Vim is my editor of choice, and I feel I am above average in my use of it. I do recognize, though, that the feature list of vim is huge. With this in mind, I was wondering what features you vim users out there use on a regular basis.
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The following google video was good: 7 Habits For Effective Text Editing 2.0 |
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In my
I had some abbreviation configured in the past for C style box comments and skeletons of HTML pages etc. like TextMate users seem to like ( When editing,
Hardly use anything else to be frank. Pretty vanilla stuff, none of the more complex features really stuck ;-) |
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One of the ones I use most is '='. That does automatic indentation of existing code. |
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A fantastic list is David Rayner's Best of Vim Tips. I guarantee you could find something new in there every week for the next year. |
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my favourite
runs a macro recorded in h for every match of search-string...divine :D and the fd to quickly move the cursor to the next occurrence of 'd'...very useful while selecting in visual mode |
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Oh my goodness, I can't believe no one has listed these:
you can replace c with v or d and do what you would expect. Basically ciw means change inner-word, or, if you put your cursor in the middle of a word in normal mode and type ciw it will erase the entire word (not the surrounding spaces, if you want that use a instead of i) and put you in insert mode. The ' does it with things in quotes and t does it for html tags. Oh yeah, and gv will reselect whatever you selected with v last. |
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Put your cursor on a function and press K to get the man page. |
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Most Vim users are probably aware of them, but I also find myself using the movment commands
With the cursor on the first line in normal mode, you can instantly jump to the errant '3' in the misspelled word 'Weath3r' by pressing When combined with counts and other commands (for me, usually
can be used to delete everything up to and including the 2nd instance of the ':' character on the current line. |
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syntax on Although this is rather basic, it is still the #1 feature that I use. |
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Macros and ^p and ^n. Most people watching type in an editor think that I am the worlds fastest typist with my use (and abuse) of ^p and ^n. If you don't know what they do they are pseudo intellisense for Vim (basically completes a word based on other words in the document, works incredibly well for well named variables and function names). If you use TAGS it also uses the tags file (then ^t to just to the function is also very useful). Another favorite is * in the normal mode, to search for the next occurrence of the word underneath your cursor (but that has already been mentioned). |
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Here are two screencasts for beginners that I found useful as well: |
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A lot of other commands are embedded in my brain (or fingers) somewhere, so I'm not sure what those are. At this point I'm going to make stuff up (because I don't use those commands (especially abbreviations). So I will stop. |
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Something I recently learned:
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replace all occurrences of PATTERN (which is a regular expression) with REPLACE
Simple but I use it constantly. The other thing I love, which I can't think up a great example of right now, is being able to paste commands into the editor. |
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* or # for searching in normal mode was something i wish i knew from day one. Just some vim scripts that i found helpful nerdtree, project listing/folders,files. Can open files in new tabs, split,etc nerdcomment, same author as nerdtree allows you to bind commands to comment code for any language and also has different types of formatting. fuzzyfinder, also you to search for files/buffers/tags using any sort of pattern snippets, code snippets for most languages. |
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You can consult Vim Tips sorted by ratings, the first tip being Best of VIM Tips. As for me, I find gv (reselect last selection) and CTRL-O & CTRL-I (Go to older / newer cursor position in jump list) very usefull. Oh, and CTRL-V {motion} SHIFT-I {write some text} <ESC> (writes the text on each line of the selected block). And |
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Another one is extensive use of windows using the :split command or the ^w commands:
Combine that with various buffers using :e < filename > to open a file and :b< number > or even Now combine that with tags and you have even better browsing capabilities. Create a tags file with
and then you can jump to the declaration of an identifier with ^] and back to where you were with ^T. The combination of windows, buffers and tags is a killer! |
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Visual block Insert:
search/replace within a visual selection ( Similarly, |
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Find and remove empty lines:
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Use Vim-style movement (no arrow keys, PgUp/PgDown, etc.) 'h' 'j' 'k' 'l' for movement (Up, Down, Left, Right) |
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You will probably get something from watching this presentation by Bram Moolenaar at a Google Tech Talk - it's all about power tips in Vim and quite well presented. Not for beginners, I suspect |
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I used to use the exuberant ctags a lot, but now I don't write C. I used the syntax-highlighting-to-colored-HTML-output script frequently. I appreciate the brace highlighting and smart indenting quite a bit. The help is my most often used vim command feature possibly followed by gqq for wrapping. Otherwise I generally use base vi features, where I'd put '/' at the top of my list because I'm not actually as familiar with movement keys, and ':%s/x/y/g' as near the top. my .vimrc turns on syntax highlighting, and I often invoke it with a glob to do bulk find replaces across a set of files. |
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@Brendon, you switched the last two links: snippets, code snippets for most languages. fuzzyfinder, also you to search for files/buffers/tags using any sort of pattern |
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The often overlooked '.' command. It redoes the last command. I find it very useful when doing a search & replace type activity where you don't want to replace all instances. You can do a search (using '/'), do the replace (with a 'c' or maybe 'r'), find the next instance (using 'n'), and either redo the edit (with '.') or skip to the next one (another 'n'). |
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Homogenizes the indentation style of the file, based on your current settings. (shiftwidth, expandtab, etc) |
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:r! shellcommand (replace shellcommand with shell command of your choice). This will append the results of the shell command to the current buffer. |
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Multi-file search replace etc.:
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Learn to use and love the search/replace feature: :[range]s/reg_ex/text_to_replace |
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which opens the file in a new tab, instead. |
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