Mercurial > vim
annotate runtime/doc/vim.man @ 16648:a7f06505ad39 v8.1.1326
patch 8.1.1326: no test for listener with partial
commit https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/8aad88d8de256e58f04054eb7230c9613e26502f
Author: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
Date: Sun May 12 13:53:50 2019 +0200
patch 8.1.1326: no test for listener with partial
Problem: No test for listener with partial.
Solution: Add a test. Add example to help.
author | Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 12 May 2019 14:00:07 +0200 |
parents | 34c8ec888122 |
children | cc953757ed2a |
rev | line source |
---|---|
6918 | 1 VIM(1) General Commands Manual VIM(1) |
7 | 2 |
3 | |
4 | |
5 NAME | |
12254 | 6 vim - Vi IMproved, a programmer's text editor |
7 | 7 |
8 SYNOPSIS | |
9 vim [options] [file ..] | |
10 vim [options] - | |
11 vim [options] -t tag | |
12 vim [options] -q [errorfile] | |
13 | |
14 ex | |
15 view | |
16 gvim gview evim eview | |
17 rvim rview rgvim rgview | |
18 | |
19 DESCRIPTION | |
20 Vim is a text editor that is upwards compatible to Vi. It can be used | |
21 to edit all kinds of plain text. It is especially useful for editing | |
22 programs. | |
23 | |
6918 | 24 There are a lot of enhancements above Vi: multi level undo, multi win‐ |
7 | 25 dows and buffers, syntax highlighting, command line editing, filename |
26 completion, on-line help, visual selection, etc.. See ":help | |
27 vi_diff.txt" for a summary of the differences between Vim and Vi. | |
28 | |
29 While running Vim a lot of help can be obtained from the on-line help | |
6918 | 30 system, with the ":help" command. See the ON-LINE HELP section below. |
7 | 31 |
32 Most often Vim is started to edit a single file with the command | |
33 | |
34 vim file | |
35 | |
36 More generally Vim is started with: | |
37 | |
38 vim [options] [filelist] | |
39 | |
40 If the filelist is missing, the editor will start with an empty buffer. | |
6918 | 41 Otherwise exactly one out of the following four may be used to choose |
7 | 42 one or more files to be edited. |
43 | |
6918 | 44 file .. A list of filenames. The first one will be the current |
45 file and read into the buffer. The cursor will be posi‐ | |
7 | 46 tioned on the first line of the buffer. You can get to the |
6918 | 47 other files with the ":next" command. To edit a file that |
7 | 48 starts with a dash, precede the filelist with "--". |
49 | |
6918 | 50 - The file to edit is read from stdin. Commands are read |
7 | 51 from stderr, which should be a tty. |
52 | |
53 -t {tag} The file to edit and the initial cursor position depends on | |
6918 | 54 a "tag", a sort of goto label. {tag} is looked up in the |
7 | 55 tags file, the associated file becomes the current file and |
6918 | 56 the associated command is executed. Mostly this is used |
57 for C programs, in which case {tag} could be a function | |
7 | 58 name. The effect is that the file containing that function |
6918 | 59 becomes the current file and the cursor is positioned on |
7 | 60 the start of the function. See ":help tag-commands". |
61 | |
62 -q [errorfile] | |
6918 | 63 Start in quickFix mode. The file [errorfile] is read and |
64 the first error is displayed. If [errorfile] is omitted, | |
7 | 65 the filename is obtained from the 'errorfile' option |
6918 | 66 (defaults to "AztecC.Err" for the Amiga, "errors.err" on |
67 other systems). Further errors can be jumped to with the | |
7 | 68 ":cn" command. See ":help quickfix". |
69 | |
6918 | 70 Vim behaves differently, depending on the name of the command (the exe‐ |
7 | 71 cutable may still be the same file). |
72 | |
73 vim The "normal" way, everything is default. | |
74 | |
6918 | 75 ex Start in Ex mode. Go to Normal mode with the ":vi" command. |
7 | 76 Can also be done with the "-e" argument. |
77 | |
6918 | 78 view Start in read-only mode. You will be protected from writing |
7 | 79 the files. Can also be done with the "-R" argument. |
80 | |
81 gvim gview | |
82 The GUI version. Starts a new window. Can also be done with | |
83 the "-g" argument. | |
84 | |
85 evim eview | |
86 The GUI version in easy mode. Starts a new window. Can also | |
87 be done with the "-y" argument. | |
88 | |
89 rvim rview rgvim rgview | |
6918 | 90 Like the above, but with restrictions. It will not be possi‐ |
91 ble to start shell commands, or suspend Vim. Can also be | |
7 | 92 done with the "-Z" argument. |
93 | |
94 OPTIONS | |
6918 | 95 The options may be given in any order, before or after filenames. |
7 | 96 Options without an argument can be combined after a single dash. |
97 | |
6918 | 98 +[num] For the first file the cursor will be positioned on line |
99 "num". If "num" is missing, the cursor will be positioned | |
7 | 100 on the last line. |
101 | |
6918 | 102 +/{pat} For the first file the cursor will be positioned in the |
103 line with the first occurrence of {pat}. See ":help | |
104 search-pattern" for the available search patterns. | |
7 | 105 |
106 +{command} | |
107 | |
108 -c {command} | |
6918 | 109 {command} will be executed after the first file has been |
110 read. {command} is interpreted as an Ex command. If the | |
111 {command} contains spaces it must be enclosed in double | |
112 quotes (this depends on the shell that is used). Example: | |
7 | 113 Vim "+set si" main.c |
114 Note: You can use up to 10 "+" or "-c" commands. | |
115 | |
6918 | 116 -S {file} {file} will be sourced after the first file has been read. |
117 This is equivalent to -c "source {file}". {file} cannot | |
7 | 118 start with '-'. If {file} is omitted "Session.vim" is used |
119 (only works when -S is the last argument). | |
120 | |
121 --cmd {command} | |
6918 | 122 Like using "-c", but the command is executed just before |
123 processing any vimrc file. You can use up to 10 of these | |
7 | 124 commands, independently from "-c" commands. |
125 | |
6918 | 126 -A If Vim has been compiled with ARABIC support for editing |
127 right-to-left oriented files and Arabic keyboard mapping, | |
128 this option starts Vim in Arabic mode, i.e. 'arabic' is | |
7 | 129 set. Otherwise an error message is given and Vim aborts. |
130 | |
6918 | 131 -b Binary mode. A few options will be set that makes it pos‐ |
7 | 132 sible to edit a binary or executable file. |
133 | |
6918 | 134 -C Compatible. Set the 'compatible' option. This will make |
135 Vim behave mostly like Vi, even though a .vimrc file | |
7 | 136 exists. |
137 | |
6918 | 138 -d Start in diff mode. There should be two, three or four |
139 file name arguments. Vim will open all the files and show | |
1698 | 140 differences between them. Works like vimdiff(1). |
7 | 141 |
6918 | 142 -d {device} Open {device} for use as a terminal. Only on the Amiga. |
7 | 143 Example: "-d con:20/30/600/150". |
144 | |
6918 | 145 -D Debugging. Go to debugging mode when executing the first |
7 | 146 command from a script. |
147 | |
6918 | 148 -e Start Vim in Ex mode, just like the executable was called |
7 | 149 "ex". |
150 | |
151 -E Start Vim in improved Ex mode, just like the executable was | |
152 called "exim". | |
153 | |
6918 | 154 -f Foreground. For the GUI version, Vim will not fork and |
7 | 155 detach from the shell it was started in. On the Amiga, Vim |
6918 | 156 is not restarted to open a new window. This option should |
157 be used when Vim is executed by a program that will wait | |
158 for the edit session to finish (e.g. mail). On the Amiga | |
7 | 159 the ":sh" and ":!" commands will not work. |
160 | |
6918 | 161 --nofork Foreground. For the GUI version, Vim will not fork and |
7 | 162 detach from the shell it was started in. |
163 | |
6918 | 164 -F If Vim has been compiled with FKMAP support for editing |
165 right-to-left oriented files and Farsi keyboard mapping, | |
166 this option starts Vim in Farsi mode, i.e. 'fkmap' and | |
167 'rightleft' are set. Otherwise an error message is given | |
168 and Vim aborts. | |
169 | |
170 -g If Vim has been compiled with GUI support, this option | |
171 enables the GUI. If no GUI support was compiled in, an | |
172 error message is given and Vim aborts. | |
173 | |
174 -h Give a bit of help about the command line arguments and | |
175 options. After this Vim exits. | |
176 | |
177 -H If Vim has been compiled with RIGHTLEFT support for editing | |
178 right-to-left oriented files and Hebrew keyboard mapping, | |
179 this option starts Vim in Hebrew mode, i.e. 'hkmap' and | |
7 | 180 'rightleft' are set. Otherwise an error message is given |
181 and Vim aborts. | |
182 | |
183 -i {viminfo} | |
6918 | 184 When using the viminfo file is enabled, this option sets |
185 the filename to use, instead of the default "~/.viminfo". | |
7 | 186 This can also be used to skip the use of the .viminfo file, |
187 by giving the name "NONE". | |
188 | |
189 -L Same as -r. | |
190 | |
191 -l Lisp mode. Sets the 'lisp' and 'showmatch' options on. | |
192 | |
6918 | 193 -m Modifying files is disabled. Resets the 'write' option. |
194 You can still modify the buffer, but writing a file is not | |
7 | 195 possible. |
196 | |
6918 | 197 -M Modifications not allowed. The 'modifiable' and 'write' |
198 options will be unset, so that changes are not allowed and | |
199 files can not be written. Note that these options can be | |
7 | 200 set to enable making modifications. |
201 | |
6918 | 202 -N No-compatible mode. Reset the 'compatible' option. This |
203 will make Vim behave a bit better, but less Vi compatible, | |
7 | 204 even though a .vimrc file does not exist. |
205 | |
6918 | 206 -n No swap file will be used. Recovery after a crash will be |
207 impossible. Handy if you want to edit a file on a very | |
208 slow medium (e.g. floppy). Can also be done with ":set | |
7 | 209 uc=0". Can be undone with ":set uc=200". |
210 | |
6918 | 211 -nb Become an editor server for NetBeans. See the docs for |
7 | 212 details. |
213 | |
214 -o[N] Open N windows stacked. When N is omitted, open one window | |
215 for each file. | |
216 | |
6918 | 217 -O[N] Open N windows side by side. When N is omitted, open one |
7 | 218 window for each file. |
219 | |
803 | 220 -p[N] Open N tab pages. When N is omitted, open one tab page for |
221 each file. | |
222 | |
6918 | 223 -R Read-only mode. The 'readonly' option will be set. You |
224 can still edit the buffer, but will be prevented from acci‐ | |
9975
03fa8a51e9dc
commit https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/e4a3bcf28d92d0bde9ca227ccb40d401038185e5
Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
parents:
6918
diff
changeset
|
225 dentally overwriting a file. If you do want to overwrite a |
6918 | 226 file, add an exclamation mark to the Ex command, as in |
227 ":w!". The -R option also implies the -n option (see | |
12559 | 228 above). The 'readonly' option can be reset with ":set |
7 | 229 noro". See ":help 'readonly'". |
230 | |
6918 | 231 -r List swap files, with information about using them for |
7 | 232 recovery. |
233 | |
6918 | 234 -r {file} Recovery mode. The swap file is used to recover a crashed |
235 editing session. The swap file is a file with the same | |
7 | 236 filename as the text file with ".swp" appended. See ":help |
237 recovery". | |
238 | |
6918 | 239 -s Silent mode. Only when started as "Ex" or when the "-e" |
7 | 240 option was given before the "-s" option. |
241 | |
242 -s {scriptin} | |
6918 | 243 The script file {scriptin} is read. The characters in the |
244 file are interpreted as if you had typed them. The same | |
7 | 245 can be done with the command ":source! {scriptin}". If the |
246 end of the file is reached before the editor exits, further | |
247 characters are read from the keyboard. | |
248 | |
249 -T {terminal} | |
6918 | 250 Tells Vim the name of the terminal you are using. Only |
251 required when the automatic way doesn't work. Should be a | |
252 terminal known to Vim (builtin) or defined in the termcap | |
7 | 253 or terminfo file. |
254 | |
6918 | 255 -u {vimrc} Use the commands in the file {vimrc} for initializations. |
256 All the other initializations are skipped. Use this to | |
257 edit a special kind of files. It can also be used to skip | |
258 all initializations by giving the name "NONE". See ":help | |
7 | 259 initialization" within vim for more details. |
260 | |
6918 | 261 -U {gvimrc} Use the commands in the file {gvimrc} for GUI initializa‐ |
262 tions. All the other GUI initializations are skipped. It | |
263 can also be used to skip all GUI initializations by giving | |
264 the name "NONE". See ":help gui-init" within vim for more | |
7 | 265 details. |
266 | |
6918 | 267 -V[N] Verbose. Give messages about which files are sourced and |
268 for reading and writing a viminfo file. The optional num‐ | |
7 | 269 ber N is the value for 'verbose'. Default is 10. |
270 | |
6918 | 271 -v Start Vim in Vi mode, just like the executable was called |
272 "vi". This only has effect when the executable is called | |
7 | 273 "ex". |
274 | |
275 -w {scriptout} | |
6918 | 276 All the characters that you type are recorded in the file |
277 {scriptout}, until you exit Vim. This is useful if you | |
278 want to create a script file to be used with "vim -s" or | |
7 | 279 ":source!". If the {scriptout} file exists, characters are |
280 appended. | |
281 | |
282 -W {scriptout} | |
283 Like -w, but an existing file is overwritten. | |
284 | |
36 | 285 -x Use encryption when writing files. Will prompt for a crypt |
286 key. | |
7 | 287 |
6918 | 288 -X Don't connect to the X server. Shortens startup time in a |
289 terminal, but the window title and clipboard will not be | |
7 | 290 used. |
291 | |
292 -y Start Vim in easy mode, just like the executable was called | |
6918 | 293 "evim" or "eview". Makes Vim behave like a click-and-type |
7 | 294 editor. |
295 | |
6918 | 296 -Z Restricted mode. Works like the executable starts with |
7 | 297 "r". |
298 | |
6918 | 299 -- Denotes the end of the options. Arguments after this will |
300 be handled as a file name. This can be used to edit a | |
7 | 301 filename that starts with a '-'. |
302 | |
36 | 303 --echo-wid GTK GUI only: Echo the Window ID on stdout. |
7 | 304 |
305 --help Give a help message and exit, just like "-h". | |
306 | |
6918 | 307 --literal Take file name arguments literally, do not expand wild‐ |
308 cards. This has no effect on Unix where the shell expands | |
36 | 309 wildcards. |
7 | 310 |
311 --noplugin Skip loading plugins. Implied by -u NONE. | |
312 | |
313 --remote Connect to a Vim server and make it edit the files given in | |
314 the rest of the arguments. If no server is found a warning | |
315 is given and the files are edited in the current Vim. | |
316 | |
317 --remote-expr {expr} | |
6918 | 318 Connect to a Vim server, evaluate {expr} in it and print |
7 | 319 the result on stdout. |
320 | |
321 --remote-send {keys} | |
322 Connect to a Vim server and send {keys} to it. | |
323 | |
324 --remote-silent | |
6918 | 325 As --remote, but without the warning when no server is |
7 | 326 found. |
327 | |
328 --remote-wait | |
6918 | 329 As --remote, but Vim does not exit until the files have |
7 | 330 been edited. |
331 | |
332 --remote-wait-silent | |
333 As --remote-wait, but without the warning when no server is | |
334 found. | |
335 | |
336 --serverlist | |
337 List the names of all Vim servers that can be found. | |
338 | |
339 --servername {name} | |
6918 | 340 Use {name} as the server name. Used for the current Vim, |
7 | 341 unless used with a --remote argument, then it's the name of |
342 the server to connect to. | |
343 | |
344 --socketid {id} | |
6918 | 345 GTK GUI only: Use the GtkPlug mechanism to run gvim in |
7 | 346 another window. |
347 | |
348 --version Print version information and exit. | |
349 | |
350 ON-LINE HELP | |
6918 | 351 Type ":help" in Vim to get started. Type ":help subject" to get help |
352 on a specific subject. For example: ":help ZZ" to get help for the | |
353 "ZZ" command. Use <Tab> and CTRL-D to complete subjects (":help cmd‐ | |
354 line-completion"). Tags are present to jump from one place to another | |
7 | 355 (sort of hypertext links, see ":help"). All documentation files can be |
356 viewed in this way, for example ":help syntax.txt". | |
357 | |
358 FILES | |
359 /usr/local/lib/vim/doc/*.txt | |
6918 | 360 The Vim documentation files. Use ":help doc-file-list" |
7 | 361 to get the complete list. |
362 | |
363 /usr/local/lib/vim/doc/tags | |
6918 | 364 The tags file used for finding information in the docu‐ |
7 | 365 mentation files. |
366 | |
367 /usr/local/lib/vim/syntax/syntax.vim | |
368 System wide syntax initializations. | |
369 | |
370 /usr/local/lib/vim/syntax/*.vim | |
371 Syntax files for various languages. | |
372 | |
373 /usr/local/lib/vim/vimrc | |
374 System wide Vim initializations. | |
375 | |
170 | 376 ~/.vimrc Your personal Vim initializations. |
377 | |
7 | 378 /usr/local/lib/vim/gvimrc |
379 System wide gvim initializations. | |
380 | |
170 | 381 ~/.gvimrc Your personal gvim initializations. |
382 | |
7 | 383 /usr/local/lib/vim/optwin.vim |
6918 | 384 Script used for the ":options" command, a nice way to |
7 | 385 view and set options. |
386 | |
387 /usr/local/lib/vim/menu.vim | |
388 System wide menu initializations for gvim. | |
389 | |
390 /usr/local/lib/vim/bugreport.vim | |
391 Script to generate a bug report. See ":help bugs". | |
392 | |
393 /usr/local/lib/vim/filetype.vim | |
6918 | 394 Script to detect the type of a file by its name. See |
7 | 395 ":help 'filetype'". |
396 | |
397 /usr/local/lib/vim/scripts.vim | |
6918 | 398 Script to detect the type of a file by its contents. |
7 | 399 See ":help 'filetype'". |
400 | |
1698 | 401 /usr/local/lib/vim/print/*.ps |
7 | 402 Files used for PostScript printing. |
403 | |
404 For recent info read the VIM home page: | |
405 <URL:http://www.vim.org/> | |
406 | |
407 SEE ALSO | |
408 vimtutor(1) | |
409 | |
410 AUTHOR | |
411 Most of Vim was made by Bram Moolenaar, with a lot of help from others. | |
412 See ":help credits" in Vim. | |
6918 | 413 Vim is based on Stevie, worked on by: Tim Thompson, Tony Andrews and |
414 G.R. (Fred) Walter. Although hardly any of the original code remains. | |
7 | 415 |
416 BUGS | |
417 Probably. See ":help todo" for a list of known problems. | |
418 | |
803 | 419 Note that a number of things that may be regarded as bugs by some, are |
420 in fact caused by a too-faithful reproduction of Vi's behaviour. And | |
421 if you think other things are bugs "because Vi does it differently", | |
422 you should take a closer look at the vi_diff.txt file (or type :help | |
423 vi_diff.txt when in Vim). Also have a look at the 'compatible' and | |
7 | 424 'cpoptions' options. |
425 | |
426 | |
427 | |
826 | 428 2006 Apr 11 VIM(1) |