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583 lines
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583 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
*usr_25.txt* Nvim
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VIM USER MANUAL - by Bram Moolenaar
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Editing formatted text
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Text hardly ever comes in one sentence per line. This chapter is about
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breaking sentences to make them fit on a page and other formatting.
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Vim also has useful features for editing single-line paragraphs and tables.
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|25.1| Breaking lines
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|25.2| Aligning text
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|25.3| Indents and tabs
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|25.4| Dealing with long lines
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|25.5| Editing tables
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Next chapter: |usr_26.txt| Repeating
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Previous chapter: |usr_24.txt| Inserting quickly
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Table of contents: |usr_toc.txt|
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==============================================================================
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*25.1* Breaking lines
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Vim has a number of functions that make dealing with text easier. By default,
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the editor does not perform automatic line breaks. In other words, you have
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to press <Enter> yourself. This is useful when you are writing programs where
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you want to decide where the line ends. It is not so good when you are
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creating documentation and want the text to be at most 70 character wide.
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If you set the 'textwidth' option, Vim automatically inserts line breaks.
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Suppose, for example, that you want a very narrow column of only 30
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characters. You need to execute the following command: >
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:set textwidth=30
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Now you start typing (ruler added):
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1 2 3
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12345678901234567890123456789012345
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I taught programming for a whi ~
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If you type "l" next, this makes the line longer than the 30-character limit.
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When Vim sees this, it inserts a line break and you get the following:
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1 2 3
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12345678901234567890123456789012345
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I taught programming for a ~
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whil ~
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Continuing on, you can type in the rest of the paragraph:
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1 2 3
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12345678901234567890123456789012345
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I taught programming for a ~
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while. One time, I was stopped ~
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by the Fort Worth police, ~
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because my homework was too ~
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hard. True story. ~
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You do not have to type newlines; Vim puts them in automatically.
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Note:
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The 'wrap' option makes Vim display lines with a line break, but this
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doesn't insert a line break in the file.
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REFORMATTING
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The Vim editor is not a word processor. In a word processor, if you delete
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something at the beginning of the paragraph, the line breaks are reworked. In
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Vim they are not; so if you delete the word "programming" from the first line,
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all you get is a short line:
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1 2 3
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12345678901234567890123456789012345
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I taught for a ~
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while. One time, I was stopped ~
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by the Fort Worth police, ~
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because my homework was too ~
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hard. True story. ~
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This does not look good. To get the paragraph into shape you use the "gq"
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operator.
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Let's first use this with a Visual selection. Starting from the first
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line, type: >
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v4jgq
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"v" to start Visual mode, "4j" to move to the end of the paragraph and then
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the "gq" operator. The result is:
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1 2 3
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12345678901234567890123456789012345
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I taught for a while. One ~
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time, I was stopped by the ~
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Fort Worth police, because my ~
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homework was too hard. True ~
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story. ~
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Note: there is a way to do automatic formatting for specific types of text
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layouts, see |auto-format|.
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Since "gq" is an operator, you can use one of the three ways to select the
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text it works on: With Visual mode, with a movement and with a text object.
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The example above could also be done with "gq4j". That's less typing, but
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you have to know the line count. A more useful motion command is "}". This
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moves to the end of a paragraph. Thus "gq}" formats from the cursor to the
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end of the current paragraph.
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A very useful text object to use with "gq" is the paragraph. Try this: >
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gqap
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"ap" stands for "a-paragraph". This formats the text of one paragraph
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(separated by empty lines). Also the part before the cursor.
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If you have your paragraphs separated by empty lines, you can format the
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whole file by typing this: >
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gggqG
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"gg" to move to the first line, "gqG" to format until the last line.
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Warning: If your paragraphs are not properly separated, they will be joined
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together. A common mistake is to have a line with a space or tab. That's a
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blank line, but not an empty line.
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Vim is able to format more than just plain text. See |fo-table| for how to
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change this. See the 'joinspaces' option to change the number of spaces used
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after a full stop.
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It is possible to use an external program for formatting. This is useful
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if your text can't be properly formatted with Vim's builtin command. See the
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'formatprg' option.
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==============================================================================
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*25.2* Aligning text
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To center a range of lines, use the following command: >
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:{range}center [width]
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{range} is the usual command-line range. [width] is an optional line width to
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use for centering. If [width] is not specified, it defaults to the value of
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'textwidth'. (If 'textwidth' is 0, the default is 80.)
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For example: >
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:1,5center 40
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results in the following:
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I taught for a while. One ~
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time, I was stopped by the ~
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Fort Worth police, because my ~
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homework was too hard. True ~
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story. ~
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RIGHT ALIGNMENT
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Similarly, the ":right" command right-justifies the text: >
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:1,5right 37
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gives this result:
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I taught for a while. One ~
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time, I was stopped by the ~
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Fort Worth police, because my ~
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homework was too hard. True ~
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story. ~
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LEFT ALIGNMENT
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Finally there is this command: >
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:{range}left [margin]
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Unlike ":center" and ":right", however, the argument to ":left" is not the
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length of the line. Instead it is the left margin. If it is omitted, the
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text will be put against the left side of the screen (using a zero margin
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would do the same). If it is 5, the text will be indented 5 spaces. For
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example, use these commands: >
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:1left 5
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:2,5left
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This results in the following:
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I taught for a while. One ~
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time, I was stopped by the ~
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Fort Worth police, because my ~
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homework was too hard. True ~
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story. ~
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JUSTIFYING TEXT
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Vim has no built-in way of justifying text. However, there is a neat macro
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package that does the job. To use this package, execute the following
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command: >
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:packadd justify
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Or put this line in your |vimrc|: >
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packadd! justify
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This Vim script file defines a new visual command "_j". To justify a block of
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text, highlight the text in Visual mode and then execute "_j".
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Look in the file for more explanations. To go there, do "gf" on this name:
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$VIMRUNTIME/pack/dist/opt/justify/plugin/justify.vim.
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An alternative is to filter the text through an external program. Example: >
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:%!fmt
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==============================================================================
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*25.3* Indents and tabs
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Indents can be used to make text stand out from the rest. The example texts
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in this manual, for example, are indented by eight spaces or a tab. You would
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normally enter this by typing a tab at the start of each line. Take this
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text:
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the first line ~
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the second line ~
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This is entered by typing a tab, some text, <Enter>, tab and more text.
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The 'autoindent' option inserts indents automatically: >
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:set autoindent
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When a new line is started it gets the same indent as the previous line. In
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the above example, the tab after the <Enter> is not needed anymore.
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INCREASING INDENT
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To increase the amount of indent in a line, use the ">" operator. Often this
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is used as ">>", which adds indent to the current line.
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The amount of indent added is specified with the 'shiftwidth' option. The
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default value is 8. To make ">>" insert four spaces worth of indent, for
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example, type this: >
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:set shiftwidth=4
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When used on the second line of the example text, this is what you get:
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the first line ~
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the second line ~
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"4>>" will increase the indent of four lines.
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TABSTOP
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If you want to make indents a multiple of 4, you set 'shiftwidth' to 4. But
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when pressing a <Tab> you still get 8 spaces worth of indent. To change this,
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set the 'softtabstop' option: >
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:set softtabstop=4
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This will make the <Tab> key insert 4 spaces worth of indent. If there are
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already four spaces, a <Tab> character is used (saving seven characters in the
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file). (If you always want spaces and no tab characters, set the 'expandtab'
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option.)
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Note:
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You could set the 'tabstop' option to 4. However, if you edit the
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file another time, with 'tabstop' set to the default value of 8, it
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will look wrong. In other programs and when printing the indent will
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also be wrong. Therefore it is recommended to keep 'tabstop' at eight
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all the time. That's the standard value everywhere.
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CHANGING TABS
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You edit a file which was written with a tabstop of 3. In Vim it looks ugly,
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because it uses the normal tabstop value of 8. You can fix this by setting
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'tabstop' to 3. But you have to do this every time you edit this file.
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Vim can change the use of tabstops in your file. First, set 'tabstop' to
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make the indents look good, then use the ":retab" command: >
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:set tabstop=3
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:retab 8
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The ":retab" command will change 'tabstop' to 8, while changing the text such
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that it looks the same. It changes spans of white space into tabs and spaces
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for this. You can now write the file. Next time you edit it the indents will
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be right without setting an option.
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Warning: When using ":retab" on a program, it may change white space inside
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a string constant. Therefore it's a good habit to use "\t" instead of a
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real tab.
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==============================================================================
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*25.4* Dealing with long lines
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Sometimes you will be editing a file that is wider than the number of columns
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in the window. When that occurs, Vim wraps the lines so that everything fits
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on the screen.
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If you switch the 'wrap' option off, each line in the file shows up as one
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line on the screen. Then the ends of the long lines disappear off the screen
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to the right.
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When you move the cursor to a character that can't be seen, Vim will scroll
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the text to show it. This is like moving a viewport over the text in the
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horizontal direction.
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By default, Vim does not display a horizontal scrollbar in the GUI. If you
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want to enable one, use the following command: >
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:set guioptions+=b
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One horizontal scrollbar will appear at the bottom of the Vim window.
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If you don't have a scrollbar or don't want to use it, use these commands to
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scroll the text. The cursor will stay in the same place, but it's moved back
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into the visible text if necessary.
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zh scroll right
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4zh scroll four characters right
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zH scroll half a window width right
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ze scroll right to put the cursor at the end
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zl scroll left
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4zl scroll four characters left
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zL scroll half a window width left
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zs scroll left to put the cursor at the start
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Let's attempt to show this with one line of text. The cursor is on the "w" of
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"which". The "current window" above the line indicates the text that is
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currently visible. The "window"s below the text indicate the text that is
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visible after the command left of it.
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|<-- current window -->|
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some long text, part of which is visible in the window ~
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ze |<-- window -->|
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zH |<-- window -->|
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4zh |<-- window -->|
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zh |<-- window -->|
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zl |<-- window -->|
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4zl |<-- window -->|
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zL |<-- window -->|
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zs |<-- window -->|
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MOVING WITH WRAP OFF
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When 'wrap' is off and the text has scrolled horizontally, you can use the
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following commands to move the cursor to a character you can see. Thus text
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left and right of the window is ignored. These never cause the text to
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scroll:
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g0 to first visible character in this line
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g^ to first non-blank visible character in this line
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gm to middle of this line
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g$ to last visible character in this line
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|<-- window -->|
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some long text, part of which is visible ~
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g0 g^ gm g$
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BREAKING AT WORDS *edit-no-break*
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When preparing text for use by another program, you might have to make
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paragraphs without a line break. A disadvantage of using 'nowrap' is that you
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can't see the whole sentence you are working on. When 'wrap' is on, words are
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broken halfway, which makes them hard to read.
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A good solution for editing this kind of paragraph is setting the
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'linebreak' option. Vim then breaks lines at an appropriate place when
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displaying the line. The text in the file remains unchanged.
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Without 'linebreak' text might look like this:
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+---------------------------------+
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|letter generation program for a b|
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|ank. They wanted to send out a s|
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|pecial, personalized letter to th|
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|eir richest 1000 customers. Unfo|
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|rtunately for the programmer, he |
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+---------------------------------+
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After: >
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:set linebreak
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it looks like this:
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+---------------------------------+
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|letter generation program for a |
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|bank. They wanted to send out a |
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|special, personalized letter to |
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|their richest 1000 customers. |
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|Unfortunately for the programmer,|
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+---------------------------------+
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Related options:
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'breakat' specifies the characters where a break can be inserted.
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'showbreak' specifies a string to show at the start of broken line.
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Set 'textwidth' to zero to avoid a paragraph to be split.
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MOVING BY VISIBLE LINES
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The "j" and "k" commands move to the next and previous lines. When used on
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a long line, this means moving a lot of screen lines at once.
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To move only one screen line, use the "gj" and "gk" commands. When a line
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doesn't wrap they do the same as "j" and "k". When the line does wrap, they
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move to a character displayed one line below or above.
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You might like to use these mappings, which bind these movement commands to
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the cursor keys: >
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:map <Up> gk
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:map <Down> gj
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TURNING A PARAGRAPH INTO ONE LINE *edit-paragraph-join*
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If you want to import text into a program like MS-Word, each paragraph should
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be a single line. If your paragraphs are currently separated with empty
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lines, this is how you turn each paragraph into a single line: >
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:g/./,/^$/join
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That looks complicated. Let's break it up in pieces:
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:g/./ A ":global" command that finds all lines that contain
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at least one character.
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,/^$/ A range, starting from the current line (the non-empty
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line) until an empty line.
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join The ":join" command joins the range of lines together
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into one line.
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Starting with this text, containing eight lines broken at column 30:
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+----------------------------------+
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|A letter generation program |
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|for a bank. They wanted to |
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|send out a special, |
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|personalized letter. |
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| |
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|To their richest 1000 |
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|customers. Unfortunately for |
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|the programmer, |
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+----------------------------------+
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You end up with two lines:
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+----------------------------------+
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|A letter generation program for a |
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|bank. They wanted to send out a s|
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|pecial, personalized letter. |
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|To their richest 1000 customers. |
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|Unfortunately for the programmer, |
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+----------------------------------+
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Note that this doesn't work when the separating line is blank but not empty;
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when it contains spaces and/or tabs. This command does work with blank lines:
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>
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:g/\S/,/^\s*$/join
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This still requires a blank or empty line at the end of the file for the last
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paragraph to be joined.
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==============================================================================
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*25.5* Editing tables
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Suppose you are editing a table with four columns:
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nice table test 1 test 2 test 3 ~
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input A 0.534 ~
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input B 0.913 ~
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You need to enter numbers in the third column. You could move to the second
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line, use "A", enter a lot of spaces and type the text.
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For this kind of editing there is a special option: >
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set virtualedit=all
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Now you can move the cursor to positions where there isn't any text. This is
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called "virtual space". Editing a table is a lot easier this way.
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Move the cursor by searching for the header of the last column: >
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/test 3
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Now press "j" and you are right where you can enter the value for "input A".
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Typing "0.693" results in:
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nice table test 1 test 2 test 3 ~
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input A 0.534 0.693 ~
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input B 0.913 ~
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Vim has automatically filled the gap in front of the new text for you. Now,
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to enter the next field in this column use "Bj". "B" moves back to the start
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of a white space separated word. Then "j" moves to the place where the next
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field can be entered.
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Note:
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You can move the cursor anywhere in the display, also beyond the end
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of a line. But Vim will not insert spaces there, until you insert a
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character in that position.
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COPYING A COLUMN
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You want to add a column, which should be a copy of the third column and
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placed before the "test 1" column. Do this in seven steps:
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1. Move the cursor to the left upper corner of this column, e.g., with
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"/test 3".
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2. Press CTRL-V to start blockwise Visual mode.
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3. Move the cursor down two lines with "2j". You are now in "virtual space":
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the "input B" line of the "test 3" column.
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4. Move the cursor right, to include the whole column in the selection, plus
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the space that you want between the columns. "9l" should do it.
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5. Yank the selected rectangle with "y".
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6. Move the cursor to "test 1", where the new column must be placed.
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7. Press "P".
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The result should be:
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nice table test 3 test 1 test 2 test 3 ~
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input A 0.693 0.534 0.693 ~
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input B 0.913 ~
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Notice that the whole "test 1" column was shifted right, also the line where
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the "test 3" column didn't have text.
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Go back to non-virtual cursor movements with: >
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:set virtualedit=
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VIRTUAL REPLACE MODE
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The disadvantage of using 'virtualedit' is that it "feels" different. You
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can't recognize tabs or spaces beyond the end of line when moving the cursor
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around. Another method can be used: Virtual Replace mode.
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Suppose you have a line in a table that contains both tabs and other
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characters. Use "rx" on the first tab:
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|
inp 0.693 0.534 0.693 ~
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|
|
|
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|
rx |
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V
|
|
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|
inpx0.693 0.534 0.693 ~
|
|
|
|
The layout is messed up. To avoid that, use the "gr" command:
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|
|
|
inp 0.693 0.534 0.693 ~
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|
|
|
|
|
grx |
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V
|
|
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|
inpx 0.693 0.534 0.693 ~
|
|
|
|
What happens is that the "gr" command makes sure the new character takes the
|
|
right amount of screen space. Extra spaces or tabs are inserted to fill the
|
|
gap. Thus what actually happens is that a tab is replaced by "x" and then
|
|
blanks added to make the text after it keep its place. In this case a
|
|
tab is inserted.
|
|
When you need to replace more than one character, you use the "R" command
|
|
to go to Replace mode (see |04.9|). This messes up the layout and replaces
|
|
the wrong characters:
|
|
|
|
inp 0 0.534 0.693 ~
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|
|
|
|
|
|
R0.786 |
|
|
V
|
|
|
|
inp 0.78634 0.693 ~
|
|
|
|
The "gR" command uses Virtual Replace mode. This preserves the layout:
|
|
|
|
inp 0 0.534 0.693 ~
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
gR0.786 |
|
|
V
|
|
|
|
inp 0.786 0.534 0.693 ~
|
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==============================================================================
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Next chapter: |usr_26.txt| Repeating
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Copyright: see |manual-copyright| vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl:
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