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In Vim normal mode, you can press ctrl+e and ctrl+y to scroll down and up, respectively. I'm trying to make a key-bind that lets me do this from insert mode as well. This is what I've got:

" Scroll up and down while in insert mode.
inoremap <C-e> <C-o><C-e>
inoremap <C-y> <C-o><C-y>

This works like expected, but it has a big flaw. It leaves insert mode, scrolls, then re-enters insert mode. This is relevant when it comes to undo, repeat command etc. and I would like to be able to scroll up and down without leaving insert mode. Thoughts?

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  • What about getting used to Vim's model of interaction instead?
    – romainl
    Jan 13, 2013 at 21:01
  • @romainl: Of course, but I see no logical reason why I shouldn't be able to nudge the viewport a couple of lines up to get a specific line into view while in insert mode.
    – Hubro
    Jan 13, 2013 at 21:19
  • To whomever posted the second answer: Why did you delete it? :( It was very informative.
    – Hubro
    Jan 13, 2013 at 21:27
  • It solves the undo breakage but not the repeat-command breakage. I'll add it back and beg for help with that part :-)
    – jthill
    Jan 13, 2013 at 21:30
  • 1
    Because in insert mode you are supposed to be typing. Not playing with your viewport. :h scrolloff might help you, though.
    – romainl
    Jan 13, 2013 at 21:41

2 Answers 2

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You could take a look at :h i_CTRL-X_CTRL-E, which is a built-in insert-mode mapping to scroll:

                    *i_CTRL-X_CTRL-E*
CTRL-X CTRL-E       scroll window one line up.
        When doing completion look here: |complete_CTRL-E|

                    *i_CTRL-X_CTRL-Y*
CTRL-X CTRL-Y       scroll window one line down.
        When doing completion look here: |complete_CTRL-Y|

So in your case, this would probably do the trick:

inoremap <C-e> <C-x><C-e>
inoremap <C-y> <C-x><C-y>
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  • +1 That is very cool, and solves my problem, but doesn't quite answer the question. If you know, could you add whether or not there is a built-in function for scrolling in Vim?
    – Hubro
    Jan 13, 2013 at 20:57
  • Well, you could also scroll in insert mode using your mouse scroll, dragging the scroll bar or using PageUp and PageDown, but those will all move the cursor so that's probably not what you want. In any case, it's probably more Vim-esque to do your scrolling in normal mode. Jan 13, 2013 at 21:04
  • 1
    There don't appear to be any built-in functions for scrolling the window, so scripting/aliasing the mnemonics are as close as you can get. Even saved sessions and views fail to remember precise window scroll position. I've come to this conclusion after combing through the vimscript function (vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/eval.html#functions) and options (vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/options.html) references.
    – Daniel
    Jan 14, 2013 at 19:30
  • @Daniel: Thanks for the thorough elaboration :) Marked this answer as accepted.
    – Hubro
    Jan 14, 2013 at 22:51
2

undojoin fixes the undo part of it:

ino <C-E> <Space><BS><ESC><C-E>:undojoin<CR>gi

The <Space><BS> sequence makes sure there's an undo block to join with.

Surprisingly (to me) this doesn't help with the . breakage, so this might leave you in just as annoying a spot as you're in now...

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