*vim_diff.txt* Nvim NVIM REFERENCE MANUAL Differences between Nvim and Vim *vim-differences* Nvim differs from Vim in many ways, although editor and VimL features are mostly identical. This document is a complete and centralized reference of the differences. Type |gO| to see the table of contents. ============================================================================== 1. Configuration *nvim-configuration* - Use `$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/nvim/init.vim` instead of `.vimrc` for configuration. - Use `$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/nvim` instead of `.vim` to store configuration files. - Use `$XDG_DATA_HOME/nvim/shada/main.shada` instead of `.viminfo` for persistent session information. |shada| ============================================================================== 2. Defaults *nvim-defaults* - Syntax highlighting is enabled by default - ":filetype plugin indent on" is enabled by default - 'autoindent' is enabled - 'autoread' is enabled - 'background' defaults to "dark" (unless set automatically by the terminal/UI) - 'backspace' defaults to "indent,eol,start" - 'backupdir' defaults to .,~/.local/share/nvim/backup (|xdg|) - 'belloff' defaults to "all" - 'compatible' is always disabled - 'complete' excludes "i" - 'cscopeverbose' is enabled - 'directory' defaults to ~/.local/share/nvim/swap// (|xdg|), auto-created - 'display' defaults to "lastline,msgsep" - 'encoding' is UTF-8 (cf. 'fileencoding' for file-content encoding) - 'fillchars' defaults (in effect) to "vert:│,fold:·" - 'formatoptions' defaults to "tcqj" - 'fsync' is disabled - 'history' defaults to 10000 (the maximum) - 'hlsearch' is enabled - 'incsearch' is enabled - 'langnoremap' is enabled - 'langremap' is disabled - 'laststatus' defaults to 2 (statusline is always shown) - 'listchars' defaults to "tab:> ,trail:-,nbsp:+" - 'nrformats' defaults to "bin,hex" - 'ruler' is enabled - 'sessionoptions' excludes "options" - 'shortmess' includes "F", excludes "S" - 'showcmd' is enabled - 'sidescroll' defaults to 1 - 'smarttab' is enabled - 'tabpagemax' defaults to 50 - 'tags' defaults to "./tags;,tags" - 'ttimeoutlen' defaults to 50 - 'ttyfast' is always set - 'undodir' defaults to ~/.local/share/nvim/undo (|xdg|), auto-created - 'viminfo' includes "!" - 'wildmenu' is enabled - 'wildoptions' defaults to "pum,tagfile" - The |man.vim| plugin is enabled, to provide the |:Man| command. - The |matchit| plugin is enabled. To disable it in your config: > :let loaded_matchit = 1 ============================================================================== 3. New Features *nvim-features* MAJOR COMPONENTS ~ API |API| Lua scripting |lua| Job control |job-control| Remote plugins |remote-plugin| Providers Clipboard |provider-clipboard| Node.js plugins |provider-nodejs| Python plugins |provider-python| Ruby plugins |provider-ruby| Shared data |shada| Embedded terminal |terminal| VimL parser |nvim_parse_expression()| XDG base directories |xdg| USER EXPERIENCE ~ Working intuitively and consistently is a major goal of Nvim. *feature-compile* - Nvim always includes ALL features, in contrast to Vim (which ships with various combinations of 100+ optional features). Think of it as a leaner version of Vim's "HUGE" build. This reduces surface area for bugs, and removes a common source of confusion and friction for users. - Nvim avoids features that cannot be provided on all platforms; instead that is delegated to external plugins/extensions. E.g. the `-X` platform-specific option is "sometimes" available in Vim (with potential surprises: http://stackoverflow.com/q/14635295). - Vim's internal test functions (test_autochdir(), test_settime(), etc.) are not exposed (nor implemented); instead Nvim has a robust API. - Behaviors, options, documentation are removed if they cost users more time than they save. Usability details have been improved where the benefit outweighs any backwards-compatibility cost. Some examples: - |K| in help documents can be used like |CTRL-]|. - Directories for 'directory' and 'undodir' are auto-created. - Terminal features such as 'guicursor' are enabled where possible. ARCHITECTURE ~ External plugins run in separate processes. |remote-plugin| This improves stability and allows those plugins to work without blocking the editor. Even "legacy" Python and Ruby plugins which use the old Vim interfaces (|if_pyth|, |if_ruby|) run out-of-process. Platform and I/O facilities are built upon libuv. Nvim benefits from libuv features and bug fixes, and other projects benefit from improvements to libuv by Nvim developers. FEATURES ~ Command-line highlighting: The expression prompt (|@=|, |c_CTRL-R_=|, |i_CTRL-R_=|) is highlighted using a built-in VimL expression parser. |expr-highlight| *E5408* *E5409* |input()|, |inputdialog()| support custom highlighting. |input()-highlight| *g:Nvim_color_cmdline* (Experimental) Command-line (|:|) is colored by callback defined in `g:Nvim_color_cmdline` (this callback is for testing only, and will be removed in the future). Commands: |:autocmd| accepts the `++once` flag |:checkhealth| |:cquit| can use [count] to set the exit code |:drop| is always available |:Man| is available by default, with many improvements such as completion |:sign-define| accepts a `numhl` argument, to highlight the line number |:tchdir| tab-local |current-directory| Events: |DirChanged| |Signal| |TabNewEntered| |TermClose| |TermOpen| |TextYankPost| |UIEnter| |UILeave| |VimResume| |VimSuspend| Functions: |dictwatcheradd()| notifies a callback whenever a |Dict| is modified |dictwatcherdel()| |menu_get()| |msgpackdump()|, |msgpackparse()| provide msgpack de/serialization |stdpath()| |system()|, |systemlist()| can run {cmd} directly (without 'shell') Highlight groups: |expr-highlight| highlight groups (prefixed with "Nvim") |hl-NormalFloat| highlights floating window |hl-NormalNC| highlights non-current windows |hl-MsgArea| highlights messages/cmdline area |hl-MsgSeparator| highlights separator for scrolled messages |hl-QuickFixLine| |hl-Substitute| |hl-TermCursor| |hl-TermCursorNC| |hl-Whitespace| highlights 'listchars' whitespace Input: ALT (|META|) chords always work (even in the |TUI|). Map |, , , , , , , , etc. Case-sensitive: and are two different keycodes. ALT in insert-mode behaves like if not mapped. |i_ALT| Mappings: || pseudokey Normal commands: "Outline": Type |gO| in |:Man| and |:help| pages to see a document outline. Options: 'cpoptions' flags: |cpo-_| 'display' flag `msgsep` to minimize scrolling when showing messages 'guicursor' works in the terminal 'fillchars' local to window. flags: `msgsep` (see 'display' above) and `eob` for |hl-EndOfBuffer| marker 'inccommand' shows interactive results for |:substitute|-like commands 'listchars' local to window 'pumblend' pseudo-transparent popupmenu 'scrollback' 'signcolumn' supports up to 9 dynamic/fixed columns 'statusline' supports unlimited alignment sections 'tabline' %@Func@foo%X can call any function on mouse-click 'wildoptions' `pum` flag to use popupmenu for wildmode completion 'winhighlight' window-local highlights Signs: Signs are removed if the associated line is deleted. Variables: |v:event| |v:exiting| |v:progpath| is always absolute ("full") |v:windowid| is always available (for use by external UIs) ============================================================================== 4. Changed features *nvim-features-changed* Nvim always builds with all features, in contrast to Vim which may have certain features removed/added at compile-time. |feature-compile| If a Python interpreter is available on your `$PATH`, |:python| and |:python3| are always available and may be used simultaneously. See |provider-python|. |:redir| nested in |execute()| works. |mkdir()| behaviour changed: 1. Assuming /tmp/foo does not exist and /tmp can be written to mkdir('/tmp/foo/bar', 'p', 0700) will create both /tmp/foo and /tmp/foo/bar with 0700 permissions. Vim mkdir will create /tmp/foo with 0755. 2. If you try to create an existing directory with `'p'` (e.g. mkdir('/', 'p')) mkdir() will silently exit. In Vim this was an error. 3. mkdir() error messages now include strerror() text when mkdir fails. |string()| and |:echo| behaviour changed: 1. No maximum recursion depth limit is applied to nested container structures. 2. |string()| fails immediately on nested containers, not when recursion limit was exceeded. 2. When |:echo| encounters duplicate containers like > let l = [] echo [l, l] < it does not use "[...]" (was: "[[], [...]]", now: "[[], []]"). "..." is only used for recursive containers. 3. |:echo| printing nested containers adds "@level" after "..." designating the level at which recursive container was printed: |:echo-self-refer|. Same thing applies to |string()| (though it uses construct like "{E724@level}"), but this is not reliable because |string()| continues to error out. 4. Stringifyed infinite and NaN values now use |str2float()| and can be evaled back. 5. (internal) Trying to print or stringify VAR_UNKNOWN in Vim results in nothing, E908, in Nvim it is internal error. |json_decode()| behaviour changed: 1. It may output |msgpack-special-dict|. 2. |msgpack-special-dict| is emitted also in case of duplicate keys, while in Vim it errors out. 3. It accepts only valid JSON. Trailing commas are not accepted. |json_encode()| behaviour slightly changed: now |msgpack-special-dict| values are accepted, but |v:none| is not. *v:none* variable is absent. In Vim it represents “no value” in “js” strings like "[,]" parsed as "[v:none]" by |js_decode()|. *js_encode()* and *js_decode()* functions are also absent. Viminfo text files were replaced with binary (messagepack) ShaDa files. Additional differences: - |shada-c| has no effect. - |shada-s| now limits size of every item and not just registers. - 'viminfo' option got renamed to 'shada'. Old option is kept as an alias for compatibility reasons. - |:wviminfo| was renamed to |:wshada|, |:rviminfo| to |:rshada|. Old commands are still kept. - ShaDa file format was designed with forward and backward compatibility in mind. |shada-compatibility| - Some errors make ShaDa code keep temporary file in-place for user to decide what to do with it. Vim deletes temporary file in these cases. |shada-error-handling| - ShaDa file keeps search direction (|v:searchforward|), viminfo does not. |printf()| returns something meaningful when used with `%p` argument: in Vim it used to return useless address of the string (strings are copied to the newly allocated memory all over the place) and fail on types which cannot be coerced to strings. See |id()| for more details, currently it uses `printf("%p", {expr})` internally. |c_CTRL-R| pasting a non-special register into |cmdline| omits the last . Lua interface (|if_lua.txt|): - `:lua print("a\0b")` will print `a^@b`, like with `:echomsg "a\nb"` . In Vim that prints `a` and `b` on separate lines, exactly like `:lua print("a\nb")` . - `:lua error('TEST')` emits the error “E5105: Error while calling lua chunk: [string ""]:1: TEST”, whereas Vim emits only “TEST”. - Lua has direct access to Nvim |API| via `vim.api`. - Lua package.path and package.cpath are automatically updated according to 'runtimepath': |lua-require|. |input()| and |inputdialog()| support for each other’s features (return on cancel and completion respectively) via dictionary argument (replaces all other arguments if used). |input()| and |inputdialog()| support user-defined cmdline highlighting. Commands: |:doautocmd| does not warn about "No matching autocommands". Highlight groups: |hl-ColorColumn|, |hl-CursorColumn| are lower priority than most other groups |hl-CursorLine| is low-priority unless foreground color is set Macro/|recording| behavior Replay of a macro recorded during :lmap produces the same actions as when it was recorded. In Vim if a macro is recorded while using :lmap'ped keys then the behaviour during record and replay differs. 'keymap' is implemented via :lmap instead of :lnoremap so that you can use macros and 'keymap' at the same time. This also means you can use |:imap| on the results of keys from 'keymap'. Motion: The |jumplist| avoids useless/phantom jumps. Normal commands: |Q| is the same as |gQ| Options: 'ttimeout', 'ttimeoutlen' behavior was simplified Shell: Shell output (|:!|, |:make|, …) is always routed through the UI, so it cannot "mess up" the screen. (You can still use "chansend(v:stderr,…)" if you want to mess up the screen :) Nvim throttles (skips) messages from shell commands (|:!|, |:grep|, |:make|) if there is too much output. No data is lost, this only affects display and improves performance. |:terminal| output is never throttled. |:!| does not support "interactive" commands. Use |:terminal| instead. (GUI Vim has a similar limitation, see ":help gui-pty" in Vim.) :!start is not special-cased on Windows. |system()| does not support writing/reading "backgrounded" commands. |E5677| Startup: |-e| and |-es| invoke the same "improved Ex mode" as -E and -Es. |-E| and |-Es| read stdin as text (into buffer 1). |-es| and |-Es| have improved behavior: - Quits automatically, don't need "-c qa!". - Skips swap-file dialog. |-s| reads Normal commands from stdin if the script name is "-". Reading text (instead of commands) from stdin |--|: - works by default: "-" file is optional - works in more cases: |-Es|, file args TUI: *:set-termcap* Start Nvim with 'verbose' level 3 to show terminal capabilities: > nvim -V3 < *'term'* *E529* *E530* *E531* 'term' reflects the terminal type derived from |$TERM| and other environment checks. For debugging only; not reliable during startup. > :echo &term < "builtin_x" means one of the |builtin-terms| was chosen, because the expected terminfo file was not found on the system. Nvim will use 256-colour capability on Linux virtual terminals. Vim uses only 8 colours plus bright foreground on Linux VTs. Vim combines what is in its |builtin-terms| with what it reads from terminfo, and has a 'ttybuiltin' setting to control how that combination works. Nvim uses one or the other, it does not attempt to merge the two. UI/Display: |Visual| selection highlights the character at cursor. |visual-use| VimL (Vim script) compatibility: `count` does not alias to |v:count| `errmsg` does not alias to |v:errmsg| `shell_error` does not alias to |v:shell_error| `this_session` does not alias to |v:this_session| ============================================================================== 5. Missing legacy features *nvim-features-missing* Some legacy Vim features are not implemented: - |if_py|: *python-bindeval* *python-Function* are not supported - |if_lua|: the `vim` object is missing some legacy methods - *if_perl* - *if_mzscheme* - *if_tcl* ============================================================================== 6. Removed features *nvim-features-removed* These Vim features were intentionally removed from Nvim. Aliases: ex (alias for "nvim -e") exim (alias for "nvim -E") gex (GUI) gview (GUI) gvim (GUI) gvimdiff (GUI) rgview (GUI) rgvim (GUI) rview (alias for "nvim -RZ") rvim (alias for "nvim -Z") view (alias for "nvim -R") vimdiff (alias for "nvim -d" |diff-mode|) Commands: :fixdel :helpfind :mode (no longer accepts an argument) :open :Print :shell :smile :tearoff Compile-time features: EBCDIC Emacs tags support X11 integration (see |x11-selection|) Highlight groups: *hl-StatusLineTerm* *hl-StatusLineTermNC* are unnecessary because Nvim supports 'winhighlight' window-local highlights. For example, to mimic Vim's StatusLineTerm: > hi StatusLineTerm ctermfg=black ctermbg=green hi StatusLineTermNC ctermfg=green autocmd TermOpen,WinEnter * if &buftype=='terminal' \|setlocal winhighlight=StatusLine:StatusLineTerm,StatusLineNC:StatusLineTermNC \|else|setlocal winhighlight=|endif < Options: 'antialias' 'bioskey' (MS-DOS) 'conskey' (MS-DOS) *'cp'* *'nocompatible'* *'nocp'* *'compatible'* (Nvim is always "nocompatible".) 'cpoptions' (gjkHw<*- and all POSIX flags were removed) *'cryptmethod'* *'cm'* *'key'* (Vim encryption implementation) *'ed'* *'edcompatible'* *'noed'* *'noedcompatible'* 'encoding' ("utf-8" is always used) 'esckeys' 'guioptions' "t" flag was removed *'guipty'* (Nvim uses pipes and PTYs consistently on all platforms.) 'highlight' (Names of builtin |highlight-groups| cannot be changed.) *'imactivatefunc'* *'imaf'* *'imactivatekey'* *'imak'* *'imstatusfunc'* *'imsf'* *'macatsui'* 'maxmem' Nvim delegates memory-management to the OS. 'maxmemtot' Nvim delegates memory-management to the OS. 'maxcombine' (6 is always used) *'restorescreen'* *'rs'* *'norestorescreen'* *'nors'* 'shelltype' *'shortname'* *'sn'* *'noshortname'* *'nosn'* *'swapsync'* *'sws'* *'termencoding'* *'tenc'* (Vim 7.4.852 also removed this for Windows) 'textauto' 'textmode' *'toolbar'* *'tb'* *'toolbariconsize'* *'tbis'* *'ttybuiltin'* *'tbi'* *'nottybuiltin'* *'notbi'* *'ttymouse'* *'ttym'* *'ttyscroll'* *'tsl'* *'ttytype'* *'tty'* 'ttyfast' 'weirdinvert' Startup: --literal (file args are always literal; to expand wildcards on Windows, use |:n| e.g. `nvim +"n *"`) Easy mode: eview, evim, nvim -y Vi mode: nvim -v Test functions: test_alloc_fail() test_autochdir() test_disable_char_avail() test_garbagecollect_now() test_null_channel() test_null_dict() test_null_job() test_null_list() test_null_partial() test_null_string() test_override() test_settime() TUI: *t_xx* *termcap-options* *t_AB* *t_Sb* *t_vb* *t_SI* Nvim does not have special `t_XX` options nor keycodes to configure terminal capabilities. Instead Nvim treats the terminal as any other UI, e.g. 'guicursor' sets the terminal cursor style if possible. *termcap* Nvim never uses the termcap database, only |terminfo| and |builtin-terms|. *xterm-8bit* *xterm-8-bit* Xterm can be run in a mode where it uses true 8-bit CSI. Supporting this requires autodetection of whether the terminal is in UTF-8 mode or non-UTF-8 mode, as the 8-bit CSI character has to be written differently in each case. Vim issues a "request version" sequence to the terminal at startup and looks at how the terminal is sending CSI. Nvim does not issue such a sequence and always uses 7-bit control sequences. ============================================================================== vim:tw=78:ts=8:sw=2:noet:ft=help:norl: