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annotate runtime/doc/editing.txt @ 18750:82a28df1e2d5
Update runtime files.
Commit: https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/91359014b359cf816bf943fe2c7d492996263def
Author: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
Date: Sat Nov 30 17:57:03 2019 +0100
Update runtime files.
author | Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org> |
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date | Sat, 30 Nov 2019 18:00:05 +0100 |
parents | 03b854983b14 |
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18186 | 1 *editing.txt* For Vim version 8.1. Last change: 2019 Sep 27 |
7 | 2 |
3 | |
4 VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar | |
5 | |
6 | |
7 Editing files *edit-files* | |
8 | |
9 1. Introduction |edit-intro| | |
10 2. Editing a file |edit-a-file| | |
39 | 11 3. The argument list |argument-list| |
12 4. Writing |writing| | |
13 5. Writing and quitting |write-quit| | |
14 6. Dialogs |edit-dialogs| | |
15 7. The current directory |current-directory| | |
7 | 16 8. Editing binary files |edit-binary| |
17 9. Encryption |encryption| | |
18 10. Timestamps |timestamps| | |
39 | 19 11. File Searching |file-searching| |
7 | 20 |
21 ============================================================================== | |
22 1. Introduction *edit-intro* | |
23 | |
24 Editing a file with Vim means: | |
25 | |
39 | 26 1. reading the file into a buffer |
7 | 27 2. changing the buffer with editor commands |
28 3. writing the buffer into a file | |
29 | |
30 *current-file* | |
31 As long as you don't write the buffer, the original file remains unchanged. | |
32 If you start editing a file (read a file into the buffer), the file name is | |
22 | 33 remembered as the "current file name". This is also known as the name of the |
39 | 34 current buffer. It can be used with "%" on the command line |:_%|. |
7 | 35 |
36 *alternate-file* | |
37 If there already was a current file name, then that one becomes the alternate | |
39 | 38 file name. It can be used with "#" on the command line |:_#| and you can use |
39 the |CTRL-^| command to toggle between the current and the alternate file. | |
40 However, the alternate file name is not changed when |:keepalt| is used. | |
5510 | 41 An alternate file name is remembered for each window. |
22 | 42 |
43 *:keepalt* *:keepa* | |
44 :keepalt {cmd} Execute {cmd} while keeping the current alternate file | |
45 name. Note that commands invoked indirectly (e.g., | |
46 with a function) may still set the alternate file | |
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47 name. |
22 | 48 |
39 | 49 All file names are remembered in the buffer list. When you enter a file name, |
236 | 50 for editing (e.g., with ":e filename") or writing (e.g., with ":w filename"), |
39 | 51 the file name is added to the list. You can use the buffer list to remember |
52 which files you edited and to quickly switch from one file to another (e.g., | |
53 to copy text) with the |CTRL-^| command. First type the number of the file | |
16610 | 54 and then hit CTRL-^. |
39 | 55 |
7 | 56 |
57 CTRL-G or *CTRL-G* *:f* *:fi* *:file* | |
268 | 58 :f[ile] Prints the current file name (as typed, unless ":cd" |
59 was used), the cursor position (unless the 'ruler' | |
60 option is set), and the file status (readonly, | |
61 modified, read errors, new file). See the 'shortmess' | |
62 option about how to make this message shorter. | |
7 | 63 |
14 | 64 :f[ile]! like |:file|, but don't truncate the name even when |
65 'shortmess' indicates this. | |
66 | |
7 | 67 {count}CTRL-G Like CTRL-G, but prints the current file name with |
68 full path. If the count is higher than 1 the current | |
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69 buffer number is also given. |
7 | 70 |
71 *g_CTRL-G* *word-count* *byte-count* | |
161 | 72 g CTRL-G Prints the current position of the cursor in five |
73 ways: Column, Line, Word, Character and Byte. If the | |
74 number of Characters and Bytes is the same then the | |
75 Character position is omitted. | |
76 If there are characters in the line that take more | |
77 than one position on the screen (<Tab> or special | |
78 character), both the "real" column and the screen | |
79 column are shown, separated with a dash. | |
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80 Also see the 'ruler' option and the |wordcount()| |
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81 function. |
7 | 82 |
83 *v_g_CTRL-G* | |
161 | 84 {Visual}g CTRL-G Similar to "g CTRL-G", but Word, Character, Line, and |
85 Byte counts for the visually selected region are | |
86 displayed. | |
87 In Blockwise mode, Column count is also shown. (For | |
7 | 88 {Visual} see |Visual-mode|.) |
89 | |
90 *:file_f* | |
14 | 91 :f[ile][!] {name} Sets the current file name to {name}. The optional ! |
92 avoids truncating the message, as with |:file|. | |
28 | 93 If the buffer did have a name, that name becomes the |
94 |alternate-file| name. An unlisted buffer is created | |
95 to hold the old name. | |
139 | 96 *:0file* |
14 | 97 :0f[ile][!] Remove the name of the current buffer. The optional ! |
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98 avoids truncating the message, as with |:file|. |
7 | 99 |
100 :buffers | |
101 :files | |
102 :ls List all the currently known file names. See | |
18016 | 103 |windows.txt| |:files| |:buffers| |:ls|. |
7 | 104 |
105 Vim will remember the full path name of a file name that you enter. In most | |
106 cases when the file name is displayed only the name you typed is shown, but | |
107 the full path name is being used if you used the ":cd" command |:cd|. | |
108 | |
109 *home-replace* | |
110 If the environment variable $HOME is set, and the file name starts with that | |
111 string, it is often displayed with HOME replaced with "~". This was done to | |
112 keep file names short. When reading or writing files the full name is still | |
113 used, the "~" is only used when displaying file names. When replacing the | |
114 file name would result in just "~", "~/" is used instead (to avoid confusion | |
42 | 115 between options set to $HOME with 'backupext' set to "~"). |
7 | 116 |
117 When writing the buffer, the default is to use the current file name. Thus | |
118 when you give the "ZZ" or ":wq" command, the original file will be | |
119 overwritten. If you do not want this, the buffer can be written into another | |
120 file by giving a file name argument to the ":write" command. For example: > | |
121 | |
122 vim testfile | |
123 [change the buffer with editor commands] | |
124 :w newfile | |
125 :q | |
126 | |
127 This will create a file "newfile", that is a modified copy of "testfile". | |
128 The file "testfile" will remain unchanged. Anyway, if the 'backup' option is | |
129 set, Vim renames or copies the original file before it will be overwritten. | |
130 You can use this file if you discover that you need the original file. See | |
131 also the 'patchmode' option. The name of the backup file is normally the same | |
132 as the original file with 'backupext' appended. The default "~" is a bit | |
133 strange to avoid accidentally overwriting existing files. If you prefer ".bak" | |
134 change the 'backupext' option. Extra dots are replaced with '_' on MS-DOS | |
135 machines, when Vim has detected that an MS-DOS-like filesystem is being used | |
136 (e.g., messydos or crossdos) or when the 'shortname' option is on. The | |
137 backup file can be placed in another directory by setting 'backupdir'. | |
138 | |
139 *auto-shortname* | |
140 Technical: On the Amiga you can use 30 characters for a file name. But on an | |
141 MS-DOS-compatible filesystem only 8 plus 3 characters are | |
142 available. Vim tries to detect the type of filesystem when it is | |
143 creating the .swp file. If an MS-DOS-like filesystem is suspected, | |
144 a flag is set that has the same effect as setting the 'shortname' | |
145 option. This flag will be reset as soon as you start editing a | |
146 new file. The flag will be used when making the file name for the | |
147 ".swp" and ".~" files for the current file. But when you are | |
148 editing a file in a normal filesystem and write to an MS-DOS-like | |
149 filesystem the flag will not have been set. In that case the | |
150 creation of the ".~" file may fail and you will get an error | |
151 message. Use the 'shortname' option in this case. | |
152 | |
153 When you started editing without giving a file name, "No File" is displayed in | |
154 messages. If the ":write" command is used with a file name argument, the file | |
155 name for the current file is set to that file name. This only happens when | |
633 | 156 the 'F' flag is included in 'cpoptions' (by default it is included) |cpo-F|. |
157 This is useful when entering text in an empty buffer and then writing it to a | |
158 file. If 'cpoptions' contains the 'f' flag (by default it is NOT included) | |
159 |cpo-f| the file name is set for the ":read file" command. This is useful | |
160 when starting Vim without an argument and then doing ":read file" to start | |
161 editing a file. | |
162 When the file name was set and 'filetype' is empty the filetype detection | |
163 autocommands will be triggered. | |
7 | 164 *not-edited* |
165 Because the file name was set without really starting to edit that file, you | |
166 are protected from overwriting that file. This is done by setting the | |
167 "notedited" flag. You can see if this flag is set with the CTRL-G or ":file" | |
168 command. It will include "[Not edited]" when the "notedited" flag is set. | |
169 When writing the buffer to the current file name (with ":w!"), the "notedited" | |
170 flag is reset. | |
171 | |
172 *abandon* | |
173 Vim remembers whether you have changed the buffer. You are protected from | |
174 losing the changes you made. If you try to quit without writing, or want to | |
175 start editing another file, Vim will refuse this. In order to overrule this | |
176 protection, add a '!' to the command. The changes will then be lost. For | |
177 example: ":q" will not work if the buffer was changed, but ":q!" will. To see | |
178 whether the buffer was changed use the "CTRL-G" command. The message includes | |
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179 the string "[Modified]" if the buffer has been changed, or "+" if the 'm' flag |
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180 is in 'shortmess'. |
7 | 181 |
182 If you want to automatically save the changes without asking, switch on the | |
183 'autowriteall' option. 'autowrite' is the associated Vi-compatible option | |
184 that does not work for all commands. | |
185 | |
186 If you want to keep the changed buffer without saving it, switch on the | |
5277 | 187 'hidden' option. See |hidden-buffer|. Some commands work like this even when |
188 'hidden' is not set, check the help for the command. | |
7 | 189 |
190 ============================================================================== | |
191 2. Editing a file *edit-a-file* | |
192 | |
5277 | 193 *:e* *:edit* *reload* |
7 | 194 :e[dit] [++opt] [+cmd] Edit the current file. This is useful to re-edit the |
195 current file, when it has been changed outside of Vim. | |
196 This fails when changes have been made to the current | |
197 buffer and 'autowriteall' isn't set or the file can't | |
198 be written. | |
199 Also see |++opt| and |+cmd|. | |
200 | |
5277 | 201 *:edit!* *discard* |
7 | 202 :e[dit]! [++opt] [+cmd] |
203 Edit the current file always. Discard any changes to | |
204 the current buffer. This is useful if you want to | |
205 start all over again. | |
206 Also see |++opt| and |+cmd|. | |
207 | |
208 *:edit_f* | |
209 :e[dit] [++opt] [+cmd] {file} | |
210 Edit {file}. | |
211 This fails when changes have been made to the current | |
212 buffer, unless 'hidden' is set or 'autowriteall' is | |
213 set and the file can be written. | |
214 Also see |++opt| and |+cmd|. | |
215 | |
216 *:edit!_f* | |
217 :e[dit]! [++opt] [+cmd] {file} | |
218 Edit {file} always. Discard any changes to the | |
219 current buffer. | |
220 Also see |++opt| and |+cmd|. | |
221 | |
222 :e[dit] [++opt] [+cmd] #[count] | |
39 | 223 Edit the [count]th buffer (as shown by |:files|). |
224 This command does the same as [count] CTRL-^. But ":e | |
225 #" doesn't work if the alternate buffer doesn't have a | |
226 file name, while CTRL-^ still works then. | |
7 | 227 Also see |++opt| and |+cmd|. |
228 | |
229 *:ene* *:enew* | |
230 :ene[w] Edit a new, unnamed buffer. This fails when changes | |
231 have been made to the current buffer, unless 'hidden' | |
232 is set or 'autowriteall' is set and the file can be | |
233 written. | |
234 If 'fileformats' is not empty, the first format given | |
235 will be used for the new buffer. If 'fileformats' is | |
236 empty, the 'fileformat' of the current buffer is used. | |
237 | |
238 *:ene!* *:enew!* | |
239 :ene[w]! Edit a new, unnamed buffer. Discard any changes to | |
240 the current buffer. | |
241 Set 'fileformat' like |:enew|. | |
242 | |
243 *:fin* *:find* | |
244 :fin[d][!] [++opt] [+cmd] {file} | |
245 Find {file} in 'path' and then |:edit| it. | |
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246 {not available when the |+file_in_path| feature was |
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247 disabled at compile time} |
7 | 248 |
249 :{count}fin[d][!] [++opt] [+cmd] {file} | |
250 Just like ":find", but use the {count} match in | |
251 'path'. Thus ":2find file" will find the second | |
252 "file" found in 'path'. When there are fewer matches | |
253 for the file in 'path' than asked for, you get an | |
254 error message. | |
255 | |
256 *:ex* | |
257 :ex [++opt] [+cmd] [file] | |
258 Same as |:edit|. | |
259 | |
260 *:vi* *:visual* | |
261 :vi[sual][!] [++opt] [+cmd] [file] | |
42 | 262 When used in Ex mode: Leave |Ex-mode|, go back to |
7 | 263 Normal mode. Otherwise same as |:edit|. |
264 | |
265 *:vie* *:view* | |
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266 :vie[w][!] [++opt] [+cmd] file |
11160 | 267 When used in Ex mode: Leave |Ex-mode|, go back to |
7 | 268 Normal mode. Otherwise same as |:edit|, but set |
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269 'readonly' option for this buffer. |
7 | 270 |
271 *CTRL-^* *CTRL-6* | |
2725 | 272 CTRL-^ Edit the alternate file. Mostly the alternate file is |
273 the previously edited file. This is a quick way to | |
274 toggle between two files. It is equivalent to ":e #", | |
275 except that it also works when there is no file name. | |
276 | |
7 | 277 If the 'autowrite' or 'autowriteall' option is on and |
278 the buffer was changed, write it. | |
279 Mostly the ^ character is positioned on the 6 key, | |
280 pressing CTRL and 6 then gets you what we call CTRL-^. | |
281 But on some non-US keyboards CTRL-^ is produced in | |
282 another way. | |
283 | |
39 | 284 {count}CTRL-^ Edit [count]th file in the buffer list (equivalent to |
285 ":e #[count]"). This is a quick way to switch between | |
286 files. | |
287 See |CTRL-^| above for further details. | |
288 | |
7 | 289 [count]]f *]f* *[f* |
290 [count][f Same as "gf". Deprecated. | |
291 | |
292 *gf* *E446* *E447* | |
293 [count]gf Edit the file whose name is under or after the cursor. | |
294 Mnemonic: "goto file". | |
295 Uses the 'isfname' option to find out which characters | |
296 are supposed to be in a file name. Trailing | |
6647 | 297 punctuation characters ".,:;!" are ignored. Escaped |
298 spaces "\ " are reduced to a single space. | |
1668 | 299 Uses the 'path' option as a list of directory names to |
300 look for the file. See the 'path' option for details | |
301 about relative directories and wildcards. | |
7 | 302 Uses the 'suffixesadd' option to check for file names |
303 with a suffix added. | |
304 If the file can't be found, 'includeexpr' is used to | |
305 modify the name and another attempt is done. | |
306 If a [count] is given, the count'th file that is found | |
307 in the 'path' is edited. | |
308 This command fails if Vim refuses to |abandon| the | |
309 current file. | |
820 | 310 If you want to edit the file in a new window use |
311 |CTRL-W_CTRL-F|. | |
7 | 312 If you do want to edit a new file, use: > |
313 :e <cfile> | |
314 < To make gf always work like that: > | |
315 :map gf :e <cfile><CR> | |
316 < If the name is a hypertext link, that looks like | |
317 "type://machine/path", you need the |netrw| plugin. | |
318 For Unix the '~' character is expanded, like in | |
319 "~user/file". Environment variables are expanded too | |
320 |expand-env|. | |
321 {not available when the |+file_in_path| feature was | |
322 disabled at compile time} | |
323 | |
324 *v_gf* | |
325 {Visual}[count]gf Same as "gf", but the highlighted text is used as the | |
326 name of the file to edit. 'isfname' is ignored. | |
327 Leading blanks are skipped, otherwise all blanks and | |
328 special characters are included in the file name. | |
329 (For {Visual} see |Visual-mode|.) | |
330 | |
681 | 331 *gF* |
332 [count]gF Same as "gf", except if a number follows the file | |
333 name, then the cursor is positioned on that line in | |
334 the file. The file name and the number must be | |
335 separated by a non-filename (see 'isfname') and | |
336 non-numeric character. White space between the | |
337 filename, the separator and the number are ignored. | |
852 | 338 Examples: |
339 eval.c:10 ~ | |
340 eval.c @ 20 ~ | |
341 eval.c (30) ~ | |
342 eval.c 40 ~ | |
343 | |
681 | 344 *v_gF* |
345 {Visual}[count]gF Same as "v_gf". | |
346 | |
7 | 347 These commands are used to start editing a single file. This means that the |
348 file is read into the buffer and the current file name is set. The file that | |
349 is opened depends on the current directory, see |:cd|. | |
350 | |
351 See |read-messages| for an explanation of the message that is given after the | |
352 file has been read. | |
353 | |
354 You can use the ":e!" command if you messed up the buffer and want to start | |
355 all over again. The ":e" command is only useful if you have changed the | |
356 current file name. | |
357 | |
358 *:filename* *{file}* | |
1620 | 359 Besides the things mentioned here, more special items for where a filename is |
360 expected are mentioned at |cmdline-special|. | |
361 | |
1668 | 362 Note for systems other than Unix: When using a command that accepts a single |
363 file name (like ":edit file") spaces in the file name are allowed, but | |
364 trailing spaces are ignored. This is useful on systems that regularly embed | |
365 spaces in file names (like MS-Windows and the Amiga). Example: The command | |
366 ":e Long File Name " will edit the file "Long File Name". When using a | |
367 command that accepts more than one file name (like ":next file1 file2") | |
368 embedded spaces must be escaped with a backslash. | |
7 | 369 |
1121 | 370 *wildcard* *wildcards* |
3682 | 371 Wildcards in {file} are expanded, but as with file completion, 'wildignore' |
372 and 'suffixes' apply. Which wildcards are supported depends on the system. | |
373 These are the common ones: | |
444 | 374 ? matches one character |
7 | 375 * matches anything, including nothing |
444 | 376 ** matches anything, including nothing, recurses into directories |
7 | 377 [abc] match 'a', 'b' or 'c' |
444 | 378 |
7 | 379 To avoid the special meaning of the wildcards prepend a backslash. However, |
380 on MS-Windows the backslash is a path separator and "path\[abc]" is still seen | |
381 as a wildcard when "[" is in the 'isfname' option. A simple way to avoid this | |
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382 is to use "path\[[]abc]", this matches the file "path\[abc]". |
7 | 383 |
444 | 384 *starstar-wildcard* |
385 Expanding "**" is possible on Unix, Win32, Mac OS/X and a few other systems. | |
386 This allows searching a directory tree. This goes up to 100 directories deep. | |
3750 | 387 Note there are some commands where this works slightly differently, see |
1668 | 388 |file-searching|. |
444 | 389 Example: > |
390 :n **/*.txt | |
391 Finds files: | |
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392 aaa.txt ~ |
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393 subdir/bbb.txt ~ |
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394 a/b/c/d/ccc.txt ~ |
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395 When non-wildcard characters are used right before or after "**" these are |
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396 only matched in the top directory. They are not used for directories further |
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397 down in the tree. For example: > |
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398 :n /usr/inc**/types.h |
444 | 399 Finds files: |
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400 /usr/include/types.h ~ |
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401 /usr/include/sys/types.h ~ |
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402 /usr/inc/old/types.h ~ |
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403 Note that the path with "/sys" is included because it does not need to match |
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404 "/inc". Thus it's like matching "/usr/inc*/*/*...", not |
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405 "/usr/inc*/inc*/inc*". |
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406 |
7 | 407 *backtick-expansion* *`-expansion* |
7013 | 408 On Unix and a few other systems you can also use backticks for the file name |
409 argument, for example: > | |
410 :next `find . -name ver\\*.c -print` | |
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411 :view `ls -t *.patch \| head -n1` |
13563 | 412 Vim will run the command in backticks using the 'shell' and use the standard |
413 output as argument for the given Vim command (error messages from the shell | |
414 command will be discarded). | |
415 To see what shell command Vim is running, set the 'verbose' option to 4. When | |
416 the shell command returns a non-zero exit code, an error message will be | |
417 displayed and the Vim command will be aborted. To avoid this make the shell | |
418 always return zero like so: > | |
419 :next `find . -name ver\\*.c -print \|\| true` | |
420 | |
7013 | 421 The backslashes before the star are required to prevent the shell from |
422 expanding "ver*.c" prior to execution of the find program. The backslash | |
423 before the shell pipe symbol "|" prevents Vim from parsing it as command | |
424 termination. | |
7 | 425 This also works for most other systems, with the restriction that the |
426 backticks must be around the whole item. It is not possible to have text | |
427 directly before the first or just after the last backtick. | |
428 | |
8 | 429 *`=* |
7013 | 430 You can have the backticks expanded as a Vim expression, instead of as an |
431 external command, by putting an equal sign right after the first backtick, | |
432 e.g.: > | |
39 | 433 :e `=tempname()` |
434 The expression can contain just about anything, thus this can also be used to | |
3682 | 435 avoid the special meaning of '"', '|', '%' and '#'. However, 'wildignore' |
4119 | 436 does apply like to other wildcards. |
7013 | 437 |
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438 Environment variables in the expression are expanded when evaluating the |
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439 expression, thus this works: > |
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440 :e `=$HOME . '/.vimrc'` |
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441 This does not work, $HOME is inside a string and used literally: > |
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442 :e `='$HOME' . '/.vimrc'` |
7013 | 443 |
3682 | 444 If the expression returns a string then names are to be separated with line |
445 breaks. When the result is a |List| then each item is used as a name. Line | |
446 breaks also separate names. | |
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447 Note that such expressions are only supported in places where a filename is |
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448 expected as an argument to an Ex-command. |
7 | 449 |
450 *++opt* *[++opt]* | |
595 | 451 The [++opt] argument can be used to force the value of 'fileformat', |
452 'fileencoding' or 'binary' to a value for one command, and to specify the | |
453 behavior for bad characters. The form is: > | |
819 | 454 ++{optname} |
455 Or: > | |
7 | 456 ++{optname}={value} |
457 | |
819 | 458 Where {optname} is one of: *++ff* *++enc* *++bin* *++nobin* *++edit* |
7 | 459 ff or fileformat overrides 'fileformat' |
460 enc or encoding overrides 'fileencoding' | |
461 bin or binary sets 'binary' | |
462 nobin or nobinary resets 'binary' | |
856 | 463 bad specifies behavior for bad characters |
819 | 464 edit for |:read| only: keep option values as if editing |
856 | 465 a file |
7 | 466 |
467 {value} cannot contain white space. It can be any valid value for these | |
468 options. Examples: > | |
469 :e ++ff=unix | |
470 This edits the same file again with 'fileformat' set to "unix". > | |
471 | |
472 :w ++enc=latin1 newfile | |
473 This writes the current buffer to "newfile" in latin1 format. | |
474 | |
595 | 475 There may be several ++opt arguments, separated by white space. They must all |
476 appear before any |+cmd| argument. | |
477 | |
478 *++bad* | |
479 The argument of "++bad=" specifies what happens with characters that can't be | |
480 converted and illegal bytes. It can be one of three things: | |
481 ++bad=X A single-byte character that replaces each bad character. | |
482 ++bad=keep Keep bad characters without conversion. Note that this may | |
856 | 483 result in illegal bytes in your text! |
595 | 484 ++bad=drop Remove the bad characters. |
485 | |
486 The default is like "++bad=?": Replace each bad character with a question | |
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487 mark. In some places an inverted question mark is used (0xBF). |
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488 |
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489 Note that not all commands use the ++bad argument, even though they do not |
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490 give an error when you add it. E.g. |:write|. |
595 | 491 |
7 | 492 Note that when reading, the 'fileformat' and 'fileencoding' options will be |
493 set to the used format. When writing this doesn't happen, thus a next write | |
494 will use the old value of the option. Same for the 'binary' option. | |
495 | |
496 | |
497 *+cmd* *[+cmd]* | |
498 The [+cmd] argument can be used to position the cursor in the newly opened | |
499 file, or execute any other command: | |
500 + Start at the last line. | |
501 +{num} Start at line {num}. | |
502 +/{pat} Start at first line containing {pat}. | |
503 +{command} Execute {command} after opening the new file. | |
504 {command} is any Ex command. | |
505 To include a white space in the {pat} or {command}, precede it with a | |
506 backslash. Double the number of backslashes. > | |
507 :edit +/The\ book file | |
508 :edit +/dir\ dirname\\ file | |
509 :edit +set\ dir=c:\\\\temp file | |
510 Note that in the last example the number of backslashes is halved twice: Once | |
511 for the "+cmd" argument and once for the ":set" command. | |
512 | |
513 *file-formats* | |
514 The 'fileformat' option sets the <EOL> style for a file: | |
515 'fileformat' characters name ~ | |
516 "dos" <CR><NL> or <NL> DOS format *DOS-format* | |
517 "unix" <NL> Unix format *Unix-format* | |
518 "mac" <CR> Mac format *Mac-format* | |
519 Previously 'textmode' was used. It is obsolete now. | |
520 | |
521 When reading a file, the mentioned characters are interpreted as the <EOL>. | |
522 In DOS format (default for MS-DOS, OS/2 and Win32), <CR><NL> and <NL> are both | |
523 interpreted as the <EOL>. Note that when writing the file in DOS format, | |
524 <CR> characters will be added for each single <NL>. Also see |file-read|. | |
525 | |
526 When writing a file, the mentioned characters are used for <EOL>. For DOS | |
527 format <CR><NL> is used. Also see |DOS-format-write|. | |
528 | |
529 You can read a file in DOS format and write it in Unix format. This will | |
530 replace all <CR><NL> pairs by <NL> (assuming 'fileformats' includes "dos"): > | |
531 :e file | |
532 :set fileformat=unix | |
533 :w | |
534 If you read a file in Unix format and write with DOS format, all <NL> | |
535 characters will be replaced with <CR><NL> (assuming 'fileformats' includes | |
536 "unix"): > | |
537 :e file | |
538 :set fileformat=dos | |
539 :w | |
540 | |
541 If you start editing a new file and the 'fileformats' option is not empty | |
542 (which is the default), Vim will try to detect whether the lines in the file | |
543 are separated by the specified formats. When set to "unix,dos", Vim will | |
544 check for lines with a single <NL> (as used on Unix and Amiga) or by a <CR> | |
545 <NL> pair (MS-DOS). Only when ALL lines end in <CR><NL>, 'fileformat' is set | |
546 to "dos", otherwise it is set to "unix". When 'fileformats' includes "mac", | |
547 and no <NL> characters are found in the file, 'fileformat' is set to "mac". | |
548 | |
549 If the 'fileformat' option is set to "dos" on non-MS-DOS systems the message | |
550 "[dos format]" is shown to remind you that something unusual is happening. On | |
551 MS-DOS systems you get the message "[unix format]" if 'fileformat' is set to | |
552 "unix". On all systems but the Macintosh you get the message "[mac format]" | |
553 if 'fileformat' is set to "mac". | |
554 | |
555 If the 'fileformats' option is empty and DOS format is used, but while reading | |
556 a file some lines did not end in <CR><NL>, "[CR missing]" will be included in | |
557 the file message. | |
558 If the 'fileformats' option is empty and Mac format is used, but while reading | |
559 a file a <NL> was found, "[NL missing]" will be included in the file message. | |
560 | |
561 If the new file does not exist, the 'fileformat' of the current buffer is used | |
562 when 'fileformats' is empty. Otherwise the first format from 'fileformats' is | |
563 used for the new file. | |
564 | |
565 Before editing binary, executable or Vim script files you should set the | |
566 'binary' option. A simple way to do this is by starting Vim with the "-b" | |
567 option. This will avoid the use of 'fileformat'. Without this you risk that | |
568 single <NL> characters are unexpectedly replaced with <CR><NL>. | |
569 | |
570 You can encrypt files that are written by setting the 'key' option. This | |
571 provides some security against others reading your files. |encryption| | |
572 | |
573 | |
574 ============================================================================== | |
39 | 575 3. The argument list *argument-list* *arglist* |
7 | 576 |
577 If you give more than one file name when starting Vim, this list is remembered | |
578 as the argument list. You can jump to each file in this list. | |
579 | |
580 Do not confuse this with the buffer list, which you can see with the | |
581 |:buffers| command. The argument list was already present in Vi, the buffer | |
39 | 582 list is new in Vim. Every file name in the argument list will also be present |
583 in the buffer list (unless it was deleted with |:bdel| or |:bwipe|). But it's | |
584 common that names in the buffer list are not in the argument list. | |
7 | 585 |
586 This subject is introduced in section |07.2| of the user manual. | |
587 | |
588 There is one global argument list, which is used for all windows by default. | |
589 It is possible to create a new argument list local to a window, see | |
590 |:arglocal|. | |
591 | |
592 You can use the argument list with the following commands, and with the | |
593 expression functions |argc()| and |argv()|. These all work on the argument | |
594 list of the current window. | |
595 | |
17036 | 596 *:ar* *:arg* *:args* |
7 | 597 :ar[gs] Print the argument list, with the current file in |
598 square brackets. | |
599 | |
600 :ar[gs] [++opt] [+cmd] {arglist} *:args_f* | |
601 Define {arglist} as the new argument list and edit | |
602 the first one. This fails when changes have been made | |
603 and Vim does not want to |abandon| the current buffer. | |
604 Also see |++opt| and |+cmd|. | |
605 | |
606 :ar[gs]! [++opt] [+cmd] {arglist} *:args_f!* | |
607 Define {arglist} as the new argument list and edit | |
608 the first one. Discard any changes to the current | |
609 buffer. | |
610 Also see |++opt| and |+cmd|. | |
611 | |
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612 :[count]arge[dit][!] [++opt] [+cmd] {name} .. *:arge* *:argedit* |
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613 Add {name}s to the argument list and edit it. |
7 | 614 When {name} already exists in the argument list, this |
615 entry is edited. | |
616 This is like using |:argadd| and then |:edit|. | |
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617 Spaces in filenames have to be escaped with "\". |
7 | 618 [count] is used like with |:argadd|. |
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619 If the current file cannot be |abandon|ed {name}s will |
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620 still be added to the argument list, but won't be |
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621 edited. No check for duplicates is done. |
7 | 622 Also see |++opt| and |+cmd|. |
623 | |
624 :[count]arga[dd] {name} .. *:arga* *:argadd* *E479* | |
6238 | 625 :[count]arga[dd] |
626 Add the {name}s to the argument list. When {name} is | |
6421 | 627 omitted add the current buffer name to the argument |
6238 | 628 list. |
7 | 629 If [count] is omitted, the {name}s are added just |
630 after the current entry in the argument list. | |
631 Otherwise they are added after the [count]'th file. | |
632 If the argument list is "a b c", and "b" is the | |
633 current argument, then these commands result in: | |
634 command new argument list ~ | |
635 :argadd x a b x c | |
636 :0argadd x x a b c | |
637 :1argadd x a x b c | |
6421 | 638 :$argadd x a b c x |
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639 And after the last one: |
6421 | 640 :+2argadd y a b c x y |
7 | 641 There is no check for duplicates, it is possible to |
642 add a file to the argument list twice. | |
643 The currently edited file is not changed. | |
644 Note: you can also use this method: > | |
645 :args ## x | |
646 < This will add the "x" item and sort the new list. | |
647 | |
648 :argd[elete] {pattern} .. *:argd* *:argdelete* *E480* | |
649 Delete files from the argument list that match the | |
650 {pattern}s. {pattern} is used like a file pattern, | |
651 see |file-pattern|. "%" can be used to delete the | |
652 current entry. | |
653 This command keeps the currently edited file, also | |
654 when it's deleted from the argument list. | |
280 | 655 Example: > |
656 :argdel *.obj | |
7 | 657 |
6421 | 658 :[range]argd[elete] Delete the {range} files from the argument list. |
659 Example: > | |
660 :10,$argdel | |
661 < Deletes arguments 10 and further, keeping 1-9. > | |
662 :$argd | |
663 < Deletes just the last one. > | |
664 :argd | |
665 :.argd | |
666 < Deletes the current argument. > | |
667 :%argd | |
668 < Removes all the files from the arglist. | |
7 | 669 When the last number in the range is too high, up to |
6421 | 670 the last argument is deleted. |
7 | 671 |
672 *:argu* *:argument* | |
673 :[count]argu[ment] [count] [++opt] [+cmd] | |
674 Edit file [count] in the argument list. When [count] | |
675 is omitted the current entry is used. This fails | |
676 when changes have been made and Vim does not want to | |
677 |abandon| the current buffer. | |
678 Also see |++opt| and |+cmd|. | |
679 | |
680 :[count]argu[ment]! [count] [++opt] [+cmd] | |
681 Edit file [count] in the argument list, discard any | |
682 changes to the current buffer. When [count] is | |
683 omitted the current entry is used. | |
684 Also see |++opt| and |+cmd|. | |
685 | |
686 :[count]n[ext] [++opt] [+cmd] *:n* *:ne* *:next* *E165* *E163* | |
687 Edit [count] next file. This fails when changes have | |
688 been made and Vim does not want to |abandon| the | |
16610 | 689 current buffer. Also see |++opt| and |+cmd|. |
7 | 690 |
691 :[count]n[ext]! [++opt] [+cmd] | |
692 Edit [count] next file, discard any changes to the | |
16610 | 693 buffer. Also see |++opt| and |+cmd|. |
7 | 694 |
695 :n[ext] [++opt] [+cmd] {arglist} *:next_f* | |
696 Same as |:args_f|. | |
697 | |
698 :n[ext]! [++opt] [+cmd] {arglist} | |
699 Same as |:args_f!|. | |
700 | |
701 :[count]N[ext] [count] [++opt] [+cmd] *:Next* *:N* *E164* | |
702 Edit [count] previous file in argument list. This | |
703 fails when changes have been made and Vim does not | |
704 want to |abandon| the current buffer. | |
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705 Also see |++opt| and |+cmd|. |
7 | 706 |
707 :[count]N[ext]! [count] [++opt] [+cmd] | |
708 Edit [count] previous file in argument list. Discard | |
709 any changes to the buffer. Also see |++opt| and | |
16610 | 710 |+cmd|. |
7 | 711 |
712 :[count]prev[ious] [count] [++opt] [+cmd] *:prev* *:previous* | |
16610 | 713 Same as :Next. Also see |++opt| and |+cmd|. |
7 | 714 |
715 *:rew* *:rewind* | |
716 :rew[ind] [++opt] [+cmd] | |
717 Start editing the first file in the argument list. | |
718 This fails when changes have been made and Vim does | |
719 not want to |abandon| the current buffer. | |
16610 | 720 Also see |++opt| and |+cmd|. |
7 | 721 |
722 :rew[ind]! [++opt] [+cmd] | |
723 Start editing the first file in the argument list. | |
724 Discard any changes to the buffer. Also see |++opt| | |
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725 and |+cmd|. |
7 | 726 |
727 *:fir* *:first* | |
728 :fir[st][!] [++opt] [+cmd] | |
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729 Other name for ":rewind". |
7 | 730 |
731 *:la* *:last* | |
732 :la[st] [++opt] [+cmd] | |
733 Start editing the last file in the argument list. | |
734 This fails when changes have been made and Vim does | |
735 not want to |abandon| the current buffer. | |
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736 Also see |++opt| and |+cmd|. |
7 | 737 |
738 :la[st]! [++opt] [+cmd] | |
739 Start editing the last file in the argument list. | |
740 Discard any changes to the buffer. Also see |++opt| | |
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741 and |+cmd|. |
7 | 742 |
743 *:wn* *:wnext* | |
1702 | 744 :[count]wn[ext] [++opt] |
7 | 745 Write current file and start editing the [count] |
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746 next file. Also see |++opt| and |+cmd|. |
7 | 747 |
1702 | 748 :[count]wn[ext] [++opt] {file} |
7 | 749 Write current file to {file} and start editing the |
750 [count] next file, unless {file} already exists and | |
751 the 'writeany' option is off. Also see |++opt| and | |
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752 |+cmd|. |
7 | 753 |
1702 | 754 :[count]wn[ext]! [++opt] {file} |
7 | 755 Write current file to {file} and start editing the |
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756 [count] next file. Also see |++opt| and |+cmd|. |
7 | 757 |
1702 | 758 :[count]wN[ext][!] [++opt] [file] *:wN* *:wNext* |
759 :[count]wp[revious][!] [++opt] [file] *:wp* *:wprevious* | |
7 | 760 Same as :wnext, but go to previous file instead of |
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761 next. |
7 | 762 |
763 The [count] in the commands above defaults to one. For some commands it is | |
764 possible to use two counts. The last one (rightmost one) is used. | |
765 | |
766 If no [+cmd] argument is present, the cursor is positioned at the last known | |
767 cursor position for the file. If 'startofline' is set, the cursor will be | |
768 positioned at the first non-blank in the line, otherwise the last know column | |
769 is used. If there is no last known cursor position the cursor will be in the | |
770 first line (the last line in Ex mode). | |
771 | |
39 | 772 *{arglist}* |
7 | 773 The wildcards in the argument list are expanded and the file names are sorted. |
774 Thus you can use the command "vim *.c" to edit all the C files. From within | |
39 | 775 Vim the command ":n *.c" does the same. |
776 | |
777 White space is used to separate file names. Put a backslash before a space or | |
1240 | 778 tab to include it in a file name. E.g., to edit the single file "foo bar": > |
39 | 779 :next foo\ bar |
780 | |
781 On Unix and a few other systems you can also use backticks, for example: > | |
782 :next `find . -name \\*.c -print` | |
7 | 783 The backslashes before the star are required to prevent "*.c" to be expanded |
784 by the shell before executing the find program. | |
785 | |
786 *arglist-position* | |
787 When there is an argument list you can see which file you are editing in the | |
788 title of the window (if there is one and 'title' is on) and with the file | |
789 message you get with the "CTRL-G" command. You will see something like | |
790 (file 4 of 11) | |
791 If 'shortmess' contains 'f' it will be | |
792 (4 of 11) | |
793 If you are not really editing the file at the current position in the argument | |
794 list it will be | |
795 (file (4) of 11) | |
796 This means that you are position 4 in the argument list, but not editing the | |
797 fourth file in the argument list. This happens when you do ":e file". | |
798 | |
799 | |
800 LOCAL ARGUMENT LIST | |
801 | |
802 *:arglocal* | |
803 :argl[ocal] Make a local copy of the global argument list. | |
804 Doesn't start editing another file. | |
805 | |
806 :argl[ocal][!] [++opt] [+cmd] {arglist} | |
807 Define a new argument list, which is local to the | |
808 current window. Works like |:args_f| otherwise. | |
809 | |
810 *:argglobal* | |
811 :argg[lobal] Use the global argument list for the current window. | |
812 Doesn't start editing another file. | |
813 | |
814 :argg[lobal][!] [++opt] [+cmd] {arglist} | |
815 Use the global argument list for the current window. | |
816 Define a new global argument list like |:args_f|. | |
817 All windows using the global argument list will see | |
818 this new list. | |
819 | |
820 There can be several argument lists. They can be shared between windows. | |
821 When they are shared, changing the argument list in one window will also | |
822 change it in the other window. | |
823 | |
824 When a window is split the new window inherits the argument list from the | |
825 current window. The two windows then share this list, until one of them uses | |
826 |:arglocal| or |:argglobal| to use another argument list. | |
827 | |
828 | |
829 USING THE ARGUMENT LIST | |
830 | |
831 *:argdo* | |
6474 | 832 :[range]argdo[!] {cmd} Execute {cmd} for each file in the argument list or |
833 if [range] is specified only for arguments in that | |
834 range. It works like doing this: > | |
7 | 835 :rewind |
836 :{cmd} | |
837 :next | |
838 :{cmd} | |
839 etc. | |
840 < When the current file can't be |abandon|ed and the [!] | |
841 is not present, the command fails. | |
842 When an error is detected on one file, further files | |
843 in the argument list will not be visited. | |
844 The last file in the argument list (or where an error | |
845 occurred) becomes the current file. | |
846 {cmd} can contain '|' to concatenate several commands. | |
847 {cmd} must not change the argument list. | |
848 Note: While this command is executing, the Syntax | |
849 autocommand event is disabled by adding it to | |
850 'eventignore'. This considerably speeds up editing | |
851 each file. | |
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852 Also see |:windo|, |:tabdo|, |:bufdo|, |:cdo|, |:ldo|, |
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853 |:cfdo| and |:lfdo| |
7 | 854 |
855 Example: > | |
856 :args *.c | |
857 :argdo set ff=unix | update | |
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858 This sets the 'fileformat' option to "unix" and writes the file if it is now |
7 | 859 changed. This is done for all *.c files. |
860 | |
861 Example: > | |
862 :args *.[ch] | |
863 :argdo %s/\<my_foo\>/My_Foo/ge | update | |
864 This changes the word "my_foo" to "My_Foo" in all *.c and *.h files. The "e" | |
865 flag is used for the ":substitute" command to avoid an error for files where | |
866 "my_foo" isn't used. ":update" writes the file only if changes were made. | |
867 | |
868 ============================================================================== | |
39 | 869 4. Writing *writing* *save-file* |
7 | 870 |
871 Note: When the 'write' option is off, you are not able to write any file. | |
872 | |
873 *:w* *:write* | |
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874 *E502* *E503* *E504* *E505* |
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875 *E512* *E514* *E667* *E796* *E949* |
1702 | 876 :w[rite] [++opt] Write the whole buffer to the current file. This is |
7 | 877 the normal way to save changes to a file. It fails |
878 when the 'readonly' option is set or when there is | |
879 another reason why the file can't be written. | |
1702 | 880 For ++opt see |++opt|, but only ++bin, ++nobin, ++ff |
881 and ++enc are effective. | |
7 | 882 |
1702 | 883 :w[rite]! [++opt] Like ":write", but forcefully write when 'readonly' is |
7 | 884 set or there is another reason why writing was |
885 refused. | |
886 Note: This may change the permission and ownership of | |
887 the file and break (symbolic) links. Add the 'W' flag | |
888 to 'cpoptions' to avoid this. | |
889 | |
1702 | 890 :[range]w[rite][!] [++opt] |
891 Write the specified lines to the current file. This | |
7 | 892 is unusual, because the file will not contain all |
893 lines in the buffer. | |
894 | |
895 *:w_f* *:write_f* | |
1702 | 896 :[range]w[rite] [++opt] {file} |
897 Write the specified lines to {file}, unless it | |
7 | 898 already exists and the 'writeany' option is off. |
899 | |
900 *:w!* | |
1702 | 901 :[range]w[rite]! [++opt] {file} |
902 Write the specified lines to {file}. Overwrite an | |
7 | 903 existing file. |
904 | |
905 *:w_a* *:write_a* *E494* | |
1702 | 906 :[range]w[rite][!] [++opt] >> |
907 Append the specified lines to the current file. | |
7 | 908 |
1702 | 909 :[range]w[rite][!] [++opt] >> {file} |
7 | 910 Append the specified lines to {file}. '!' forces the |
911 write even if file does not exist. | |
912 | |
913 *:w_c* *:write_c* | |
1702 | 914 :[range]w[rite] [++opt] !{cmd} |
915 Execute {cmd} with [range] lines as standard input | |
7 | 916 (note the space in front of the '!'). {cmd} is |
917 executed like with ":!{cmd}", any '!' is replaced with | |
918 the previous command |:!|. | |
919 | |
31 | 920 The default [range] for the ":w" command is the whole buffer (1,$). If you |
1620 | 921 write the whole buffer, it is no longer considered changed. When you |
922 write it to a different file with ":w somefile" it depends on the "+" flag in | |
923 'cpoptions'. When included, the write command will reset the 'modified' flag, | |
924 even though the buffer itself may still be different from its file. | |
31 | 925 |
7 | 926 If a file name is given with ":w" it becomes the alternate file. This can be |
927 used, for example, when the write fails and you want to try again later with | |
928 ":w #". This can be switched off by removing the 'A' flag from the | |
929 'cpoptions' option. | |
930 | |
12909 | 931 Note that the 'fsync' option matters here. If it's set it may make writes |
932 slower (but safer). | |
933 | |
7 | 934 *:sav* *:saveas* |
1702 | 935 :sav[eas][!] [++opt] {file} |
936 Save the current buffer under the name {file} and set | |
7 | 937 the filename of the current buffer to {file}. The |
938 previous name is used for the alternate file name. | |
939 The [!] is needed to overwrite an existing file. | |
633 | 940 When 'filetype' is empty filetype detection is done |
941 with the new name, before the file is written. | |
819 | 942 When the write was successful 'readonly' is reset. |
7 | 943 |
944 *:up* *:update* | |
1702 | 945 :[range]up[date][!] [++opt] [>>] [file] |
7 | 946 Like ":write", but only write when the buffer has been |
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947 modified. |
7 | 948 |
949 | |
950 WRITING WITH MULTIPLE BUFFERS *buffer-write* | |
951 | |
952 *:wa* *:wall* | |
953 :wa[ll] Write all changed buffers. Buffers without a file | |
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954 name cause an error message. Buffers which are |
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955 readonly are not written. |
7 | 956 |
957 :wa[ll]! Write all changed buffers, even the ones that are | |
958 readonly. Buffers without a file name are not | |
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959 written and cause an error message. |
7 | 960 |
961 | |
962 Vim will warn you if you try to overwrite a file that has been changed | |
963 elsewhere. See |timestamp|. | |
964 | |
965 *backup* *E207* *E506* *E507* *E508* *E509* *E510* | |
966 If you write to an existing file (but do not append) while the 'backup', | |
967 'writebackup' or 'patchmode' option is on, a backup of the original file is | |
968 made. The file is either copied or renamed (see 'backupcopy'). After the | |
969 file has been successfully written and when the 'writebackup' option is on and | |
970 the 'backup' option is off, the backup file is deleted. When the 'patchmode' | |
971 option is on the backup file may be renamed. | |
972 | |
973 *backup-table* | |
974 'backup' 'writebackup' action ~ | |
975 off off no backup made | |
976 off on backup current file, deleted afterwards (default) | |
977 on off delete old backup, backup current file | |
978 on on delete old backup, backup current file | |
979 | |
980 When the 'backupskip' pattern matches with the name of the file which is | |
981 written, no backup file is made. The values of 'backup' and 'writebackup' are | |
982 ignored then. | |
983 | |
984 When the 'backup' option is on, an old backup file (with the same name as the | |
985 new backup file) will be deleted. If 'backup' is not set, but 'writebackup' | |
986 is set, an existing backup file will not be deleted. The backup file that is | |
987 made while the file is being written will have a different name. | |
988 | |
989 On some filesystems it's possible that in a crash you lose both the backup and | |
990 the newly written file (it might be there but contain bogus data). In that | |
991 case try recovery, because the swap file is synced to disk and might still be | |
992 there. |:recover| | |
993 | |
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994 The directories given with the 'backupdir' option are used to put the backup |
7 | 995 file in. (default: same directory as the written file). |
996 | |
997 Whether the backup is a new file, which is a copy of the original file, or the | |
998 original file renamed depends on the 'backupcopy' option. See there for an | |
999 explanation of when the copy is made and when the file is renamed. | |
1000 | |
1001 If the creation of a backup file fails, the write is not done. If you want | |
1002 to write anyway add a '!' to the command. | |
1003 | |
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1004 *write-permissions* |
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1005 When writing a new file the permissions are read-write. For unix the mask is |
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1006 0666 with additionally umask applied. When writing a file that was read Vim |
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1007 will preserve the permissions, but clear the s-bit. |
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1008 |
7 | 1009 *write-readonly* |
1010 When the 'cpoptions' option contains 'W', Vim will refuse to overwrite a | |
1011 readonly file. When 'W' is not present, ":w!" will overwrite a readonly file, | |
1012 if the system allows it (the directory must be writable). | |
1013 | |
1014 *write-fail* | |
1015 If the writing of the new file fails, you have to be careful not to lose | |
1016 your changes AND the original file. If there is no backup file and writing | |
236 | 1017 the new file failed, you have already lost the original file! DON'T EXIT VIM |
1018 UNTIL YOU WRITE OUT THE FILE! If a backup was made, it is put back in place | |
7 | 1019 of the original file (if possible). If you exit Vim, and lose the changes |
1020 you made, the original file will mostly still be there. If putting back the | |
1021 original file fails, there will be an error message telling you that you | |
1022 lost the original file. | |
1023 | |
1024 *DOS-format-write* | |
1025 If the 'fileformat' is "dos", <CR> <NL> is used for <EOL>. This is default | |
1026 for MS-DOS, Win32 and OS/2. On other systems the message "[dos format]" is | |
1027 shown to remind you that an unusual <EOL> was used. | |
1028 *Unix-format-write* | |
1029 If the 'fileformat' is "unix", <NL> is used for <EOL>. On MS-DOS, Win32 and | |
1030 OS/2 the message "[unix format]" is shown. | |
1031 *Mac-format-write* | |
1032 If the 'fileformat' is "mac", <CR> is used for <EOL>. On non-Mac systems the | |
1033 message "[mac format]" is shown. | |
1034 | |
1035 See also |file-formats| and the 'fileformat' and 'fileformats' options. | |
1036 | |
1037 *ACL* | |
1038 ACL stands for Access Control List. It is an advanced way to control access | |
1039 rights for a file. It is used on new MS-Windows and Unix systems, but only | |
1040 when the filesystem supports it. | |
1041 Vim attempts to preserve the ACL info when writing a file. The backup file | |
1042 will get the ACL info of the original file. | |
1043 The ACL info is also used to check if a file is read-only (when opening the | |
1044 file). | |
1045 | |
1046 *read-only-share* | |
1047 When MS-Windows shares a drive on the network it can be marked as read-only. | |
1048 This means that even if the file read-only attribute is absent, and the ACL | |
1049 settings on NT network shared drives allow writing to the file, you can still | |
1050 not write to the file. Vim on Win32 platforms will detect read-only network | |
1051 drives and will mark the file as read-only. You will not be able to override | |
1052 it with |:write|. | |
1053 | |
1054 *write-device* | |
1055 When the file name is actually a device name, Vim will not make a backup (that | |
1056 would be impossible). You need to use "!", since the device already exists. | |
1057 Example for Unix: > | |
1058 :w! /dev/lpt0 | |
1059 and for MS-DOS or MS-Windows: > | |
1060 :w! lpt0 | |
1061 For Unix a device is detected when the name doesn't refer to a normal file or | |
1062 a directory. A fifo or named pipe also looks like a device to Vim. | |
1063 For MS-DOS and MS-Windows the device is detected by its name: | |
1064 AUX | |
1065 CON | |
1066 CLOCK$ | |
1067 NUL | |
1068 PRN | |
1069 COMn n=1,2,3... etc | |
1070 LPTn n=1,2,3... etc | |
1071 The names can be in upper- or lowercase. | |
1072 | |
1073 ============================================================================== | |
39 | 1074 5. Writing and quitting *write-quit* |
7 | 1075 |
1076 *:q* *:quit* | |
1077 :q[uit] Quit the current window. Quit Vim if this is the last | |
1078 window. This fails when changes have been made and | |
1079 Vim refuses to |abandon| the current buffer, and when | |
1080 the last file in the argument list has not been | |
1081 edited. | |
674 | 1082 If there are other tab pages and quitting the last |
1083 window in the current tab page the current tab page is | |
1084 closed |tab-page|. | |
3682 | 1085 Triggers the |QuitPre| autocommand event. |
12254 | 1086 See |CTRL-W_q| for quitting another window. |
7 | 1087 |
1088 :conf[irm] q[uit] Quit, but give prompt when changes have been made, or | |
1089 the last file in the argument list has not been | |
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1090 edited. See |:confirm| and 'confirm'. |
7 | 1091 |
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1092 :q[uit]! Quit without writing, also when the current buffer has |
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1093 changes. The buffer is unloaded, also when it has |
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1094 'hidden' set. |
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1095 If this is the last window and there is a modified |
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1096 hidden buffer, the current buffer is abandoned and the |
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1097 first changed hidden buffer becomes the current |
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1098 buffer. |
6385 | 1099 Use ":qall!" to exit always. |
7 | 1100 |
1101 :cq[uit] Quit always, without writing, and return an error | |
1102 code. See |:cq|. Used for Manx's QuickFix mode (see | |
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1103 |quickfix|). |
7 | 1104 |
1105 *:wq* | |
1702 | 1106 :wq [++opt] Write the current file and quit. Writing fails when |
7 | 1107 the file is read-only or the buffer does not have a |
1108 name. Quitting fails when the last file in the | |
1109 argument list has not been edited. | |
1110 | |
1702 | 1111 :wq! [++opt] Write the current file and quit. Writing fails when |
7 | 1112 the current buffer does not have a name. |
1113 | |
1702 | 1114 :wq [++opt] {file} Write to {file} and quit. Quitting fails when the |
7 | 1115 last file in the argument list has not been edited. |
1116 | |
1702 | 1117 :wq! [++opt] {file} Write to {file} and quit. |
7 | 1118 |
1702 | 1119 :[range]wq[!] [++opt] [file] |
1120 Same as above, but only write the lines in [range]. | |
7 | 1121 |
1122 *:x* *:xit* | |
1702 | 1123 :[range]x[it][!] [++opt] [file] |
7 | 1124 Like ":wq", but write only when changes have been |
1125 made. | |
1126 When 'hidden' is set and there are more windows, the | |
1127 current buffer becomes hidden, after writing the file. | |
1128 | |
1129 *:exi* *:exit* | |
1702 | 1130 :[range]exi[t][!] [++opt] [file] |
7 | 1131 Same as :xit. |
1132 | |
1133 *ZZ* | |
1134 ZZ Write current file, if modified, and quit (same as | |
1135 ":x"). (Note: If there are several windows for the | |
1136 current file, the file is written if it was modified | |
1137 and the window is closed). | |
1138 | |
1139 *ZQ* | |
1140 ZQ Quit without checking for changes (same as ":q!"). | |
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1141 |
7 | 1142 |
1143 MULTIPLE WINDOWS AND BUFFERS *window-exit* | |
1144 | |
1145 *:qa* *:qall* | |
1146 :qa[ll] Exit Vim, unless there are some buffers which have been | |
1147 changed. (Use ":bmod" to go to the next modified buffer). | |
1148 When 'autowriteall' is set all changed buffers will be | |
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1149 written, like |:wqall|. |
7 | 1150 |
1151 :conf[irm] qa[ll] | |
1152 Exit Vim. Bring up a prompt when some buffers have been | |
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1153 changed. See |:confirm|. |
7 | 1154 |
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1155 :qa[ll]! Exit Vim. Any changes to buffers are lost. |
1620 | 1156 Also see |:cquit|, it does the same but exits with a non-zero |
1157 value. | |
7 | 1158 |
1159 *:quita* *:quitall* | |
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1160 :quita[ll][!] Same as ":qall". |
7 | 1161 |
1702 | 1162 :wqa[ll] [++opt] *:wqa* *:wqall* *:xa* *:xall* |
7 | 1163 :xa[ll] Write all changed buffers and exit Vim. If there are buffers |
1164 without a file name, which are readonly or which cannot be | |
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1165 written for another reason, Vim will not quit. |
7 | 1166 |
1702 | 1167 :conf[irm] wqa[ll] [++opt] |
7 | 1168 :conf[irm] xa[ll] |
1169 Write all changed buffers and exit Vim. Bring up a prompt | |
1170 when some buffers are readonly or cannot be written for | |
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1171 another reason. See |:confirm|. |
7 | 1172 |
1702 | 1173 :wqa[ll]! [++opt] |
7 | 1174 :xa[ll]! Write all changed buffers, even the ones that are readonly, |
1175 and exit Vim. If there are buffers without a file name or | |
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1176 which cannot be written for another reason, or there is a |
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1177 terminal with a running job, Vim will not quit. |
7 | 1178 |
1179 ============================================================================== | |
39 | 1180 6. Dialogs *edit-dialogs* |
1181 | |
1182 *:confirm* *:conf* | |
1183 :conf[irm] {command} Execute {command}, and use a dialog when an | |
1184 operation has to be confirmed. Can be used on the | |
3445 | 1185 |:q|, |:qa| and |:w| commands (the latter to override |
1186 a read-only setting), and any other command that can | |
1187 fail in such a way, such as |:only|, |:buffer|, | |
1188 |:bdelete|, etc. | |
39 | 1189 |
1190 Examples: > | |
1191 :confirm w foo | |
1192 < Will ask for confirmation when "foo" already exists. > | |
1193 :confirm q | |
1194 < Will ask for confirmation when there are changes. > | |
1195 :confirm qa | |
1196 < If any modified, unsaved buffers exist, you will be prompted to save | |
1197 or abandon each one. There are also choices to "save all" or "abandon | |
1198 all". | |
1199 | |
1200 If you want to always use ":confirm", set the 'confirm' option. | |
1201 | |
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1202 *:browse* *:bro* *E338* *E614* *E615* *E616* |
39 | 1203 :bro[wse] {command} Open a file selection dialog for an argument to |
1204 {command}. At present this works for |:e|, |:w|, | |
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1205 |:wall|, |:wq|, |:wqall|, |:x|, |:xall|, |:exit|, |
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1206 |:view|, |:sview|, |:r|, |:saveas|, |:sp|, |:mkexrc|, |
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1207 |:mkvimrc|, |:mksession|, |:mkview|, |:split|, |
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1208 |:vsplit|, |:tabe|, |:tabnew|, |:cfile|, |:cgetfile|, |
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1209 |:caddfile|, |:lfile|, |:lgetfile|, |:laddfile|, |
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1210 |:diffsplit|, |:diffpatch|, |:open|, |:pedit|, |
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1211 |:redir|, |:source|, |:update|, |:visual|, |:vsplit|, |
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1212 and |:qall| if 'confirm' is set. |
39 | 1213 {only in Win32, Athena, Motif, GTK and Mac GUI} |
1214 When ":browse" is not possible you get an error | |
1215 message. If the |+browse| feature is missing or the | |
1216 {command} doesn't support browsing, the {command} is | |
1217 executed without a dialog. | |
1218 ":browse set" works like |:options|. | |
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1219 See also |:oldfiles| for ":browse oldfiles". |
39 | 1220 |
1221 The syntax is best shown via some examples: > | |
1222 :browse e $vim/foo | |
1223 < Open the browser in the $vim/foo directory, and edit the | |
1224 file chosen. > | |
1225 :browse e | |
1226 < Open the browser in the directory specified with 'browsedir', | |
1227 and edit the file chosen. > | |
1228 :browse w | |
1229 < Open the browser in the directory of the current buffer, | |
1230 with the current buffer filename as default, and save the | |
1231 buffer under the filename chosen. > | |
1232 :browse w C:/bar | |
1233 < Open the browser in the C:/bar directory, with the current | |
1234 buffer filename as default, and save the buffer under the | |
1235 filename chosen. | |
18016 | 1236 Also see the 'browsedir' option. |
39 | 1237 For versions of Vim where browsing is not supported, the command is executed |
1238 unmodified. | |
1239 | |
1240 *browsefilter* | |
3682 | 1241 For MS Windows and GTK, you can modify the filters that are used in the browse |
1242 dialog. By setting the g:browsefilter or b:browsefilter variables, you can | |
1243 change the filters globally or locally to the buffer. The variable is set to | |
1244 a string in the format "{filter label}\t{pattern};{pattern}\n" where {filter | |
1245 label} is the text that appears in the "Files of Type" comboBox, and {pattern} | |
1246 is the pattern which filters the filenames. Several patterns can be given, | |
1247 separated by ';'. | |
39 | 1248 |
1249 For Motif the same format is used, but only the very first pattern is actually | |
1250 used (Motif only offers one pattern, but you can edit it). | |
1251 | |
1252 For example, to have only Vim files in the dialog, you could use the following | |
1253 command: > | |
1254 | |
3682 | 1255 let g:browsefilter = "Vim Scripts\t*.vim\nVim Startup Files\t*vimrc\n" |
39 | 1256 |
1257 You can override the filter setting on a per-buffer basis by setting the | |
1258 b:browsefilter variable. You would most likely set b:browsefilter in a | |
1259 filetype plugin, so that the browse dialog would contain entries related to | |
1260 the type of file you are currently editing. Disadvantage: This makes it | |
1261 difficult to start editing a file of a different type. To overcome this, you | |
1262 may want to add "All Files\t*.*\n" as the final filter, so that the user can | |
1263 still access any desired file. | |
1264 | |
3682 | 1265 To avoid setting browsefilter when Vim does not actually support it, you can |
1266 use has("browsefilter"): > | |
1267 | |
1268 if has("browsefilter") | |
1269 let g:browsefilter = "whatever" | |
1270 endif | |
1271 | |
39 | 1272 ============================================================================== |
1273 7. The current directory *current-directory* | |
1274 | |
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1275 You can use the |:cd|, |:tcd| and |:lcd| commands to change to another |
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1276 directory, so you will not have to type that directory name in front of the |
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1277 file names. It also makes a difference for executing external commands, e.g. |
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1278 ":!ls". |
39 | 1279 |
167 | 1280 Changing directory fails when the current buffer is modified, the '.' flag is |
1281 present in 'cpoptions' and "!" is not used in the command. | |
1282 | |
835 | 1283 *:cd* *E747* *E472* |
167 | 1284 :cd[!] On non-Unix systems: Print the current directory |
39 | 1285 name. On Unix systems: Change the current directory |
1286 to the home directory. Use |:pwd| to print the | |
1287 current directory on all systems. | |
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1288 On Unix systems: clear any window-local directory. |
39 | 1289 |
167 | 1290 :cd[!] {path} Change the current directory to {path}. |
39 | 1291 If {path} is relative, it is searched for in the |
1292 directories listed in |'cdpath'|. | |
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1293 Clear any window-local directory. |
39 | 1294 Does not change the meaning of an already opened file, |
1295 because its full path name is remembered. Files from | |
1296 the |arglist| may change though! | |
1297 On MS-DOS this also changes the active drive. | |
1298 To change to the directory of the current file: > | |
1299 :cd %:h | |
1300 < | |
1301 *:cd-* *E186* | |
167 | 1302 :cd[!] - Change to the previous current directory (before the |
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1303 previous ":cd {path}" command). |
39 | 1304 |
1305 *:chd* *:chdir* | |
167 | 1306 :chd[ir][!] [path] Same as |:cd|. |
39 | 1307 |
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1308 *:tcd* |
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1309 :tcd[!] {path} Like |:cd|, but only set the directory for the current |
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1310 tab. The current window will also use this directory. |
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1311 The current directory is not changed for windows in |
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1312 other tabs and for windows in the current tab that |
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1313 have their own window-local directory. |
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1314 |
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1315 *:tch* *:tchdir* |
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1316 :tch[dir][!] Same as |:tcd|. |
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1317 |
39 | 1318 *:lc* *:lcd* |
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1319 :lc[d][!] {path} Like |:cd|, but only set the current directory when |
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1320 the cursor is in the current window. The current |
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1321 directory for other windows is not changed, switching |
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1322 to another window will stop using {path}. |
39 | 1323 |
1324 *:lch* *:lchdir* | |
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1325 :lch[dir][!] Same as |:lcd|. |
39 | 1326 |
1327 *:pw* *:pwd* *E187* | |
16610 | 1328 :pw[d] Print the current directory name. |
39 | 1329 Also see |getcwd()|. |
1330 | |
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1331 So long as no |:lcd| or |:tcd| command has been used, all windows share the |
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1332 same current directory. Using a command to jump to another window doesn't |
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1333 change anything for the current directory. |
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1334 |
39 | 1335 When a |:lcd| command has been used for a window, the specified directory |
1336 becomes the current directory for that window. Windows where the |:lcd| | |
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1337 command has not been used stick to the global or tab-local current directory. |
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1338 When jumping to another window the current directory will become the last |
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1339 specified local current directory. If none was specified, the global or |
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1340 tab-local current directory is used. |
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1341 |
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1342 When a |:tcd| command has been used for a tab page, the specified directory |
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1343 becomes the current directory for the current tab page and the current window. |
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1344 The current directory of other tab pages is not affected. When jumping to |
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1345 another tab page, the current directory will become the last specified local |
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1346 directory for that tab page. If the current tab has no local current directory |
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1347 the global current directory is used. |
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1348 |
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1349 When a |:cd| command is used, the current window and tab page will lose the |
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1350 local current directory and will use the global current directory from now on. |
39 | 1351 |
1352 After using |:cd| the full path name will be used for reading and writing | |
1353 files. On some networked file systems this may cause problems. The result of | |
1354 using the full path name is that the file names currently in use will remain | |
1355 referring to the same file. Example: If you have a file a:test and a | |
1356 directory a:vim the commands ":e test" ":cd vim" ":w" will overwrite the file | |
1357 a:test and not write a:vim/test. But if you do ":w test" the file a:vim/test | |
1358 will be written, because you gave a new file name and did not refer to a | |
1359 filename before the ":cd". | |
1360 | |
1361 ============================================================================== | |
7 | 1362 8. Editing binary files *edit-binary* |
1363 | |
1364 Although Vim was made to edit text files, it is possible to edit binary | |
1365 files. The |-b| Vim argument (b for binary) makes Vim do file I/O in binary | |
1366 mode, and sets some options for editing binary files ('binary' on, 'textwidth' | |
1367 to 0, 'modeline' off, 'expandtab' off). Setting the 'binary' option has the | |
1368 same effect. Don't forget to do this before reading the file. | |
1369 | |
1370 There are a few things to remember when editing binary files: | |
1371 - When editing executable files the number of characters must not change. | |
1372 Use only the "R" or "r" command to change text. Do not delete characters | |
1373 with "x" or by backspacing. | |
1374 - Set the 'textwidth' option to 0. Otherwise lines will unexpectedly be | |
1375 split in two. | |
1376 - When there are not many <EOL>s, the lines will become very long. If you | |
1377 want to edit a line that does not fit on the screen reset the 'wrap' option. | |
1378 Horizontal scrolling is used then. If a line becomes too long (more than | |
1379 about 32767 characters on the Amiga, much more on 32-bit systems, see | |
1380 |limits|) you cannot edit that line. The line will be split when reading | |
1381 the file. It is also possible that you get an "out of memory" error when | |
1382 reading the file. | |
1383 - Make sure the 'binary' option is set BEFORE loading the | |
1384 file. Otherwise both <CR> <NL> and <NL> are considered to end a line | |
1385 and when the file is written the <NL> will be replaced with <CR> <NL>. | |
1386 - <Nul> characters are shown on the screen as ^@. You can enter them with | |
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1387 "CTRL-V CTRL-@" or "CTRL-V 000" |
7013 | 1388 - To insert a <NL> character in the file split a line. When writing the |
7 | 1389 buffer to a file a <NL> will be written for the <EOL>. |
1390 - Vim normally appends an <EOL> at the end of the file if there is none. | |
1391 Setting the 'binary' option prevents this. If you want to add the final | |
1392 <EOL>, set the 'endofline' option. You can also read the value of this | |
1393 option to see if there was an <EOL> for the last line (you cannot see this | |
1394 in the text). | |
1395 | |
1396 ============================================================================== | |
1397 9. Encryption *encryption* | |
1398 | |
1399 Vim is able to write files encrypted, and read them back. The encrypted text | |
1400 cannot be read without the right key. | |
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1401 {only available when compiled with the |+cryptv| feature} *E833* |
7 | 1402 |
2662 | 1403 The text in the swap file and the undo file is also encrypted. *E843* |
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1404 However, this is done block-by-block and may reduce the time needed to crack a |
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1405 password. You can disable the swap file, but then a crash will cause you to |
15194 | 1406 lose your work. The undo file can be disabled without too much disadvantage. > |
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1407 :set noundofile |
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1408 :noswapfile edit secrets |
2267 | 1409 |
1410 Note: The text in memory is not encrypted. A system administrator may be able | |
1411 to see your text while you are editing it. When filtering text with | |
6122 | 1412 ":!filter" or using ":w !command" the text is also not encrypted, this may |
1413 reveal it to others. The 'viminfo' file is not encrypted. | |
1414 | |
1415 You could do this to edit very secret text: > | |
1416 :set noundofile viminfo= | |
1417 :noswapfile edit secrets.txt | |
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commit https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/88774fdd23f08355297bb8cda78856859051d3c7
Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
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diff
changeset
|
1418 Keep in mind that without a swap file you risk losing your work in the event |
7013 | 1419 of a crash or a power failure. |
7 | 1420 |
1421 WARNING: If you make a typo when entering the key and then write the file and | |
1422 exit, the text will be lost! | |
1423 | |
1424 The normal way to work with encryption, is to use the ":X" command, which will | |
1425 ask you to enter a key. A following write command will use that key to | |
1426 encrypt the file. If you later edit the same file, Vim will ask you to enter | |
1427 a key. If you type the same key as that was used for writing, the text will | |
1428 be readable again. If you use a wrong key, it will be a mess. | |
1429 | |
1430 *:X* | |
1431 :X Prompt for an encryption key. The typing is done without showing the | |
1432 actual text, so that someone looking at the display won't see it. | |
1433 The typed key is stored in the 'key' option, which is used to encrypt | |
1434 the file when it is written. The file will remain unchanged until you | |
1435 write it. See also |-x|. | |
1436 | |
1437 The value of the 'key' options is used when text is written. When the option | |
1438 is not empty, the written file will be encrypted, using the value as the | |
1439 encryption key. A magic number is prepended, so that Vim can recognize that | |
1440 the file is encrypted. | |
1441 | |
1442 To disable the encryption, reset the 'key' option to an empty value: > | |
1443 :set key= | |
1444 | |
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d8e4b27cef80
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changeset
|
1445 You can use the 'cryptmethod' option to select the type of encryption, use one |
6122 | 1446 of these: > |
1447 :setlocal cm=zip " weak method, backwards compatible | |
1448 :setlocal cm=blowfish " method with flaws | |
1449 :setlocal cm=blowfish2 " medium strong method | |
1450 | |
2360
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diff
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|
1451 Do this before writing the file. When reading an encrypted file it will be |
d8e4b27cef80
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Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
parents:
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diff
changeset
|
1452 set automatically to the method used when that file was written. You can |
d8e4b27cef80
Change 'cryptmethod' from a number to a string option. Make it global-local.
Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
parents:
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changeset
|
1453 change 'cryptmethod' before writing that file to change the method. |
6122 | 1454 |
6369 | 1455 To set the default method, used for new files, use this in your |vimrc| |
1456 file: > | |
6122 | 1457 set cm=blowfish2 |
6369 | 1458 Using "blowfish2" is highly recommended. Only use another method if you |
1459 must use an older Vim version that does not support it. | |
6122 | 1460 |
2725 | 1461 The message given for reading and writing a file will show "[crypted]" when |
6122 | 1462 using zip, "[blowfish]" when using blowfish, etc. |
2180
f60a0c9cbe6c
Add the blowfish encryption patch from Mohsin Ahmed. Needs more work.
Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
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diff
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|
1463 |
2239
732cb7b31956
Crypt the text in the undo file if the file itself is crypted.
Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
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changeset
|
1464 When writing an undo file, the same key and method will be used for the text |
732cb7b31956
Crypt the text in the undo file if the file itself is crypted.
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|
1465 in the undo file. |persistent-undo|. |
732cb7b31956
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1466 |
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|
1467 To test for blowfish support you can use these conditions: > |
07f11de5efca
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|
1468 has('crypt-blowfish') |
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|
1469 has('crypt-blowfish2') |
07f11de5efca
commit https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/85084ef1e999dcf50e8d466106a33bac24a0febb
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|
1470 This works since Vim 7.4.1099 while blowfish support was added earlier. |
07f11de5efca
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changeset
|
1471 Thus the condition failing doesn't mean blowfish is not supported. You can |
07f11de5efca
commit https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/85084ef1e999dcf50e8d466106a33bac24a0febb
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|
1472 test for blowfish with: > |
07f11de5efca
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Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
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|
1473 v:version >= 703 |
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|
1474 And for blowfish2 with: > |
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commit https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/85084ef1e999dcf50e8d466106a33bac24a0febb
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|
1475 v:version > 704 || (v:version == 704 && has('patch401')) |
7876
93f747af7b58
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Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
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|
1476 If you are sure Vim includes patch 7.4.237 a simpler check is: > |
93f747af7b58
commit https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/5e9b2fa9bb0e6061cf18457c173cd141a5dc9c92
Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
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changeset
|
1477 has('patch-7.4.401') |
7659
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|
1478 < |
2199
014a996ac896
Use UINT32_T in the code, define it to uint32_t or unsigned int.
Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
parents:
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changeset
|
1479 *E817* *E818* *E819* *E820* |
2184
5028c4d6d825
Fixed encryption big/little endian test.
Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
parents:
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diff
changeset
|
1480 When encryption does not work properly, you would be able to write your text |
5028c4d6d825
Fixed encryption big/little endian test.
Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
parents:
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changeset
|
1481 to a file and never be able to read it back. Therefore a test is performed to |
5028c4d6d825
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Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
parents:
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changeset
|
1482 check if the encryption works as expected. If you get one of these errors |
5028c4d6d825
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Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
parents:
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changeset
|
1483 don't write the file encrypted! You need to rebuild the Vim binary to fix |
5028c4d6d825
Fixed encryption big/little endian test.
Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
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|
1484 this. |
5028c4d6d825
Fixed encryption big/little endian test.
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changeset
|
1485 |
2264 | 1486 *E831* This is an internal error, "cannot happen". If you can reproduce it, |
2251
646d34788036
Fix a few compiler warnings. Fix crash with encrypted undo file.
Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
parents:
2239
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changeset
|
1487 please report to the developers. |
646d34788036
Fix a few compiler warnings. Fix crash with encrypted undo file.
Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
parents:
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changeset
|
1488 |
2184
5028c4d6d825
Fixed encryption big/little endian test.
Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
parents:
2180
diff
changeset
|
1489 When reading a file that has been encrypted and the 'key' option is not empty, |
5028c4d6d825
Fixed encryption big/little endian test.
Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
parents:
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diff
changeset
|
1490 it will be used for decryption. If the value is empty, you will be prompted |
5028c4d6d825
Fixed encryption big/little endian test.
Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
parents:
2180
diff
changeset
|
1491 to enter the key. If you don't enter a key, or you enter the wrong key, the |
5028c4d6d825
Fixed encryption big/little endian test.
Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
parents:
2180
diff
changeset
|
1492 file is edited without being decrypted. There is no warning about using the |
5028c4d6d825
Fixed encryption big/little endian test.
Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
parents:
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changeset
|
1493 wrong key (this makes brute force methods to find the key more difficult). |
7 | 1494 |
1495 If want to start reading a file that uses a different key, set the 'key' | |
1496 option to an empty string, so that Vim will prompt for a new one. Don't use | |
1497 the ":set" command to enter the value, other people can read the command over | |
1498 your shoulder. | |
1499 | |
1500 Since the value of the 'key' option is supposed to be a secret, its value can | |
1501 never be viewed. You should not set this option in a vimrc file. | |
1502 | |
2368 | 1503 An encrypted file can be recognized by the "file" command, if you add these |
1504 lines to "/etc/magic", "/usr/share/misc/magic" or wherever your system has the | |
7 | 1505 "magic" file: > |
1506 0 string VimCrypt~ Vim encrypted file | |
2364
151b037b7e74
Fix hang when resizing in diff mode and there are concealed items.
Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
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changeset
|
1507 >9 string 01 - "zip" cryptmethod |
151b037b7e74
Fix hang when resizing in diff mode and there are concealed items.
Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
parents:
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changeset
|
1508 >9 string 02 - "blowfish" cryptmethod |
6122 | 1509 >9 string 03 - "blowfish2" cryptmethod |
7 | 1510 |
1511 Notes: | |
1512 - Encryption is not possible when doing conversion with 'charconvert'. | |
1513 - Text you copy or delete goes to the numbered registers. The registers can | |
1514 be saved in the .viminfo file, where they could be read. Change your | |
1515 'viminfo' option to be safe. | |
1516 - Someone can type commands in Vim when you walk away for a moment, he should | |
1517 not be able to get the key. | |
1518 - If you make a typing mistake when entering the key, you might not be able to | |
1519 get your text back! | |
1520 - If you type the key with a ":set key=value" command, it can be kept in the | |
1521 history, showing the 'key' value in a viminfo file. | |
1522 - There is never 100% safety. The encryption in Vim has not been tested for | |
1523 robustness. | |
2581 | 1524 - The algorithm used for 'cryptmethod' "zip" is breakable. A 4 character key |
1525 in about one hour, a 6 character key in one day (on a Pentium 133 PC). This | |
1526 requires that you know some text that must appear in the file. An expert | |
1527 can break it for any key. When the text has been decrypted, this also means | |
1528 that the key can be revealed, and other files encrypted with the same key | |
1529 can be decrypted. | |
1530 - Pkzip uses the same encryption as 'cryptmethod' "zip", and US Govt has no | |
1531 objection to its export. Pkzip's public file APPNOTE.TXT describes this | |
1532 algorithm in detail. | |
6259 | 1533 - The implementation of 'cryptmethod' "blowfish" has a flaw. It is possible |
1534 to crack the first 64 bytes of a file and in some circumstances more of the | |
6122 | 1535 file. Use of it is not recommended, but it's still the strongest method |
1536 supported by Vim 7.3 and 7.4. The "zip" method is even weaker. | |
7 | 1537 - Vim originates from the Netherlands. That is where the sources come from. |
1538 Thus the encryption code is not exported from the USA. | |
1539 | |
1540 ============================================================================== | |
1541 10. Timestamps *timestamp* *timestamps* | |
1542 | |
5908 | 1543 Vim remembers the modification timestamp, mode and size of a file when you |
1544 begin editing it. This is used to avoid that you have two different versions | |
1545 of the same file (without you knowing this). | |
7 | 1546 |
5908 | 1547 After a shell command is run (|:!cmd| |suspend| |:read!| |K|) timestamps, |
1548 file modes and file sizes are compared for all buffers in a window. Vim will | |
1549 run any associated |FileChangedShell| autocommands or display a warning for | |
1550 any files that have changed. In the GUI this happens when Vim regains input | |
1551 focus. | |
7 | 1552 |
1553 *E321* *E462* | |
1554 If you want to automatically reload a file when it has been changed outside of | |
1555 Vim, set the 'autoread' option. This doesn't work at the moment you write the | |
1556 file though, only when the file wasn't changed inside of Vim. | |
18186 | 1557 *ignore-timestamp* |
11400
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diff
changeset
|
1558 If you do not want to be asked or automatically reload the file, you can use |
0f8713fe20dc
Updated runtime files.
Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
parents:
11160
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changeset
|
1559 this: > |
0f8713fe20dc
Updated runtime files.
Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
parents:
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changeset
|
1560 set buftype=nofile |
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|
1561 |
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|
1562 Or, when starting gvim from a shell: > |
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parents:
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|
1563 gvim file.log -c "set buftype=nofile" |
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parents:
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|
1564 |
7 | 1565 Note that if a FileChangedShell autocommand is defined you will not get a |
1566 warning message or prompt. The autocommand is expected to handle this. | |
1567 | |
139 | 1568 There is no warning for a directory (e.g., with |netrw-browse|). But you do |
1569 get warned if you started editing a new file and it was created as a directory | |
1570 later. | |
7 | 1571 |
1572 When Vim notices the timestamp of a file has changed, and the file is being | |
1573 edited in a buffer but has not changed, Vim checks if the contents of the file | |
1574 is equal. This is done by reading the file again (into a hidden buffer, which | |
1575 is immediately deleted again) and comparing the text. If the text is equal, | |
1576 you will get no warning. | |
1577 | |
1578 If you don't get warned often enough you can use the following command. | |
1579 | |
1580 *:checkt* *:checktime* | |
1581 :checkt[ime] Check if any buffers were changed outside of Vim. | |
1582 This checks and warns you if you would end up with two | |
1583 versions of a file. | |
1584 If this is called from an autocommand, a ":global" | |
1585 command or is not typed the actual check is postponed | |
1586 until a moment the side effects (reloading the file) | |
1587 would be harmless. | |
1588 Each loaded buffer is checked for its associated file | |
1589 being changed. If the file was changed Vim will take | |
1590 action. If there are no changes in the buffer and | |
1591 'autoread' is set, the buffer is reloaded. Otherwise, | |
1592 you are offered the choice of reloading the file. If | |
1593 the file was deleted you get an error message. | |
1594 If the file previously didn't exist you get a warning | |
1595 if it exists now. | |
1596 Once a file has been checked the timestamp is reset, | |
1597 you will not be warned again. | |
1598 | |
1599 :[N]checkt[ime] {filename} | |
1600 :[N]checkt[ime] [N] | |
1601 Check the timestamp of a specific buffer. The buffer | |
1602 may be specified by name, number or with a pattern. | |
1603 | |
1604 | |
2033
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|
1605 *E813* *E814* |
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|
1606 Vim will reload the buffer if you chose to. If a window is visible that |
de5a43c5eedc
Update documentation files.
Bram Moolenaar <bram@zimbu.org>
parents:
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|
1607 contains this buffer, the reloading will happen in the context of this window. |
de5a43c5eedc
Update documentation files.
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|
1608 Otherwise a special window is used, so that most autocommands will work. You |
de5a43c5eedc
Update documentation files.
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parents:
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|
1609 can't close this window. A few other restrictions apply. Best is to make |
de5a43c5eedc
Update documentation files.
Bram Moolenaar <bram@zimbu.org>
parents:
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|
1610 sure nothing happens outside of the current buffer. E.g., setting |
de5a43c5eedc
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parents:
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|
1611 window-local options may end up in the wrong window. Splitting the window, |
de5a43c5eedc
Update documentation files.
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parents:
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|
1612 doing something there and closing it should be OK (if there are no side |
de5a43c5eedc
Update documentation files.
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parents:
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|
1613 effects from other autocommands). Closing unrelated windows and buffers will |
de5a43c5eedc
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Bram Moolenaar <bram@zimbu.org>
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|
1614 get you into trouble. |
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|
1615 |
7 | 1616 Before writing a file the timestamp is checked. If it has changed, Vim will |
1617 ask if you really want to overwrite the file: | |
1618 | |
1619 WARNING: The file has been changed since reading it!!! | |
1620 Do you really want to write to it (y/n)? | |
1621 | |
1622 If you hit 'y' Vim will continue writing the file. If you hit 'n' the write is | |
1623 aborted. If you used ":wq" or "ZZ" Vim will not exit, you will get another | |
1624 chance to write the file. | |
1625 | |
1626 The message would normally mean that somebody has written to the file after | |
1627 the edit session started. This could be another person, in which case you | |
1628 probably want to check if your changes to the file and the changes from the | |
1629 other person should be merged. Write the file under another name and check for | |
1630 differences (the "diff" program can be used for this). | |
1631 | |
1632 It is also possible that you modified the file yourself, from another edit | |
1633 session or with another command (e.g., a filter command). Then you will know | |
1634 which version of the file you want to keep. | |
1635 | |
236 | 1636 There is one situation where you get the message while there is nothing wrong: |
1637 On a Win32 system on the day daylight saving time starts. There is something | |
1638 in the Win32 libraries that confuses Vim about the hour time difference. The | |
1639 problem goes away the next day. | |
1640 | |
39 | 1641 ============================================================================== |
1642 11. File Searching *file-searching* | |
1643 | |
1644 {not available when compiled without the |+path_extra| feature} | |
1645 | |
1646 The file searching is currently used for the 'path', 'cdpath' and 'tags' | |
1668 | 1647 options, for |finddir()| and |findfile()|. Other commands use |wildcards| |
1648 which is slightly different. | |
1121 | 1649 |
1650 There are three different types of searching: | |
39 | 1651 |
444 | 1652 1) Downward search: *starstar* |
39 | 1653 Downward search uses the wildcards '*', '**' and possibly others |
1668 | 1654 supported by your operating system. '*' and '**' are handled inside Vim, |
1655 so they work on all operating systems. Note that "**" only acts as a | |
1656 special wildcard when it is at the start of a name. | |
39 | 1657 |
1620 | 1658 The usage of '*' is quite simple: It matches 0 or more characters. In a |
1659 search pattern this would be ".*". Note that the "." is not used for file | |
1660 searching. | |
39 | 1661 |
1662 '**' is more sophisticated: | |
1663 - It ONLY matches directories. | |
1668 | 1664 - It matches up to 30 directories deep by default, so you can use it to |
1665 search an entire directory tree | |
39 | 1666 - The maximum number of levels matched can be given by appending a number |
1667 to '**'. | |
1668 Thus '/usr/**2' can match: > | |
1669 /usr | |
1670 /usr/include | |
1671 /usr/include/sys | |
1672 /usr/include/g++ | |
1673 /usr/lib | |
1674 /usr/lib/X11 | |
1675 .... | |
1676 < It does NOT match '/usr/include/g++/std' as this would be three | |
1677 levels. | |
1668 | 1678 The allowed number range is 0 ('**0' is removed) to 100 |
39 | 1679 If the given number is smaller than 0 it defaults to 30, if it's |
1668 | 1680 bigger than 100 then 100 is used. The system also has a limit on the |
1681 path length, usually 256 or 1024 bytes. | |
39 | 1682 - '**' can only be at the end of the path or be followed by a path |
1683 separator or by a number and a path separator. | |
1684 | |
1685 You can combine '*' and '**' in any order: > | |
1686 /usr/**/sys/* | |
1668 | 1687 /usr/*tory/sys/** |
39 | 1688 /usr/**2/sys/* |
1689 | |
1690 2) Upward search: | |
1691 Here you can give a directory and then search the directory tree upward for | |
236 | 1692 a file. You could give stop-directories to limit the upward search. The |
39 | 1693 stop-directories are appended to the path (for the 'path' option) or to |
236 | 1694 the filename (for the 'tags' option) with a ';'. If you want several |
1695 stop-directories separate them with ';'. If you want no stop-directory | |
39 | 1696 ("search upward till the root directory) just use ';'. > |
1697 /usr/include/sys;/usr | |
1698 < will search in: > | |
1699 /usr/include/sys | |
1700 /usr/include | |
1701 /usr | |
1702 < | |
1703 If you use a relative path the upward search is started in Vim's current | |
1704 directory or in the directory of the current file (if the relative path | |
1705 starts with './' and 'd' is not included in 'cpoptions'). | |
1706 | |
1707 If Vim's current path is /u/user_x/work/release and you do > | |
1708 :set path=include;/u/user_x | |
1709 < and then search for a file with |gf| the file is searched in: > | |
1710 /u/user_x/work/release/include | |
1711 /u/user_x/work/include | |
1712 /u/user_x/include | |
1713 | |
236 | 1714 3) Combined up/downward search: |
39 | 1715 If Vim's current path is /u/user_x/work/release and you do > |
1716 set path=**;/u/user_x | |
1717 < and then search for a file with |gf| the file is searched in: > | |
1718 /u/user_x/work/release/** | |
1719 /u/user_x/work/** | |
1720 /u/user_x/** | |
1721 < | |
236 | 1722 BE CAREFUL! This might consume a lot of time, as the search of |
39 | 1723 '/u/user_x/**' includes '/u/user_x/work/**' and |
1724 '/u/user_x/work/release/**'. So '/u/user_x/work/release/**' is searched | |
236 | 1725 three times and '/u/user_x/work/**' is searched twice. |
39 | 1726 |
1727 In the above example you might want to set path to: > | |
1728 :set path=**,/u/user_x/** | |
2429
7ce8b24450dc
Improvements for ":find" completion. (Nazri Ramliy)
Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
parents:
2413
diff
changeset
|
1729 < This searches: |
7ce8b24450dc
Improvements for ":find" completion. (Nazri Ramliy)
Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
parents:
2413
diff
changeset
|
1730 /u/user_x/work/release/** ~ |
7ce8b24450dc
Improvements for ":find" completion. (Nazri Ramliy)
Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
parents:
2413
diff
changeset
|
1731 /u/user_x/** ~ |
7ce8b24450dc
Improvements for ":find" completion. (Nazri Ramliy)
Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
parents:
2413
diff
changeset
|
1732 This searches the same directories, but in a different order. |
39 | 1733 |
2429
7ce8b24450dc
Improvements for ":find" completion. (Nazri Ramliy)
Bram Moolenaar <bram@vim.org>
parents:
2413
diff
changeset
|
1734 Note that completion for ":find", ":sfind", and ":tabfind" commands do not |
11914 | 1735 currently work with 'path' items that contain a URL or use the double star |
3456 | 1736 with depth limiter (/usr/**2) or upward search (;) notations. |
7 | 1737 |
14421 | 1738 vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl: |