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Among other things, this includes: - lies about command.com - references to pcterm
564 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
564 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
*usr_27.txt* For Vim version 7.4. Last change: 2010 Mar 28
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VIM USER MANUAL - by Bram Moolenaar
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Search commands and patterns
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In chapter 3 a few simple search patterns were mentioned |03.9|. Vim can do
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much more complex searches. This chapter explains the most often used ones.
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A detailed specification can be found here: |pattern|
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|27.1| Ignoring case
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|27.2| Wrapping around the file end
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|27.3| Offsets
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|27.4| Matching multiple times
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|27.5| Alternatives
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|27.6| Character ranges
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|27.7| Character classes
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|27.8| Matching a line break
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|27.9| Examples
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Next chapter: |usr_28.txt| Folding
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Previous chapter: |usr_26.txt| Repeating
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Table of contents: |usr_toc.txt|
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==============================================================================
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*27.1* Ignoring case
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By default, Vim's searches are case sensitive. Therefore, "include",
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"INCLUDE", and "Include" are three different words and a search will match
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only one of them.
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Now switch on the 'ignorecase' option: >
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:set ignorecase
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Search for "include" again, and now it will match "Include", "INCLUDE" and
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"InClUDe". (Set the 'hlsearch' option to quickly see where a pattern
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matches.)
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You can switch this off again with: >
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:set noignorecase
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But let's keep it set, and search for "INCLUDE". It will match exactly the
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same text as "include" did. Now set the 'smartcase' option: >
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:set ignorecase smartcase
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If you have a pattern with at least one uppercase character, the search
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becomes case sensitive. The idea is that you didn't have to type that
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uppercase character, so you must have done it because you wanted case to
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match. That's smart!
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With these two options set you find the following matches:
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pattern matches ~
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word word, Word, WORD, WoRd, etc.
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Word Word
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WORD WORD
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WoRd WoRd
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CASE IN ONE PATTERN
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If you want to ignore case for one specific pattern, you can do this by
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prepending the "\c" string. Using "\C" will make the pattern to match case.
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This overrules the 'ignorecase' and 'smartcase' options, when "\c" or "\C" is
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used their value doesn't matter.
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pattern matches ~
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\Cword word
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\CWord Word
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\cword word, Word, WORD, WoRd, etc.
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\cWord word, Word, WORD, WoRd, etc.
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A big advantage of using "\c" and "\C" is that it sticks with the pattern.
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Thus if you repeat a pattern from the search history, the same will happen, no
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matter if 'ignorecase' or 'smartcase' was changed.
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Note:
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The use of "\" items in search patterns depends on the 'magic' option.
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In this chapter we will assume 'magic' is on, because that is the
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standard and recommended setting. If you would change 'magic', many
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search patterns would suddenly become invalid.
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Note:
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If your search takes much longer than you expected, you can interrupt
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it with CTRL-C on Unix and CTRL-Break on Windows.
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==============================================================================
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*27.2* Wrapping around the file end
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By default, a forward search starts searching for the given string at the
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current cursor location. It then proceeds to the end of the file. If it has
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not found the string by that time, it starts from the beginning and searches
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from the start of the file to the cursor location.
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Keep in mind that when repeating the "n" command to search for the next
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match, you eventually get back to the first match. If you don't notice this
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you keep searching forever! To give you a hint, Vim displays this message:
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search hit BOTTOM, continuing at TOP ~
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If you use the "?" command, to search in the other direction, you get this
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message:
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search hit TOP, continuing at BOTTOM ~
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Still, you don't know when you are back at the first match. One way to see
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this is by switching on the 'ruler' option: >
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:set ruler
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Vim will display the cursor position in the lower righthand corner of the
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window (in the status line if there is one). It looks like this:
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101,29 84% ~
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The first number is the line number of the cursor. Remember the line number
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where you started, so that you can check if you passed this position again.
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NOT WRAPPING
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To turn off search wrapping, use the following command: >
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:set nowrapscan
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Now when the search hits the end of the file, an error message displays:
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E385: search hit BOTTOM without match for: forever ~
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Thus you can find all matches by going to the start of the file with "gg" and
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keep searching until you see this message.
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If you search in the other direction, using "?", you get:
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E384: search hit TOP without match for: forever ~
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==============================================================================
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*27.3* Offsets
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By default, the search command leaves the cursor positioned on the beginning
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of the pattern. You can tell Vim to leave it some other place by specifying
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an offset. For the forward search command "/", the offset is specified by
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appending a slash (/) and the offset: >
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/default/2
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This command searches for the pattern "default" and then moves to the
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beginning of the second line past the pattern. Using this command on the
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paragraph above, Vim finds the word "default" in the first line. Then the
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cursor is moved two lines down and lands on "an offset".
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If the offset is a simple number, the cursor will be placed at the beginning
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of the line that many lines from the match. The offset number can be positive
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or negative. If it is positive, the cursor moves down that many lines; if
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negative, it moves up.
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CHARACTER OFFSETS
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The "e" offset indicates an offset from the end of the match. It moves the
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cursor onto the last character of the match. The command: >
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/const/e
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puts the cursor on the "t" of "const".
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From that position, adding a number moves forward that many characters.
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This command moves to the character just after the match: >
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/const/e+1
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A positive number moves the cursor to the right, a negative number moves it to
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the left. For example: >
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/const/e-1
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moves the cursor to the "s" of "const".
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If the offset begins with "b", the cursor moves to the beginning of the
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pattern. That's not very useful, since leaving out the "b" does the same
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thing. It does get useful when a number is added or subtracted. The cursor
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then goes forward or backward that many characters. For example: >
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/const/b+2
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Moves the cursor to the beginning of the match and then two characters to the
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right. Thus it lands on the "n".
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REPEATING
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To repeat searching for the previously used search pattern, but with a
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different offset, leave out the pattern: >
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/that
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//e
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Is equal to: >
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/that/e
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To repeat with the same offset: >
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/
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"n" does the same thing. To repeat while removing a previously used offset: >
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//
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SEARCHING BACKWARDS
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The "?" command uses offsets in the same way, but you must use "?" to separate
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the offset from the pattern, instead of "/": >
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?const?e-2
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The "b" and "e" keep their meaning, they don't change direction with the use
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of "?".
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START POSITION
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When starting a search, it normally starts at the cursor position. When you
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specify a line offset, this can cause trouble. For example: >
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/const/-2
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This finds the next word "const" and then moves two lines up. If you
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use "n" to search again, Vim could start at the current position and find the same
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"const" match. Then using the offset again, you would be back where you started.
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You would be stuck!
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It could be worse: Suppose there is another match with "const" in the next
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line. Then repeating the forward search would find this match and move two
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lines up. Thus you would actually move the cursor back!
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When you specify a character offset, Vim will compensate for this. Thus the
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search starts a few characters forward or backward, so that the same match
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isn't found again.
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==============================================================================
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*27.4* Matching multiple times
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The "*" item specifies that the item before it can match any number of times.
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Thus: >
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/a*
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matches "a", "aa", "aaa", etc. But also "" (the empty string), because zero
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times is included.
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The "*" only applies to the item directly before it. Thus "ab*" matches
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"a", "ab", "abb", "abbb", etc. To match a whole string multiple times, it
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must be grouped into one item. This is done by putting "\(" before it and
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"\)" after it. Thus this command: >
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/\(ab\)*
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Matches: "ab", "abab", "ababab", etc. And also "".
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To avoid matching the empty string, use "\+". This makes the previous item
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match one or more times. >
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/ab\+
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Matches "ab", "abb", "abbb", etc. It does not match "a" when no "b" follows.
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To match an optional item, use "\=". Example: >
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/folders\=
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Matches "folder" and "folders".
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SPECIFIC COUNTS
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To match a specific number of items use the form "\{n,m}". "n" and "m" are
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numbers. The item before it will be matched "n" to "m" times |inclusive|.
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Example: >
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/ab\{3,5}
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matches "abbb", "abbbb" and "abbbbb".
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When "n" is omitted, it defaults to zero. When "m" is omitted it defaults
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to infinity. When ",m" is omitted, it matches exactly "n" times.
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Examples:
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pattern match count ~
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\{,4} 0, 1, 2, 3 or 4
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\{3,} 3, 4, 5, etc.
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\{0,1} 0 or 1, same as \=
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\{0,} 0 or more, same as *
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\{1,} 1 or more, same as \+
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\{3} 3
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MATCHING AS LITTLE AS POSSIBLE
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The items so far match as many characters as they can find. To match as few
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as possible, use "\{-n,m}". It works the same as "\{n,m}", except that the
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minimal amount possible is used.
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For example, use: >
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/ab\{-1,3}
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Will match "ab" in "abbb". Actually, it will never match more than one b,
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because there is no reason to match more. It requires something else to force
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it to match more than the lower limit.
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The same rules apply to removing "n" and "m". It's even possible to remove
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both of the numbers, resulting in "\{-}". This matches the item before it
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zero or more times, as few as possible. The item by itself always matches
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zero times. It is useful when combined with something else. Example: >
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/a.\{-}b
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This matches "axb" in "axbxb". If this pattern would be used: >
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/a.*b
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It would try to match as many characters as possible with ".*", thus it
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matches "axbxb" as a whole.
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==============================================================================
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*27.5* Alternatives
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The "or" operator in a pattern is "\|". Example: >
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/foo\|bar
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This matches "foo" or "bar". More alternatives can be concatenated: >
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/one\|two\|three
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Matches "one", "two" and "three".
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To match multiple times, the whole thing must be placed in "\(" and "\)": >
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/\(foo\|bar\)\+
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This matches "foo", "foobar", "foofoo", "barfoobar", etc.
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Another example: >
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/end\(if\|while\|for\)
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This matches "endif", "endwhile" and "endfor".
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A related item is "\&". This requires that both alternatives match in the
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same place. The resulting match uses the last alternative. Example: >
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/forever\&...
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This matches "for" in "forever". It will not match "fortuin", for example.
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==============================================================================
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*27.6* Character ranges
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To match "a", "b" or "c" you could use "/a\|b\|c". When you want to match all
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letters from "a" to "z" this gets very long. There is a shorter method: >
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/[a-z]
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The [] construct matches a single character. Inside you specify which
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characters to match. You can include a list of characters, like this: >
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/[0123456789abcdef]
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This will match any of the characters included. For consecutive characters
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you can specify the range. "0-3" stands for "0123". "w-z" stands for "wxyz".
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Thus the same command as above can be shortened to: >
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/[0-9a-f]
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To match the "-" character itself make it the first or last one in the range.
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These special characters are accepted to make it easier to use them inside a
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[] range (they can actually be used anywhere in the search pattern):
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\e <Esc>
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\t <Tab>
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\r <CR>
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\b <BS>
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There are a few more special cases for [] ranges, see |/[]| for the whole
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story.
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COMPLEMENTED RANGE
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To avoid matching a specific character, use "^" at the start of the range.
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The [] item then matches everything but the characters included. Example: >
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/"[^"]*"
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<
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" a double quote
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[^"] any character that is not a double quote
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* as many as possible
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" a double quote again
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This matches "foo" and "3!x", including the double quotes.
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PREDEFINED RANGES
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A number of ranges are used very often. Vim provides a shortcut for these.
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For example: >
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/\a
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Finds alphabetic characters. This is equal to using "/[a-zA-Z]". Here are a
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few more of these:
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item matches equivalent ~
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\d digit [0-9]
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\D non-digit [^0-9]
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\x hex digit [0-9a-fA-F]
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\X non-hex digit [^0-9a-fA-F]
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\s white space [ ] (<Tab> and <Space>)
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\S non-white characters [^ ] (not <Tab> and <Space>)
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\l lowercase alpha [a-z]
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\L non-lowercase alpha [^a-z]
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\u uppercase alpha [A-Z]
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\U non-uppercase alpha [^A-Z]
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Note:
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Using these predefined ranges works a lot faster than the character
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range it stands for.
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These items can not be used inside []. Thus "[\d\l]" does NOT work to
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match a digit or lowercase alpha. Use "\(\d\|\l\)" instead.
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See |/\s| for the whole list of these ranges.
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==============================================================================
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*27.7* Character classes
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The character range matches a fixed set of characters. A character class is
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similar, but with an essential difference: The set of characters can be
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redefined without changing the search pattern.
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For example, search for this pattern: >
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/\f\+
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The "\f" items stands for file name characters. Thus this matches a sequence
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of characters that can be a file name.
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Which characters can be part of a file name depends on the system you are
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using. On MS-Windows, the backslash is included, on Unix it is not. This is
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specified with the 'isfname' option. The default value for Unix is: >
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:set isfname
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isfname=@,48-57,/,.,-,_,+,,,#,$,%,~,=
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For other systems the default value is different. Thus you can make a search
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pattern with "\f" to match a file name, and it will automatically adjust to
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the system you are using it on.
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Note:
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Actually, Unix allows using just about any character in a file name,
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including white space. Including these characters in 'isfname' would
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be theoretically correct. But it would make it impossible to find the
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end of a file name in text. Thus the default value of 'isfname' is a
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compromise.
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The character classes are:
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item matches option ~
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\i identifier characters 'isident'
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\I like \i, excluding digits
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\k keyword characters 'iskeyword'
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\K like \k, excluding digits
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\p printable characters 'isprint'
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\P like \p, excluding digits
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\f file name characters 'isfname'
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\F like \f, excluding digits
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==============================================================================
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*27.8* Matching a line break
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Vim can find a pattern that includes a line break. You need to specify where
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the line break happens, because all items mentioned so far don't match a line
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break.
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To check for a line break in a specific place, use the "\n" item: >
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/the\nword
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This will match at a line that ends in "the" and the next line starts with
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"word". To match "the word" as well, you need to match a space or a line
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break. The item to use for it is "\_s": >
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/the\_sword
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To allow any amount of white space: >
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/the\_s\+word
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This also matches when "the " is at the end of a line and " word" at the
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start of the next one.
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"\s" matches white space, "\_s" matches white space or a line break.
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Similarly, "\a" matches an alphabetic character, and "\_a" matches an
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alphabetic character or a line break. The other character classes and ranges
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can be modified in the same way by inserting a "_".
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Many other items can be made to match a line break by prepending "\_". For
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example: "\_." matches any character or a line break.
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Note:
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"\_.*" matches everything until the end of the file. Be careful with
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this, it can make a search command very slow.
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Another example is "\_[]", a character range that includes a line break: >
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/"\_[^"]*"
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This finds a text in double quotes that may be split up in several lines.
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==============================================================================
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*27.9* Examples
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Here are a few search patterns you might find useful. This shows how the
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items mentioned above can be combined.
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FINDING A CALIFORNIA LICENSE PLATE
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A sample license plate number is "1MGU103". It has one digit, three uppercase
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letters and three digits. Directly putting this into a search pattern: >
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/\d\u\u\u\d\d\d
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Another way is to specify that there are three digits and letters with a
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count: >
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/\d\u\{3}\d\{3}
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Using [] ranges instead: >
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/[0-9][A-Z]\{3}[0-9]\{3}
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Which one of these you should use? Whichever one you can remember. The
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simple way you can remember is much faster than the fancy way that you can't.
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If you can remember them all, then avoid the last one, because it's both more
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typing and slower to execute.
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FINDING AN IDENTIFIER
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In C programs (and many other computer languages) an identifier starts with a
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letter and further consists of letters and digits. Underscores can be used
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too. This can be found with: >
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/\<\h\w*\>
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"\<" and "\>" are used to find only whole words. "\h" stands for "[A-Za-z_]"
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and "\w" for "[0-9A-Za-z_]".
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Note:
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"\<" and "\>" depend on the 'iskeyword' option. If it includes "-",
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for example, then "ident-" is not matched. In this situation use: >
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/\w\@<!\h\w*\w\@!
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<
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This checks if "\w" does not match before or after the identifier.
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See |/\@<!| and |/\@!|.
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==============================================================================
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Next chapter: |usr_28.txt| Folding
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Copyright: see |manual-copyright| vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl:
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