1*tips.txt*      For Vim version 7.3.  Last change: 2009 Nov 07
2
3
4		  VIM REFERENCE MANUAL    by Bram Moolenaar
5
6
7Tips and ideas for using Vim				*tips*
8
9These are just a few that we thought would be helpful for many users.
10You can find many more tips on the wiki.  The URL can be found on
11http://www.vim.org
12
13Don't forget to browse the user manual, it also contains lots of useful tips
14|usr_toc.txt|.
15
16Editing C programs				|C-editing|
17Finding where identifiers are used		|ident-search|
18Switching screens in an xterm			|xterm-screens|
19Scrolling in Insert mode			|scroll-insert|
20Smooth scrolling				|scroll-smooth|
21Correcting common typing mistakes		|type-mistakes|
22Counting words, lines, etc.			|count-items|
23Restoring the cursor position			|restore-position|
24Renaming files					|rename-files|
25Change a name in multiple files			|change-name|
26Speeding up external commands			|speed-up|
27Useful mappings					|useful-mappings|
28Compressing the help files			|gzip-helpfile|
29Executing shell commands in a window		|shell-window|
30Hex editing					|hex-editing|
31Using <> notation in autocommands		|autocmd-<>|
32Highlighting matching parens			|match-parens|
33
34==============================================================================
35Editing C programs					*C-editing*
36
37There are quite a few features in Vim to help you edit C program files.  Here
38is an overview with tags to jump to:
39
40|usr_29.txt|		Moving through programs chapter in the user manual.
41|usr_30.txt|		Editing programs chapter in the user manual.
42|C-indenting|		Automatically set the indent of a line while typing
43			text.
44|=|			Re-indent a few lines.
45|format-comments|	Format comments.
46
47|:checkpath|		Show all recursively included files.
48|[i|			Search for identifier under cursor in current and
49			included files.
50|[_CTRL-I|		Jump to match for "[i"
51|[I|			List all lines in current and included files where
52			identifier under the cursor matches.
53|[d|			Search for define under cursor in current and included
54			files.
55
56|CTRL-]|		Jump to tag under cursor (e.g., definition of a
57			function).
58|CTRL-T|		Jump back to before a CTRL-] command.
59|:tselect|		Select one tag out of a list of matching tags.
60
61|gd|			Go to Declaration of local variable under cursor.
62|gD|			Go to Declaration of global variable under cursor.
63
64|gf|			Go to file name under the cursor.
65
66|%|			Go to matching (), {}, [], /* */, #if, #else, #endif.
67|[/|			Go to previous start of comment.
68|]/|			Go to next end of comment.
69|[#|			Go back to unclosed #if, #ifdef, or #else.
70|]#|			Go forward to unclosed #else or #endif.
71|[(|			Go back to unclosed '('
72|])|			Go forward to unclosed ')'
73|[{|			Go back to unclosed '{'
74|]}|			Go forward to unclosed '}'
75
76|v_ab|			Select "a block" from "[(" to "])", including braces
77|v_ib|			Select "inner block" from "[(" to "])"
78|v_aB|			Select "a block" from "[{" to "]}", including brackets
79|v_iB|			Select "inner block" from "[{" to "]}"
80
81==============================================================================
82Finding where identifiers are used			*ident-search*
83
84You probably already know that |tags| can be used to jump to the place where a
85function or variable is defined.  But sometimes you wish you could jump to all
86the places where a function or variable is being used.  This is possible in
87two ways:
881. Using the |:grep| command.  This should work on most Unix systems,
89   but can be slow (it reads all files) and only searches in one directory.
902. Using ID utils.  This is fast and works in multiple directories.  It uses a
91   database to store locations.  You will need some additional programs for
92   this to work.  And you need to keep the database up to date.
93
94Using the GNU id-tools:
95
96What you need:
97- The GNU id-tools installed (mkid is needed to create ID and lid is needed to
98  use the macros).
99- An identifier database file called "ID" in the current directory.  You can
100  create it with the shell command "mkid file1 file2 ..".
101
102Put this in your .vimrc: >
103	map _u :call ID_search()<Bar>execute "/\\<" . g:word . "\\>"<CR>
104	map _n :n<Bar>execute "/\\<" . g:word . "\\>"<CR>
105
106	function! ID_search()
107	  let g:word = expand("<cword>")
108	  let x = system("lid --key=none ". g:word)
109	  let x = substitute(x, "\n", " ", "g")
110	  execute "next " . x
111	endfun
112
113To use it, place the cursor on a word, type "_u" and vim will load the file
114that contains the word.  Search for the next occurrence of the word in the
115same file with "n".  Go to the next file with "_n".
116
117This has been tested with id-utils-3.2 (which is the name of the id-tools
118archive file on your closest gnu-ftp-mirror).
119
120[the idea for this comes from Andreas Kutschera]
121
122==============================================================================
123Switching screens in an xterm		*xterm-screens* *xterm-save-screen*
124
125(From comp.editors, by Juergen Weigert, in reply to a question)
126
127:> Another question is that after exiting vim, the screen is left as it
128:> was, i.e. the contents of the file I was viewing (editing) was left on
129:> the screen. The output from my previous like "ls" were lost,
130:> ie. no longer in the scrolling buffer. I know that there is a way to
131:> restore the screen after exiting vim or other vi like editors,
132:> I just don't know how. Helps are appreciated. Thanks.
133:
134:I imagine someone else can answer this.  I assume though that vim and vi do
135:the same thing as each other for a given xterm setup.
136
137They not necessarily do the same thing, as this may be a termcap vs.
138terminfo problem.  You should be aware that there are two databases for
139describing attributes of a particular type of terminal: termcap and
140terminfo.  This can cause differences when the entries differ AND when of
141the programs in question one uses terminfo and the other uses termcap
142(also see |+terminfo|).
143
144In your particular problem, you are looking for the control sequences
145^[[?47h and ^[[?47l.  These switch between xterms alternate and main screen
146buffer.  As a quick workaround a command sequence like >
147	echo -n "^[[?47h"; vim ... ; echo -n "^[[?47l"
148may do what you want.  (My notation ^[ means the ESC character, further down
149you'll see that the databases use \E instead).
150
151On startup, vim echoes the value of the termcap variable ti (terminfo:
152smcup) to the terminal.  When exiting, it echoes te (terminfo: rmcup).  Thus
153these two variables are the correct place where the above mentioned control
154sequences should go.
155
156Compare your xterm termcap entry (found in /etc/termcap) with your xterm
157terminfo entry (retrieved with "infocmp -C xterm").  Both should contain
158entries similar to: >
159	:te=\E[2J\E[?47l\E8:ti=\E7\E[?47h:
160
161PS: If you find any difference, someone (your sysadmin?) should better check
162    the complete termcap and terminfo database for consistency.
163
164NOTE 1: If you recompile Vim with FEAT_XTERM_SAVE defined in feature.h, the
165builtin xterm will include the mentioned "te" and "ti" entries.
166
167NOTE 2: If you want to disable the screen switching, and you don't want to
168change your termcap, you can add these lines to your .vimrc: >
169	:set t_ti= t_te=
170
171==============================================================================
172Scrolling in Insert mode				*scroll-insert*
173
174If you are in insert mode and you want to see something that is just off the
175screen, you can use CTRL-X CTRL-E and CTRL-X CTRL-Y to scroll the screen.
176						|i_CTRL-X_CTRL-E|
177
178To make this easier, you could use these mappings: >
179	:inoremap <C-E> <C-X><C-E>
180	:inoremap <C-Y> <C-X><C-Y>
181(Type this literally, make sure the '<' flag is not in 'cpoptions').
182You then lose the ability to copy text from the line above/below the cursor
183|i_CTRL-E|.
184
185Also consider setting 'scrolloff' to a larger value, so that you can always see
186some context around the cursor.  If 'scrolloff' is bigger than half the window
187height, the cursor will always be in the middle and the text is scrolled when
188the cursor is moved up/down.
189
190==============================================================================
191Smooth scrolling					*scroll-smooth*
192
193If you like the scrolling to go a bit smoother, you can use these mappings: >
194	:map <C-U> <C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y><C-Y>
195	:map <C-D> <C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E><C-E>
196
197(Type this literally, make sure the '<' flag is not in 'cpoptions').
198
199==============================================================================
200Correcting common typing mistakes			*type-mistakes*
201
202When there are a few words that you keep on typing in the wrong way, make
203abbreviations that correct them.  For example: >
204	:ab teh the
205	:ab fro for
206
207==============================================================================
208Counting words, lines, etc.				*count-items*
209
210To count how often any pattern occurs in the current buffer use the substitute
211command and add the 'n' flag to avoid the substitution.  The reported number
212of substitutions is the number of items.  Examples: >
213
214	:%s/./&/gn		characters
215	:%s/\i\+/&/gn		words
216	:%s/^//n		lines
217	:%s/the/&/gn		"the" anywhere
218	:%s/\<the\>/&/gn	"the" as a word
219
220You might want to reset 'hlsearch' or do ":nohlsearch".
221Add the 'e' flag if you don't want an error when there are no matches.
222
223An alternative is using |v_g_CTRL-G| in Visual mode.
224
225If you want to find matches in multiple files use |:vimgrep|.
226
227							*count-bytes*
228If you want to count bytes, you can use this:
229
230	Visually select the characters (block is also possible)
231	Use "y" to yank the characters
232	Use the strlen() function: >
233		:echo strlen(@")
234A line break is counted for one byte.
235
236==============================================================================
237Restoring the cursor position				*restore-position*
238
239Sometimes you want to write a mapping that makes a change somewhere in the
240file and restores the cursor position, without scrolling the text.  For
241example, to change the date mark in a file: >
242   :map <F2> msHmtgg/Last [cC]hange:\s*/e+1<CR>"_D"=strftime("%Y %b %d")<CR>p'tzt`s
243
244Breaking up saving the position:
245	ms	store cursor position in the 's' mark
246	H	go to the first line in the window
247	mt	store this position in the 't' mark
248
249Breaking up restoring the position:
250	't	go to the line previously at the top of the window
251	zt	scroll to move this line to the top of the window
252	`s	jump to the original position of the cursor
253
254For something more advanced see |winsaveview()| and |winrestview()|.
255
256==============================================================================
257Renaming files						*rename-files*
258
259Say I have a directory with the following files in them (directory picked at
260random :-):
261
262buffer.c
263charset.c
264digraph.c
265...
266
267and I want to rename *.c *.bla.  I'd do it like this: >
268
269	$ vim
270	:r !ls *.c
271	:%s/\(.*\).c/mv & \1.bla
272	:w !sh
273	:q!
274
275==============================================================================
276Change a name in multiple files				*change-name*
277
278Example for using a script file to change a name in several files:
279
280	Create a file "subs.vim" containing substitute commands and a :update
281	command: >
282		:%s/Jones/Smith/g
283		:%s/Allen/Peter/g
284		:update
285<
286	Execute Vim on all files you want to change, and source the script for
287	each argument: >
288
289		vim *.let
290		argdo source subs.vim
291
292See |:argdo|.
293
294==============================================================================
295Speeding up external commands				*speed-up*
296
297In some situations, execution of an external command can be very slow.  This
298can also slow down wildcard expansion on Unix.  Here are a few suggestions to
299increase the speed.
300
301If your .cshrc (or other file, depending on the shell used) is very long, you
302should separate it into a section for interactive use and a section for
303non-interactive use (often called secondary shells).  When you execute a
304command from Vim like ":!ls", you do not need the interactive things (for
305example, setting the prompt).  Put the stuff that is not needed after these
306lines: >
307
308	if ($?prompt == 0) then
309		exit 0
310	endif
311
312Another way is to include the "-f" flag in the 'shell' option, e.g.: >
313
314	:set shell=csh\ -f
315
316(the backslash is needed to include the space in the option).
317This will make csh completely skip the use of the .cshrc file.  This may cause
318some things to stop working though.
319
320==============================================================================
321Useful mappings						*useful-mappings*
322
323Here are a few mappings that some people like to use.
324
325							*map-backtick*  >
326	:map ' `
327Make the single quote work like a backtick.  Puts the cursor on the column of
328a mark, instead of going to the first non-blank character in the line.
329
330							*emacs-keys*
331For Emacs-style editing on the command-line: >
332	" start of line
333	:cnoremap <C-A>		<Home>
334	" back one character
335	:cnoremap <C-B>		<Left>
336	" delete character under cursor
337	:cnoremap <C-D>		<Del>
338	" end of line
339	:cnoremap <C-E>		<End>
340	" forward one character
341	:cnoremap <C-F>		<Right>
342	" recall newer command-line
343	:cnoremap <C-N>		<Down>
344	" recall previous (older) command-line
345	:cnoremap <C-P>		<Up>
346	" back one word
347	:cnoremap <Esc><C-B>	<S-Left>
348	" forward one word
349	:cnoremap <Esc><C-F>	<S-Right>
350
351NOTE: This requires that the '<' flag is excluded from 'cpoptions'. |<>|
352
353							*format-bullet-list*
354This mapping will format any bullet list.  It requires that there is an empty
355line above and below each list entry.  The expression commands are used to
356be able to give comments to the parts of the mapping. >
357
358	:let m =     ":map _f  :set ai<CR>"    " need 'autoindent' set
359	:let m = m . "{O<Esc>"		      " add empty line above item
360	:let m = m . "}{)^W"		      " move to text after bullet
361	:let m = m . "i     <CR>     <Esc>"    " add space for indent
362	:let m = m . "gq}"		      " format text after the bullet
363	:let m = m . "{dd"		      " remove the empty line
364	:let m = m . "5lDJ"		      " put text after bullet
365	:execute m			      |" define the mapping
366
367(<> notation |<>|.  Note that this is all typed literally.  ^W is "^" "W", not
368CTRL-W.  You can copy/paste this into Vim if '<' is not included in
369'cpoptions'.)
370
371Note that the last comment starts with |", because the ":execute" command
372doesn't accept a comment directly.
373
374You also need to set 'textwidth' to a non-zero value, e.g., >
375	:set tw=70
376
377A mapping that does about the same, but takes the indent for the list from the
378first line (Note: this mapping is a single long line with a lot of spaces): >
379	:map _f :set ai<CR>}{a                                                          <Esc>WWmmkD`mi<CR><Esc>kkddpJgq}'mJO<Esc>j
380<
381							*collapse*
382These two mappings reduce a sequence of empty (;b) or blank (;n) lines into a
383single line >
384    :map ;b   GoZ<Esc>:g/^$/.,/./-j<CR>Gdd
385    :map ;n   GoZ<Esc>:g/^[ <Tab>]*$/.,/[^ <Tab>]/-j<CR>Gdd
386
387==============================================================================
388Compressing the help files				*gzip-helpfile*
389
390For those of you who are really short on disk space, you can compress the help
391files and still be able to view them with Vim.  This makes accessing the help
392files a bit slower and requires the "gzip" program.
393
394(1) Compress all the help files: "gzip doc/*.txt".
395
396(2) Edit "doc/tags" and change the ".txt" to ".txt.gz": >
397	:%s=\(\t.*\.txt\)\t=\1.gz\t=
398
399(3) Add this line to your vimrc: >
400	set helpfile={dirname}/help.txt.gz
401
402Where {dirname} is the directory where the help files are.  The |gzip| plugin
403will take care of decompressing the files.
404You must make sure that $VIMRUNTIME is set to where the other Vim files are,
405when they are not in the same location as the compressed "doc" directory.  See
406|$VIMRUNTIME|.
407
408==============================================================================
409Executing shell commands in a window			*shell-window*
410
411There have been questions for the possibility to execute a shell in a window
412inside Vim.  The answer: you can't!  Including this would add a lot of code to
413Vim, which is a good reason not to do this.  After all, Vim is an editor, it
414is not supposed to do non-editing tasks.  However, to get something like this,
415you might try splitting your terminal screen or display window with the
416"splitvt" program.  You can probably find it on some ftp server.  The person
417that knows more about this is Sam Lantinga <slouken@cs.ucdavis.edu>.
418An alternative is the "window" command, found on BSD Unix systems, which
419supports multiple overlapped windows.  Or the "screen" program, found at
420www.uni-erlangen.de, which supports a stack of windows.
421
422==============================================================================
423Hex editing					*hex-editing* *using-xxd*
424
425See section |23.4| of the user manual.
426
427If one has a particular extension that one uses for binary files (such as exe,
428bin, etc), you may find it helpful to automate the process with the following
429bit of autocmds for your <.vimrc>.  Change that "*.bin" to whatever
430comma-separated list of extension(s) you find yourself wanting to edit: >
431
432	" vim -b : edit binary using xxd-format!
433	augroup Binary
434	  au!
435	  au BufReadPre  *.bin let &bin=1
436	  au BufReadPost *.bin if &bin | %!xxd
437	  au BufReadPost *.bin set ft=xxd | endif
438	  au BufWritePre *.bin if &bin | %!xxd -r
439	  au BufWritePre *.bin endif
440	  au BufWritePost *.bin if &bin | %!xxd
441	  au BufWritePost *.bin set nomod | endif
442	augroup END
443
444==============================================================================
445Using <> notation in autocommands			*autocmd-<>*
446
447The <> notation is not recognized in the argument of an :autocmd.  To avoid
448having to use special characters, you could use a self-destroying mapping to
449get the <> notation and then call the mapping from the autocmd.  Example:
450
451						*map-self-destroy*  >
452 " This is for automatically adding the name of the file to the menu list.
453 " It uses a self-destroying mapping!
454 " 1. use a line in the buffer to convert the 'dots' in the file name to \.
455 " 2. store that in register '"'
456 " 3. add that name to the Buffers menu list
457 " WARNING: this does have some side effects, like overwriting the
458 " current register contents and removing any mapping for the "i" command.
459 "
460 autocmd BufNewFile,BufReadPre * nmap i :nunmap i<CR>O<C-R>%<Esc>:.g/\./s/\./\\./g<CR>0"9y$u:menu Buffers.<C-R>9 :buffer <C-R>%<C-V><CR><CR>
461 autocmd BufNewFile,BufReadPre * normal i
462
463Another method, perhaps better, is to use the ":execute" command.  In the
464string you can use the <> notation by preceding it with a backslash.  Don't
465forget to double the number of existing backslashes and put a backslash before
466'"'.
467>
468  autocmd BufNewFile,BufReadPre * exe "normal O\<C-R>%\<Esc>:.g/\\./s/\\./\\\\./g\<CR>0\"9y$u:menu Buffers.\<C-R>9 :buffer \<C-R>%\<C-V>\<CR>\<CR>"
469
470For a real buffer menu, user functions should be used (see |:function|), but
471then the <> notation isn't used, which defeats using it as an example here.
472
473==============================================================================
474Highlighting matching parens					*match-parens*
475
476This example shows the use of a few advanced tricks:
477- using the |CursorMoved| autocommand event
478- using |searchpairpos()| to find a matching paren
479- using |synID()| to detect whether the cursor is in a string or comment
480- using |:match| to highlight something
481- using a |pattern| to match a specific position in the file.
482
483This should be put in a Vim script file, since it uses script-local variables.
484It skips matches in strings or comments, unless the cursor started in string
485or comment.  This requires syntax highlighting.
486
487A slightly more advanced version is used in the |matchparen| plugin.
488>
489	let s:paren_hl_on = 0
490	function s:Highlight_Matching_Paren()
491	  if s:paren_hl_on
492	    match none
493	    let s:paren_hl_on = 0
494	  endif
495
496	  let c_lnum = line('.')
497	  let c_col = col('.')
498
499	  let c = getline(c_lnum)[c_col - 1]
500	  let plist = split(&matchpairs, ':\|,')
501	  let i = index(plist, c)
502	  if i < 0
503	    return
504	  endif
505	  if i % 2 == 0
506	    let s_flags = 'nW'
507	    let c2 = plist[i + 1]
508	  else
509	    let s_flags = 'nbW'
510	    let c2 = c
511	    let c = plist[i - 1]
512	  endif
513	  if c == '['
514	    let c = '\['
515	    let c2 = '\]'
516	  endif
517	  let s_skip ='synIDattr(synID(line("."), col("."), 0), "name") ' .
518		\ '=~?	"string\\|comment"'
519	  execute 'if' s_skip '| let s_skip = 0 | endif'
520
521	  let [m_lnum, m_col] = searchpairpos(c, '', c2, s_flags, s_skip)
522
523	  if m_lnum > 0 && m_lnum >= line('w0') && m_lnum <= line('w$')
524	    exe 'match Search /\(\%' . c_lnum . 'l\%' . c_col .
525		  \ 'c\)\|\(\%' . m_lnum . 'l\%' . m_col . 'c\)/'
526	    let s:paren_hl_on = 1
527	  endif
528	endfunction
529
530	autocmd CursorMoved,CursorMovedI * call s:Highlight_Matching_Paren()
531	autocmd InsertEnter * match none
532<
533
534 vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl:
535