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181 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
*usr_32.txt* Nvim
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VIM USER MANUAL - by Bram Moolenaar
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The undo tree
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Vim provides multi-level undo. If you undo a few changes and then make a new
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change you create a branch in the undo tree. This text is about moving
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through the branches.
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|32.1| Undo up to a file write
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|32.2| Numbering changes
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|32.3| Jumping around the tree
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|32.4| Time travelling
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Next chapter: |usr_40.txt| Make new commands
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Previous chapter: |usr_31.txt| Exploiting the GUI
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Table of contents: |usr_toc.txt|
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==============================================================================
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*32.1* Undo up to a file write
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Sometimes you make several changes, and then discover you want to go back to
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when you have last written the file. You can do that with this command: >
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:earlier 1f
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The "f" stands for "file" here.
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You can repeat this command to go further back in the past. Or use a count
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different from 1 to go back faster.
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If you go back too far, go forward again with: >
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:later 1f
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Note that these commands really work in time sequence. This matters if you
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made changes after undoing some changes. It's explained in the next section.
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Also note that we are talking about text writes here. For writing the undo
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information in a file see |undo-persistence|.
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==============================================================================
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*32.2* Numbering changes
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In section |02.5| we only discussed one line of undo/redo. But it is also
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possible to branch off. This happens when you undo a few changes and then
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make a new change. The new changes become a branch in the undo tree.
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Let's start with the text "one". The first change to make is to append
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" too". And then move to the first 'o' and change it into 'w'. We then have
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two changes, numbered 1 and 2, and three states of the text:
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one ~
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change 1
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one too ~
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change 2
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one two ~
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If we now undo one change, back to "one too", and change "one" to "me" we
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create a branch in the undo tree:
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one ~
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change 1
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one too ~
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/ \
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change 2 change 3
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one two me too ~
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You can now use the |u| command to undo. If you do this twice you get to
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"one". Use |CTRL-R| to redo, and you will go to "one too". One more |CTRL-R|
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takes you to "me too". Thus undo and redo go up and down in the tree, using
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the branch that was last used.
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What matters here is the order in which the changes are made. Undo and redo
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are not considered changes in this context. After each change you have a new
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state of the text.
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Note that only the changes are numbered, the text shown in the tree above has
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no identifier. They are mostly referred to by the number of the change above
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it. But sometimes by the number of one of the changes below it, especially
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when moving up in the tree, so that you know which change was just undone.
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==============================================================================
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*32.3* Jumping around the tree
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So how do you get to "one two" now? You can use this command: >
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:undo 2
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The text is now "one two", you are below change 2. You can use the |:undo|
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command to jump to below any change in the tree.
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Now make another change: change "one" to "not":
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one ~
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change 1
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one too ~
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/ \
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change 2 change 3
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one two me too ~
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change 4
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not two ~
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Now you change your mind and want to go back to "me too". Use the |g-|
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command. This moves back in time. Thus it doesn't walk the tree upwards or
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downwards, but goes to the change made before.
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You can repeat |g-| and you will see the text change:
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me too ~
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one two ~
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one too ~
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one ~
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Use |g+| to move forward in time:
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one ~
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one too ~
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one two ~
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me too ~
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not two ~
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Using |:undo| is useful if you know what change you want to jump to. |g-| and
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|g+| are useful if you don't know exactly what the change number is.
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You can type a count before |g-| and |g+| to repeat them.
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==============================================================================
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*32.4* Time travelling
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When you have been working on text for a while the tree grows to become big.
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Then you may want to go to the text of some minutes ago.
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To see what branches there are in the undo tree use this command: >
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:undolist
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< number changes time ~
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3 2 16 seconds ago
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4 3 5 seconds ago
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Here you can see the number of the leaves in each branch and when the change
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was made. Assuming we are below change 4, at "not two", you can go back ten
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seconds with this command: >
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:earlier 10s
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Depending on how much time you took for the changes you end up at a certain
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position in the tree. The |:earlier| command argument can be "m" for minutes,
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"h" for hours and "d" for days. To go all the way back use a big number: >
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:earlier 100d
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To travel forward in time again use the |:later| command: >
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:later 1m
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The arguments are "s", "m" and "h", just like with |:earlier|.
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If you want even more details, or want to manipulate the information, you can
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use the |undotree()| function. To see what it returns: >
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:echo undotree()
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==============================================================================
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Next chapter: |usr_40.txt| Make new commands
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Copyright: see |manual-copyright| vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl:
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