Mercurial > vim
annotate runtime/doc/map.txt @ 30243:b57d52934160 v9.0.0457
patch 9.0.0457: substitute prompt does not highlight an empty match
Commit: https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/a04f457a6c071179bac4088c9314007d39d5c5e0
Author: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
Date: Tue Sep 13 13:45:26 2022 +0100
patch 9.0.0457: substitute prompt does not highlight an empty match
Problem: Substitute prompt does not highlight an empty match.
Solution: Highlight at least one character.
author | Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org> |
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date | Tue, 13 Sep 2022 15:00:05 +0200 |
parents | 578e71f924fe |
children | 0827d3d6d8c0 |
rev | line source |
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29314 | 1 *map.txt* For Vim version 9.0. Last change: 2022 Jun 18 |
7 | 2 |
3 | |
4 VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar | |
5 | |
6 | |
7 Key mapping, abbreviations and user-defined commands. | |
8 | |
27036 | 9 This subject is introduced in sections |05.4|, |24.7| and |40.1| of the user |
7 | 10 manual. |
11 | |
12 1. Key mapping |key-mapping| | |
592 | 13 1.1 MAP COMMANDS |:map-commands| |
14 1.2 Special arguments |:map-arguments| | |
15 1.3 Mapping and modes |:map-modes| | |
16 1.4 Listing mappings |map-listing| | |
17 1.5 Mapping special keys |:map-special-keys| | |
18 1.6 Special characters |:map-special-chars| | |
19 1.7 What keys to map |map-which-keys| | |
20 1.8 Examples |map-examples| | |
21 1.9 Using mappings |map-typing| | |
22 1.10 Mapping alt-keys |:map-alt-keys| | |
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23 1.11 Mapping in modifyOtherKeys mode |modifyOtherKeys| |
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24 1.12 Mapping an operator |:map-operator| |
7 | 25 2. Abbreviations |abbreviations| |
26 3. Local mappings and functions |script-local| | |
27 4. User-defined commands |user-commands| | |
28 | |
29 ============================================================================== | |
30 1. Key mapping *key-mapping* *mapping* *macro* | |
31 | |
32 Key mapping is used to change the meaning of typed keys. The most common use | |
12559 | 33 is to define a sequence of commands for a function key. Example: > |
7 | 34 |
35 :map <F2> a<C-R>=strftime("%c")<CR><Esc> | |
36 | |
236 | 37 This appends the current date and time after the cursor (in <> notation |<>|). |
7 | 38 |
592 | 39 |
40 1.1 MAP COMMANDS *:map-commands* | |
41 | |
7 | 42 There are commands to enter new mappings, remove mappings and list mappings. |
43 See |map-overview| for the various forms of "map" and their relationships with | |
44 modes. | |
45 | |
46 {lhs} means left-hand-side *{lhs}* | |
47 {rhs} means right-hand-side *{rhs}* | |
48 | |
663 | 49 :map {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-nvo| *:map* |
50 :nm[ap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-n| *:nm* *:nmap* | |
51 :vm[ap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-v| *:vm* *:vmap* | |
788 | 52 :xm[ap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-x| *:xm* *:xmap* |
4358 | 53 :smap {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-s| *:smap* |
663 | 54 :om[ap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-o| *:om* *:omap* |
55 :map! {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-ic| *:map!* | |
56 :im[ap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-i| *:im* *:imap* | |
16944 | 57 :lm[ap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-l| *:lm* *:lma* *:lmap* |
663 | 58 :cm[ap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-c| *:cm* *:cmap* |
12499 | 59 :tma[p] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-t| *:tma* *:tmap* |
7 | 60 Map the key sequence {lhs} to {rhs} for the modes |
61 where the map command applies. The result, including | |
62 {rhs}, is then further scanned for mappings. This | |
63 allows for nested and recursive use of mappings. | |
26148 | 64 Note: Trailing spaces are included in the {rhs}, |
65 because space is a valid Normal mode command. | |
29066 | 66 See |map-trailing-white|. |
7 | 67 |
5968 | 68 *:nore* *:norem* |
69 :no[remap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-nvo| *:no* *:noremap* *:nor* | |
70 :nn[oremap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-n| *:nn* *:nnoremap* | |
71 :vn[oremap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-v| *:vn* *:vnoremap* | |
72 :xn[oremap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-x| *:xn* *:xnoremap* | |
16944 | 73 :snor[emap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-s| *:snor* *:snore* *:snoremap* |
5968 | 74 :ono[remap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-o| *:ono* *:onoremap* |
75 :no[remap]! {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-ic| *:no!* *:noremap!* | |
16944 | 76 :ino[remap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-i| *:ino* *:inor* *:inoremap* |
5968 | 77 :ln[oremap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-l| *:ln* *:lnoremap* |
16944 | 78 :cno[remap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-c| *:cno* *:cnor* *:cnoremap* |
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79 :tno[remap] {lhs} {rhs} |mapmode-t| *:tno* *:tnoremap* |
7 | 80 Map the key sequence {lhs} to {rhs} for the modes |
81 where the map command applies. Disallow mapping of | |
82 {rhs}, to avoid nested and recursive mappings. Often | |
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83 used to redefine a command. |
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84 Note: When <Plug> appears in the {rhs} this part is |
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85 always applied even if remapping is disallowed. |
7 | 86 |
87 | |
663 | 88 :unm[ap] {lhs} |mapmode-nvo| *:unm* *:unmap* |
89 :nun[map] {lhs} |mapmode-n| *:nun* *:nunmap* | |
90 :vu[nmap] {lhs} |mapmode-v| *:vu* *:vunmap* | |
788 | 91 :xu[nmap] {lhs} |mapmode-x| *:xu* *:xunmap* |
92 :sunm[ap] {lhs} |mapmode-s| *:sunm* *:sunmap* | |
663 | 93 :ou[nmap] {lhs} |mapmode-o| *:ou* *:ounmap* |
94 :unm[ap]! {lhs} |mapmode-ic| *:unm!* *:unmap!* | |
95 :iu[nmap] {lhs} |mapmode-i| *:iu* *:iunmap* | |
96 :lu[nmap] {lhs} |mapmode-l| *:lu* *:lunmap* | |
16944 | 97 :cu[nmap] {lhs} |mapmode-c| *:cu* *:cun* *:cunmap* |
12499 | 98 :tunma[p] {lhs} |mapmode-t| *:tunma* *:tunmap* |
7 | 99 Remove the mapping of {lhs} for the modes where the |
100 map command applies. The mapping may remain defined | |
101 for other modes where it applies. | |
26219 | 102 It also works when {lhs} matches the {rhs} of a |
27036 | 103 mapping. This is for when an abbreviation applied. |
29066 | 104 Note: Trailing spaces are included in the {lhs}. |
105 See |map-trailing-white|. | |
7 | 106 |
663 | 107 :mapc[lear] |mapmode-nvo| *:mapc* *:mapclear* |
108 :nmapc[lear] |mapmode-n| *:nmapc* *:nmapclear* | |
109 :vmapc[lear] |mapmode-v| *:vmapc* *:vmapclear* | |
788 | 110 :xmapc[lear] |mapmode-x| *:xmapc* *:xmapclear* |
111 :smapc[lear] |mapmode-s| *:smapc* *:smapclear* | |
663 | 112 :omapc[lear] |mapmode-o| *:omapc* *:omapclear* |
113 :mapc[lear]! |mapmode-ic| *:mapc!* *:mapclear!* | |
114 :imapc[lear] |mapmode-i| *:imapc* *:imapclear* | |
115 :lmapc[lear] |mapmode-l| *:lmapc* *:lmapclear* | |
116 :cmapc[lear] |mapmode-c| *:cmapc* *:cmapclear* | |
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117 :tmapc[lear] |mapmode-t| *:tmapc* *:tmapclear* |
7 | 118 Remove ALL mappings for the modes where the map |
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119 command applies. |
2908 | 120 Use the <buffer> argument to remove buffer-local |
121 mappings |:map-<buffer>| | |
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122 Warning: This also removes the |mac-standard-mappings| |
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123 and the |dos-standard-mappings|. |
7 | 124 |
663 | 125 :map |mapmode-nvo| |
126 :nm[ap] |mapmode-n| | |
127 :vm[ap] |mapmode-v| | |
788 | 128 :xm[ap] |mapmode-x| |
129 :sm[ap] |mapmode-s| | |
663 | 130 :om[ap] |mapmode-o| |
131 :map! |mapmode-ic| | |
132 :im[ap] |mapmode-i| | |
133 :lm[ap] |mapmode-l| | |
134 :cm[ap] |mapmode-c| | |
12499 | 135 :tma[p] |mapmode-t| |
7 | 136 List all key mappings for the modes where the map |
137 command applies. Note that ":map" and ":map!" are | |
138 used most often, because they include the other modes. | |
139 | |
663 | 140 :map {lhs} |mapmode-nvo| *:map_l* |
141 :nm[ap] {lhs} |mapmode-n| *:nmap_l* | |
142 :vm[ap] {lhs} |mapmode-v| *:vmap_l* | |
788 | 143 :xm[ap] {lhs} |mapmode-x| *:xmap_l* |
144 :sm[ap] {lhs} |mapmode-s| *:smap_l* | |
663 | 145 :om[ap] {lhs} |mapmode-o| *:omap_l* |
146 :map! {lhs} |mapmode-ic| *:map_l!* | |
147 :im[ap] {lhs} |mapmode-i| *:imap_l* | |
148 :lm[ap] {lhs} |mapmode-l| *:lmap_l* | |
149 :cm[ap] {lhs} |mapmode-c| *:cmap_l* | |
12499 | 150 :tma[p] {lhs} |mapmode-t| *:tmap_l* |
7 | 151 List the key mappings for the key sequences starting |
152 with {lhs} in the modes where the map command applies. | |
153 | |
154 These commands are used to map a key or key sequence to a string of | |
155 characters. You can use this to put command sequences under function keys, | |
156 translate one key into another, etc. See |:mkexrc| for how to save and | |
157 restore the current mappings. | |
158 | |
592 | 159 *map-ambiguous* |
160 When two mappings start with the same sequence of characters, they are | |
161 ambiguous. Example: > | |
162 :imap aa foo | |
163 :imap aaa bar | |
164 When Vim has read "aa", it will need to get another character to be able to | |
165 decide if "aa" or "aaa" should be mapped. This means that after typing "aa" | |
166 that mapping won't get expanded yet, Vim is waiting for another character. | |
167 If you type a space, then "foo" will get inserted, plus the space. If you | |
168 type "a", then "bar" will get inserted. | |
169 | |
29066 | 170 Trailing white space ~ |
171 *map-trailing-white* | |
172 This unmap command does NOT work: > | |
173 :map @@ foo | |
174 :unmap @@ | print | |
175 | |
176 Because it tries to unmap "@@ ", including the white space before the command | |
177 separator "|". Other examples with trailing white space: > | |
178 unmap @@ | |
179 unmap @@ # Vim9 script comment | |
29290 | 180 unmap @@ " legacy script comment |
29066 | 181 |
182 An error will be issued, which is very hard to identify, because the ending | |
183 whitespace character in `unmap @@ ` is not visible. | |
184 | |
185 A generic solution is to put the command separator "|" right after the mapped | |
186 keys. After that white space and a comment may follow: > | |
187 | |
29290 | 188 unmap @@| # Vim9 script comment |
189 unmap @@| " legacy script comment | |
29066 | 190 |
592 | 191 |
192 1.2 SPECIAL ARGUMENTS *:map-arguments* | |
193 | |
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194 "<buffer>", "<nowait>", "<silent>", "<special>", "<script>", "<expr>" and |
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195 "<unique>" can be used in any order. They must appear right after the |
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196 command, before any other arguments. |
721 | 197 |
29290 | 198 *:map-local* *:map-<buffer>* *:map-buffer* |
199 *E224* *E225* | |
1668 | 200 If the first argument to one of these commands is "<buffer>" the mapping will |
201 be effective in the current buffer only. Example: > | |
7 | 202 :map <buffer> ,w /[.,;]<CR> |
203 Then you can map ",w" to something else in another buffer: > | |
204 :map <buffer> ,w /[#&!]<CR> | |
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205 The local buffer mappings are used before the global ones. See <nowait> below |
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206 to make a short local mapping not taking effect when a longer global one |
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207 exists. |
7 | 208 The "<buffer>" argument can also be used to clear mappings: > |
209 :unmap <buffer> ,w | |
210 :mapclear <buffer> | |
211 Local mappings are also cleared when a buffer is deleted, but not when it is | |
212 unloaded. Just like local option values. | |
4869 | 213 Also see |map-precedence|. |
7 | 214 |
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215 *:map-<nowait>* *:map-nowait* |
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216 When defining a buffer-local mapping for "," there may be a global mapping |
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217 that starts with ",". Then you need to type another character for Vim to know |
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218 whether to use the "," mapping or the longer one. To avoid this add the |
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219 <nowait> argument. Then the mapping will be used when it matches, Vim does |
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220 not wait for more characters to be typed. However, if the characters were |
11473 | 221 already typed they are used. |
21991 | 222 Note that this works when the <nowait> mapping fully matches and is found |
223 before any partial matches. This works when: | |
224 - There is only one matching buffer-local mapping, since these are always | |
225 found before global mappings. | |
22171 | 226 - There is another buffer-local mapping that partly matches, but it is |
21991 | 227 defined earlier (last defined mapping is found first). |
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228 |
7 | 229 *:map-<silent>* *:map-silent* |
230 To define a mapping which will not be echoed on the command line, add | |
231 "<silent>" as the first argument. Example: > | |
232 :map <silent> ,h /Header<CR> | |
233 The search string will not be echoed when using this mapping. Messages from | |
234 the executed command are still given though. To shut them up too, add a | |
235 ":silent" in the executed command: > | |
236 :map <silent> ,h :exe ":silent normal /Header\r"<CR> | |
237 Prompts will still be given, e.g., for inputdialog(). | |
238 Using "<silent>" for an abbreviation is possible, but will cause redrawing of | |
239 the command line to fail. | |
240 | |
859 | 241 *:map-<special>* *:map-special* |
242 Define a mapping with <> notation for special keys, even though the "<" flag | |
243 may appear in 'cpoptions'. This is useful if the side effect of setting | |
244 'cpoptions' is not desired. Example: > | |
245 :map <special> <F12> /Header<CR> | |
246 < | |
7 | 247 *:map-<script>* *:map-script* |
248 If the first argument to one of these commands is "<script>" and it is used to | |
249 define a new mapping or abbreviation, the mapping will only remap characters | |
250 in the {rhs} using mappings that were defined local to a script, starting with | |
251 "<SID>". This can be used to avoid that mappings from outside a script | |
252 interfere (e.g., when CTRL-V is remapped in mswin.vim), but do use other | |
253 mappings defined in the script. | |
254 Note: ":map <script>" and ":noremap <script>" do the same thing. The | |
255 "<script>" overrules the command name. Using ":noremap <script>" is | |
256 preferred, because it's clearer that remapping is (mostly) disabled. | |
257 | |
26591 | 258 *:map-<unique>* *:map-unique* *E226* *E227* |
7 | 259 If the first argument to one of these commands is "<unique>" and it is used to |
260 define a new mapping or abbreviation, the command will fail if the mapping or | |
261 abbreviation already exists. Example: > | |
262 :map <unique> ,w /[#&!]<CR> | |
263 When defining a local mapping, there will also be a check if a global map | |
264 already exists which is equal. | |
265 Example of what will fail: > | |
266 :map ,w /[#&!]<CR> | |
267 :map <buffer> <unique> ,w /[.,;]<CR> | |
626 | 268 If you want to map a key and then have it do what it was originally mapped to, |
269 have a look at |maparg()|. | |
7 | 270 |
721 | 271 *:map-<expr>* *:map-expression* |
272 If the first argument to one of these commands is "<expr>" and it is used to | |
273 define a new mapping or abbreviation, the argument is an expression. The | |
274 expression is evaluated to obtain the {rhs} that is used. Example: > | |
24569 | 275 :inoremap <expr> . <SID>InsertDot() |
276 The result of the s:InsertDot() function will be inserted. It could check the | |
721 | 277 text before the cursor and start omni completion when some condition is met. |
24569 | 278 Using a script-local function is preferred, to avoid polluting the global |
279 namespace. Use <SID> in the RHS so that the script that the mapping was | |
280 defined in can be found. | |
721 | 281 |
1969 | 282 For abbreviations |v:char| is set to the character that was typed to trigger |
283 the abbreviation. You can use this to decide how to expand the {lhs}. You | |
3082 | 284 should not either insert or change the v:char. |
1969 | 285 |
22565 | 286 In case you want the mapping to not do anything, you can have the expression |
287 evaluate to an empty string. If something changed that requires Vim to | |
288 go through the main loop (e.g. to update the display), return "\<Ignore>". | |
289 This is similar to "nothing" but makes Vim return from the loop that waits for | |
290 input. Example: > | |
291 func s:OpenPopup() | |
292 call popup_create(... arguments ...) | |
293 return "\<Ignore>" | |
294 endfunc | |
24569 | 295 nnoremap <expr> <F3> <SID>OpenPopup() |
22565 | 296 |
27162 | 297 Keep in mind that the expression may be evaluated when looking for |
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298 typeahead, before the previous command has been executed. For example: > |
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299 func StoreColumn() |
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300 let g:column = col('.') |
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301 return 'x' |
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302 endfunc |
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303 nnoremap <expr> x StoreColumn() |
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304 nmap ! f!x |
24278 | 305 You will notice that g:column has the value from before executing "f!", |
306 because "x" is evaluated before "f!" is executed. | |
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307 This can be solved by inserting <Ignore> before the character that is |
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308 expression-mapped: > |
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309 nmap ! f!<Ignore>x |
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310 |
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311 When defining a mapping in a |Vim9| script, the expression will be evaluated |
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312 in the context of that script. This means that script-local items can be |
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313 accessed in the expression. |
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314 |
721 | 315 Be very careful about side effects! The expression is evaluated while |
856 | 316 obtaining characters, you may very well make the command dysfunctional. |
317 For this reason the following is blocked: | |
1132 | 318 - Changing the buffer text |textlock|. |
319 - Editing another buffer. | |
320 - The |:normal| command. | |
321 - Moving the cursor is allowed, but it is restored afterwards. | |
856 | 322 If you want the mapping to do any of these let the returned characters do |
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323 that, or use a |<Cmd>| mapping instead. |
721 | 324 |
3153 | 325 You can use getchar(), it consumes typeahead if there is any. E.g., if you |
326 have these mappings: > | |
327 inoremap <expr> <C-L> nr2char(getchar()) | |
328 inoremap <expr> <C-L>x "foo" | |
329 If you now type CTRL-L nothing happens yet, Vim needs the next character to | |
330 decide what mapping to use. If you type 'x' the second mapping is used and | |
3224 | 331 "foo" is inserted. If you type any other key the first mapping is used, |
332 getchar() gets the typed key and returns it. | |
3153 | 333 |
721 | 334 Here is an example that inserts a list number that increases: > |
335 let counter = 0 | |
336 inoremap <expr> <C-L> ListItem() | |
337 inoremap <expr> <C-R> ListReset() | |
338 | |
339 func ListItem() | |
340 let g:counter += 1 | |
27903 | 341 return g:counter .. '. ' |
721 | 342 endfunc |
343 | |
344 func ListReset() | |
345 let g:counter = 0 | |
346 return '' | |
347 endfunc | |
348 | |
727 | 349 CTRL-L inserts the next number, CTRL-R resets the count. CTRL-R returns an |
721 | 350 empty string, so that nothing is inserted. |
7 | 351 |
22171 | 352 Note that using 0x80 as a single byte before other text does not work, it will |
353 be seen as a special key. | |
837 | 354 |
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355 *<Cmd>* *:map-cmd* |
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356 The special text <Cmd> begins a "command mapping", it executes the command |
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357 directly without changing modes. Where you might use ":...<CR>" in the |
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358 {rhs} of a mapping, you can instead use "<Cmd>...<CR>". |
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359 Example: > |
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360 noremap x <Cmd>echo mode(1)<CR> |
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361 < |
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362 This is more flexible than `:<C-U>` in Visual and Operator-pending mode, or |
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363 `<C-O>:` in Insert mode, because the commands are executed directly in the |
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364 current mode, instead of always going to Normal mode. Visual mode is |
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365 preserved, so tricks with |gv| are not needed. Commands can be invoked |
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366 directly in Command-line mode (which would otherwise require timer hacks). |
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367 Example of using <Cmd> halfway Insert mode: > |
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368 nnoremap <F3> aText <Cmd>echo mode(1)<CR> Added<Esc> |
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369 |
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370 Unlike <expr> mappings, there are no special restrictions on the <Cmd> |
22958 | 371 command: it is executed as if an (unrestricted) |autocommand| was invoked. |
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372 |
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373 *<ScriptCmd>* |
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374 <ScriptCmd> is like <Cmd> but sets the context to the script the mapping was |
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375 defined in, for the duration of the command execution. This is especially |
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376 useful for |Vim9| script. It also works to access an import, which is useful |
29403 | 377 in a plugin using a, possibly autoloaded, script: > |
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378 vim9script |
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379 import autoload 'implementation.vim' as impl |
27162 | 380 nnoremap <F4> <ScriptCmd>impl.DoTheWork()<CR> |
29403 | 381 < |
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382 No matter where <F4> is typed, the "impl" import will be found in the script |
29403 | 383 context of where the mapping was defined. When it's an autoload import, as in |
384 the example, the "implementation.vim" script will only be loaded once <F4> is | |
385 typed, not when the mapping is defined. | |
386 | |
387 Without <ScriptCmd> using "s:impl" would result in "E121: Undefined variable". | |
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388 |
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389 Note: |
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390 - Because <Cmd> and <ScriptCmd> avoid mode-changes it does not trigger |
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391 |CmdlineEnter| and |CmdlineLeave| events, because no user interaction is |
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392 expected. |
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393 - For the same reason, |keycodes| like <C-R><C-W> are interpreted as plain, |
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394 unmapped keys. |
22958 | 395 - The command is not echo'ed, no need for <silent>. |
26219 | 396 - The {rhs} is not subject to abbreviations nor to other mappings, even if the |
397 mapping is recursive. | |
22958 | 398 - In Visual mode you can use `line('v')` and `col('v')` to get one end of the |
399 Visual area, the cursor is at the other end. | |
29236 | 400 |
26779 | 401 *E1255* *E1136* |
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402 <Cmd> and <ScriptCmd> commands must terminate, that is, they must be followed |
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403 by <CR> in the {rhs} of the mapping definition. |Command-line| mode is never |
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404 entered. |
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405 |
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406 *E1137* |
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407 <Cmd> and <ScriptCmd> commands can have only normal characters and cannot |
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408 contain special characters like function keys. |
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409 |
7 | 410 |
592 | 411 1.3 MAPPING AND MODES *:map-modes* |
1619 | 412 *mapmode-nvo* *mapmode-n* *mapmode-v* *mapmode-o* |
7 | 413 |
28010 | 414 There are seven sets of mappings |
7 | 415 - For Normal mode: When typing commands. |
416 - For Visual mode: When typing commands while the Visual area is highlighted. | |
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417 - For Select mode: like Visual mode but typing text replaces the selection. |
7 | 418 - For Operator-pending mode: When an operator is pending (after "d", "y", "c", |
1619 | 419 etc.). See below: |omap-info|. |
236 | 420 - For Insert mode. These are also used in Replace mode. |
7 | 421 - For Command-line mode: When entering a ":" or "/" command. |
28010 | 422 - For Terminal mode: When typing in a |:terminal| buffer. |
7 | 423 |
424 Special case: While typing a count for a command in Normal mode, mapping zero | |
425 is disabled. This makes it possible to map zero without making it impossible | |
426 to type a count with a zero. | |
427 | |
428 *map-overview* *map-modes* | |
5908 | 429 Overview of which map command works in which mode. More details below. |
430 COMMANDS MODES ~ | |
431 :map :noremap :unmap Normal, Visual, Select, Operator-pending | |
432 :nmap :nnoremap :nunmap Normal | |
433 :vmap :vnoremap :vunmap Visual and Select | |
434 :smap :snoremap :sunmap Select | |
435 :xmap :xnoremap :xunmap Visual | |
436 :omap :onoremap :ounmap Operator-pending | |
437 :map! :noremap! :unmap! Insert and Command-line | |
438 :imap :inoremap :iunmap Insert | |
439 :lmap :lnoremap :lunmap Insert, Command-line, Lang-Arg | |
440 :cmap :cnoremap :cunmap Command-line | |
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441 :tmap :tnoremap :tunmap Terminal-Job |
7 | 442 |
24636 | 443 Same information in a table: |
444 *map-table* | |
445 Mode | Norm | Ins | Cmd | Vis | Sel | Opr | Term | Lang | ~ | |
446 Command +------+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+------+------+ ~ | |
447 [nore]map | yes | - | - | yes | yes | yes | - | - | | |
448 n[nore]map | yes | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | | |
449 [nore]map! | - | yes | yes | - | - | - | - | - | | |
450 i[nore]map | - | yes | - | - | - | - | - | - | | |
451 c[nore]map | - | - | yes | - | - | - | - | - | | |
452 v[nore]map | - | - | - | yes | yes | - | - | - | | |
453 x[nore]map | - | - | - | yes | - | - | - | - | | |
454 s[nore]map | - | - | - | - | yes | - | - | - | | |
455 o[nore]map | - | - | - | - | - | yes | - | - | | |
456 t[nore]map | - | - | - | - | - | - | yes | - | | |
457 l[nore]map | - | yes | yes | - | - | - | - | yes | | |
458 | |
5908 | 459 |
460 COMMANDS MODES ~ | |
856 | 461 Normal Visual+Select Operator-pending ~ |
462 :map :noremap :unmap :mapclear yes yes yes | |
463 :nmap :nnoremap :nunmap :nmapclear yes - - | |
464 :vmap :vnoremap :vunmap :vmapclear - yes - | |
465 :omap :onoremap :ounmap :omapclear - - yes | |
788 | 466 |
826 | 467 :nunmap can also be used outside of a monastery. |
856 | 468 *mapmode-x* *mapmode-s* |
788 | 469 Some commands work both in Visual and Select mode, some in only one. Note |
470 that quite often "Visual" is mentioned where both Visual and Select mode | |
471 apply. |Select-mode-mapping| | |
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472 NOTE: Mapping a printable character in Select mode may confuse the user. It's |
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473 better to explicitly use :xmap and :smap for printable characters. Or use |
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474 :sunmap after defining the mapping. |
788 | 475 |
5908 | 476 COMMANDS MODES ~ |
856 | 477 Visual Select ~ |
478 :vmap :vnoremap :vunmap :vmapclear yes yes | |
479 :xmap :xnoremap :xunmap :xmapclear yes - | |
480 :smap :snoremap :sunmap :smapclear - yes | |
7 | 481 |
663 | 482 *mapmode-ic* *mapmode-i* *mapmode-c* *mapmode-l* |
788 | 483 Some commands work both in Insert mode and Command-line mode, some not: |
484 | |
5908 | 485 COMMANDS MODES ~ |
7 | 486 Insert Command-line Lang-Arg ~ |
487 :map! :noremap! :unmap! :mapclear! yes yes - | |
488 :imap :inoremap :iunmap :imapclear yes - - | |
489 :cmap :cnoremap :cunmap :cmapclear - yes - | |
490 :lmap :lnoremap :lunmap :lmapclear yes* yes* yes* | |
491 | |
18594 | 492 * If 'iminsert' is 1, see |language-mapping| below. |
493 | |
7 | 494 The original Vi did not have separate mappings for |
495 Normal/Visual/Operator-pending mode and for Insert/Command-line mode. | |
496 Therefore the ":map" and ":map!" commands enter and display mappings for | |
497 several modes. In Vim you can use the ":nmap", ":vmap", ":omap", ":cmap" and | |
498 ":imap" commands to enter mappings for each mode separately. | |
499 | |
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500 *mapmode-t* |
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501 The terminal mappings are used in a terminal window, when typing keys for the |
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502 job running in the terminal. See |terminal-typing|. |
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503 |
1619 | 504 *omap-info* |
505 Operator-pending mappings can be used to define a movement command that can be | |
14864 | 506 used with any operator. Simple example: > |
507 :omap { w | |
508 makes "y{" work like "yw" and "d{" like "dw". | |
1619 | 509 |
510 To ignore the starting cursor position and select different text, you can have | |
511 the omap start Visual mode to select the text to be operated upon. Example | |
512 that operates on a function name in the current line: > | |
513 onoremap <silent> F :<C-U>normal! 0f(hviw<CR> | |
514 The CTRL-U (<C-U>) is used to remove the range that Vim may insert. The | |
515 Normal mode commands find the first '(' character and select the first word | |
516 before it. That usually is the function name. | |
517 | |
7 | 518 To enter a mapping for Normal and Visual mode, but not Operator-pending mode, |
14864 | 519 first define it for all three modes, then unmap it for |
520 Operator-pending mode: > | |
7 | 521 :map xx something-difficult |
522 :ounmap xx | |
14864 | 523 |
7 | 524 Likewise for a mapping for Visual and Operator-pending mode or Normal and |
525 Operator-pending mode. | |
526 | |
527 *language-mapping* | |
528 ":lmap" defines a mapping that applies to: | |
529 - Insert mode | |
530 - Command-line mode | |
531 - when entering a search pattern | |
532 - the argument of the commands that accept a text character, such as "r" and | |
533 "f" | |
534 - for the input() line | |
535 Generally: Whenever a character is to be typed that is part of the text in the | |
536 buffer, not a Vim command character. "Lang-Arg" isn't really another mode, | |
537 it's just used here for this situation. | |
538 The simplest way to load a set of related language mappings is by using the | |
539 'keymap' option. See |45.5|. | |
540 In Insert mode and in Command-line mode the mappings can be disabled with | |
5340 | 541 the CTRL-^ command |i_CTRL-^| |c_CTRL-^|. These commands change the value of |
5294 | 542 the 'iminsert' option. When starting to enter a normal command line (not a |
543 search pattern) the mappings are disabled until a CTRL-^ is typed. The state | |
544 last used is remembered for Insert mode and Search patterns separately. The | |
545 state for Insert mode is also used when typing a character as an argument to | |
546 command like "f" or "t". | |
7 | 547 Language mappings will never be applied to already mapped characters. They |
548 are only used for typed characters. This assumes that the language mapping | |
549 was already done when typing the mapping. | |
550 | |
551 | |
592 | 552 1.4 LISTING MAPPINGS *map-listing* |
553 | |
7 | 554 When listing mappings the characters in the first two columns are: |
555 | |
556 CHAR MODE ~ | |
1132 | 557 <Space> Normal, Visual, Select and Operator-pending |
7 | 558 n Normal |
1132 | 559 v Visual and Select |
560 s Select | |
561 x Visual | |
7 | 562 o Operator-pending |
563 ! Insert and Command-line | |
564 i Insert | |
565 l ":lmap" mappings for Insert, Command-line and Lang-Arg | |
566 c Command-line | |
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567 t Terminal-Job |
7 | 568 |
569 Just before the {rhs} a special character can appear: | |
570 * indicates that it is not remappable | |
571 & indicates that only script-local mappings are remappable | |
572 @ indicates a buffer-local mapping | |
573 | |
574 Everything from the first non-blank after {lhs} up to the end of the line | |
575 (or '|') is considered to be part of {rhs}. This allows the {rhs} to end | |
576 with a space. | |
577 | |
578 Note: When using mappings for Visual mode, you can use the "'<" mark, which | |
579 is the start of the last selected Visual area in the current buffer |'<|. | |
580 | |
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581 The |:filter| command can be used to select what mappings to list. The |
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582 pattern is matched against the {lhs} and {rhs} in the raw form. |
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583 |
481 | 584 *:map-verbose* |
585 When 'verbose' is non-zero, listing a key map will also display where it was | |
586 last defined. Example: > | |
587 | |
588 :verbose map <C-W>* | |
589 n <C-W>* * <C-W><C-S>* | |
856 | 590 Last set from /home/abcd/.vimrc |
481 | 591 |
483 | 592 See |:verbose-cmd| for more information. |
481 | 593 |
592 | 594 |
595 1.5 MAPPING SPECIAL KEYS *:map-special-keys* | |
596 | |
597 There are three ways to map a special key: | |
598 1. The Vi-compatible method: Map the key code. Often this is a sequence that | |
599 starts with <Esc>. To enter a mapping like this you type ":map " and then | |
600 you have to type CTRL-V before hitting the function key. Note that when | |
601 the key code for the key is in the termcap (the t_ options), it will | |
602 automatically be translated into the internal code and become the second | |
603 way of mapping (unless the 'k' flag is included in 'cpoptions'). | |
604 2. The second method is to use the internal code for the function key. To | |
605 enter such a mapping type CTRL-K and then hit the function key, or use | |
606 the form "#1", "#2", .. "#9", "#0", "<Up>", "<S-Down>", "<S-F7>", etc. | |
607 (see table of keys |key-notation|, all keys from <Up> can be used). The | |
608 first ten function keys can be defined in two ways: Just the number, like | |
609 "#2", and with "<F>", like "<F2>". Both stand for function key 2. "#0" | |
610 refers to function key 10, defined with option 't_f10', which may be | |
611 function key zero on some keyboards. The <> form cannot be used when | |
612 'cpoptions' includes the '<' flag. | |
613 3. Use the termcap entry, with the form <t_xx>, where "xx" is the name of the | |
614 termcap entry. Any string entry can be used. For example: > | |
615 :map <t_F3> G | |
616 < Maps function key 13 to "G". This does not work if 'cpoptions' includes | |
617 the '<' flag. | |
618 | |
619 The advantage of the second and third method is that the mapping will work on | |
620 different terminals without modification (the function key will be | |
621 translated into the same internal code or the actual key code, no matter what | |
622 terminal you are using. The termcap must be correct for this to work, and you | |
623 must use the same mappings). | |
624 | |
625 DETAIL: Vim first checks if a sequence from the keyboard is mapped. If it | |
626 isn't the terminal key codes are tried (see |terminal-options|). If a | |
627 terminal code is found it is replaced with the internal code. Then the check | |
628 for a mapping is done again (so you can map an internal code to something | |
629 else). What is written into the script file depends on what is recognized. | |
630 If the terminal key code was recognized as a mapping the key code itself is | |
631 written to the script file. If it was recognized as a terminal code the | |
632 internal code is written to the script file. | |
633 | |
634 | |
635 1.6 SPECIAL CHARACTERS *:map-special-chars* | |
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636 *map_backslash* *map-backslash* |
7 | 637 Note that only CTRL-V is mentioned here as a special character for mappings |
638 and abbreviations. When 'cpoptions' does not contain 'B', a backslash can | |
639 also be used like CTRL-V. The <> notation can be fully used then |<>|. But | |
640 you cannot use "<C-V>" like CTRL-V to escape the special meaning of what | |
641 follows. | |
642 | |
643 To map a backslash, or use a backslash literally in the {rhs}, the special | |
644 sequence "<Bslash>" can be used. This avoids the need to double backslashes | |
645 when using nested mappings. | |
646 | |
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647 *map_CTRL-C* *map-CTRL-C* |
532 | 648 Using CTRL-C in the {lhs} is possible, but it will only work when Vim is |
649 waiting for a key, not when Vim is busy with something. When Vim is busy | |
650 CTRL-C interrupts/breaks the command. | |
651 When using the GUI version on MS-Windows CTRL-C can be mapped to allow a Copy | |
652 command to the clipboard. Use CTRL-Break to interrupt Vim. | |
7 | 653 |
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654 *map_space_in_lhs* *map-space_in_lhs* |
7 | 655 To include a space in {lhs} precede it with a CTRL-V (type two CTRL-Vs for |
656 each space). | |
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657 *map_space_in_rhs* *map-space_in_rhs* |
7 | 658 If you want a {rhs} that starts with a space, use "<Space>". To be fully Vi |
659 compatible (but unreadable) don't use the |<>| notation, precede {rhs} with a | |
660 single CTRL-V (you have to type CTRL-V two times). | |
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661 *map_empty_rhs* *map-empty-rhs* |
7 | 662 You can create an empty {rhs} by typing nothing after a single CTRL-V (you |
663 have to type CTRL-V two times). Unfortunately, you cannot do this in a vimrc | |
664 file. | |
665 *<Nop>* | |
2826 | 666 An easier way to get a mapping that doesn't produce anything, is to use |
667 "<Nop>" for the {rhs}. This only works when the |<>| notation is enabled. | |
668 For example, to make sure that function key 8 does nothing at all: > | |
7 | 669 :map <F8> <Nop> |
670 :map! <F8> <Nop> | |
671 < | |
592 | 672 *map-multibyte* |
673 It is possible to map multibyte characters, but only the whole character. You | |
674 cannot map the first byte only. This was done to prevent problems in this | |
675 scenario: > | |
676 :set encoding=latin1 | |
677 :imap <M-C> foo | |
678 :set encoding=utf-8 | |
679 The mapping for <M-C> is defined with the latin1 encoding, resulting in a 0xc3 | |
13857 | 680 byte. If you type the character á (0xe1 <M-a>) in UTF-8 encoding this is the |
2826 | 681 two bytes 0xc3 0xa1. You don't want the 0xc3 byte to be mapped then or |
13857 | 682 otherwise it would be impossible to type the á character. |
592 | 683 |
7 | 684 *<Leader>* *mapleader* |
29450 | 685 To define a mapping which uses the "g:mapleader" variable, the special string |
686 "<Leader>" can be used. It is replaced with the string value of | |
687 "g:mapleader". If "g:mapleader" is not set or empty, a backslash is used | |
688 instead. Example: > | |
689 map <Leader>A oanother line<Esc> | |
7 | 690 Works like: > |
29450 | 691 map \A oanother line<Esc> |
692 But after (legacy script): > | |
693 let mapleader = "," | |
694 Or (Vim9 script): > | |
695 g:mapleader = "," | |
7 | 696 It works like: > |
29450 | 697 map ,A oanother line<Esc> |
7 | 698 |
29450 | 699 Note that the value of "g:mapleader" is used at the moment the mapping is |
700 defined. Changing "g:mapleader" after that has no effect for already defined | |
7 | 701 mappings. |
702 | |
703 *<LocalLeader>* *maplocalleader* | |
1619 | 704 <LocalLeader> is just like <Leader>, except that it uses "maplocalleader" |
705 instead of "mapleader". <LocalLeader> is to be used for mappings which are | |
706 local to a buffer. Example: > | |
3312 | 707 :map <buffer> <LocalLeader>A oanother line<Esc> |
7 | 708 < |
709 In a global plugin <Leader> should be used and in a filetype plugin | |
710 <LocalLeader>. "mapleader" and "maplocalleader" can be equal. Although, if | |
711 you make them different, there is a smaller chance of mappings from global | |
712 plugins to clash with mappings for filetype plugins. For example, you could | |
713 keep "mapleader" at the default backslash, and set "maplocalleader" to an | |
714 underscore. | |
715 | |
716 *map-<SID>* | |
717 In a script the special key name "<SID>" can be used to define a mapping | |
718 that's local to the script. See |<SID>| for details. | |
719 | |
720 *<Plug>* | |
721 The special key name "<Plug>" can be used for an internal mapping, which is | |
722 not to be matched with any key sequence. This is useful in plugins | |
723 |using-<Plug>|. | |
724 | |
28379 | 725 *<MouseMove>* |
726 The special key name "<MouseMove>" can be used to handle mouse movement. It | |
727 needs to be enabled with 'mousemoveevent'. Currently only works in the GUI. | |
28933 | 728 The |getmousepos()| function can be used to obtain the mouse position. |
28379 | 729 |
7 | 730 *<Char>* *<Char->* |
731 To map a character by its decimal, octal or hexadecimal number the <Char> | |
732 construct can be used: | |
733 <Char-123> character 123 | |
734 <Char-033> character 27 | |
735 <Char-0x7f> character 127 | |
3082 | 736 <S-Char-114> character 114 ('r') shifted ('R') |
21991 | 737 This is useful to specify a (multibyte) character in a 'keymap' file. |
7 | 738 Upper and lowercase differences are ignored. |
739 | |
740 *map-comments* | |
741 It is not possible to put a comment after these commands, because the '"' | |
11160 | 742 character is considered to be part of the {lhs} or {rhs}. However, one can |
743 use |", since this starts a new, empty command with a comment. | |
7 | 744 |
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745 *map_bar* *map-bar* |
7 | 746 Since the '|' character is used to separate a map command from the next |
747 command, you will have to do something special to include a '|' in {rhs}. | |
748 There are three methods: | |
749 use works when example ~ | |
750 <Bar> '<' is not in 'cpoptions' :map _l :!ls <Bar> more^M | |
751 \| 'b' is not in 'cpoptions' :map _l :!ls \| more^M | |
752 ^V| always, in Vim and Vi :map _l :!ls ^V| more^M | |
753 | |
754 (here ^V stands for CTRL-V; to get one CTRL-V you have to type it twice; you | |
755 cannot use the <> notation "<C-V>" here). | |
756 | |
757 All three work when you use the default setting for 'cpoptions'. | |
758 | |
759 When 'b' is present in 'cpoptions', "\|" will be recognized as a mapping | |
760 ending in a '\' and then another command. This is Vi compatible, but | |
761 illogical when compared to other commands. | |
762 | |
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763 *map_return* *map-return* |
7 | 764 When you have a mapping that contains an Ex command, you need to put a line |
765 terminator after it to have it executed. The use of <CR> is recommended for | |
766 this (see |<>|). Example: > | |
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767 :map _ls :!ls -l %:S<CR>:echo "the end"<CR> |
7 | 768 |
769 To avoid mapping of the characters you type in insert or Command-line mode, | |
770 type a CTRL-V first. The mapping in Insert mode is disabled if the 'paste' | |
771 option is on. | |
5239 | 772 *map-error* |
7 | 773 Note that when an error is encountered (that causes an error message or beep) |
774 the rest of the mapping is not executed. This is Vi-compatible. | |
775 | |
776 Note that the second character (argument) of the commands @zZtTfF[]rm'`"v | |
777 and CTRL-X is not mapped. This was done to be able to use all the named | |
778 registers and marks, even when the command with the same name has been | |
779 mapped. | |
780 | |
592 | 781 |
782 1.7 WHAT KEYS TO MAP *map-which-keys* | |
783 | |
7 | 784 If you are going to map something, you will need to choose which key(s) to use |
785 for the {lhs}. You will have to avoid keys that are used for Vim commands, | |
786 otherwise you would not be able to use those commands anymore. Here are a few | |
787 suggestions: | |
788 - Function keys <F2>, <F3>, etc.. Also the shifted function keys <S-F1>, | |
789 <S-F2>, etc. Note that <F1> is already used for the help command. | |
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790 - Meta-keys (with the ALT key pressed). Depending on your keyboard accented |
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791 characters may be used as well. |:map-alt-keys| |
7 | 792 - Use the '_' or ',' character and then any other character. The "_" and "," |
793 commands do exist in Vim (see |_| and |,|), but you probably never use them. | |
794 - Use a key that is a synonym for another command. For example: CTRL-P and | |
795 CTRL-N. Use an extra character to allow more mappings. | |
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796 - The key defined by <Leader> and one or more other keys. This is especially |
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797 useful in scripts. |mapleader| |
7 | 798 |
799 See the file "index" for keys that are not used and thus can be mapped without | |
800 losing any builtin function. You can also use ":help {key}^D" to find out if | |
801 a key is used for some command. ({key} is the specific key you want to find | |
802 out about, ^D is CTRL-D). | |
803 | |
592 | 804 |
805 1.8 EXAMPLES *map-examples* | |
806 | |
7 | 807 A few examples (given as you type them, for "<CR>" you type four characters; |
808 the '<' flag must not be present in 'cpoptions' for this to work). > | |
809 | |
810 :map <F3> o#include | |
811 :map <M-g> /foo<CR>cwbar<Esc> | |
812 :map _x d/END/e<CR> | |
813 :map! qq quadrillion questions | |
1132 | 814 |
815 | |
816 Multiplying a count | |
817 | |
818 When you type a count before triggering a mapping, it's like the count was | |
819 typed before the {lhs}. For example, with this mapping: > | |
820 :map <F4> 3w | |
821 Typing 2<F4> will result in "23w". Thus not moving 2 * 3 words but 23 words. | |
822 If you want to multiply counts use the expression register: > | |
823 :map <F4> @='3w'<CR> | |
824 The part between quotes is the expression being executed. |@=| | |
825 | |
592 | 826 |
827 1.9 USING MAPPINGS *map-typing* | |
828 | |
7 | 829 Vim will compare what you type with the start of a mapped sequence. If there |
830 is an incomplete match, it will get more characters until there either is a | |
831 complete match or until there is no match at all. Example: If you map! "qq", | |
832 the first 'q' will not appear on the screen until you type another | |
833 character. This is because Vim cannot know if the next character will be a | |
834 'q' or not. If the 'timeout' option is on (which is the default) Vim will | |
835 only wait for one second (or as long as specified with the 'timeoutlen' | |
836 option). After that it assumes that the 'q' is to be interpreted as such. If | |
837 you type slowly, or your system is slow, reset the 'timeout' option. Then you | |
838 might want to set the 'ttimeout' option. | |
839 | |
12499 | 840 *map-precedence* |
4869 | 841 Buffer-local mappings (defined using |:map-<buffer>|) take precedence over |
842 global mappings. When a buffer-local mapping is the same as a global mapping, | |
843 Vim will use the buffer-local mapping. In addition, Vim will use a complete | |
5055 | 844 mapping immediately if it was defined with <nowait>, even if a longer mapping |
845 has the same prefix. For example, given the following two mappings: > | |
846 :map <buffer> <nowait> \a :echo "Local \a"<CR> | |
847 :map \abc :echo "Global \abc"<CR> | |
848 When typing \a the buffer-local mapping will be used immediately. Vim will | |
849 not wait for more characters to see if the user might be typing \abc. | |
4869 | 850 |
7 | 851 *map-keys-fails* |
588 | 852 There are situations where key codes might not be recognized: |
7 | 853 - Vim can only read part of the key code. Mostly this is only the first |
854 character. This happens on some Unix versions in an xterm. | |
855 - The key code is after character(s) that are mapped. E.g., "<F1><F1>" or | |
856 "g<F1>". | |
588 | 857 |
7 | 858 The result is that the key code is not recognized in this situation, and the |
588 | 859 mapping fails. There are two actions needed to avoid this problem: |
860 | |
7 | 861 - Remove the 'K' flag from 'cpoptions'. This will make Vim wait for the rest |
862 of the characters of the function key. | |
863 - When using <F1> to <F4> the actual key code generated may correspond to | |
864 <xF1> to <xF4>. There are mappings from <xF1> to <F1>, <xF2> to <F2>, etc., | |
865 but these are not recognized after another half a mapping. Make sure the | |
866 key codes for <F1> to <F4> are correct: > | |
867 :set <F1>=<type CTRL-V><type F1> | |
868 < Type the <F1> as four characters. The part after the "=" must be done with | |
869 the actual keys, not the literal text. | |
870 Another solution is to use the actual key code in the mapping for the second | |
871 special key: > | |
872 :map <F1><Esc>OP :echo "yes"<CR> | |
873 Don't type a real <Esc>, Vim will recognize the key code and replace it with | |
874 <F1> anyway. | |
875 | |
588 | 876 Another problem may be that when keeping ALT or Meta pressed the terminal |
877 prepends ESC instead of setting the 8th bit. See |:map-alt-keys|. | |
878 | |
7 | 879 *recursive_mapping* |
880 If you include the {lhs} in the {rhs} you have a recursive mapping. When | |
881 {lhs} is typed, it will be replaced with {rhs}. When the {lhs} which is | |
882 included in {rhs} is encountered it will be replaced with {rhs}, and so on. | |
883 This makes it possible to repeat a command an infinite number of times. The | |
884 only problem is that the only way to stop this is by causing an error. The | |
885 macros to solve a maze uses this, look there for an example. There is one | |
886 exception: If the {rhs} starts with {lhs}, the first character is not mapped | |
887 again (this is Vi compatible). | |
888 For example: > | |
889 :map ab abcd | |
890 will execute the "a" command and insert "bcd" in the text. The "ab" in the | |
891 {rhs} will not be mapped again. | |
892 | |
893 If you want to exchange the meaning of two keys you should use the :noremap | |
894 command. For example: > | |
895 :noremap k j | |
896 :noremap j k | |
897 This will exchange the cursor up and down commands. | |
898 | |
899 With the normal :map command, when the 'remap' option is on, mapping takes | |
900 place until the text is found not to be a part of a {lhs}. For example, if | |
901 you use: > | |
902 :map x y | |
903 :map y x | |
904 Vim will replace x with y, and then y with x, etc. When this has happened | |
905 'maxmapdepth' times (default 1000), Vim will give the error message | |
906 "recursive mapping". | |
907 | |
908 *:map-undo* | |
909 If you include an undo command inside a mapped sequence, this will bring the | |
910 text back in the state before executing the macro. This is compatible with | |
911 the original Vi, as long as there is only one undo command in the mapped | |
912 sequence (having two undo commands in a mapped sequence did not make sense | |
913 in the original Vi, you would get back the text before the first undo). | |
914 | |
915 | |
592 | 916 1.10 MAPPING ALT-KEYS *:map-alt-keys* |
588 | 917 |
918 In the GUI Vim handles the Alt key itself, thus mapping keys with ALT should | |
919 always work. But in a terminal Vim gets a sequence of bytes and has to figure | |
920 out whether ALT was pressed or not. | |
921 | |
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922 If the terminal supports the modifyOtherKeys mode and it has been enabled, |
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923 then Vim can recognize more key combinations, see |modifyOtherKeys| below. |
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924 |
588 | 925 By default Vim assumes that pressing the ALT key sets the 8th bit of a typed |
605 | 926 character. Most decent terminals can work that way, such as xterm, aterm and |
588 | 927 rxvt. If your <A-k> mappings don't work it might be that the terminal is |
928 prefixing the character with an ESC character. But you can just as well type | |
929 ESC before a character, thus Vim doesn't know what happened (except for | |
930 checking the delay between characters, which is not reliable). | |
931 | |
932 As of this writing, some mainstream terminals like gnome-terminal and konsole | |
933 use the ESC prefix. There doesn't appear a way to have them use the 8th bit | |
605 | 934 instead. Xterm should work well by default. Aterm and rxvt should work well |
935 when started with the "--meta8" argument. You can also tweak resources like | |
936 "metaSendsEscape", "eightBitInput" and "eightBitOutput". | |
588 | 937 |
938 On the Linux console, this behavior can be toggled with the "setmetamode" | |
939 command. Bear in mind that not using an ESC prefix could get you in trouble | |
940 with other programs. You should make sure that bash has the "convert-meta" | |
941 option set to "on" in order for your Meta keybindings to still work on it | |
942 (it's the default readline behavior, unless changed by specific system | |
943 configuration). For that, you can add the line: > | |
944 | |
945 set convert-meta on | |
946 | |
947 to your ~/.inputrc file. If you're creating the file, you might want to use: > | |
948 | |
949 $include /etc/inputrc | |
950 | |
951 as the first line, if that file exists on your system, to keep global options. | |
952 This may cause a problem for entering special characters, such as the umlaut. | |
953 Then you should use CTRL-V before that character. | |
954 | |
955 Bear in mind that convert-meta has been reported to have troubles when used in | |
956 UTF-8 locales. On terminals like xterm, the "metaSendsEscape" resource can be | |
957 toggled on the fly through the "Main Options" menu, by pressing Ctrl-LeftClick | |
958 on the terminal; that's a good last resource in case you want to send ESC when | |
11473 | 959 using other applications but not when inside Vim. |
588 | 960 |
592 | 961 |
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962 1.11 MAPPING IN modifyOtherKeys mode *modifyOtherKeys* |
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963 |
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964 Xterm and a few other terminals can be put in a mode where keys with modifiers |
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965 are sent with a special escape code. Vim recognizes these codes and can then |
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966 make a difference between CTRL-H and Backspace, even when Backspace sends the |
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967 character 8. And many more special keys. |
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968 |
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969 For xterm modifyOtherKeys is enabled in the builtin termcap entry. If this is |
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970 not used you can enable modifyOtherKeys with these lines in your vimrc: > |
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971 let &t_TI = "\<Esc>[>4;2m" |
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972 let &t_TE = "\<Esc>[>4;m" |
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973 |
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974 In case the modifyOtherKeys mode causes problems you can disable it: > |
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975 let &t_TI = "" |
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976 let &t_TE = "" |
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977 It does not take effect immediately. To have this work without restarting Vim |
18594 | 978 execute a shell command, e.g.: `!ls` Or put the lines in your |vimrc|. |
979 | |
980 When modifyOtherKeys is enabled you can map <C-[> and <C-S-{>: > | |
981 imap <C-[> [[[ | |
22526
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982 imap <C-{> {{{ |
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983 Without modifyOtherKeys <C-[> and <C-{> are indistinguishable from Esc. |
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984 Note that <C-{> is used and not <C-S-[> or <C-S-{>. This works on most |
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985 keyboards. Similarly, <C-}> is used instead of <C-S-]> or <C-S-}> and |
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986 <C-|> instead of <C-S-\> or <C-S-|>. Note that '|' has a special meaning in a |
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987 mapping, see |map-bar|. |
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988 |
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989 WARNING: if you map <C-[> you may very well break any key codes that start |
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990 with Esc. Make sure it comes AFTER other mappings. |
18400
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991 |
21499 | 992 A known side effect is that in Insert mode the raw escape sequence is inserted |
993 after the CTRL-V key. This can be used to check whether modifyOtherKeys is | |
994 enabled: In Insert mode type CTRL-SHIFT-V CTRL-V, if you get one byte then | |
995 modifyOtherKeys is off, if you get <1b>27;5;118~ then it is on. | |
18400
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996 |
18594 | 997 When the 'esckeys' option is off, then modifyOtherKeys will be disabled in |
998 Insert mode to avoid every key with a modifier causing Insert mode to end. | |
999 | |
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1000 |
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1001 1.12 MAPPING AN OPERATOR *:map-operator* |
592 | 1002 |
1003 An operator is used before a {motion} command. To define your own operator | |
23164 | 1004 you must create a mapping that first sets the 'operatorfunc' option and then |
592 | 1005 invoke the |g@| operator. After the user types the {motion} command the |
1006 specified function will be called. | |
1007 | |
626 | 1008 *g@* *E774* *E775* |
592 | 1009 g@{motion} Call the function set by the 'operatorfunc' option. |
1010 The '[ mark is positioned at the start of the text | |
1011 moved over by {motion}, the '] mark on the last | |
1012 character of the text. | |
1013 The function is called with one String argument: | |
1014 "line" {motion} was |linewise| | |
1015 "char" {motion} was |characterwise| | |
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1016 "block" {motion} was |blockwise-visual| |
26708 | 1017 The type can be forced, see |forced-motion|. |
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1018 {not available when compiled without the |+eval| |
592 | 1019 feature} |
1020 | |
1021 Here is an example that counts the number of spaces with <F4>: > | |
1022 | |
22171 | 1023 nnoremap <expr> <F4> CountSpaces() |
1024 xnoremap <expr> <F4> CountSpaces() | |
1025 " doubling <F4> works on a line | |
1026 nnoremap <expr> <F4><F4> CountSpaces() .. '_' | |
592 | 1027 |
26708 | 1028 function CountSpaces(context = {}, type = '') abort |
22171 | 1029 if a:type == '' |
26708 | 1030 let context = #{ |
1031 \ dot_command: v:false, | |
1032 \ extend_block: '', | |
1033 \ virtualedit: [&l:virtualedit, &g:virtualedit], | |
1034 \ } | |
1035 let &operatorfunc = function('CountSpaces', [context]) | |
26591 | 1036 set virtualedit=block |
22171 | 1037 return 'g@' |
26591 | 1038 endif |
22171 | 1039 |
26708 | 1040 let save = #{ |
1041 \ clipboard: &clipboard, | |
1042 \ selection: &selection, | |
1043 \ virtualedit: [&l:virtualedit, &g:virtualedit], | |
1044 \ register: getreginfo('"'), | |
1045 \ visual_marks: [getpos("'<"), getpos("'>")], | |
1046 \ } | |
592 | 1047 |
22171 | 1048 try |
26591 | 1049 set clipboard= selection=inclusive virtualedit= |
26708 | 1050 let commands = #{ |
1051 \ line: "'[V']", | |
1052 \ char: "`[v`]", | |
1053 \ block: "`[\<C-V>`]", | |
1054 \ }[a:type] | |
1055 let [_, _, col, off] = getpos("']") | |
1056 if off != 0 | |
1057 let vcol = getline("'[")->strpart(0, col + off)->strdisplaywidth() | |
1058 if vcol >= [line("'["), '$']->virtcol() - 1 | |
1059 let a:context.extend_block = '$' | |
1060 else | |
1061 let a:context.extend_block = vcol .. '|' | |
1062 endif | |
1063 endif | |
1064 if a:context.extend_block != '' | |
1065 let commands ..= 'oO' .. a:context.extend_block | |
26591 | 1066 endif |
1067 let commands ..= 'y' | |
1068 execute 'silent noautocmd keepjumps normal! ' .. commands | |
1069 echomsg getreg('"')->count(' ') | |
22171 | 1070 finally |
26708 | 1071 call setreg('"', save.register) |
1072 call setpos("'<", save.visual_marks[0]) | |
1073 call setpos("'>", save.visual_marks[1]) | |
1074 let &clipboard = save.clipboard | |
1075 let &selection = save.selection | |
1076 let [&l:virtualedit, &g:virtualedit] = get(a:context.dot_command ? save : a:context, 'virtualedit') | |
1077 let a:context.dot_command = v:true | |
22171 | 1078 endtry |
1079 endfunction | |
592 | 1080 |
22171 | 1081 An <expr> mapping is used to be able to fetch any prefixed count and register. |
1082 This also avoids using a command line, which would trigger CmdlineEnter and | |
1083 CmdlineLeave autocommands. | |
592 | 1084 |
1085 Note that the 'selection' option is temporarily set to "inclusive" to be able | |
1086 to yank exactly the right text by using Visual mode from the '[ to the '] | |
1087 mark. | |
1088 | |
22171 | 1089 Also note that the 'clipboard' option is temporarily emptied to avoid |
1090 clobbering the `"*` or `"+` registers, if its value contains the item `unnamed` | |
1091 or `unnamedplus`. | |
592 | 1092 |
26050 | 1093 The `mode()` function will return the state as it will be after applying the |
1094 operator. | |
1095 | |
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1096 Here is an example for using a lambda function to create a normal-mode |
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1097 operator to add quotes around text in the current line: > |
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1098 |
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1099 nnoremap <F4> <Cmd>let &opfunc='{t -> |
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1100 \ getline(".") |
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1101 \ ->split("\\zs") |
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1102 \ ->insert("\"", col("'']")) |
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1103 \ ->insert("\"", col("''[") - 1) |
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1104 \ ->join("") |
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1105 \ ->setline(".")}'<CR>g@ |
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1106 |
7 | 1107 ============================================================================== |
1108 2. Abbreviations *abbreviations* *Abbreviations* | |
1109 | |
1110 Abbreviations are used in Insert mode, Replace mode and Command-line mode. | |
1111 If you enter a word that is an abbreviation, it is replaced with the word it | |
1112 stands for. This can be used to save typing for often used long words. And | |
1113 you can use it to automatically correct obvious spelling errors. | |
1114 Examples: | |
1115 | |
1190 | 1116 :iab ms Microsoft |
7 | 1117 :iab tihs this |
1118 | |
1119 There are three types of abbreviations: | |
1120 | |
1121 full-id The "full-id" type consists entirely of keyword characters (letters | |
1122 and characters from 'iskeyword' option). This is the most common | |
1123 abbreviation. | |
1124 | |
1125 Examples: "foo", "g3", "-1" | |
1126 | |
1127 end-id The "end-id" type ends in a keyword character, but all the other | |
1128 characters are not keyword characters. | |
1129 | |
1130 Examples: "#i", "..f", "$/7" | |
1131 | |
1132 non-id The "non-id" type ends in a non-keyword character, the other | |
1236 | 1133 characters may be of any type, excluding space and tab. {this type |
7 | 1134 is not supported by Vi} |
1135 | |
1136 Examples: "def#", "4/7$" | |
1137 | |
1138 Examples of strings that cannot be abbreviations: "a.b", "#def", "a b", "_$r" | |
1139 | |
1140 An abbreviation is only recognized when you type a non-keyword character. | |
1141 This can also be the <Esc> that ends insert mode or the <CR> that ends a | |
1142 command. The non-keyword character which ends the abbreviation is inserted | |
1143 after the expanded abbreviation. An exception to this is the character <C-]>, | |
1144 which is used to expand an abbreviation without inserting any extra | |
1145 characters. | |
1146 | |
1147 Example: > | |
1148 :ab hh hello | |
1149 < "hh<Space>" is expanded to "hello<Space>" | |
1150 "hh<C-]>" is expanded to "hello" | |
1151 | |
1152 The characters before the cursor must match the abbreviation. Each type has | |
1153 an additional rule: | |
1154 | |
1155 full-id In front of the match is a non-keyword character, or this is where | |
1156 the line or insertion starts. Exception: When the abbreviation is | |
1157 only one character, it is not recognized if there is a non-keyword | |
13937 | 1158 character in front of it, other than a space or a tab. However, for |
1159 the command line "'<,'>" (or any other marks) is ignored, as if the | |
1160 command line starts after it. | |
7 | 1161 |
1236 | 1162 end-id In front of the match is a keyword character, or a space or a tab, |
7 | 1163 or this is where the line or insertion starts. |
1164 | |
1236 | 1165 non-id In front of the match is a space, tab or the start of the line or |
7 | 1166 the insertion. |
1167 | |
1168 Examples: ({CURSOR} is where you type a non-keyword character) > | |
1169 :ab foo four old otters | |
1170 < " foo{CURSOR}" is expanded to " four old otters" | |
1171 " foobar{CURSOR}" is not expanded | |
1172 "barfoo{CURSOR}" is not expanded | |
1173 > | |
1174 :ab #i #include | |
1175 < "#i{CURSOR}" is expanded to "#include" | |
1176 ">#i{CURSOR}" is not expanded | |
1177 > | |
42 | 1178 :ab ;; <endofline> |
7 | 1179 < "test;;" is not expanded |
1180 "test ;;" is expanded to "test <endofline>" | |
1181 | |
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1182 To avoid the abbreviation in Insert mode: Type CTRL-V before the character |
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1183 that would trigger the abbreviation. E.g. CTRL-V <Space>. Or type part of |
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1184 the abbreviation, exit insert mode with <Esc>, re-enter insert mode with "a" |
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1185 and type the rest. |
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1186 |
7 | 1187 To avoid the abbreviation in Command-line mode: Type CTRL-V twice somewhere in |
1188 the abbreviation to avoid it to be replaced. A CTRL-V in front of a normal | |
1189 character is mostly ignored otherwise. | |
1190 | |
1191 It is possible to move the cursor after an abbreviation: > | |
1192 :iab if if ()<Left> | |
1193 This does not work if 'cpoptions' includes the '<' flag. |<>| | |
1194 | |
1195 You can even do more complicated things. For example, to consume the space | |
1196 typed after an abbreviation: > | |
1197 func Eatchar(pat) | |
685 | 1198 let c = nr2char(getchar(0)) |
7 | 1199 return (c =~ a:pat) ? '' : c |
1200 endfunc | |
1201 iabbr <silent> if if ()<Left><C-R>=Eatchar('\s')<CR> | |
1202 | |
1203 There are no default abbreviations. | |
1204 | |
1205 Abbreviations are never recursive. You can use ":ab f f-o-o" without any | |
1206 problem. But abbreviations can be mapped. {some versions of Vi support | |
1207 recursive abbreviations, for no apparent reason} | |
1208 | |
1209 Abbreviations are disabled if the 'paste' option is on. | |
1210 | |
1211 *:abbreviate-local* *:abbreviate-<buffer>* | |
1212 Just like mappings, abbreviations can be local to a buffer. This is mostly | |
1213 used in a |filetype-plugin| file. Example for a C plugin file: > | |
1214 :abb <buffer> FF for (i = 0; i < ; ++i) | |
1215 < | |
1216 *:ab* *:abbreviate* | |
1217 :ab[breviate] list all abbreviations. The character in the first | |
1218 column indicates the mode where the abbreviation is | |
1219 used: 'i' for insert mode, 'c' for Command-line | |
1220 mode, '!' for both. These are the same as for | |
1221 mappings, see |map-listing|. | |
1222 | |
502 | 1223 *:abbreviate-verbose* |
1224 When 'verbose' is non-zero, listing an abbreviation will also display where it | |
1225 was last defined. Example: > | |
1226 | |
1227 :verbose abbreviate | |
856 | 1228 ! teh the |
502 | 1229 Last set from /home/abcd/vim/abbr.vim |
1230 | |
1231 See |:verbose-cmd| for more information. | |
1232 | |
7 | 1233 :ab[breviate] {lhs} list the abbreviations that start with {lhs} |
1234 You may need to insert a CTRL-V (type it twice) to | |
1235 avoid that a typed {lhs} is expanded, since | |
1236 command-line abbreviations apply here. | |
1237 | |
2908 | 1238 :ab[breviate] [<expr>] [<buffer>] {lhs} {rhs} |
7 | 1239 add abbreviation for {lhs} to {rhs}. If {lhs} already |
1240 existed it is replaced with the new {rhs}. {rhs} may | |
1241 contain spaces. | |
838 | 1242 See |:map-<expr>| for the optional <expr> argument. |
2908 | 1243 See |:map-<buffer>| for the optional <buffer> argument. |
7 | 1244 |
1245 *:una* *:unabbreviate* | |
18928 | 1246 :una[bbreviate] [<buffer>] {lhs} |
1247 Remove abbreviation for {lhs} from the list. If none | |
7 | 1248 is found, remove abbreviations in which {lhs} matches |
1249 with the {rhs}. This is done so that you can even | |
1250 remove abbreviations after expansion. To avoid | |
1251 expansion insert a CTRL-V (type it twice). | |
1252 | |
1253 *:norea* *:noreabbrev* | |
2908 | 1254 :norea[bbrev] [<expr>] [<buffer>] [lhs] [rhs] |
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1255 Same as ":ab", but no remapping for this {rhs}. |
7 | 1256 |
16944 | 1257 *:ca* *:cab* *:cabbrev* |
2908 | 1258 :ca[bbrev] [<expr>] [<buffer>] [lhs] [rhs] |
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1259 Same as ":ab", but for Command-line mode only. |
7 | 1260 |
1261 *:cuna* *:cunabbrev* | |
18928 | 1262 :cuna[bbrev] [<buffer>] {lhs} |
1263 Same as ":una", but for Command-line mode only. | |
7 | 1264 |
1265 *:cnorea* *:cnoreabbrev* | |
2908 | 1266 :cnorea[bbrev] [<expr>] [<buffer>] [lhs] [rhs] |
7 | 1267 same as ":ab", but for Command-line mode only and no |
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1268 remapping for this {rhs} |
7 | 1269 |
1270 *:ia* *:iabbrev* | |
2908 | 1271 :ia[bbrev] [<expr>] [<buffer>] [lhs] [rhs] |
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1272 Same as ":ab", but for Insert mode only. |
7 | 1273 |
1274 *:iuna* *:iunabbrev* | |
18928 | 1275 :iuna[bbrev] [<buffer>] {lhs} |
1276 Same as ":una", but for insert mode only. | |
7 | 1277 |
1278 *:inorea* *:inoreabbrev* | |
2908 | 1279 :inorea[bbrev] [<expr>] [<buffer>] [lhs] [rhs] |
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1280 Same as ":ab", but for Insert mode only and no |
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1281 remapping for this {rhs}. |
7 | 1282 |
1283 *:abc* *:abclear* | |
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1284 :abc[lear] [<buffer>] Remove all abbreviations. |
7 | 1285 |
1286 *:iabc* *:iabclear* | |
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1287 :iabc[lear] [<buffer>] Remove all abbreviations for Insert mode. |
7 | 1288 |
1289 *:cabc* *:cabclear* | |
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1290 :cabc[lear] [<buffer>] Remove all abbreviations for Command-line mode. |
7 | 1291 |
1292 *using_CTRL-V* | |
1293 It is possible to use special characters in the rhs of an abbreviation. | |
1294 CTRL-V has to be used to avoid the special meaning of most non printable | |
1295 characters. How many CTRL-Vs need to be typed depends on how you enter the | |
1296 abbreviation. This also applies to mappings. Let's use an example here. | |
1297 | |
1298 Suppose you want to abbreviate "esc" to enter an <Esc> character. When you | |
1299 type the ":ab" command in Vim, you have to enter this: (here ^V is a CTRL-V | |
1300 and ^[ is <Esc>) | |
1301 | |
1302 You type: ab esc ^V^V^V^V^V^[ | |
1303 | |
1304 All keyboard input is subjected to ^V quote interpretation, so | |
1305 the first, third, and fifth ^V characters simply allow the second, | |
1306 and fourth ^Vs, and the ^[, to be entered into the command-line. | |
1307 | |
1308 You see: ab esc ^V^V^[ | |
1309 | |
1310 The command-line contains two actual ^Vs before the ^[. This is | |
1311 how it should appear in your .exrc file, if you choose to go that | |
1312 route. The first ^V is there to quote the second ^V; the :ab | |
1313 command uses ^V as its own quote character, so you can include quoted | |
42 | 1314 whitespace or the | character in the abbreviation. The :ab command |
7 | 1315 doesn't do anything special with the ^[ character, so it doesn't need |
1316 to be quoted. (Although quoting isn't harmful; that's why typing 7 | |
1317 [but not 8!] ^Vs works.) | |
1318 | |
1319 Stored as: esc ^V^[ | |
1320 | |
1321 After parsing, the abbreviation's short form ("esc") and long form | |
1322 (the two characters "^V^[") are stored in the abbreviation table. | |
1323 If you give the :ab command with no arguments, this is how the | |
1324 abbreviation will be displayed. | |
1325 | |
1326 Later, when the abbreviation is expanded because the user typed in | |
1327 the word "esc", the long form is subjected to the same type of | |
1328 ^V interpretation as keyboard input. So the ^V protects the ^[ | |
42 | 1329 character from being interpreted as the "exit Insert mode" character. |
7 | 1330 Instead, the ^[ is inserted into the text. |
1331 | |
1332 Expands to: ^[ | |
1333 | |
1334 [example given by Steve Kirkendall] | |
1335 | |
1336 ============================================================================== | |
1337 3. Local mappings and functions *script-local* | |
1338 | |
1339 When using several Vim script files, there is the danger that mappings and | |
1340 functions used in one script use the same name as in other scripts. To avoid | |
1341 this, they can be made local to the script. | |
1342 | |
1343 *<SID>* *<SNR>* *E81* | |
1344 The string "<SID>" can be used in a mapping or menu. This requires that the | |
1345 '<' flag is not present in 'cpoptions'. | |
1346 When executing the map command, Vim will replace "<SID>" with the special | |
1347 key code <SNR>, followed by a number that's unique for the script, and an | |
1348 underscore. Example: > | |
1349 :map <SID>Add | |
1350 could define a mapping "<SNR>23_Add". | |
1351 | |
1352 When defining a function in a script, "s:" can be prepended to the name to | |
28517 | 1353 make it local to the script (in |Vim9| script functions without a prefix are |
1354 local to the script). But when a mapping is executed from outside of | |
7 | 1355 the script, it doesn't know in which script the function was defined. To |
1356 avoid this problem, use "<SID>" instead of "s:". The same translation is done | |
1357 as for mappings. This makes it possible to define a call to the function in | |
42 | 1358 a mapping. |
7 | 1359 |
1360 When a local function is executed, it runs in the context of the script it was | |
1361 defined in. This means that new functions and mappings it defines can also | |
1362 use "s:" or "<SID>" and it will use the same unique number as when the | |
1363 function itself was defined. Also, the "s:var" local script variables can be | |
1364 used. | |
1365 | |
1366 When executing an autocommand or a user command, it will run in the context of | |
1367 the script it was defined in. This makes it possible that the command calls a | |
1368 local function or uses a local mapping. | |
1369 | |
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1370 In case the value is used in a context where <SID> cannot be correctly |
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1371 expanded, use the expand() function: > |
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1372 let &includexpr = expand('<SID>') .. 'My_includeexpr()' |
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1373 |
7 | 1374 Otherwise, using "<SID>" outside of a script context is an error. |
1375 | |
1376 If you need to get the script number to use in a complicated script, you can | |
625 | 1377 use this function: > |
22958 | 1378 func s:ScriptNumber() |
1379 return matchstr(expand('<SID>'), '<SNR>\zs\d\+\ze_') | |
1380 endfunc | |
7 | 1381 |
1382 The "<SNR>" will be shown when listing functions and mappings. This is useful | |
1383 to find out what they are defined to. | |
1384 | |
1385 The |:scriptnames| command can be used to see which scripts have been sourced | |
1386 and what their <SNR> number is. | |
1387 | |
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1388 This is all {not available when compiled without the |+eval| feature}. |
7 | 1389 |
1390 ============================================================================== | |
1391 4. User-defined commands *user-commands* | |
1392 | |
236 | 1393 It is possible to define your own Ex commands. A user-defined command can act |
7 | 1394 just like a built-in command (it can have a range or arguments, arguments can |
1395 be completed as filenames or buffer names, etc), except that when the command | |
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1396 is executed, it is transformed into a normal Ex command and then executed. |
7 | 1397 |
1398 For starters: See section |40.2| in the user manual. | |
1399 | |
2642 | 1400 *E183* *E841* *user-cmd-ambiguous* |
7 | 1401 All user defined commands must start with an uppercase letter, to avoid |
2642 | 1402 confusion with builtin commands. Exceptions are these builtin commands: |
1403 :Next | |
1404 :X | |
1405 They cannot be used for a user defined command. ":Print" is also an existing | |
1406 command, but it is deprecated and can be overruled. | |
1407 | |
1408 The other characters of the user command can be uppercase letters, lowercase | |
1409 letters or digits. When using digits, note that other commands that take a | |
1410 numeric argument may become ambiguous. For example, the command ":Cc2" could | |
1411 be the user command ":Cc2" without an argument, or the command ":Cc" with | |
1412 argument "2". It is advised to put a space between the command name and the | |
1413 argument to avoid these problems. | |
7 | 1414 |
236 | 1415 When using a user-defined command, the command can be abbreviated. However, if |
1416 an abbreviation is not unique, an error will be issued. Furthermore, a | |
7 | 1417 built-in command will always take precedence. |
1418 | |
1419 Example: > | |
1420 :command Rename ... | |
1421 :command Renumber ... | |
1422 :Rena " Means "Rename" | |
1423 :Renu " Means "Renumber" | |
1424 :Ren " Error - ambiguous | |
1425 :command Paste ... | |
1426 :P " The built-in :Print | |
1427 | |
1428 It is recommended that full names for user-defined commands are used in | |
1429 scripts. | |
1430 | |
1431 :com[mand] *:com* *:command* | |
236 | 1432 List all user-defined commands. When listing commands, |
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1433 the characters in the first columns are: |
7 | 1434 ! Command has the -bang attribute |
1435 " Command has the -register attribute | |
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1436 | Command has the -bar attribute |
7 | 1437 b Command is local to current buffer |
1438 (see below for details on attributes) | |
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1439 The list can be filtered on command name with |
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1440 |:filter|, e.g., to list all commands with "Pyth" in |
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1441 the name: > |
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1442 filter Pyth command |
7 | 1443 |
1444 :com[mand] {cmd} List the user-defined commands that start with {cmd} | |
1445 | |
482 | 1446 *:command-verbose* |
1447 When 'verbose' is non-zero, listing a command will also display where it was | |
27321 | 1448 last defined and any completion argument. Example: > |
482 | 1449 |
1450 :verbose command TOhtml | |
856 | 1451 < Name Args Range Complete Definition ~ |
1452 TOhtml 0 % :call Convert2HTML(<line1>, <line2>) ~ | |
1453 Last set from /usr/share/vim/vim-7.0/plugin/tohtml.vim ~ | |
1454 | |
483 | 1455 See |:verbose-cmd| for more information. |
482 | 1456 |
7 | 1457 *E174* *E182* |
23164 | 1458 :com[mand][!] [{attr}...] {cmd} {repl} |
7 | 1459 Define a user command. The name of the command is |
23164 | 1460 {cmd} and its replacement text is {repl}. The |
1461 command's attributes (see below) are {attr}. If the | |
1462 command already exists, an error is reported, unless a | |
1463 ! is specified, in which case the command is | |
1464 redefined. There is one exception: When sourcing a | |
1465 script again, a command that was previously defined in | |
1466 that script will be silently replaced. | |
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1467 |
7 | 1468 |
1469 :delc[ommand] {cmd} *:delc* *:delcommand* *E184* | |
1470 Delete the user-defined command {cmd}. | |
1471 | |
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1472 :delc[ommand] -buffer {cmd} *E1237* |
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1473 Delete the user-defined command {cmd} that was defined |
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1474 for the current buffer. |
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1475 |
7 | 1476 :comc[lear] *:comc* *:comclear* |
1477 Delete all user-defined commands. | |
1478 | |
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1479 |
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1480 Command attributes ~ |
28010 | 1481 *command-attributes* |
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1482 User-defined commands are treated by Vim just like any other Ex commands. They |
236 | 1483 can have arguments, or have a range specified. Arguments are subject to |
1484 completion as filenames, buffers, etc. Exactly how this works depends upon the | |
7 | 1485 command's attributes, which are specified when the command is defined. |
1486 | |
1487 There are a number of attributes, split into four categories: argument | |
236 | 1488 handling, completion behavior, range handling, and special cases. The |
7 | 1489 attributes are described below, by category. |
1490 | |
1491 | |
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1492 Argument handling ~ |
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1493 *E175* *E176* *:command-nargs* |
7 | 1494 By default, a user defined command will take no arguments (and an error is |
236 | 1495 reported if any are supplied). However, it is possible to specify that the |
1496 command can take arguments, using the -nargs attribute. Valid cases are: | |
7 | 1497 |
1498 -nargs=0 No arguments are allowed (the default) | |
15194 | 1499 -nargs=1 Exactly one argument is required, it includes spaces |
2826 | 1500 -nargs=* Any number of arguments are allowed (0, 1, or many), |
1501 separated by white space | |
7 | 1502 -nargs=? 0 or 1 arguments are allowed |
1503 -nargs=+ Arguments must be supplied, but any number are allowed | |
1504 | |
1236 | 1505 Arguments are considered to be separated by (unescaped) spaces or tabs in this |
2826 | 1506 context, except when there is one argument, then the white space is part of |
1507 the argument. | |
7 | 1508 |
1509 Note that arguments are used as text, not as expressions. Specifically, | |
1510 "s:var" will use the script-local variable in the script where the command was | |
1511 defined, not where it is invoked! Example: | |
1512 script1.vim: > | |
1513 :let s:error = "None" | |
1514 :command -nargs=1 Error echoerr <args> | |
1515 < script2.vim: > | |
1516 :source script1.vim | |
1517 :let s:error = "Wrong!" | |
1518 :Error s:error | |
1619 | 1519 Executing script2.vim will result in "None" being echoed. Not what you |
7 | 1520 intended! Calling a function may be an alternative. |
1521 | |
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1522 |
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1523 Completion behavior ~ |
15194 | 1524 *:command-completion* *E179* *E180* *E181* |
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1525 *:command-complete* |
7 | 1526 By default, the arguments of user defined commands do not undergo completion. |
1527 However, by specifying one or the other of the following attributes, argument | |
1528 completion can be enabled: | |
1529 | |
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1530 -complete=arglist file names in argument list |
7 | 1531 -complete=augroup autocmd groups |
1532 -complete=buffer buffer names | |
3503 | 1533 -complete=behave :behave suboptions |
2970 | 1534 -complete=color color schemes |
7 | 1535 -complete=command Ex command (and arguments) |
2970 | 1536 -complete=compiler compilers |
2596 | 1537 -complete=cscope |:cscope| suboptions |
7 | 1538 -complete=dir directory names |
1539 -complete=environment environment variable names | |
1540 -complete=event autocommand events | |
1541 -complete=expression Vim expression | |
1542 -complete=file file and directory names | |
2970 | 1543 -complete=file_in_path file and directory names in |'path'| |
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1544 -complete=filetype filetype names |'filetype'| |
7 | 1545 -complete=function function name |
1546 -complete=help help subjects | |
1547 -complete=highlight highlight groups | |
3503 | 1548 -complete=history :history suboptions |
2970 | 1549 -complete=locale locale names (as output of locale -a) |
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1550 -complete=mapclear buffer argument |
7 | 1551 -complete=mapping mapping name |
1552 -complete=menu menus | |
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1553 -complete=messages |:messages| suboptions |
7 | 1554 -complete=option options |
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1555 -complete=packadd optional package |pack-add| names |
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1556 -complete=shellcmd Shell command |
2596 | 1557 -complete=sign |:sign| suboptions |
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1558 -complete=syntax syntax file names |'syntax'| |
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1559 -complete=syntime |:syntime| suboptions |
7 | 1560 -complete=tag tags |
1561 -complete=tag_listfiles tags, file names are shown when CTRL-D is hit | |
3744 | 1562 -complete=user user names |
7 | 1563 -complete=var user variables |
1564 -complete=custom,{func} custom completion, defined via {func} | |
406 | 1565 -complete=customlist,{func} custom completion, defined via {func} |
7 | 1566 |
27321 | 1567 If you specify completion while there is nothing to complete (-nargs=0, the |
1568 default) then you get error *E1208* . | |
6259 | 1569 Note: That some completion methods might expand environment variables. |
1570 | |
557 | 1571 |
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1572 Custom completion ~ |
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1573 *:command-completion-custom* |
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1574 *:command-completion-customlist* *E467* *E468* |
7 | 1575 It is possible to define customized completion schemes via the "custom,{func}" |
406 | 1576 or the "customlist,{func}" completion argument. The {func} part should be a |
1619 | 1577 function with the following signature: > |
7 | 1578 |
1579 :function {func}(ArgLead, CmdLine, CursorPos) | |
1580 | |
406 | 1581 The function need not use all these arguments. The function should provide the |
1582 completion candidates as the return value. | |
1583 | |
1584 For the "custom" argument, the function should return the completion | |
1585 candidates one per line in a newline separated string. | |
1586 | |
1587 For the "customlist" argument, the function should return the completion | |
557 | 1588 candidates as a Vim List. Non-string items in the list are ignored. |
406 | 1589 |
1590 The function arguments are: | |
7 | 1591 ArgLead the leading portion of the argument currently being |
1592 completed on | |
1593 CmdLine the entire command line | |
557 | 1594 CursorPos the cursor position in it (byte index) |
406 | 1595 The function may use these for determining context. For the "custom" |
1596 argument, it is not necessary to filter candidates against the (implicit | |
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1597 pattern in) ArgLead. Vim will filter the candidates with its regexp engine |
28010 | 1598 after function return, and this is probably more efficient in most cases. If |
1599 'wildoptions' contains "fuzzy", then the candidates will be filtered using | |
1600 |fuzzy-matching|. For the "customlist" argument, Vim will not | |
1601 filter the returned completion candidates and the user supplied function | |
1602 should filter the candidates. | |
7 | 1603 |
1604 The following example lists user names to a Finger command > | |
1605 :com -complete=custom,ListUsers -nargs=1 Finger !finger <args> | |
1606 :fun ListUsers(A,L,P) | |
1607 : return system("cut -d: -f1 /etc/passwd") | |
1608 :endfun | |
1609 | |
406 | 1610 The following example completes filenames from the directories specified in |
1611 the 'path' option: > | |
1612 :com -nargs=1 -bang -complete=customlist,EditFileComplete | |
1613 \ EditFile edit<bang> <args> | |
1614 :fun EditFileComplete(A,L,P) | |
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1615 : return split(globpath(&path, a:A), "\n") |
406 | 1616 :endfun |
1617 < | |
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1618 This example does not work for file names with spaces! |
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1619 |
557 | 1620 |
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1621 Range handling ~ |
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1622 *E177* *E178* *:command-range* *:command-count* |
236 | 1623 By default, user-defined commands do not accept a line number range. However, |
7 | 1624 it is possible to specify that the command does take a range (the -range |
1625 attribute), or that it takes an arbitrary count value, either in the line | |
1626 number position (-range=N, like the |:split| command) or as a "count" | |
1132 | 1627 argument (-count=N, like the |:Next| command). The count will then be |
1628 available in the argument with |<count>|. | |
1629 | |
1630 Possible attributes are: | |
7 | 1631 |
1632 -range Range allowed, default is current line | |
1633 -range=% Range allowed, default is whole file (1,$) | |
1634 -range=N A count (default N) which is specified in the line | |
2788 | 1635 number position (like |:split|); allows for zero line |
1636 number. | |
7 | 1637 -count=N A count (default N) which is specified either in the line |
171 | 1638 number position, or as an initial argument (like |:Next|). |
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1639 -count acts like -count=0 |
7 | 1640 |
1641 Note that -range=N and -count=N are mutually exclusive - only one should be | |
1642 specified. | |
1643 | |
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1644 *:command-addr* |
6424 | 1645 It is possible that the special characters in the range like ., $ or % which |
1646 by default correspond to the current line, last line and the whole buffer, | |
1647 relate to arguments, (loaded) buffers, windows or tab pages. | |
1648 | |
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1649 Possible values are (second column is the short name used in listing): |
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1650 -addr=lines Range of lines (this is the default for -range) |
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1651 -addr=arguments arg Range for arguments |
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1652 -addr=buffers buf Range for buffers (also not loaded buffers) |
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1653 -addr=loaded_buffers load Range for loaded buffers |
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1654 -addr=windows win Range for windows |
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1655 -addr=tabs tab Range for tab pages |
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1656 -addr=quickfix qf Range for quickfix entries |
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1657 -addr=other ? other kind of range; can use ".", "$" and "%" |
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1658 as with "lines" (this is the default for |
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1659 -count) |
6424 | 1660 |
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1661 |
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1662 Special cases ~ |
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1663 *:command-bang* *:command-bar* |
1132 | 1664 *:command-register* *:command-buffer* |
26148 | 1665 *:command-keepscript* |
7 | 1666 There are some special cases as well: |
1667 | |
1668 -bang The command can take a ! modifier (like :q or :w) | |
1669 -bar The command can be followed by a "|" and another command. | |
1670 A "|" inside the command argument is not allowed then. | |
1671 Also checks for a " to start a comment. | |
1672 -register The first argument to the command can be an optional | |
1673 register name (like :del, :put, :yank). | |
1674 -buffer The command will only be available in the current buffer. | |
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1675 -keepscript Do not use the location of where the user command was |
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1676 defined for verbose messages, use the location of where |
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1677 the user command was invoked. |
7 | 1678 |
1679 In the cases of the -count and -register attributes, if the optional argument | |
1680 is supplied, it is removed from the argument list and is available to the | |
1681 replacement text separately. | |
5340 | 1682 Note that these arguments can be abbreviated, but that is a deprecated |
1683 feature. Use the full name for new scripts. | |
7 | 1684 |
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1685 |
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1686 Replacement text ~ |
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1687 *:command-repl* |
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1688 The {repl} argument is normally one long string, possibly with "|" separated |
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1689 commands. A special case is when the argument is "{", then the following |
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1690 lines, up to a line starting with "}" are used and |Vim9| syntax applies. |
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1691 Example: > |
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1692 :command MyCommand { |
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1693 echo 'hello' |
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1694 g:calledMyCommand = true |
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1695 } |
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1696 < *E1231* |
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1697 There must be white space before the "{". No nesting is supported, inline |
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1698 functions cannot be used. Commands where a "|" may appear in the argument, |
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1699 such as commands with an expression argument, cannot be followed by a "|" and |
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1700 another command. |
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1701 |
23164 | 1702 The replacement text {repl} for a user defined command is scanned for special |
1703 escape sequences, using <...> notation. Escape sequences are replaced with | |
1704 values from the entered command line, and all other text is copied unchanged. | |
1705 The resulting string is executed as an Ex command. To avoid the replacement | |
1706 use <lt> in place of the initial <. Thus to include "<bang>" literally use | |
788 | 1707 "<lt>bang>". |
7 | 1708 |
1709 The valid escape sequences are | |
1710 | |
1711 *<line1>* | |
1712 <line1> The starting line of the command range. | |
1713 *<line2>* | |
1714 <line2> The final line of the command range. | |
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1715 *<range>* |
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1716 <range> The number of items in the command range: 0, 1 or 2 |
7 | 1717 *<count>* |
1718 <count> Any count supplied (as described for the '-range' | |
1719 and '-count' attributes). | |
1720 *<bang>* | |
1721 <bang> (See the '-bang' attribute) Expands to a ! if the | |
1722 command was executed with a ! modifier, otherwise | |
1723 expands to nothing. | |
22328 | 1724 *<mods>* *<q-mods>* *:command-modifiers* |
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1725 <mods> The command modifiers, if specified. Otherwise, expands to |
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1726 nothing. Supported modifiers are |:aboveleft|, |:belowright|, |
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1727 |:botright|, |:browse|, |:confirm|, |:hide|, |:horizontal|, |
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1728 |:keepalt|, |:keepjumps|, |:keepmarks|, |:keeppatterns|, |
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1729 |:leftabove|, |:lockmarks|, |:noautocmd|, |:noswapfile| |
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1730 |:rightbelow|, |:sandbox|, |:silent|, |:tab|, |:topleft|, |
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1731 |:unsilent|, |:verbose|, and |:vertical|. |
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1732 Note that |:filter| is not supported. |
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1733 Examples: > |
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1734 command! -nargs=+ -complete=file MyEdit |
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1735 \ for f in expand(<q-args>, 0, 1) | |
27903 | 1736 \ exe '<mods> split ' .. f | |
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1737 \ endfor |
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1738 |
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1739 function! SpecialEdit(files, mods) |
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1740 for f in expand(a:files, 0, 1) |
27903 | 1741 exe a:mods .. ' split ' .. f |
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1742 endfor |
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1743 endfunction |
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1744 command! -nargs=+ -complete=file Sedit |
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1745 \ call SpecialEdit(<q-args>, <q-mods>) |
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1746 < |
7 | 1747 *<reg>* *<register>* |
1748 <reg> (See the '-register' attribute) The optional register, | |
236 | 1749 if specified. Otherwise, expands to nothing. <register> |
7 | 1750 is a synonym for this. |
1751 *<args>* | |
1752 <args> The command arguments, exactly as supplied (but as | |
1753 noted above, any count or register can consume some | |
1754 of the arguments, which are then not part of <args>). | |
1755 <lt> A single '<' (Less-Than) character. This is needed if you | |
1756 want to get a literal copy of one of these escape sequences | |
1757 into the expansion - for example, to get <bang>, use | |
1758 <lt>bang>. | |
1759 | |
1760 *<q-args>* | |
1761 If the first two characters of an escape sequence are "q-" (for example, | |
1762 <q-args>) then the value is quoted in such a way as to make it a valid value | |
1763 for use in an expression. This uses the argument as one single value. | |
300 | 1764 When there is no argument <q-args> is an empty string. |
1088 | 1765 *<f-args>* |
7 | 1766 To allow commands to pass their arguments on to a user-defined function, there |
236 | 1767 is a special form <f-args> ("function args"). This splits the command |
1236 | 1768 arguments at spaces and tabs, quotes each argument individually, and the |
7 | 1769 <f-args> sequence is replaced by the comma-separated list of quoted arguments. |
856 | 1770 See the Mycmd example below. If no arguments are given <f-args> is removed. |
1088 | 1771 To embed whitespace into an argument of <f-args>, prepend a backslash. |
1772 <f-args> replaces every pair of backslashes (\\) with one backslash. A | |
1773 backslash followed by a character other than white space or a backslash | |
1774 remains unmodified. Overview: | |
1775 | |
1776 command <f-args> ~ | |
1777 XX ab 'ab' | |
1778 XX a\b 'a\b' | |
1779 XX a\ b 'a b' | |
1780 XX a\ b 'a ', 'b' | |
1781 XX a\\b 'a\b' | |
1782 XX a\\ b 'a\', 'b' | |
1783 XX a\\\b 'a\\b' | |
1784 XX a\\\ b 'a\ b' | |
1785 XX a\\\\b 'a\\b' | |
1786 XX a\\\\ b 'a\\', 'b' | |
7 | 1787 |
1788 Examples > | |
1789 | |
1790 " Delete everything after here to the end | |
1791 :com Ddel +,$d | |
1792 | |
1793 " Rename the current buffer | |
1794 :com -nargs=1 -bang -complete=file Ren f <args>|w<bang> | |
1795 | |
1796 " Replace a range with the contents of a file | |
1797 " (Enter this all as one line) | |
1798 :com -range -nargs=1 -complete=file | |
1799 Replace <line1>-pu_|<line1>,<line2>d|r <args>|<line1>d | |
1800 | |
1801 " Count the number of lines in the range | |
42 | 1802 :com! -range -nargs=0 Lines echo <line2> - <line1> + 1 "lines" |
7 | 1803 |
1804 " Call a user function (example of <f-args>) | |
1805 :com -nargs=* Mycmd call Myfunc(<f-args>) | |
1806 | |
1807 When executed as: > | |
1808 :Mycmd arg1 arg2 | |
1809 This will invoke: > | |
1810 :call Myfunc("arg1","arg2") | |
1811 | |
1812 :" A more substantial example | |
1813 :function Allargs(command) | |
1619 | 1814 : let i = 0 |
1815 : while i < argc() | |
1816 : if filereadable(argv(i)) | |
27903 | 1817 : execute "e " .. argv(i) |
7 | 1818 : execute a:command |
1819 : endif | |
1820 : let i = i + 1 | |
1821 : endwhile | |
1822 :endfunction | |
1823 :command -nargs=+ -complete=command Allargs call Allargs(<q-args>) | |
1824 | |
1825 The command Allargs takes any Vim command(s) as argument and executes it on all | |
1826 files in the argument list. Usage example (note use of the "e" flag to ignore | |
1827 errors and the "update" command to write modified buffers): > | |
1828 :Allargs %s/foo/bar/ge|update | |
1829 This will invoke: > | |
1830 :call Allargs("%s/foo/bar/ge|update") | |
1831 < | |
23164 | 1832 If the command is defined in Vim9 script (a script that starts with |
1833 `:vim9script` and in a `:def` function) then {repl} will be executed as in Vim9 | |
1834 script. Thus this depends on where the command is defined, not where it is | |
1835 used. | |
1836 | |
2033
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1837 When defining a user command in a script, it will be able to call functions |
7 | 1838 local to the script and use mappings local to the script. When the user |
1839 invokes the user command, it will run in the context of the script it was | |
1840 defined in. This matters if |<SID>| is used in a command. | |
1841 | |
14421 | 1842 vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl: |