Whenever I enter vim, there are 99% chance that I will go in insert mode and edit the file. Can I make vim always start in insert mode?
4 Answers
You can start vim like this:
vim -c 'startinsert' FILENAME
If you want, you can edit the .bashrc file (if you are using bash) and add this line:
alias vim="vim -c 'startinsert'"
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2This only worked for me after removing the single quotes around
startinsert
, otherwise vim loads complaining about not finding a mark. This is for gvim on windows.– EinJul 2, 2013 at 17:14 -
1
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4I used this to instantly start typing when committing in git:
git config --global core.editor "vim -c 'startinsert'"
Feb 26, 2016 at 12:35 -
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@DanielBöhmer Almost years later that is exactly why I was looking for this and it still works today.– grettkeDec 8, 2021 at 18:57
You can use vim +star
, which is even shorter. NB: star
is short for :help :start
.
If you want this behavior by default, the best option is to add the line
autocmd BufRead,BufNewFile * start
into your ~/.vimrc
. Also take a look at :h 'insertmode'
, which outlines a special option made for this kind of functionality. However, it can make it difficult to get out of insert mode which is crucial for growing in your vim ninja skills.
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4This should be the accepted answer in my opinion, because it does not depend on bash's config files, which might be relevant when running gvim with an non-interactive, no-login shell (
-c
).– BengtJan 6, 2014 at 16:38 -
If you want to make it the standard all the time, you should add
VimEnter
to the event list, this way it still works if you just callvim
without any arguments.– SkillmonJun 7, 2017 at 8:42 -
that's honestly a bad/dysfunctional way to get at what the OP is asking for, because it just starts in insert mode when you start typing...or at least that's how it behaves when i try it. It's better just to let the program start in normal mode because that's how you take advantage of all the search and navigation features.– user5849816Feb 14, 2023 at 17:35
You can, and it's very simple.
The :startinsert command enters insert mode. (It is the exact command-line-mode counterpart to typing i in normal-mode.) Just drop it into your vimrc so it runs at startup. Unlike some of the other suggestions, this doesn't interfere with dropping back to normal-mode by ESC as normal.
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1
vim +star
also doesn't interfere with dropping back to normal-mode Feb 20, 2014 at 18:27 -
this works just like the
autocmd
hack above, but the problem is that neither one explicitly tells you that you are in insert mode at the bottom unlike when you switch to insert mode, so i would not recommend putting either of these things in the .vimrc file– user5849816Apr 23, 2023 at 17:38
Additionally, there's something called "Easy mode", started from vim -y
or evim
. It's a more radical departure than just starting in insert mode: it has some key bindings matching other editors', and normal-mode commands are done by hitting Ctrl+O instead of Esc. As a consequence of that, being in insert mode is the rule rather than the exception.
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+1 I think, reading form the OP, this is most likely what he was after. Essentially: he wants something not-vim. Or, at least, less-vim.– seheJul 13, 2012 at 10:21
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3Whoa, 'easy mode' is weird. And hard to quit. blog.tommorris.org/post/1230874385/… Oct 3, 2013 at 5:15
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I tried easy mode but have no idea how to quit it. The blog post linked above is now a 404. Oct 9, 2019 at 18:48
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@TaylorEdmiston True, the post is gone and I can't find it in the Wayback Machine. But, to quit, you'd do
C-o
:
q
RETURN
. Oct 10, 2019 at 19:27 -
vim
, this is a well established (and time saving) habit. Withvim
, however, the results of doing this are somewhat random - typically what you type will move you around a bit, accidentally switch to insert mode and the rest of what you type gets inserted in some random spot. Sometimes you delete stuff. To work out what happened takes a moment, and you often miss something.