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author | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-10 20:09:20 +0000 |
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committer | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-10 20:09:20 +0000 |
commit | 029f72b1a93430b24b88eb3a72c6114d9f149737 (patch) | |
tree | 765d5c2041967f9c6fef195fe343d9234a030e90 /runtime/doc/usr_22.txt | |
parent | Initial commit. (diff) | |
download | vim-029f72b1a93430b24b88eb3a72c6114d9f149737.tar.xz vim-029f72b1a93430b24b88eb3a72c6114d9f149737.zip |
Adding upstream version 2:9.1.0016.upstream/2%9.1.0016
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'runtime/doc/usr_22.txt')
-rw-r--r-- | runtime/doc/usr_22.txt | 414 |
1 files changed, 414 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/runtime/doc/usr_22.txt b/runtime/doc/usr_22.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..57862ed --- /dev/null +++ b/runtime/doc/usr_22.txt @@ -0,0 +1,414 @@ +*usr_22.txt* For Vim version 9.1. Last change: 2020 Mar 28 + + VIM USER MANUAL - by Bram Moolenaar + + Finding the file to edit + + +Files can be found everywhere. So how do you find them? Vim offers various +ways to browse the directory tree. There are commands to jump to a file that +is mentioned in another. And Vim remembers which files have been edited +before. + +|22.1| The file browser +|22.2| The current directory +|22.3| Finding a file +|22.4| The buffer list + + Next chapter: |usr_23.txt| Editing other files + Previous chapter: |usr_21.txt| Go away and come back +Table of contents: |usr_toc.txt| + +============================================================================== +*22.1* The file browser + +Vim has a plugin that makes it possible to edit a directory. Try this: > + + :edit . + +Through the magic of autocommands and Vim scripts, the window will be filled +with the contents of the directory. It looks like this: + +" ============================================================================ ~ +" Netrw Directory Listing (netrw v109) ~ +" Sorted by name ~ +" Sort sequence: [\/]$,\.h$,\.c$,\.cpp$,*,\.info$,\.swp$,\.o$\.obj$,\.bak$ ~ +" Quick Help: <F1>:help -:go up dir D:delete R:rename s:sort-by x:exec ~ +" ============================================================================ ~ +../ ~ +./ ~ +check/ ~ +Makefile ~ +autocmd.txt ~ +change.txt ~ +eval.txt~ ~ +filetype.txt~ ~ +help.txt.info ~ + +You can see these items: + +1. The name of the browsing tool and its version number +2. The name of the browsing directory +3. The method of sorting (may be by name, time, or size) +4. How names are to be sorted (directories first, then *.h files, + *.c files, etc) +5. How to get help (use the <F1> key), and an abbreviated listing + of available commands +6. A listing of files, including "../", which allows one to list + the parent directory. + +If you have syntax highlighting enabled, the different parts are highlighted +so as to make it easier to spot them. + +You can use Normal mode Vim commands to move around in the text. For example, +move the cursor atop a file and press <Enter>; you will then be editing that +file. To go back to the browser use ":edit ." again, or use ":Explore". +CTRL-O also works. + +Try using <Enter> while the cursor is atop a directory name. The result is +that the file browser moves into that directory and displays the items found +there. Pressing <Enter> on the first directory "../" moves you one level +higher. Pressing "-" does the same thing, without the need to move to the +"../" item first. + +You can press <F1> to get help on the things you can do in the netrw file +browser. This is what you get: > + + 9. Directory Browsing netrw-browse netrw-dir netrw-list netrw-help + + MAPS netrw-maps + <F1>.............Help.......................................|netrw-help| + <cr>.............Browsing...................................|netrw-cr| + <del>............Deleting Files or Directories..............|netrw-delete| + -................Going Up...................................|netrw--| + a................Hiding Files or Directories................|netrw-a| + mb...............Bookmarking a Directory....................|netrw-mb| + gb...............Changing to a Bookmarked Directory.........|netrw-gb| + cd...............Make Browsing Directory The Current Dir....|netrw-c| + d................Make A New Directory.......................|netrw-d| + D................Deleting Files or Directories..............|netrw-D| + <c-h>............Edit File/Directory Hiding List............|netrw-ctrl-h| + i................Change Listing Style.......................|netrw-i| + <c-l>............Refreshing the Listing.....................|netrw-ctrl-l| + o................Browsing with a Horizontal Split...........|netrw-o| + p................Use Preview Window.........................|netrw-p| + P................Edit in Previous Window....................|netrw-p| + q................Listing Bookmarks and History..............|netrw-qb| + r................Reversing Sorting Order....................|netrw-r| +< (etc) + +The <F1> key thus brings you to a netrw directory browsing contents help page. +It's a regular help page; use the usual |CTRL-]| to jump to tagged help items +and |CTRL-O| to jump back. + +To select files for display and editing: (with the cursor is atop a filename) + + <enter> Open the file in the current window. |netrw-cr| + o Horizontally split window and display file |netrw-o| + v Vertically split window and display file |netrw-v| + p Use the |preview-window| |netrw-p| + P Edit in the previous window |netrw-P| + t Open file in a new tab |netrw-t| + +The following normal-mode commands may be used to control the browser display: + + i Controls listing style (thin, long, wide, and tree). + The long listing includes size and date information. + s Repeatedly pressing s will change the way the files + are sorted; one may sort on name, modification time, + or size. + r Reverse the sorting order. + +As a sampling of extra normal-mode commands: + + cd Change Vim's notion of the current directory to be + the same as the browser directory. (see + |g:netrw_keepdir| to control this, too) + R Rename the file or directory under the cursor; a + prompt will be issued for the new name. + D Delete the file or directory under the cursor; a + confirmation request will be issued. + mb gb Make bookmark/goto bookmark + + +One may also use command mode; again, just a sampling: + + :Explore [directory] Browse specified/current directory + :NetrwSettings A comprehensive list of your current netrw + settings with help linkage. + +The netrw browser is not limited to just your local machine; one may use +urls such as: (that trailing / is important) + + :Explore ftp://somehost/path/to/dir/ + :e scp://somehost/path/to/dir/ + +See |netrw-browse| for more. + +============================================================================== +*22.2* The current directory + +Just like the shell, Vim has the concept of a current directory. Suppose you +are in your home directory and want to edit several files in a directory +"VeryLongFileName". You could do: > + + :edit VeryLongFileName/file1.txt + :edit VeryLongFileName/file2.txt + :edit VeryLongFileName/file3.txt + +To avoid much of the typing, do this: > + + :cd VeryLongFileName + :edit file1.txt + :edit file2.txt + :edit file3.txt + +The ":cd" command changes the current directory. You can see what the current +directory is with the ":pwd" command: > + + :pwd + /home/Bram/VeryLongFileName + +Vim remembers the last directory that you used. Use "cd -" to go back to it. +Example: > + + :pwd + /home/Bram/VeryLongFileName + :cd /etc + :pwd + /etc + :cd - + :pwd + /home/Bram/VeryLongFileName + :cd - + :pwd + /etc + + +WINDOW LOCAL DIRECTORY + +When you split a window, both windows use the same current directory. When +you want to edit a number of files somewhere else in the new window, you can +make it use a different directory, without changing the current directory in +the other window. This is called a local directory. > + + :pwd + /home/Bram/VeryLongFileName + :split + :lcd /etc + :pwd + /etc + CTRL-W w + :pwd + /home/Bram/VeryLongFileName + +So long as no `:lcd` command has been used, all windows share the same current +directory. Doing a `:cd` command in one window will also change the current +directory of the other window. + For a window where `:lcd` has been used a different current directory is +remembered. Using `:cd` or `:lcd` in other windows will not change it. + When using a `:cd` command in a window that uses a different current +directory, it will go back to using the shared directory. + + +TAB LOCAL DIRECTORY + +When you open a new tab page, it uses the directory of the window in the +previous tab page from which the new tab page was opened. You can change the +directory of the current tab page using the `:tcd` command. All the windows in +a tab page share this directory except for windows with a window-local +directory. Any new windows opened in this tab page will use this directory as +the current working directory. Using a `:cd` command in a tab page will not +change the working directory of tab pages which have a tab local directory. +When the global working directory is changed using the `:cd` command in a tab +page, it will also change the current tab page working directory. + + +============================================================================== +*22.3* Finding a file + +You are editing a C program that contains this line: + + #include "inits.h" ~ + +You want to see what is in that "inits.h" file. Move the cursor on the name +of the file and type: > + + gf + +Vim will find the file and edit it. + What if the file is not in the current directory? Vim will use the 'path' +option to find the file. This option is a list of directory names where to +look for your file. + Suppose you have your include files located in "c:/prog/include". This +command will add it to the 'path' option: > + + :set path+=c:/prog/include + +This directory is an absolute path. No matter where you are, it will be the +same place. What if you have located files in a subdirectory, below where the +file is? Then you can specify a relative path name. This starts with a dot: +> + :set path+=./proto + +This tells Vim to look in the directory "proto", below the directory where the +file in which you use "gf" is. Thus using "gf" on "inits.h" will make Vim +look for "proto/inits.h", starting in the directory of the file. + Without the "./", thus "proto", Vim would look in the "proto" directory +below the current directory. And the current directory might not be where the +file that you are editing is located. + +The 'path' option allows specifying the directories where to search for files +in many more ways. See the help on the 'path' option. + The 'isfname' option is used to decide which characters are included in the +file name, and which ones are not (e.g., the " character in the example +above). + +When you know the file name, but it's not to be found in the file, you can +type it: > + + :find inits.h + +Vim will then use the 'path' option to try and locate the file. This is the +same as the ":edit" command, except for the use of 'path'. + +To open the found file in a new window use CTRL-W f instead of "gf", or use +":sfind" instead of ":find". + + +A nice way to directly start Vim to edit a file somewhere in the 'path': > + + vim "+find stdio.h" + +This finds the file "stdio.h" in your value of 'path'. The quotes are +necessary to have one argument |-+c|. + +============================================================================== +*22.4* The buffer list + +The Vim editor uses the term buffer to describe a file being edited. +Actually, a buffer is a copy of the file that you edit. When you finish +changing the buffer, you write the contents of the buffer to the file. +Buffers not only contain file contents, but also all the marks, settings, and +other stuff that goes with it. + + +HIDDEN BUFFERS + +Suppose you are editing the file one.txt and need to edit the file two.txt. +You could simply use ":edit two.txt", but since you made changes to one.txt +that won't work. You also don't want to write one.txt yet. Vim has a +solution for you: > + + :hide edit two.txt + +The buffer "one.txt" disappears from the screen, but Vim still knows that you +are editing this buffer, so it keeps the modified text. This is called a +hidden buffer: The buffer contains text, but you can't see it. + The argument of ":hide" is another command. ":hide" makes that command +behave as if the 'hidden' option was set. You could also set this option +yourself. The effect is that when any buffer is abandoned, it becomes hidden. + Be careful! When you have hidden buffers with changes, don't exit Vim +without making sure you have saved all the buffers. + + +INACTIVE BUFFERS + + When a buffer has been used once, Vim remembers some information about it. +When it is not displayed in a window and it is not hidden, it is still in the +buffer list. This is called an inactive buffer. Overview: + + Active Appears in a window, text loaded. + Hidden Not in a window, text loaded. + Inactive Not in a window, no text loaded. + +The inactive buffers are remembered, because Vim keeps information about them, +like marks. And remembering the file name is useful too, so that you can see +which files you have edited. And edit them again. + + +LISTING BUFFERS + +View the buffer list with this command: > + + :buffers + +A command which does the same, is not so obvious to list buffers, but is much +shorter to type: > + + :ls + +The output could look like this: + + 1 #h "help.txt" line 62 ~ + 2 %a + "usr_21.txt" line 1 ~ + 3 "usr_toc.txt" line 1 ~ + +The first column contains the buffer number. You can use this to edit the +buffer without having to type the name, see below. + After the buffer number come the flags. Then the name of the file +and the line number where the cursor was the last time. + The flags that can appear are these (from left to right): + + u Buffer is unlisted |unlisted-buffer|. + % Current buffer. + # Alternate buffer. + a Buffer is loaded and displayed. + h Buffer is loaded but hidden. + = Buffer is read-only. + - Buffer is not modifiable, the 'modifiable' option is off. + + Buffer has been modified. + + +EDITING A BUFFER + +You can edit a buffer by its number. That avoids having to type the file +name: > + + :buffer 2 + +But the only way to know the number is by looking in the buffer list. You can +use the name, or part of it, instead: > + + :buffer help + +Vim will find the best match for the name you type. If there is only one +buffer that matches the name, it will be used. In this case "help.txt". + To open a buffer in a new window: > + + :sbuffer 3 + +This works with a name as well. + + +USING THE BUFFER LIST + +You can move around in the buffer list with these commands: + + :bnext go to next buffer + :bprevious go to previous buffer + :bfirst go to the first buffer + :blast go to the last buffer + +To remove a buffer from the list, use this command: > + + :bdelete 3 + +Again, this also works with a name. + If you delete a buffer that was active (visible in a window), that window +will be closed. If you delete the current buffer, the current window will be +closed. If it was the last window, Vim will find another buffer to edit. You +can't be editing nothing! + + Note: + Even after removing the buffer with ":bdelete" Vim still remembers it. + It's actually made "unlisted", it no longer appears in the list from + ":buffers". The ":buffers!" command will list unlisted buffers (yes, + Vim can do the impossible). To really make Vim forget about a buffer, + use ":bwipe". Also see the 'buflisted' option. + +============================================================================== + +Next chapter: |usr_23.txt| Editing other files + +Copyright: see |manual-copyright| vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl: |