mirror of
https://github.com/neovim/neovim.git
synced 2024-12-24 13:15:09 -07:00
037ea6e786
Experimental and subject to future changes. Add a way to redraw certain elements that are not redrawn while Nvim is waiting for input, or currently have no API to do so. This API covers all that can be done with the :redraw* commands, in addition to the following new features: - Immediately move the cursor to a (non-current) window. - Target a specific window or buffer to mark for redraw. - Mark a buffer range for redraw (replaces nvim__buf_redraw_range()). - Redraw the 'statuscolumn'.
604 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
604 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
*various.txt* Nvim
|
|
|
|
|
|
VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar
|
|
|
|
|
|
Various commands *various*
|
|
|
|
Type |gO| to see the table of contents.
|
|
|
|
==============================================================================
|
|
1. Various commands *various-cmds*
|
|
|
|
*CTRL-L*
|
|
CTRL-L Clears and redraws the screen. The redraw may happen
|
|
later, after processing typeahead.
|
|
See also |nvim__redraw()|.
|
|
*CTRL-L-default*
|
|
By default, also clears search highlighting
|
|
|:nohlsearch| and updates diffs |:diffupdate|.
|
|
|default-mappings|
|
|
|
|
*:mod* *:mode*
|
|
:mod[e] Clears and redraws the screen.
|
|
See also |nvim__redraw()|.
|
|
|
|
*:redr* *:redraw*
|
|
:redr[aw][!] Redraws pending screen updates now, or the entire
|
|
screen if "!" is included. To CLEAR the screen use
|
|
|:mode| or |CTRL-L|.
|
|
Useful to update the screen during a script or
|
|
function (or a mapping if 'lazyredraw' set).
|
|
See also |nvim__redraw()|.
|
|
|
|
*:redraws* *:redrawstatus*
|
|
:redraws[tatus][!] Redraws the status line and window bar of the current
|
|
window, or all status lines and window bars if "!" is
|
|
included. Redraws the commandline instead if it contains
|
|
the 'ruler'. Useful if 'statusline' or 'winbar' includes
|
|
an item that doesn't cause automatic updating.
|
|
See also |nvim__redraw()|.
|
|
|
|
*:redrawt* *:redrawtabline*
|
|
:redrawt[abline] Redraw the tabline. Useful to update the tabline when
|
|
'tabline' includes an item that doesn't trigger
|
|
automatic updating. See also |nvim__redraw()|.
|
|
|
|
*N<Del>*
|
|
<Del> When entering a number: Remove the last digit.
|
|
Note: if you like to use <BS> for this, add this
|
|
mapping to your vimrc: >
|
|
:map CTRL-V <BS> CTRL-V <Del>
|
|
<
|
|
:as[cii] or *ga* *:as* *:ascii*
|
|
ga Print the ascii value of the character under the
|
|
cursor in decimal, hexadecimal and octal.
|
|
Mnemonic: Get Ascii value.
|
|
|
|
For example, when the cursor is on a 'R':
|
|
<R> 82, Hex 52, Octal 122 ~
|
|
When the character is a non-standard ASCII character,
|
|
but printable according to the 'isprint' option, the
|
|
non-printable version is also given.
|
|
|
|
When the character is larger than 127, the <M-x> form
|
|
is also printed. For example:
|
|
<~A> <M-^A> 129, Hex 81, Octal 201 ~
|
|
<p> <|~> <M-~> 254, Hex fe, Octal 376 ~
|
|
(where <p> is a special character)
|
|
|
|
The <Nul> character in a file is stored internally as
|
|
<NL>, but it will be shown as:
|
|
<^@> 0, Hex 00, Octal 000 ~
|
|
|
|
If the character has composing characters these are
|
|
also shown. The value of 'maxcombine' doesn't matter.
|
|
|
|
If the character can be inserted as a digraph, also
|
|
output the two characters that can be used to create
|
|
the character:
|
|
<ö> 246, Hex 00f6, Oct 366, Digr o: ~
|
|
This shows you can type CTRL-K o : to insert ö.
|
|
|
|
|
|
*g8*
|
|
g8 Print the hex values of the bytes used in the
|
|
character under the cursor, assuming it is in |UTF-8|
|
|
encoding. This also shows composing characters. The
|
|
value of 'maxcombine' doesn't matter.
|
|
Example of a character with two composing characters:
|
|
e0 b8 81 + e0 b8 b9 + e0 b9 89 ~
|
|
|
|
*8g8*
|
|
8g8 Find an illegal UTF-8 byte sequence at or after the
|
|
cursor.
|
|
Can be used when editing a file that was supposed to
|
|
be UTF-8 but was read as if it is an 8-bit encoding
|
|
because it contains illegal bytes.
|
|
Does not wrap around the end of the file.
|
|
Note that when the cursor is on an illegal byte or the
|
|
cursor is halfway through a multibyte character the
|
|
command won't move the cursor.
|
|
|
|
*gx*
|
|
gx Opens the current filepath or URL (decided by
|
|
|<cfile>|, 'isfname') at cursor using the system
|
|
default handler, by calling |vim.ui.open()|.
|
|
|
|
*v_gx*
|
|
{Visual}gx Opens the selected text using the system default
|
|
handler, by calling |vim.ui.open()|.
|
|
|
|
*:p* *:pr* *:print* *E749*
|
|
:[range]p[rint] [flags]
|
|
Print [range] lines (default current line).
|
|
In the GUI you can use the File.Print menu entry.
|
|
See |ex-flags| for [flags].
|
|
The |:filter| command can be used to only show lines
|
|
matching a pattern.
|
|
|
|
:[range]p[rint] {count} [flags]
|
|
Print {count} lines, starting with [range] (default
|
|
current line |cmdline-ranges|).
|
|
See |ex-flags| for [flags].
|
|
|
|
*:l* *:list*
|
|
:[range]l[ist] [count] [flags]
|
|
Same as :print, but show tabs as ">", trailing spaces
|
|
as "-", and non-breakable space characters as "+" by
|
|
default. Further changed by the 'listchars' option.
|
|
See |ex-flags| for [flags].
|
|
|
|
*:nu* *:number*
|
|
:[range]nu[mber] [count] [flags]
|
|
Same as :print, but precede each line with its line
|
|
number. (See also |hl-LineNr| and 'numberwidth').
|
|
See |ex-flags| for [flags].
|
|
|
|
*:#*
|
|
:[range]# [count] [flags]
|
|
synonym for :number.
|
|
|
|
*:#!*
|
|
:#!{anything} Ignored, so that you can start a Vim script with: >
|
|
#!vim -S
|
|
echo "this is a Vim script"
|
|
quit
|
|
<
|
|
*:z* *E144*
|
|
:[range]z[+-^.=][count] Display several lines of text surrounding the line
|
|
specified with [range], or around the current line
|
|
if there is no [range].
|
|
|
|
If there is a [count], that's how many lines you'll
|
|
see; if there is no [count] and only one window then
|
|
twice the value of the 'scroll' option is used,
|
|
otherwise the current window height minus 3 is used.
|
|
This is the value of "scr" in the table below.
|
|
|
|
If there is a [count] the 'window' option is set to
|
|
its value.
|
|
|
|
:z can be used either alone or followed by any of
|
|
several marks. These have the following effect:
|
|
|
|
mark first line last line new cursor line ~
|
|
---- ---------- --------- ------------
|
|
+ current line 1 scr forward 1 scr forward
|
|
- 1 scr back current line current line
|
|
^ 2 scr back 1 scr back 1 scr back
|
|
. 1/2 scr back 1/2 scr fwd 1/2 scr fwd
|
|
= 1/2 scr back 1/2 scr fwd current line
|
|
|
|
Specifying no mark at all is the same as "+".
|
|
If the mark is "=", a line of dashes is printed
|
|
around the current line.
|
|
|
|
*:z!*
|
|
:[range]z![+-^.=][count]
|
|
Like ":z", but when [count] is not specified, it
|
|
defaults to the Vim window height minus one.
|
|
|
|
:[range]z[!]#[+-^.=][count] *:z#*
|
|
Like ":z" or ":z!", but number the lines.
|
|
|
|
*:=*
|
|
:= [args] Without [args]: prints the last line number.
|
|
With [args]: equivalent to `:lua ={expr}`. see |:lua|
|
|
|
|
:{range}= Prints the last line number in {range}. For example,
|
|
this prints the current line number: >
|
|
:.=
|
|
|
|
:norm[al][!] {commands} *:norm* *:normal*
|
|
Execute Normal mode commands {commands}. This makes
|
|
it possible to execute Normal mode commands typed on
|
|
the command-line. {commands} are executed like they
|
|
are typed. For undo all commands are undone together.
|
|
Execution stops when an error is encountered.
|
|
|
|
If the [!] is given, mappings will not be used.
|
|
Without it, when this command is called from a
|
|
non-remappable mapping (|:noremap|), the argument can
|
|
be mapped anyway.
|
|
|
|
{commands} should be a complete command. If
|
|
{commands} does not finish a command, the last one
|
|
will be aborted as if <Esc> or <C-C> was typed.
|
|
This implies that an insert command must be completed
|
|
(to start Insert mode, see |:startinsert|). A ":"
|
|
command must be completed as well. And you can't use
|
|
"Q" or "gQ" to start Ex mode.
|
|
|
|
The display is not updated while ":normal" is busy.
|
|
|
|
{commands} cannot start with a space. Put a count of
|
|
1 (one) before it, "1 " is one space.
|
|
|
|
This command cannot be followed by another command,
|
|
since any '|' is considered part of the command.
|
|
|
|
This command can be used recursively, but the depth is
|
|
limited by 'maxmapdepth'.
|
|
|
|
An alternative is to use |:execute|, which uses an
|
|
expression as argument. This allows the use of
|
|
printable characters to represent special characters.
|
|
|
|
Example: >
|
|
:exe "normal \<c-w>\<c-w>"
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
:{range}norm[al][!] {commands} *:normal-range*
|
|
Execute Normal mode commands {commands} for each line
|
|
in the {range}. Before executing the {commands}, the
|
|
cursor is positioned in the first column of the range,
|
|
for each line. Otherwise it's the same as the
|
|
":normal" command without a range.
|
|
|
|
*:sh* *:shell* *E371* *E360*
|
|
:sh[ell] Removed. |vim-differences|
|
|
|
|
*:terminal* *:te*
|
|
:te[rminal][!] [{cmd}] Run {cmd} in a non-interactive 'shell' in a new
|
|
|terminal-emulator| buffer. Without {cmd}, start an
|
|
interactive 'shell'.
|
|
|
|
Type |i| to enter |Terminal-mode|, then keys are sent to
|
|
the job running in the terminal. Type <C-\><C-N> to
|
|
leave Terminal-mode. |CTRL-\_CTRL-N|. Type <C-\><C-O>
|
|
to execute a single normal mode command |t_CTRL-\_CTRL-O|
|
|
|
|
Fails if changes have been made to the current buffer,
|
|
unless 'hidden' is set.
|
|
|
|
If {cmd} is omitted, and the 'shell' job exits with no
|
|
error, the buffer is closed automatically
|
|
|default-autocmds|.
|
|
|
|
To enter |Terminal-mode| automatically: >
|
|
autocmd TermOpen * startinsert
|
|
<
|
|
*:!cmd* *:!*
|
|
:!{cmd} Execute {cmd} with 'shell'. See also |:terminal|.
|
|
|
|
The command runs in a non-interactive shell connected
|
|
to a pipe (not a terminal). Use |:terminal| to run an
|
|
interactive shell connected to a terminal.
|
|
|
|
Backgrounded ("&") commands must not write to stdout
|
|
or stderr, the streams are closed immediately. |E5677|
|
|
Use |jobstart()| instead. >
|
|
:call jobstart('foo', {'detach':1})
|
|
<
|
|
For powershell, chaining a stringed executable path
|
|
requires using the call operator (&). >
|
|
:!Write-Output "1`n2" | & "C:\Windows\System32\sort.exe" /r
|
|
<
|
|
*E34*
|
|
Any "!" in {cmd} is replaced with the previous
|
|
external command (see also 'cpoptions'), unless
|
|
escaped by a backslash. Example: ":!ls" followed by
|
|
":!echo ! \! \\!" executes "echo ls ! \!".
|
|
|
|
Any "|" in {cmd} is passed to the shell, you cannot
|
|
use it to append a Vim command. See |:bar|.
|
|
|
|
Any "%" in {cmd} is expanded to the current file name.
|
|
Any "#" in {cmd} is expanded to the alternate file name.
|
|
Special characters are not escaped, use quotes or
|
|
|shellescape()|: >
|
|
:!ls "%"
|
|
:exe "!ls " .. shellescape(expand("%"))
|
|
<
|
|
Newline character ends {cmd} unless a backslash
|
|
precedes the newline. What follows is interpreted as
|
|
another |:| command.
|
|
|
|
After the command has been executed, the timestamp and
|
|
size of the current file is checked |timestamp|.
|
|
|
|
If the command produces too much output some lines may
|
|
be skipped so the command can execute quickly. No
|
|
data is lost, this only affects the display. The last
|
|
few lines are always displayed (never skipped).
|
|
|
|
To avoid the hit-enter prompt use: >
|
|
:silent !{cmd}
|
|
<
|
|
*:!!*
|
|
:!! Repeat last ":!{cmd}".
|
|
|
|
*:ve* *:ver* *:version*
|
|
:ve[rsion] Print editor version and build information.
|
|
See also |feature-compile|.
|
|
|
|
*:redi* *:redir*
|
|
:redi[r][!] > {file} Redirect messages to file {file}. The messages which
|
|
are the output of commands are written to that file,
|
|
until redirection ends. The messages are also still
|
|
shown on the screen. When [!] is included, an
|
|
existing file is overwritten. When [!] is omitted,
|
|
and {file} exists, this command fails.
|
|
|
|
Only one ":redir" can be active at a time. Calls to
|
|
":redir" will close any active redirection before
|
|
starting redirection to the new target. For recursive
|
|
use check out |execute()|.
|
|
|
|
To stop the messages and commands from being echoed to
|
|
the screen, put the commands in a function and call it
|
|
with ":silent call Function()".
|
|
Alternatives are the 'verbosefile' option or
|
|
|execute()| function, these can be used in combination
|
|
with ":redir".
|
|
|
|
:redi[r] >> {file} Redirect messages to file {file}. Append if {file}
|
|
already exists.
|
|
|
|
:redi[r] @{a-zA-Z}
|
|
:redi[r] @{a-zA-Z}> Redirect messages to register {a-z}. Append to the
|
|
contents of the register if its name is given
|
|
uppercase {A-Z}. The ">" after the register name is
|
|
optional.
|
|
:redi[r] @{a-z}>> Append messages to register {a-z}.
|
|
|
|
:redi[r] @*>
|
|
:redi[r] @+> Redirect messages to the selection or clipboard. For
|
|
backward compatibility, the ">" after the register
|
|
name can be omitted. See |quotestar| and |quoteplus|.
|
|
:redi[r] @*>>
|
|
:redi[r] @+>> Append messages to the selection or clipboard.
|
|
|
|
:redi[r] @"> Redirect messages to the unnamed register. For
|
|
backward compatibility, the ">" after the register
|
|
name can be omitted.
|
|
:redi[r] @">> Append messages to the unnamed register.
|
|
|
|
:redi[r] => {var} Redirect messages to a variable. If the variable
|
|
doesn't exist, then it is created. If the variable
|
|
exists, then it is initialized to an empty string.
|
|
The variable will remain empty until redirection ends.
|
|
Only string variables can be used. After the
|
|
redirection starts, if the variable is removed or
|
|
locked or the variable type is changed, then further
|
|
command output messages will cause errors. When using
|
|
a local variable (l:var in a function or s:var in a
|
|
script) and another `:redir` causes the current one to
|
|
end, the scope might be different and the assignment
|
|
fails.
|
|
To get the output of one command the |execute()|
|
|
function can be used instead of redirection.
|
|
|
|
:redi[r] =>> {var} Append messages to an existing variable. Only string
|
|
variables can be used.
|
|
|
|
:redi[r] END End redirecting messages.
|
|
|
|
*:filt* *:filter*
|
|
:filt[er][!] {pattern} {command}
|
|
:filt[er][!] /{pattern}/ {command}
|
|
Restrict the output of {command} to lines matching
|
|
with {pattern}. For example, to list only xml files: >
|
|
:filter /\.xml$/ oldfiles
|
|
< If the [!] is given, restrict the output of {command}
|
|
to lines that do NOT match {pattern}.
|
|
|
|
{pattern} is a Vim search pattern. Instead of enclosing
|
|
it in / any non-ID character (see |'isident'|) can be
|
|
used, so long as it does not appear in {pattern}.
|
|
Without the enclosing character the pattern cannot
|
|
include the bar character. 'ignorecase' is not used.
|
|
|
|
The pattern is matched against the relevant part of
|
|
the output, not necessarily the whole line. Only some
|
|
commands support filtering, try it out to check if it
|
|
works. Some of the commands that support filtering:
|
|
|:#| - filter whole line
|
|
|:clist| - filter by file name or module name
|
|
|:command| - filter by command name
|
|
|:files| - filter by file name
|
|
|:highlight| - filter by highlight group
|
|
|:jumps| - filter by file name
|
|
|:let| - filter by variable name
|
|
|:list| - filter whole line
|
|
|:llist| - filter by file name or module name
|
|
|:marks| - filter by text in the current file,
|
|
or file name for other files
|
|
|:oldfiles| - filter by file name
|
|
|:registers| - filter by register contents
|
|
(does not work multi-line)
|
|
|:set| - filter by option name
|
|
|
|
Only normal messages are filtered, error messages are
|
|
not.
|
|
|
|
*:sil* *:silent* *:silent!*
|
|
:sil[ent][!] {command} Execute {command} silently. Normal messages will not
|
|
be given or added to the message history.
|
|
When [!] is added, error messages will also be
|
|
skipped, and commands and mappings will not be aborted
|
|
when an error is detected. |v:errmsg| is still set.
|
|
When [!] is not used, an error message will cause
|
|
further messages to be displayed normally.
|
|
Redirection, started with |:redir|, will continue as
|
|
usual, although there might be small differences.
|
|
This will allow redirecting the output of a command
|
|
without seeing it on the screen. Example: >
|
|
:redir >/tmp/foobar
|
|
:silent g/Aap/p
|
|
:redir END
|
|
< To execute a Normal mode command silently, use the
|
|
|:normal| command. For example, to search for a
|
|
string without messages: >
|
|
:silent exe "normal /path\<CR>"
|
|
< ":silent!" is useful to execute a command that may
|
|
fail, but the failure is to be ignored. Example: >
|
|
:let v:errmsg = ""
|
|
:silent! /^begin
|
|
:if v:errmsg != ""
|
|
: ... pattern was not found
|
|
< ":silent" also skips the hit-enter prompt.
|
|
Dialogs that prompt for user input (|confirm()|,
|
|
'swapfile', …) are never silent.
|
|
|
|
*:uns* *:unsilent*
|
|
:uns[ilent] {command} Execute {command} not silently. Only makes a
|
|
difference when |:silent| was used to get to this
|
|
command.
|
|
Use this for giving a message even when |:silent| was
|
|
used. In this example |:silent| is used to avoid the
|
|
message about reading the file and |:unsilent| to be
|
|
able to list the first line of each file. >
|
|
:silent argdo unsilent echo expand('%') .. ": " .. getline(1)
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
*:verb* *:verbose*
|
|
:[count]verb[ose] {command}
|
|
Execute {command} with 'verbose' set to [count]. If
|
|
[count] is omitted one is used. ":0verbose" can be
|
|
used to set 'verbose' to zero.
|
|
The additional use of ":silent" makes messages
|
|
generated but not displayed.
|
|
The combination of ":silent" and ":verbose" can be
|
|
used to generate messages and check them with
|
|
|v:statusmsg| and friends. For example: >
|
|
:let v:statusmsg = ""
|
|
:silent verbose runtime foobar.vim
|
|
:if v:statusmsg != ""
|
|
: " foobar.vim could not be found
|
|
:endif
|
|
< When concatenating another command, the ":verbose"
|
|
only applies to the first one: >
|
|
:4verbose set verbose | set verbose
|
|
< verbose=4 ~
|
|
verbose=0 ~
|
|
For logging verbose messages in a file use the
|
|
'verbosefile' option.
|
|
|
|
*:verbose-cmd*
|
|
When 'verbose' is non-zero, listing the value of a Vim option or a key map or
|
|
an abbreviation or a user-defined function or a command or a highlight group
|
|
or an autocommand will also display where it was last defined. If they were
|
|
defined in Lua they will only be located if 'verbose' is set. So Start
|
|
nvim with -V1 arg to see them. If it was defined manually then there
|
|
will be no "Last set" message. When it was defined while executing a function,
|
|
user command or autocommand, the script in which it was defined is reported.
|
|
|
|
*K*
|
|
[count]K Runs the program given by 'keywordprg' to lookup the
|
|
|word| (defined by 'iskeyword') under or right of the
|
|
cursor. Default is "man". Works like this: >
|
|
:tabnew | terminal {program} {keyword}
|
|
< Special cases:
|
|
- If 'keywordprg' begins with ":" it is invoked as
|
|
a Vim command with [count].
|
|
- If 'keywordprg' is empty, |:help| is used.
|
|
- When 'keywordprg' is equal to "man", a [count]
|
|
before "K" is inserted after the "man" command and
|
|
before the keyword. For example, using "2K" while
|
|
the cursor is on "mkdir", results in: >
|
|
!man 2 mkdir
|
|
< - When 'keywordprg' is equal to "man -s", a [count]
|
|
before "K" is inserted after the "-s". If there is
|
|
no count, the "-s" is removed.
|
|
*K-lsp-default*
|
|
- The Nvim |LSP| client sets K to show LSP "hover"
|
|
feature. |lsp-defaults|
|
|
|
|
*v_K*
|
|
{Visual}K Like "K", but use the visually highlighted text for
|
|
the keyword. Only works when the highlighted text is
|
|
not more than one line.
|
|
|
|
*gO*
|
|
gO Show a filetype-specific, navigable "outline" of the
|
|
current buffer. For example, in a |help| buffer this
|
|
shows the table of contents.
|
|
|
|
Currently works in |help| and |:Man| buffers.
|
|
|
|
[N]gs *gs* *:sl* *:sleep*
|
|
:[N]sl[eep] [N][m] Do nothing for [N] seconds, or [N] milliseconds if [m]
|
|
was given. "gs" always uses seconds.
|
|
Default is one second. >
|
|
:sleep "sleep for one second
|
|
:5sleep "sleep for five seconds
|
|
:sleep 100m "sleep for 100 milliseconds
|
|
10gs "sleep for ten seconds
|
|
< Can be interrupted with CTRL-C.
|
|
"gs" stands for "goto sleep".
|
|
While sleeping the cursor is positioned in the text,
|
|
if at a visible position.
|
|
Queued messages are processed during the sleep.
|
|
|
|
*:sl!* *:sleep!*
|
|
:[N]sl[eep]! [N][m] Same as above. Unlike Vim, it does not hide the
|
|
cursor. |vim-differences|
|
|
|
|
==============================================================================
|
|
2. Using Vim like less or more *less*
|
|
|
|
If you use the less or more program to view a file, you don't get syntax
|
|
highlighting. Thus you would like to use Vim instead. You can do this by
|
|
using the shell script "$VIMRUNTIME/macros/less.sh".
|
|
|
|
This shell script uses the Vim script "$VIMRUNTIME/macros/less.vim". It sets
|
|
up mappings to simulate the commands that less supports. Otherwise, you can
|
|
still use the Vim commands.
|
|
|
|
This isn't perfect. For example, when viewing a short file Vim will still use
|
|
the whole screen. But it works well enough for most uses, and you get syntax
|
|
highlighting.
|
|
|
|
The "h" key will give you a short overview of the available commands.
|
|
|
|
If you want to set options differently when using less, define the
|
|
LessInitFunc in your vimrc, for example: >
|
|
|
|
func LessInitFunc()
|
|
set nocursorcolumn nocursorline
|
|
endfunc
|
|
<
|
|
==============================================================================
|
|
3. Commenting *commenting*
|
|
|
|
Nvim supports commenting and uncommenting of lines based on 'commentstring'.
|
|
|
|
Acting on a single line behaves as follows:
|
|
- If the line matches 'commentstring', the comment markers are removed (e.g.
|
|
`/*foo*/` is transformed to `foo`).
|
|
- Otherwise the comment markers are added to the current line (e.g. `foo` is
|
|
transformed to `/*foo*/`). Blank lines are ignored.
|
|
|
|
Acting on multiple lines behaves as follows:
|
|
- If each affected non-blank line matches 'commentstring', then all comment
|
|
markers are removed.
|
|
- Otherwise all affected lines are converted to comments; blank lines are
|
|
transformed to empty comments (e.g. `/**/`). Comment markers are aligned to
|
|
the least indented line.
|
|
|
|
If the filetype of the buffer is associated with a language for which a
|
|
|treesitter| parser is installed, then |vim.filetype.get_option()| is called
|
|
to look up the value of 'commentstring' corresponding to the cursor position.
|
|
(This can be different from the buffer's 'commentstring' in case of
|
|
|treesitter-language-injections|.)
|
|
|
|
*gc* *gc-default*
|
|
gc{motion} Comment or uncomment lines covered by {motion}.
|
|
|
|
*gcc* *gcc-default*
|
|
gcc Comment or uncomment [count] lines starting at cursor.
|
|
|
|
*v_gc* *v_gc-default*
|
|
{Visual}gc Comment or uncomment the selected line(s).
|
|
|
|
*o_gc* *o_gc-default*
|
|
gc Text object for the largest contiguous block of
|
|
non-blank commented lines around the cursor (e.g.
|
|
`gcgc` uncomments a comment block; `dgc` deletes it).
|
|
Works only in Operator-pending mode.
|
|
|
|
vim:noet:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl:
|