Fast word count function in Vim - Stack Overflow most recent 30 from stackoverflow.com 2009-12-19T12:39:47Z http://stackoverflow.com/feeds/question/114431 http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://stackoverflow.com/questions/114431/fast-word-count-function-in-vim 1 Fast word count function in Vim Greg Sexton 2008-09-22T11:58:22Z 2009-02-16T13:13:01Z <p>I am trying to display a live word count in the vim statusline. I do this by setting my status line in my .vimrc and inserting a function into it. The idea of this function is to return the number of words in the current buffer. This number is then displayed on the status line. This should work nicely as the statusline is updated at just about every possible opportunity so the count will always remain 'live'. </p> <p>The problem is that the function I have currently defined is slow and so vim is obviously sluggish when it is used for all but the smallest files; due to this function being executed so frequently.</p> <p>In summary, does anyone have a clever trick for producing a function that is blazingly fast at calculating the number of words in the current buffer and returning the result?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/114431/fast-word-count-function-in-vim/114474#114474 2 Answer by Steve Moyer for Fast word count function in Vim Steve Moyer 2008-09-22T12:09:42Z 2008-09-22T12:09:42Z <p>Keep a count for the current line and a separate count for the rest of the buffer. As you type (or delete) words on the current line, update only that count, but display the sum of the current line count and the rest of the buffer count.</p> <p>When you change lines, add the current line count to the buffer count, count the words in the current line and a) set the current line count and b) subtract it from the buffer count.</p> <p>It would also be wise to recount the buffer periodically (note that you don't have to count the whole buffer at once, since you know where editing is occurring).</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/114431/fast-word-count-function-in-vim/114684#114684 1 Answer by Rodrigo Queiro for Fast word count function in Vim Rodrigo Queiro 2008-09-22T12:51:53Z 2008-09-22T14:20:55Z <p>So I've written:</p> <pre> func CountWords() exe "normal g\" let words = substitute(v:statusmsg, "^.*Word [^ ]* of ", "", "") let words = substitute(words, ";.*", "", "") return words endfunc </pre> <p>But it prints out info to the statusbar, so I don't think it will be suitable for your use-case. It's very fast, though!</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/114431/fast-word-count-function-in-vim/116454#116454 2 Answer by Mikael Jansson for Fast word count function in Vim Mikael Jansson 2008-09-22T18:04:59Z 2008-09-22T18:04:59Z <p>This will recalculate the number of words whenever you stop typing for a while (specifically, <code>updatetime</code> ms).</p> <pre><code>let g:word_count="&lt;unknown&gt;" fun! WordCount() return g:word_count endfun fun! UpdateWordCount() let s = system("wc -w ".expand("%p")) let parts = split(s, ' ') if len(parts) &gt; 1 let g:word_count = parts[0] endif endfun augroup WordCounter au! CursorHold * call UpdateWordCount() au! CursorHoldI * call UpdateWordCount() augroup END " how eager are you? (default is 4000 ms) set updatetime=500 " modify as you please... set statusline=%{WordCount()}\ words </code></pre> <p>Enjoy!</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/114431/fast-word-count-function-in-vim/120386#120386 0 Answer by Greg Sexton for Fast word count function in Vim Greg Sexton 2008-09-23T11:19:05Z 2008-09-23T11:30:28Z <p>Using the method in the answer provided by Steve Moyer I was able to produce the following solution. It is a rather inelegant hack I'm afraid and I feel that there must be a neater solution, but it works, and is much faster than simply counting all of the words in a buffer every time the status line is updated. I should note also that this solution is platform independent and does not assume a system has 'wc' or something similar.</p> <p>My solution does not periodically update the buffer, but the answer provided by Mikael Jansson would be able to provide this functionality. I have not, as of yet, found an instance where my solution becomes out of sync. However I have only tested this briefly as an accurate live word count is not essential to my needs. The pattern I use for matching words is also simple and is intended for simple text documents. If anyone has a better idea for a pattern or any other suggestions please feel free to post an answer or edit this post.</p> <p>My solution:</p> <pre><code>"returns the count of how many words are in the entire file excluding the current line "updates the buffer variable Global_Word_Count to reflect this fu! OtherLineWordCount() let data = [] "get lines above and below current line unless current line is first or last if line(".") &gt; 1 let data = getline(1, line(".")-1) endif if line(".") &lt; line("$") let data = data + getline(line(".")+1, "$") endif let count_words = 0 let pattern = "\\&lt;\\(\\w\\|-\\|'\\)\\+\\&gt;" for str in data let count_words = count_words + NumPatternsInString(str, pattern) endfor let b:Global_Word_Count = count_words return count_words endf "returns the word count for the current line "updates the buffer variable Current_Line_Number "updates the buffer variable Current_Line_Word_Count fu! CurrentLineWordCount() if b:Current_Line_Number != line(".") "if the line number has changed then add old count let b:Global_Word_Count = b:Global_Word_Count + b:Current_Line_Word_Count endif "calculate number of words on current line let line = getline(".") let pattern = "\\&lt;\\(\\w\\|-\\|'\\)\\+\\&gt;" let count_words = NumPatternsInString(line, pattern) let b:Current_Line_Word_Count = count_words "update buffer variable with current line count if b:Current_Line_Number != line(".") "if the line number has changed then subtract current line count let b:Global_Word_Count = b:Global_Word_Count - b:Current_Line_Word_Count endif let b:Current_Line_Number = line(".") "update buffer variable with current line number return count_words endf "returns the word count for the entire file using variables defined in other procedures "this is the function that is called repeatedly and controls the other word "count functions. fu! WordCount() if exists("b:Global_Word_Count") == 0 let b:Global_Word_Count = 0 let b:Current_Line_Word_Count = 0 let b:Current_Line_Number = line(".") call OtherLineWordCount() endif call CurrentLineWordCount() return b:Global_Word_Count + b:Current_Line_Word_Count endf "returns the number of patterns found in a string fu! NumPatternsInString(str, pat) let i = 0 let num = -1 while i != -1 let num = num + 1 let i = matchend(a:str, a:pat, i) endwhile return num endf </code></pre> <p>This is then added to the status line by:</p> <pre><code>:set statusline=wc:%{WordCount()} </code></pre> <p>I hope this helps anyone looking for a live word count in Vim. Albeit one that isn't always exact. Alternatively of course g ctrl-g will provide you with Vim's word count!</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/114431/fast-word-count-function-in-vim/553257#553257 1 Answer by Michael Dunn for Fast word count function in Vim Michael Dunn 2009-02-16T13:13:01Z 2009-02-16T13:13:01Z <p>Here's a usable version of Rodrigo Queiro's idea. It doesn't change the status bar, and it restores the statusmsg variable.</p> <pre><code>function WordCount() let s:old_status = v:statusmsg exe "silent normal g\&lt;c-g&gt;" let s:word_count = str2nr(split(v:statusmsg)[11]) let v:statusmsg = s:old_status return s:word_count endfunction </code></pre> <p>This seems to be fast enough to include directly in the status line, e.g.:</p> <pre><code>:set statusline=wc:%{WordCount()} </code></pre>