who |
35 maintains the messages or the translations. You can use this to contact the | |
36 maintainer when you spot a mistake. | |
37 | |
38 If you want to find help on a specific (error) message, use the ID at the | |
39 start of the message. For example, to get help on the message: > | |
40 | |
41 E72: Close error on swap file | |
42 | |
43 or (translated): > | |
44 | |
45 E72: Errore durante chiusura swap file | |
46 | |
47 Use: > | |
48 | |
49 :help E72 | |
50 | |
51 If you are lazy, it also works without the shift key: > | |
52 | |
53 :help e72 | |
54 | |
55 ============================================================================== | |
1618 | 56 2. Error messages *error-messages* *errors* |
7 | 57 |
58 When an error message is displayed, but it is removed before you could read | |
59 it, you can see it again with: > | |
60 :echo errmsg | |
61 or view a list of recent messages with: > | |
62 :messages | |
63 | |
64 | |
65 LIST OF MESSAGES | |
66 *E222* *E228* *E232* *E256* *E293* *E298* *E304* *E317* | |
67 *E318* *E356* *E438* *E439* *E440* *E316* *E320* *E322* | |
2581 | 68 *E323* *E341* *E473* *E570* *E685* > |
7 | 69 Add to read buffer |
70 makemap: Illegal mode | |
71 Cannot create BalloonEval with both message and callback | |
72 Hangul automata ERROR | |
73 block was not locked | |
74 Didn't get block nr {N}? | |
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75 ml_upd_block0(): Didn't get block 0?? |
7 | 76 pointer block id wrong {N} |
77 Updated too many blocks? | |
78 get_varp ERROR | |
79 u_undo: line numbers wrong | |
80 undo list corrupt | |
81 undo line missing | |
82 ml_get: cannot find line {N} | |
83 cannot find line {N} | |
84 line number out of range: {N} past the end | |
85 line count wrong in block {N} | |
86 Internal error | |
84 | 87 Internal error: {function} |
7 | 88 fatal error in cs_manage_matches |
89 | |
90 This is an internal error. If you can reproduce it, please send in a bug | |
91 report. |bugs| | |
92 | |
93 > | |
94 ATTENTION | |
95 Found a swap file by the name ... | |
96 | |
97 See |ATTENTION|. | |
98 | |
99 *E92* > | |
100 Buffer {N} not found | |
101 | |
102 The buffer you requested does not exist. This can also happen when you have | |
103 wiped out a buffer which contains a mark or is referenced in another way. | |
104 |:bwipeout| | |
105 | |
106 *E95* > | |
107 Buffer with this name already exists | |
108 | |
109 You cannot have two buffers with the same name. | |
110 | |
111 *E72* > | |
112 Close error on swap file | |
113 | |
114 The |swap-file|, that is used to keep a copy of the edited text, could not be | |
115 closed properly. Mostly harmless. | |
116 | |
117 *E169* > | |
118 Command too recursive | |
119 | |
120 This happens when an Ex command executes an Ex command that executes an Ex | |
121 command, etc. This is only allowed 200 times. When it's more there probably | |
122 is an endless loop. Probably a |:execute| or |:source| command is involved. | |
123 | |
124 *E254* > | |
125 Cannot allocate color {name} | |
126 | |
127 The color name {name} is unknown. See |gui-colors| for a list of colors that | |
128 are available on most systems. | |
129 | |
130 *E458* > | |
131 Cannot allocate colormap entry, some colors may be incorrect | |
132 | |
133 This means that there are not enough colors available for Vim. It will still | |
134 run, but some of the colors will not appear in the specified color. Try | |
135 stopping other applications that use many colors, or start them after starting | |
136 gvim. | |
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137 Browsers are known to consume a lot of colors. You can avoid this with |
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138 netscape by telling it to use its own colormap: > |
7 | 139 netscape -install |
140 Or tell it to limit to a certain number of colors (64 should work well): > | |
141 netscape -ncols 64 | |
142 This can also be done with a line in your Xdefaults file: > | |
143 Netscape*installColormap: Yes | |
144 or > | |
145 Netscape*maxImageColors: 64 | |
146 < | |
147 *E79* > | |
148 Cannot expand wildcards | |
149 | |
150 A filename contains a strange combination of characters, which causes Vim to | |
151 attempt expanding wildcards but this fails. This does NOT mean that no | |
152 matching file names could be found, but that the pattern was illegal. | |
153 | |
154 *E459* > | |
155 Cannot go back to previous directory | |
156 | |
157 While expanding a file name, Vim failed to go back to the previously used | |
158 directory. All file names being used may be invalid now! You need to have | |
159 execute permission on the current directory. | |
160 | |
161 *E190* *E212* > | |
162 Cannot open "{filename}" for writing | |
163 Can't open file for writing | |
164 | |
165 For some reason the file you are writing to cannot be created or overwritten. | |
166 The reason could be that you do not have permission to write in the directory | |
167 or the file name is not valid. | |
168 | |
169 *E166* > | |
170 Can't open linked file for writing | |
171 | |
172 You are trying to write to a file which can't be overwritten, and the file is | |
173 a link (either a hard link or a symbolic link). Writing might still be | |
174 possible if the directory that contains the link or the file is writable, but | |
175 Vim now doesn't know if you want to delete the link and write the file in its | |
176 place, or if you want to delete the file itself and write the new file in its | |
177 place. If you really want to write the file under this name, you have to | |
178 manually delete the link or the file, or change the permissions so that Vim | |
179 can overwrite. | |
180 | |
181 *E46* > | |
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182 Cannot change read-only variable "{name}" |
7 | 183 |
184 You are trying to assign a value to an argument of a function |a:var| or a Vim | |
185 internal variable |v:var| which is read-only. | |
186 | |
187 *E90* > | |
188 Cannot unload last buffer | |
189 | |
190 Vim always requires one buffer to be loaded, otherwise there would be nothing | |
191 to display in the window. | |
192 | |
193 *E40* > | |
194 Can't open errorfile <filename> | |
195 | |
196 When using the ":make" or ":grep" commands: The file used to save the error | |
197 messages or grep output cannot be opened. This can have several causes: | |
198 - 'shellredir' has a wrong value. | |
199 - The shell changes directory, causing the error file to be written in another | |
200 directory. This could be fixed by changing 'makeef', but then the make | |
201 command is still executed in the wrong directory. | |
202 - 'makeef' has a wrong value. | |
203 - The 'grepprg' or 'makeprg' could not be executed. This cannot always be | |
204 detected (especially on MS-Windows). Check your $PATH. | |
205 | |
206 > | |
207 Can't open file C:\TEMP\VIoD243.TMP | |
208 | |
209 On MS-Windows, this message appears when the output of an external command was | |
210 to be read, but the command didn't run successfully. This can be caused by | |
211 many things. Check the 'shell', 'shellquote', 'shellxquote', 'shellslash' and | |
212 related options. It might also be that the external command was not found, | |
213 there is no different error message for that. | |
214 | |
215 *E12* > | |
216 Command not allowed from exrc/vimrc in current dir or tag search | |
217 | |
218 Some commands are not allowed for security reasons. These commands mostly | |
219 come from a .exrc or .vimrc file in the current directory, or from a tags | |
220 file. Also see 'secure'. | |
221 | |
222 *E74* > | |
223 Command too complex | |
224 | |
225 A mapping resulted in a very long command string. Could be caused by a | |
226 mapping that indirectly calls itself. | |
227 | |
228 > | |
229 CONVERSION ERROR | |
230 | |
231 When writing a file and the text "CONVERSION ERROR" appears, this means that | |
232 some bits were lost when converting text from the internally used UTF-8 to the | |
233 format of the file. The file will not be marked unmodified. If you care | |
234 about the loss of information, set the 'fileencoding' option to another value | |
235 that can handle the characters in the buffer and write again. If you don't | |
236 care, you can abandon the buffer or reset the 'modified' option. | |
237 | |
238 *E302* > | |
239 Could not rename swap file | |
240 | |
241 When the file name changes, Vim tries to rename the |swap-file| as well. | |
242 This failed and the old swap file is now still used. Mostly harmless. | |
243 | |
244 *E43* *E44* > | |
245 Damaged match string | |
246 Corrupted regexp program | |
247 | |
248 Something inside Vim went wrong and resulted in a corrupted regexp. If you | |
249 know how to reproduce this problem, please report it. |bugs| | |
250 | |
251 *E208* *E209* *E210* > | |
252 Error writing to "{filename}" | |
253 Error closing "{filename}" | |
254 Error reading "{filename}" | |
255 | |
256 This occurs when Vim is trying to rename a file, but a simple change of file | |
257 name doesn't work. Then the file will be copied, but somehow this failed. | |
258 The result may be that both the original file and the destination file exist | |
259 and the destination file may be incomplete. | |
260 | |
261 > | |
262 Vim: Error reading input, exiting... | |
263 | |
264 This occurs when Vim cannot read typed characters while input is required. | |
265 Vim got stuck, the only thing it can do is exit. This can happen when both | |
266 stdin and stderr are redirected and executing a script that doesn't exit Vim. | |
267 | |
268 *E47* > | |
269 Error while reading errorfile | |
270 | |
271 Reading the error file was not possible. This is NOT caused by an error | |
272 message that was not recognized. | |
273 | |
274 *E80* > | |
275 Error while writing | |
276 | |
277 Writing a file was not completed successfully. The file is probably | |
278 incomplete. | |
279 | |
280 *E13* *E189* > | |
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281 File exists (add ! to override) |
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282 "{filename}" exists (add ! to override) |
7 | 283 |
284 You are protected from accidentally overwriting a file. When you want to | |
285 write anyway, use the same command, but add a "!" just after the command. | |
286 Example: > | |
287 :w /tmp/test | |
288 changes to: > | |
289 :w! /tmp/test | |
290 < | |
457 | 291 *E768* > |
292 Swap file exists: {filename} (:silent! overrides) | |
293 | |
294 You are protected from overwriting a file that is being edited by Vim. This | |
295 happens when you use ":w! filename" and a swapfile is found. | |
296 - If the swapfile was left over from an old crashed edit session you may want | |
297 to delete the swapfile. Edit {filename} to find out information about the | |
298 swapfile. | |
299 - If you want to write anyway prepend ":silent!" to the command. For example: > | |
856 | 300 :silent! w! /tmp/test |
457 | 301 < The special command is needed, since you already added the ! for overwriting |
302 an existing file. | |
303 | |
7 | 304 *E139* > |
305 File is loaded in another buffer | |
306 | |
307 You are trying to write a file under a name which is also used in another | |
308 buffer. This would result in two versions of the same file. | |
309 | |
310 *E142* > | |
311 File not written: Writing is disabled by 'write' option | |
312 | |
313 The 'write' option is off. This makes all commands that try to write a file | |
314 generate this message. This could be caused by a |-m| commandline argument. | |
315 You can switch the 'write' option on with ":set write". | |
316 | |
317 *E25* > | |
318 GUI cannot be used: Not enabled at compile time | |
319 | |
320 You are running a version of Vim that doesn't include the GUI code. Therefore | |
321 "gvim" and ":gui" don't work. | |
322 | |
323 *E49* > | |
324 Invalid scroll size | |
325 | |
326 This is caused by setting an invalid value for the 'scroll', 'scrolljump' or | |
327 'scrolloff' options. | |
328 | |
329 *E17* > | |
330 "{filename}" is a directory | |
331 | |
332 You tried to write a file with the name of a directory. This is not possible. | |
333 You probably need to append a file name. | |
334 | |
335 *E19* > | |
336 Mark has invalid line number | |
337 | |
338 You are using a mark that has a line number that doesn't exist. This can | |
339 happen when you have a mark in another file, and some other program has | |
340 deleted lines from it. | |
341 | |
342 *E219* *E220* > | |
343 Missing {. | |
344 Missing }. | |
345 | |
346 Using a {} construct in a file name, but there is a { without a matching } or | |
347 the other way around. It should be used like this: {foo,bar}. This matches | |
348 "foo" and "bar". | |
349 | |
350 *E315* > | |
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351 ml_get: invalid lnum: {number} |
7 | 352 |
353 This is an internal Vim error. Please try to find out how it can be | |
354 reproduced, and submit a bug report |bugreport.vim|. | |
355 | |
356 *E173* > | |
357 {number} more files to edit | |
358 | |
359 You are trying to exit, while the last item in the argument list has not been | |
360 edited. This protects you from accidentally exiting when you still have more | |
361 files to work on. See |argument-list|. If you do want to exit, just do it | |
362 again and it will work. | |
363 | |
364 *E23* *E194* > | |
365 No alternate file | |
366 No alternate file name to substitute for '#' | |
367 | |
368 The alternate file is not defined yet. See |alternate-file|. | |
369 | |
370 *E32* > | |
371 No file name | |
372 | |
373 The current buffer has no name. To write it, use ":w fname". Or give the | |
374 buffer a name with ":file fname". | |
375 | |
376 *E141* > | |
377 No file name for buffer {number} | |
378 | |
379 One of the buffers that was changed does not have a file name. Therefore it | |
380 cannot be written. You need to give the buffer a file name: > | |
381 :buffer {number} | |
382 :file {filename} | |
383 < | |
384 *E33* > | |
385 No previous substitute regular expression | |
386 | |
387 When using the '~' character in a pattern, it is replaced with the previously | |
388 used pattern in a ":substitute" command. This fails when no such command has | |
167 | 389 been used yet. See |/~|. This also happens when using ":s/pat/%/", where the |
390 "%" stands for the previous substitute string. | |
7 | 391 |
392 *E35* > | |
393 No previous regular expression | |
394 | |
395 When using an empty search pattern, the previous search pattern is used. But | |
396 that is not possible if there was no previous search. | |
397 | |
398 *E24* > | |
399 No such abbreviation | |
400 | |
401 You have used an ":unabbreviate" command with an argument which is not an | |
402 existing abbreviation. All variations of this command give the same message: | |
403 ":cunabbrev", ":iunabbrev", etc. Check for trailing white space. | |
404 | |
405 > | |
406 /dev/dsp: No such file or directory | |
407 | |
408 Only given for GTK GUI with Gnome support. Gnome tries to use the audio | |
409 device and it isn't present. You can ignore this error. | |
410 | |
411 *E31* > | |
412 No such mapping | |
413 | |
414 You have used an ":unmap" command with an argument which is not an existing | |
415 mapping. All variations of this command give the same message: ":cunmap", | |
826 | 416 ":unmap!", etc. A few hints: |
417 - Check for trailing white space. | |
418 - If the mapping is buffer-local you need to use ":unmap <buffer>". | |
419 |:map-<buffer>| | |
7 | 420 |
421 *E37* *E89* > | |
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422 No write since last change (add ! to override) |
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423 No write since last change for buffer {N} (add ! to override) |
7 | 424 |
425 You are trying to |abandon| a file that has changes. Vim protects you from | |
426 losing your work. You can either write the changed file with ":w", or, if you | |
427 are sure, |abandon| it anyway, and lose all the changes. This can be done by | |
428 adding a '!' character just after the command you used. Example: > | |
429 :e other_file | |
430 changes to: > | |
431 :e! other_file | |
432 < | |
433 *E162* > | |
434 No write since last change for buffer "{name}" | |
435 | |
436 This appears when you try to exit Vim while some buffers are changed. You | |
437 will either have to write the changed buffer (with |:w|), or use a command to | |
438 abandon the buffer forcefully, e.g., with ":qa!". Careful, make sure you | |
439 don't throw away changes you really want to keep. You might have forgotten | |
440 about a buffer, especially when 'hidden' is set. | |
441 | |
22 | 442 > |
443 [No write since last change] | |
444 | |
445 This appears when executing a shell command while at least one buffer was | |
446 changed. To avoid the message reset the 'warn' option. | |
447 | |
7 | 448 *E38* > |
449 Null argument | |
450 | |
451 Something inside Vim went wrong and resulted in a NULL pointer. If you know | |
452 how to reproduce this problem, please report it. |bugs| | |
453 | |
454 *E172* > | |
455 Only one file name allowed | |
456 | |
457 The ":edit" command only accepts one file name. When you want to specify | |
458 several files for editing use ":next" |:next|. | |
459 | |
460 *E41* *E82* *E83* *E342* > | |
461 Out of memory! | |
462 Out of memory! (allocating {number} bytes) | |
463 Cannot allocate any buffer, exiting... | |
464 Cannot allocate buffer, using other one... | |
465 | |
466 Oh, oh. You must have been doing something complicated, or some other program | |
467 is consuming your memory. Be careful! Vim is not completely prepared for an | |
468 out-of-memory situation. First make sure that any changes are saved. Then | |
469 try to solve the memory shortage. To stay on the safe side, exit Vim and | |
2415 | 470 start again. |
471 | |
472 Buffers are only partly kept in memory, thus editing a very large file is | |
473 unlikely to cause an out-of-memory situation. Undo information is completely | |
474 in memory, you can reduce that with these options: | |
475 - 'undolevels' Set to a low value, or to -1 to disable undo completely. This | |
476 helps for a change that affects all lines. | |
477 - 'undoreload' Set to zero to disable. | |
478 | |
7 | 479 *E339* > |
480 Pattern too long | |
481 | |
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482 This happens on systems with 16 bit ints: The compiled regexp pattern is |
7 | 483 longer than about 65000 characters. Try using a shorter pattern. |
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484 It also happens when the offset of a rule doesn't fit in the space available. |
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485 Try simplifying the pattern. |
7 | 486 |
487 *E45* > | |
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488 'readonly' option is set (add ! to override) |
7 | 489 |
490 You are trying to write a file that was marked as read-only. To write the | |
491 file anyway, either reset the 'readonly' option, or add a '!' character just | |
492 after the command you used. Example: > | |
493 :w | |
494 changes to: > | |
495 :w! | |
496 < | |
497 *E294* *E295* *E301* > | |
498 Read error in swap file | |
499 Seek error in swap file read | |
500 Oops, lost the swap file!!! | |
501 | |
502 Vim tried to read text from the |swap-file|, but something went wrong. The | |
503 text in the related buffer may now be corrupted! Check carefully before you | |
504 write a buffer. You may want to write it in another file and check for | |
505 differences. | |
506 | |
507 *E192* > | |
508 Recursive use of :normal too deep | |
509 | |
510 You are using a ":normal" command, whose argument again uses a ":normal" | |
511 command in a recursive way. This is restricted to 'maxmapdepth' levels. This | |
512 example illustrates how to get this message: > | |
513 :map gq :normal gq<CR> | |
514 If you type "gq", it will execute this mapping, which will call "gq" again. | |
515 | |
516 *E22* > | |
517 Scripts nested too deep | |
518 | |
519 Scripts can be read with the "-s" command-line argument and with the ":source" | |
520 command. The script can then again read another script. This can continue | |
521 for about 14 levels. When more nesting is done, Vim assumes that there is a | |
522 recursive loop somewhere and stops with this error message. | |
523 | |
524 *E319* > | |
525 Sorry, the command is not available in this version | |
526 | |
527 You have used a command that is not present in the version of Vim you are | |
528 using. When compiling Vim, many different features can be enabled or | |
529 disabled. This depends on how big Vim has chosen to be and the operating | |
530 system. See |+feature-list| for when which feature is available. The | |
531 |:version| command shows which feature Vim was compiled with. | |
532 | |
533 *E300* > | |
534 Swap file already exists (symlink attack?) | |
535 | |
536 This message appears when Vim is trying to open a swap file and finds it | |
537 already exists or finds a symbolic link in its place. This shouldn't happen, | |
538 because Vim already checked that the file doesn't exist. Either someone else | |
539 opened the same file at exactly the same moment (very unlikely) or someone is | |
540 attempting a symlink attack (could happen when editing a file in /tmp or when | |
541 'directory' starts with "/tmp", which is a bad choice). | |
542 | |
543 *E432* > | |
544 Tags file not sorted: {file name} | |
545 | |
546 Vim (and Vi) expect tags files to be sorted in ASCII order. Binary searching | |
547 can then be used, which is a lot faster than a linear search. If your tags | |
548 files are not properly sorted, reset the |'tagbsearch'| option. | |
549 This message is only given when Vim detects a problem when searching for a | |
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550 tag. Sometimes this message is not given, even though the tags file is not |
7 | 551 properly sorted. |
552 | |
553 *E460* > | |
554 The resource fork would be lost (add ! to override) | |
555 | |
556 On the Macintosh (classic), when writing a file, Vim attempts to preserve all | |
557 info about a file, including its resource fork. If this is not possible you | |
558 get this error message. Append "!" to the command name to write anyway (and | |
559 lose the info). | |
560 | |
561 *E424* > | |
562 Too many different highlighting attributes in use | |
563 | |
564 Vim can only handle about 223 different kinds of highlighting. If you run | |
565 into this limit, you have used too many |:highlight| commands with different | |
566 arguments. A ":highlight link" is not counted. | |
567 | |
568 *E77* > | |
569 Too many file names | |
570 | |
571 When expanding file names, more than one match was found. Only one match is | |
572 allowed for the command that was used. | |
573 | |
574 *E303* > | |
575 Unable to open swap file for "{filename}", recovery impossible | |
576 | |
577 Vim was not able to create a swap file. You can still edit the file, but if | |
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578 Vim unexpectedly exits the changes will be lost. And Vim may consume a lot of |
7 | 579 memory when editing a big file. You may want to change the 'directory' option |
580 to avoid this error. See |swap-file|. | |
581 | |
582 *E140* > | |
583 Use ! to write partial buffer | |
584 | |
585 When using a range to write part of a buffer, it is unusual to overwrite the | |
586 original file. It is probably a mistake (e.g., when Visual mode was active | |
587 when using ":w"), therefore Vim requires using a ! after the command, e.g.: | |
588 ":3,10w!". | |
589 > | |
590 | |
591 Warning: Cannot convert string "<Key>Escape,_Key_Cancel" to type | |
592 VirtualBinding | |
593 | |
594 Messages like this appear when starting up. This is not a Vim problem, your | |
595 X11 configuration is wrong. You can find a hint on how to solve this here: | |
596 http://groups.yahoo.com/group/solarisonintel/message/12179. | |
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597 [this URL is no longer valid] |
7 | 598 |
599 *W10* > | |
600 Warning: Changing a readonly file | |
601 | |
602 The file is read-only and you are making a change to it anyway. You can use | |
603 the |FileChangedRO| autocommand event to avoid this message (the autocommand | |
604 must reset the 'readonly' option). See 'modifiable' to completely disallow | |
605 making changes to a file. | |
548 | 606 This message is only given for the first change after 'readonly' has been set. |
7 | 607 |
608 *W13* > | |
609 Warning: File "{filename}" has been created after editing started | |
610 | |
611 You are editing a file in Vim when it didn't exist, but it does exist now. | |
612 You will have to decide if you want to keep the version in Vim or the newly | |
613 created file. This message is not given when 'buftype' is not empty. | |
614 | |
615 *W11* > | |
616 Warning: File "{filename}" has changed since editing started | |
617 | |
618 The file which you have started editing has got another timestamp and the | |
619 contents changed (more precisely: When reading the file again with the current | |
620 option settings and autocommands you would end up with different text). This | |
621 probably means that some other program changed the file. You will have to | |
622 find out what happened, and decide which version of the file you want to keep. | |
623 Set the 'autoread' option if you want to do this automatically. | |
624 This message is not given when 'buftype' is not empty. | |
625 | |
626 There is one situation where you get this message even though there is nothing | |
627 wrong: If you save a file in Windows on the day the daylight saving time | |
628 starts. It can be fixed in one of these ways: | |
629 - Add this line in your autoexec.bat: > | |
630 SET TZ=-1 | |
631 < Adjust the "-1" for your time zone. | |
632 - Disable "automatically adjust clock for daylight saving changes". | |
633 - Just write the file again the next day. Or set your clock to the next day, | |
634 write the file twice and set the clock back. | |
635 | |
636 *W12* > | |
637 Warning: File "{filename}" has changed and the buffer was changed in Vim as well | |
638 | |
639 Like the above, and the buffer for the file was changed in this Vim as well. | |
640 You will have to decide if you want to keep the version in this Vim or the one | |
641 on disk. This message is not given when 'buftype' is not empty. | |
642 | |
643 *W16* > | |
644 Warning: Mode of file "{filename}" has changed since editing started | |
645 | |
646 When the timestamp for a buffer was changed and the contents are still the | |
647 same but the mode (permissions) have changed. This usually occurs when | |
648 checking out a file from a version control system, which causes the read-only | |
649 bit to be reset. It should be safe to reload the file. Set 'autoread' to | |
650 automatically reload the file. | |
651 | |
652 *E211* > | |
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3259c3923c1e
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653 File "{filename}" no longer available |
7 | 654 |
655 The file which you have started editing has disappeared, or is no longer | |
656 accessible. Make sure you write the buffer somewhere to avoid losing | |
657 changes. This message is not given when 'buftype' is not empty. | |
658 | |
659 *W14* > | |
660 Warning: List of file names overflow | |
661 | |
662 You must be using an awful lot of buffers. It's now possible that two buffers | |
663 have the same number, which causes various problems. You might want to exit | |
664 Vim and restart it. | |
665 | |
666 *E296* *E297* > | |
667 Seek error in swap file write | |
668 Write error in swap file | |
669 | |
670 This mostly happens when the disk is full. Vim could not write text into the | |
671 |swap-file|. It's not directly harmful, but when Vim unexpectedly exits some | |
672 text may be lost without recovery being possible. Vim might run out of memory | |
673 when this problem persists. | |
674 | |
675 *connection-refused* > | |
676 Xlib: connection to "<machine-name:0.0" refused by server | |
677 | |
678 This happens when Vim tries to connect to the X server, but the X server does | |
679 not allow a connection. The connection to the X server is needed to be able | |
680 to restore the title and for the xterm clipboard support. Unfortunately this | |
681 error message cannot be avoided, except by disabling the |+xterm_clipboard| | |
682 and |+X11| features. | |
683 | |
684 *E10* > | |
685 \\ should be followed by /, ? or & | |
686 | |
687 A command line started with a backslash or the range of a command contained a | |
688 backslash in a wrong place. This is often caused by command-line continuation | |
689 being disabled. Remove the 'C' flag from the 'cpoptions' option to enable it. | |
20 | 690 Or use ":set nocp". |
7 | 691 |
692 *E471* > | |
693 Argument required | |
694 | |
695 This happens when an Ex command with mandatory argument(s) was executed, but | |
696 no argument has been specified. | |
697 | |
698 *E474* *E475* > | |
699 Invalid argument | |
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700 Invalid argument: {arg} |
7 | 701 |
702 An Ex command has been executed, but an invalid argument has been specified. | |
703 | |
704 *E488* > | |
705 Trailing characters | |
706 | |
707 An argument has been added to an Ex command that does not permit one. | |
708 | |
709 *E477* *E478* > | |
710 No ! allowed | |
711 Don't panic! | |
712 | |
713 You have added a "!" after an Ex command that doesn't permit one. | |
714 | |
715 *E481* > | |
716 No range allowed | |
717 | |
718 A range was specified for an Ex command that doesn't permit one. See | |
719 |cmdline-ranges|. | |
720 | |
721 *E482* *E483* > | |
722 Can't create file {filename} | |
723 Can't get temp file name | |
724 | |
725 Vim cannot create a temporary file. | |
726 | |
727 *E484* *E485* > | |
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728 Can't open file {filename} |
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729 Can't read file {filename} |
7 | 730 |
4186 | 731 Vim cannot read a temporary file. Especially on Windows, this can be caused |
732 by wrong escaping of special characters for cmd.exe; the approach was | |
733 changed with patch 7.3.443. Try using |shellescape()| for all shell arguments | |
734 given to |system()|, or explicitly add escaping with ^. Also see | |
735 'shellxquote' and 'shellxescape'. | |
7 | 736 |
737 *E464* > | |
738 Ambiguous use of user-defined command | |
739 | |
740 There are two user-defined commands with a common name prefix, and you used | |
741 Command-line completion to execute one of them. |user-cmd-ambiguous| | |
742 Example: > | |
743 :command MyCommand1 echo "one" | |
744 :command MyCommand2 echo "two" | |
745 :MyCommand | |
746 < | |
747 *E492* > | |
748 Not an editor command | |
749 | |
750 You tried to execute a command that is neither an Ex command nor | |
751 a user-defined command. | |
752 | |
753 ============================================================================== | |
754 3. Messages *messages* | |
755 | |
756 This is an (incomplete) overview of various messages that Vim gives: | |
757 | |
446 | 758 *hit-enter* *press-enter* *hit-return* |
759 *press-return* *hit-enter-prompt* | |
7 | 760 |
446 | 761 Press ENTER or type command to continue |
7 | 762 |
763 This message is given when there is something on the screen for you to read, | |
764 and the screen is about to be redrawn: | |
765 - After executing an external command (e.g., ":!ls" and "="). | |
766 - Something is displayed on the status line that is longer than the width of | |
767 the window, or runs into the 'showcmd' or 'ruler' output. | |
768 | |
446 | 769 -> Press <Enter> or <Space> to redraw the screen and continue, without that |
770 key being used otherwise. | |
771 -> Press ':' or any other Normal mode command character to start that command. | |
698 | 772 -> Press 'k', <Up>, 'u', 'b' or 'g' to scroll back in the messages. This |
773 works the same way as at the |more-prompt|. Only works when 'compatible' | |
774 is off and 'more' is on. | |
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de5a43c5eedc
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775 -> Pressing 'j', 'f', 'd' or <Down> is ignored when messages scrolled off the |
de5a43c5eedc
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776 top of the screen, 'compatible' is off and 'more' is on, to avoid that |
de5a43c5eedc
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777 typing one 'j' or 'f' too many causes the messages to disappear. |
446 | 778 -> Press <C-Y> to copy (yank) a modeless selection to the clipboard register. |
7 | 779 -> Use a menu. The characters defined for Cmdline-mode are used. |
780 -> When 'mouse' contains the 'r' flag, clicking the left mouse button works | |
781 like pressing <Space>. This makes it impossible to select text though. | |
782 -> For the GUI clicking the left mouse button in the last line works like | |
783 pressing <Space>. | |
784 {Vi: only ":" commands are interpreted} | |
785 | |
447 | 786 If you accidentally hit <Enter> or <Space> and you want to see the displayed |
787 text then use |g<|. This only works when 'more' is set. | |
788 | |
7 | 789 To reduce the number of hit-enter prompts: |
790 - Set 'cmdheight' to 2 or higher. | |
791 - Add flags to 'shortmess'. | |
792 - Reset 'showcmd' and/or 'ruler'. | |
793 | |
539 | 794 If your script causes the hit-enter prompt and you don't know why, you may |
795 find the |v:scrollstart| variable useful. | |
796 | |
7 | 797 Also see 'mouse'. The hit-enter message is highlighted with the |hl-Question| |
798 group. | |
799 | |
800 | |
801 *more-prompt* *pager* > | |
802 -- More -- | |
446 | 803 -- More -- SPACE/d/j: screen/page/line down, b/u/k: up, q: quit |
7 | 804 |
805 This message is given when the screen is filled with messages. It is only | |
806 given when the 'more' option is on. It is highlighted with the |hl-MoreMsg| | |
807 group. | |
808 | |
809 Type effect ~ | |
810 <CR> or <NL> or j or <Down> one more line | |
446 | 811 d down a page (half a screen) |
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812 <Space> or f or <PageDown> down a screen |
447 | 813 G down all the way, until the hit-enter |
856 | 814 prompt |
446 | 815 |
7 | 816 <BS> or k or <Up> one line back (*) |
446 | 817 u up a page (half a screen) (*) |
818 b or <PageUp> back a screen (*) | |
447 | 819 g back to the start (*) |
446 | 820 |
7 | 821 q, <Esc> or CTRL-C stop the listing |
822 : stop the listing and enter a | |
823 command-line | |
824 <C-Y> yank (copy) a modeless selection to | |
825 the clipboard ("* and "+ registers) | |
826 {menu-entry} what the menu is defined to in | |
827 Cmdline-mode. | |
828 <LeftMouse> (**) next page | |
829 | |
830 Any other key causes the meaning of the keys to be displayed. | |
831 | |
446 | 832 (*) backwards scrolling is {not in Vi}. Only scrolls back to where messages |
833 started to scroll. | |
7 | 834 (**) Clicking the left mouse button only works: |
835 - For the GUI: in the last line of the screen. | |
836 - When 'r' is included in 'mouse' (but then selecting text won't work). | |
837 | |
838 | |
839 Note: The typed key is directly obtained from the terminal, it is not mapped | |
840 and typeahead is ignored. | |
841 | |
532 | 842 The |g<| command can be used to see the last page of previous command output. |
843 This is especially useful if you accidentally typed <Space> at the hit-enter | |
844 prompt. | |
845 | |
7 | 846 vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl: |