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644 lines
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644 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
*usr_30.txt* Nvim
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VIM USER MANUAL - by Bram Moolenaar
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Editing programs
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Vim has various commands that aid in writing computer programs. Compile a
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program and directly jump to reported errors. Automatically set the indent
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for many languages and format comments.
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|30.1| Compiling
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|30.2| Indenting C files
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|30.3| Automatic indenting
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|30.4| Other indenting
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|30.5| Tabs and spaces
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|30.6| Formatting comments
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Next chapter: |usr_31.txt| Exploiting the GUI
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Previous chapter: |usr_29.txt| Moving through programs
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Table of contents: |usr_toc.txt|
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==============================================================================
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*30.1* Compiling
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Vim has a set of so called "quickfix" commands. They enable you to compile a
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program from within Vim and then go through the errors generated and fix them
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(hopefully). You can then recompile and fix any new errors that are found
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until finally your program compiles without any error.
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The following command runs the program "make" (supplying it with any argument
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you give) and captures the results: >
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:make {arguments}
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If errors were generated, they are captured and the editor positions you where
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the first error occurred.
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Take a look at an example ":make" session. (Typical :make sessions generate
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far more errors and fewer stupid ones.) After typing ":make" the screen looks
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like this:
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:!make | &tee /tmp/vim215953.err ~
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gcc -g -Wall -o prog main.c sub.c ~
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main.c: In function 'main': ~
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main.c:6: too many arguments to function 'do_sub' ~
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main.c: At top level: ~
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main.c:10: parse error before '}' ~
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make: *** [prog] Error 1 ~
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2 returned ~
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"main.c" 11L, 111C ~
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(3 of 6): too many arguments to function 'do_sub' ~
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Press ENTER or type command to continue ~
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From this you can see that you have errors in the file "main.c". When you
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press <Enter>, Vim displays the file "main.c", with the cursor positioned on
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line 6, the first line with an error. You did not need to specify the file or
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the line number, Vim knew where to go by looking in the error messages.
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>
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+---------------------------------------------------+
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|int main() |
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|{ |
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| int i=3; |
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cursor -> | do_sub("foo"); |
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| ++i; |
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| return (0); |
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|} |
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|} |
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| ~ |
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|(3 of 12): too many arguments to function 'do_sub' |
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+---------------------------------------------------+
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<
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The following command goes to where the next error occurs: >
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:cnext
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Vim jumps to line 10, the last line in the file, where there is an extra '}'.
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When there is not enough room, Vim will shorten the error message. To see
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the whole message use: >
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:cc
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You can get an overview of all the error messages with the ":clist" command.
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The output looks like this: >
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:clist
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< 3 main.c: 6:too many arguments to function 'do_sub' ~
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5 main.c: 10:parse error before '}' ~
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Only the lines where Vim recognized a file name and line number are listed
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here. It assumes those are the interesting lines and the rest is just boring
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messages. However, sometimes unrecognized lines do contain something you want
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to see. Output from the linker, for example, about an undefined function.
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To see all the messages add a "!" to the command: >
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:clist!
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< 1 gcc -g -Wall -o prog main.c sub.c ~
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2 main.c: In function 'main': ~
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3 main.c:6: too many arguments to function 'do_sub' ~
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4 main.c: At top level: ~
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5 main.c:10: parse error before '}' ~
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6 make: *** [prog] Error 1 ~
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Vim will highlight the current error. To go back to the previous error, use:
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>
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:cprevious
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Other commands to move around in the error list:
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:cfirst to first error
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:clast to last error
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:cc 3 to error nr 3
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USING ANOTHER COMPILER
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The name of the program to run when the ":make" command is executed is defined
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by the 'makeprg' option. Usually this is set to "make", but Visual C++ users
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should set this to "nmake" by executing the following command: >
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:set makeprg=nmake
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You can also include arguments in this option. Special characters need to
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be escaped with a backslash. Example: >
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:set makeprg=nmake\ -f\ project.mak
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You can include special Vim keywords in the command specification. The %
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character expands to the name of the current file. So if you execute the
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command: >
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:set makeprg=make\ %:S
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When you are editing main.c, then ":make" executes the following command: >
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make main.c
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This is not too useful, so you will refine the command a little and use the :r
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(root) modifier: >
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:set makeprg=make\ %:r:S.o
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Now the command executed is as follows: >
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make main.o
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More about these modifiers here: |filename-modifiers|.
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OLD ERROR LISTS
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Suppose you ":make" a program. There is a warning message in one file and an
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error message in another. You fix the error and use ":make" again to check if
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it was really fixed. Now you want to look at the warning message. It doesn't
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show up in the last error list, since the file with the warning wasn't
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compiled again. You can go back to the previous error list with: >
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:colder
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Then use ":clist" and ":cc {nr}" to jump to the place with the warning.
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To go forward to the next error list: >
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:cnewer
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Vim remembers ten error lists.
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SWITCHING COMPILERS
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You have to tell Vim what format the error messages are that your compiler
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produces. This is done with the 'errorformat' option. The syntax of this
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option is quite complicated and it can be made to fit almost any compiler.
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You can find the explanation here: |errorformat|.
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You might be using various different compilers. Setting the 'makeprg' option,
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and especially the 'errorformat' each time is not easy. Vim offers a simple
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method for this. For example, to switch to using the Microsoft Visual C++
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compiler: >
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:compiler msvc
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This will find the Vim script for the "msvc" compiler and set the appropriate
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options.
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You can write your own compiler files. See |write-compiler-plugin|.
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OUTPUT REDIRECTION
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The ":make" command redirects the output of the executed program to an error
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file. How this works depends on various things, such as the 'shell'. If your
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":make" command doesn't capture the output, check the 'makeef' and
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'shellpipe' options. The 'shellquote' and 'shellxquote' options might also
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matter.
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In case you can't get ":make" to redirect the file for you, an alternative is
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to compile the program in another window and redirect the output into a file.
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Then have Vim read this file with: >
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:cfile {filename}
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Jumping to errors will work like with the ":make" command.
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==============================================================================
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*30.2* Indenting C style text
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A program is much easier to understand when the lines have been properly
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indented. Vim offers various ways to make this less work. For C or C style
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programs like Java or C++, set the 'cindent' option. Vim knows a lot about C
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programs and will try very hard to automatically set the indent for you. Set
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the 'shiftwidth' option to the amount of spaces you want for a deeper level.
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Four spaces will work fine. One ":set" command will do it: >
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:set cindent shiftwidth=4
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With this option enabled, when you type something such as "if (x)", the next
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line will automatically be indented an additional level.
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if (flag)
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Automatic indent ---> do_the_work();
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Automatic unindent <-- if (other_flag) {
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Automatic indent ---> do_file();
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keep indent do_some_more();
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Automatic unindent <-- }
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When you type something in curly braces ({}), the text will be indented at the
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start and unindented at the end. The unindenting will happen after typing the
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'}', since Vim can't guess what you are going to type.
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One side effect of automatic indentation is that it helps you catch errors in
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your code early. When you type a } to finish a function, only to find that
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the automatic indentation gives it more indent than what you expected, there
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is probably a } missing. Use the "%" command to find out which { matches the
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} you typed.
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A missing ) and ; also cause extra indent. Thus if you get more white
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space than you would expect, check the preceding lines.
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When you have code that is badly formatted, or you inserted and deleted lines,
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you need to re-indent the lines. The "=" operator does this. The simplest
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form is: >
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==
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This indents the current line. Like with all operators, there are three ways
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to use it. In Visual mode "=" indents the selected lines. A useful text
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object is "a{". This selects the current {} block. Thus, to re-indent the
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code block the cursor is in: >
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=a{
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I you have really badly indented code, you can re-indent the whole file with:
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>
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gg=G
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However, don't do this in files that have been carefully indented manually.
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The automatic indenting does a good job, but in some situations you might want
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to overrule it.
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SETTING INDENT STYLE
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Different people have different styles of indentation. By default Vim does a
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pretty good job of indenting in a way that 90% of programmers do. There are
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different styles, however; so if you want to, you can customize the
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indentation style with the 'cinoptions' option.
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By default 'cinoptions' is empty and Vim uses the default style. You can
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add various items where you want something different. For example, to make
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curly braces be placed like this:
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if (flag) ~
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{ ~
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i = 8; ~
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j = 0; ~
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} ~
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Use this command: >
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:set cinoptions+={2
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There are many of these items. See |cinoptions-values|.
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==============================================================================
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*30.3* Automatic indenting
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You don't want to switch on the 'cindent' option manually every time you edit
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a C file. This is how you make it work automatically: >
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:filetype indent on
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Actually, this does a lot more than switching on 'cindent' for C files. First
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of all, it enables detecting the type of a file. That's the same as what is
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used for syntax highlighting.
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When the filetype is known, Vim will search for an indent file for this
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type of file. The Vim distribution includes a number of these for various
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programming languages. This indent file will then prepare for automatic
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indenting specifically for this file.
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If you don't like the automatic indenting, you can switch it off again: >
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:filetype indent off
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If you don't like the indenting for one specific type of file, this is how you
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avoid it. Create a file with just this one line: >
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:let b:did_indent = 1
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Now you need to write this in a file with a specific name:
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{directory}/indent/{filetype}.vim
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The {filetype} is the name of the file type, such as "cpp" or "java". You can
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see the exact name that Vim detected with this command: >
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:set filetype
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In this file the output is:
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filetype=help ~
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Thus you would use "help" for {filetype}.
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For the {directory} part you need to use your runtime directory. Look at
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the output of this command: >
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set runtimepath
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Now use the first item, the name before the first comma. Thus if the output
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looks like this:
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runtimepath=~/.config/nvim,/usr/local/share/vim/vim60/runtime,~/.config/nvim/after ~
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You use "~/.config/nvim" for {directory}. Then the resulting file name is:
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~/.config/nvim/indent/help.vim ~
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Instead of switching the indenting off, you could write your own indent file.
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How to do that is explained here: |indent-expression|.
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==============================================================================
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*30.4* Other indenting
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The simplest form of automatic indenting is with the 'autoindent' option.
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It uses the indent from the previous line. A bit smarter is the 'smartindent'
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option. This is useful for languages where no indent file is available.
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'smartindent' is not as smart as 'cindent', but smarter than 'autoindent'.
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With 'smartindent' set, an extra level of indentation is added for each {
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and removed for each }. An extra level of indentation will also be added for
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any of the words in the 'cinwords' option. Lines that begin with # are
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treated specially: all indentation is removed. This is done so that
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preprocessor directives will all start in column 1. The indentation is
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restored for the next line.
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CORRECTING INDENTS
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When you are using 'autoindent' or 'smartindent' to get the indent of the
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previous line, there will be many times when you need to add or remove one
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'shiftwidth' worth of indent. A quick way to do this is using the CTRL-D and
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CTRL-T commands in Insert mode.
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For example, you are typing a shell script that is supposed to look like
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this:
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if test -n a; then ~
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echo a ~
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echo "-------" ~
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fi ~
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Start off by setting these options: >
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:set autoindent shiftwidth=3
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You start by typing the first line, <Enter> and the start of the second line:
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if test -n a; then ~
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echo ~
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Now you see that you need an extra indent. Type CTRL-T. The result:
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if test -n a; then ~
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echo ~
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The CTRL-T command, in Insert mode, adds one 'shiftwidth' to the indent, no
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matter where in the line you are.
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You continue typing the second line, <Enter> and the third line. This time
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the indent is OK. Then <Enter> and the last line. Now you have this:
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if test -n a; then ~
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echo a ~
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echo "-------" ~
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fi ~
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To remove the superfluous indent in the last line press CTRL-D. This deletes
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one 'shiftwidth' worth of indent, no matter where you are in the line.
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When you are in Normal mode, you can use the ">>" and "<<" commands to
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shift lines. ">" and "<" are operators, thus you have the usual three ways to
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specify the lines you want to indent. A useful combination is: >
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>i{
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This adds one indent to the current block of lines, inside {}. The { and }
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lines themselves are left unmodified. ">a{" includes them. In this example
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the cursor is on "printf":
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original text after ">i{" after ">a{"
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if (flag) if (flag) if (flag) ~
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{ { { ~
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printf("yes"); printf("yes"); printf("yes"); ~
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flag = 0; flag = 0; flag = 0; ~
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} } } ~
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==============================================================================
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*30.5* Tabs and spaces
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'tabstop' is set to eight by default. Although you can change it, you quickly
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run into trouble later. Other programs won't know what tabstop value you
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used. They probably use the default value of eight, and your text suddenly
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looks very different. Also, most printers use a fixed tabstop value of eight.
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Thus it's best to keep 'tabstop' alone. (If you edit a file which was written
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with a different tabstop setting, see |25.3| for how to fix that.)
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For indenting lines in a program, using a multiple of eight spaces makes
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you quickly run into the right border of the window. Using a single space
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doesn't provide enough visual difference. Many people prefer to use four
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spaces, a good compromise.
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Since a <Tab> is eight spaces and you want to use an indent of four spaces,
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you can't use a <Tab> character to make your indent. There are two ways to
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handle this:
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1. Use a mix of <Tab> and space characters. Since a <Tab> takes the place of
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eight spaces, you have fewer characters in your file. Inserting a <Tab>
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is quicker than eight spaces. Backspacing works faster as well.
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2. Use spaces only. This avoids the trouble with programs that use a
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different tabstop value.
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Fortunately, Vim supports both methods quite well.
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SPACES AND TABS
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If you are using a combination of tabs and spaces, you just edit normally.
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The Vim defaults do a fine job of handling things.
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You can make life a little easier by setting the 'softtabstop' option.
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This option tells Vim to make the <Tab> key look and feel as if tabs were set
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at the value of 'softtabstop', but actually use a combination of tabs and
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spaces.
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After you execute the following command, every time you press the <Tab> key
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the cursor moves to the next 4-column boundary: >
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:set softtabstop=4
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When you start in the first column and press <Tab>, you get 4 spaces inserted
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in your text. The second time, Vim takes out the 4 spaces and puts in a <Tab>
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(thus taking you to column 8). Thus Vim uses as many <Tab>s as possible, and
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then fills up with spaces.
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When backspacing it works the other way around. A <BS> will always delete
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the amount specified with 'softtabstop'. Then <Tab>s are used as many as
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possible and spaces to fill the gap.
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The following shows what happens pressing <Tab> a few times, and then using
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<BS>. A "." stands for a space and "------->" for a <Tab>.
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type result ~
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<Tab> ....
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<Tab><Tab> ------->
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<Tab><Tab><Tab> ------->....
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<Tab><Tab><Tab><BS> ------->
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<Tab><Tab><Tab><BS><BS> ....
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An alternative is to use the 'smarttab' option. When it's set, Vim uses
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'shiftwidth' for a <Tab> typed in the indent of a line, and a real <Tab> when
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typed after the first non-blank character. However, <BS> doesn't work like
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with 'softtabstop'.
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JUST SPACES
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If you want absolutely no tabs in your file, you can set the 'expandtab'
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option: >
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:set expandtab
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When this option is set, the <Tab> key inserts a series of spaces. Thus you
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get the same amount of white space as if a <Tab> character was inserted, but
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there isn't a real <Tab> character in your file.
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The backspace key will delete each space by itself. Thus after typing one
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<Tab> you have to press the <BS> key up to eight times to undo it. If you are
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in the indent, pressing CTRL-D will be a lot quicker.
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CHANGING TABS IN SPACES (AND BACK)
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Setting 'expandtab' does not affect any existing tabs. In other words, any
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tabs in the document remain tabs. If you want to convert tabs to spaces, use
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the ":retab" command. Use these commands: >
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:set expandtab
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:%retab
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Now Vim will have changed all indents to use spaces instead of tabs. However,
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all tabs that come after a non-blank character are kept. If you want these to
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be converted as well, add a !: >
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:%retab!
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This is a little bit dangerous, because it can also change tabs inside a
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string. To check if these exist, you could use this: >
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/"[^"\t]*\t[^"]*"
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It's recommended not to use hard tabs inside a string. Replace them with
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"\t" to avoid trouble.
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The other way around works just as well: >
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:set noexpandtab
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:%retab!
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==============================================================================
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*30.6* Formatting comments
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One of the great things about Vim is that it understands comments. You can
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ask Vim to format a comment and it will do the right thing.
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Suppose, for example, that you have the following comment:
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/* ~
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* This is a test ~
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* of the text formatting. ~
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*/ ~
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You then ask Vim to format it by positioning the cursor at the start of the
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comment and type: >
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gq]/
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"gq" is the operator to format text. "]/" is the motion that takes you to the
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end of a comment. The result is:
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/* ~
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* This is a test of the text formatting. ~
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*/ ~
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Notice that Vim properly handled the beginning of each line.
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An alternative is to select the text that is to be formatted in Visual mode
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and type "gq".
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To add a new line to the comment, position the cursor on the middle line and
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press "o". The result looks like this:
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/* ~
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* This is a test of the text formatting. ~
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* ~
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*/ ~
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Vim has automatically inserted a star and a space for you. Now you can type
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the comment text. When it gets longer than 'textwidth', Vim will break the
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line. Again, the star is inserted automatically:
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/* ~
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* This is a test of the text formatting. ~
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* Typing a lot of text here will make Vim ~
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* break ~
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*/ ~
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For this to work some flags must be present in 'formatoptions':
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r insert the star when typing <Enter> in Insert mode
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o insert the star when using "o" or "O" in Normal mode
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c break comment text according to 'textwidth'
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See |fo-table| for more flags.
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DEFINING A COMMENT
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The 'comments' option defines what a comment looks like. Vim distinguishes
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between a single-line comment and a comment that has a different start, end
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and middle part.
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Many single-line comments start with a specific character. In C++ // is
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used, in Makefiles #, in Vim scripts ". For example, to make Vim understand
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C++ comments: >
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:set comments=://
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The colon separates the flags of an item from the text by which the comment is
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recognized. The general form of an item in 'comments' is:
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{flags}:{text}
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The {flags} part can be empty, as in this case.
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Several of these items can be concatenated, separated by commas. This
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allows recognizing different types of comments at the same time. For example,
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let's edit an e-mail message. When replying, the text that others wrote is
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preceded with ">" and "!" characters. This command would work: >
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:set comments=n:>,n:!
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There are two items, one for comments starting with ">" and one for comments
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that start with "!". Both use the flag "n". This means that these comments
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nest. Thus a line starting with ">" may have another comment after the ">".
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This allows formatting a message like this:
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> ! Did you see that site? ~
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> ! It looks really great. ~
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> I don't like it. The ~
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> colors are terrible. ~
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What is the URL of that ~
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site? ~
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Try setting 'textwidth' to a different value, e.g., 80, and format the text by
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Visually selecting it and typing "gq". The result is:
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> ! Did you see that site? It looks really great. ~
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> I don't like it. The colors are terrible. ~
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What is the URL of that site? ~
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You will notice that Vim did not move text from one type of comment to
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another. The "I" in the second line would have fit at the end of the first
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line, but since that line starts with "> !" and the second line with ">", Vim
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knows that this is a different kind of comment.
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A THREE PART COMMENT
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A C comment starts with "/*", has "*" in the middle and "*/" at the end. The
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entry in 'comments' for this looks like this: >
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:set comments=s1:/*,mb:*,ex:*/
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The start is defined with "s1:/*". The "s" indicates the start of a
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three-piece comment. The colon separates the flags from the text by which the
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comment is recognized: "/*". There is one flag: "1". This tells Vim that the
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middle part has an offset of one space.
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The middle part "mb:*" starts with "m", which indicates it is a middle
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part. The "b" flag means that a blank must follow the text. Otherwise Vim
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would consider text like "*pointer" also to be the middle of a comment.
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The end part "ex:*/" has the "e" for identification. The "x" flag has a
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special meaning. It means that after Vim automatically inserted a star,
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typing / will remove the extra space.
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For more details see |format-comments|.
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==============================================================================
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Next chapter: |usr_31.txt| Exploiting the GUI
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Copyright: see |manual-copyright| vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl:
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