My current setting assumes 8 spaces; how could I redefine it?
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5Better yet, set it to four spaces and enable auto-indent at the same time: Auto-indent with tabwidth set to 4 spaces– solid_liqSep 11, 2013 at 1:55
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8@heinrich5991 I don't get it. I don't need 8 spaces to realize that a line is indented, and more than necessary means limiting the characters you can view on a long line of text (at least before wrapping). But to each his own. :)– weberc2Apr 20, 2014 at 11:25
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51@heinrich5991 My argument is "use as little as possible to readily identify an indented line". By my estimation, one's ability to easily identify an indentation drops off rapidly at < 3 spaces, and it stops increasing at 4 spaces. Therefore, indentation that exceeds 4 spaces is a waste, in my experience.– weberc2Apr 21, 2014 at 13:40
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10@weberc2 Couldn't possibly agree more, mate. Which is why I feel so damn claustrophobic reading Ruby or "modern-day JavaScript", each of which use 2-spaces for indentation. It legitimately gives me eye strain when trying to follow heavily-nested structures. Hard tabs for the goddamn win.– user458541Nov 13, 2015 at 6:57
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Possible duplicate of Replace Tab with Spaces in VIM– rofrolMar 28, 2016 at 20:13
13 Answers
It depends on what you mean. Do you mean:
- you want tab characters in your file to appear 4 character cells wide?
- you want the tab key to generate an indent consisting of 4 space characters
Depending on which behavior you need, one of the following sets of settings should work:
If you want tab characters in your file to appear 4 character cells wide:
set tabstop=4
If your code requires use of actual tab characters these settings prevent unintentional insertion of spaces (these are the defaults, but you may want to set them defensively):
set softtabstop=0 noexpandtab
If you also want to use tabs for indentation, you should also set shiftwidth
to be the same as tabstop
:
set shiftwidth=4
To make any of these settings permanent add them to your vimrc.
If you want pressing the tab key to indent with 4 space characters:
First, tell vim to use 4-space indents, and to intelligently use the tab key for indentation instead of for inserting tab characters (when at the beginning of a line):
set shiftwidth=4 smarttab
If you'd also like vim to only use space caharacters, never tab characters:
set expandtab
Finally, I also recommend setting tab stops to be different from the indentation width, in order to reduce the chance of tab characters masquerading as proper indents:
set tabstop=8 softtabstop=0
To make any of these settings permanent add them to your vimrc.
More Details
In case you need to make adjustments, or would simply like to understand what these options all mean, here's a breakdown of what each option means:
tabstop
The width of a hard tabstop measured in "spaces" -- effectively the (maximum) width of an actual tab character.
shiftwidth
The size of an "indent". It's also measured in spaces, so if your code base indents with tab characters then you want
shiftwidth
to equal the number of tab characters timestabstop
. This is also used by things like the=
,>
and<
commands.
softtabstop
Setting this to a non-zero value other than
tabstop
will make the tab key (in insert mode) insert a combination of spaces (and possibly tabs) to simulate tab stops at this width.
expandtab
Enabling this will make the tab key (in insert mode) insert spaces instead of tab characters. This also affects the behavior of the
retab
command.
smarttab
Enabling this will make the tab key (in insert mode) insert spaces or tabs to go to the next indent of the next tabstop when the cursor is at the beginning of a line (i.e. the only preceding characters are whitespace).
For further details on any of these see :help 'optionname'
in vim (e.g. :help 'tabstop'
)
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26It is also important to ensure that Makefiles always use hard tab characters, otherwise builds will fail! I have shown how to, at stackoverflow.com/questions/234564/… Jan 24, 2014 at 2:48
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4Vim users take note of the
set softtabstop=4
feature! I am tired of trying to read your code withless
, or any other editor exceptvim
, only to see wacky indenting because you redefined tab to be some arbitrary number of spaces (even though the rest of the system thinks otherwise)! :-) Sep 17, 2014 at 12:51 -
3@OgrePsalm33 Personally, I always have
tabstop=8
andexpandtab
enabled when editing code. Not everyone feels that way, however. There are some who feel an indent should be a single tab character, so the width is adjustable by the reader. I don't think these people are exclusively (or even mostly) vim users... Oct 7, 2014 at 0:42 -
14Can someone help me understand why this answer says to use
tabstop=8
for indents that consist of 4 spaces? I couldn't get the reason after reading the descriptions of the various settings. Another answer says to usetabstop=4
which makes a little bit more sense to me. Jan 16, 2019 at 1:09 -
17@KodosJohnson The
tabstop
option controls the width of a hard tab character. If you want your indents to consist of 4 space characters, rather than single tab characters that are 4-wide, then the width of your tab character doesn't matter -- sort of. In practice, you probably want your tab character width to be different from the width of your indents, in order to reduce the chance of tab characters masquerading as proper indents. (list
+expandtab
can help here too) Also, 8-char-wide tabs is "the standard" -- your terminal, Python, and many other tools default to 8-char-wide-tabs. Jan 16, 2019 at 21:04
To define this on a permanent basis for the current user, create (or edit) the .vimrc
file:
$ vim ~/.vimrc
Then, paste the configuration below into the file. Once vim is restarted, the tab settings will apply.
set tabstop=4 " The width of a TAB is set to 4.
" Still it is a \t. It is just that
" Vim will interpret it to be having
" a width of 4.
set shiftwidth=4 " Indents will have a width of 4
set softtabstop=4 " Sets the number of columns for a TAB
set expandtab " Expand TABs to spaces
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If you do not have ~/.vimrc, try with /etc/vim/vimrc. In my case on Ubuntu 16.04 the config file is there. But keep in mind that changing this file will cause the configuration to be used globaly. Oct 11, 2016 at 7:43
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10One more thing, use
:retab
to convert existingtab
tospaces
. vim.wikia.com/wiki/Converting_tabs_to_spaces– DawnSongNov 10, 2016 at 14:39 -
@TodorTodorov It is ok and usually conducted to create one ~/.vimrc. Jun 25, 2021 at 18:09
or shorthand for vim modeline:
vim :set ts=4 sw=4 sts=4 et :
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I like this because in the CKAD exam, there's not much time to set options. Why is there s
:
at the end or is it a typo?– likejudoMar 17 at 17:52
There are few settings which define whether to use spaces or tabs.
So here are handy functions which can be defined in your ~/.vimrc
file:
function! UseTabs()
set tabstop=4 " Size of a hard tabstop (ts).
set shiftwidth=4 " Size of an indentation (sw).
set noexpandtab " Always uses tabs instead of space characters (noet).
set autoindent " Copy indent from current line when starting a new line (ai).
endfunction
function! UseSpaces()
set tabstop=2 " Size of a hard tabstop (ts).
set shiftwidth=2 " Size of an indentation (sw).
set expandtab " Always uses spaces instead of tab characters (et).
set softtabstop=0 " Number of spaces a <Tab> counts for. When 0, featuer is off (sts).
set autoindent " Copy indent from current line when starting a new line.
set smarttab " Inserts blanks on a <Tab> key (as per sw, ts and sts).
endfunction
Usage:
:call UseTabs()
:call UseSpaces()
To use it per file extensions, the following syntax can be used (added to .vimrc
):
au! BufWrite,FileWritePre *.module,*.install call UseSpaces()
See also: Converting tabs to spaces.
Here is another snippet from Wikia which can be used to toggle between tabs and spaces:
" virtual tabstops using spaces
set shiftwidth=4
set softtabstop=4
set expandtab
" allow toggling between local and default mode
function TabToggle()
if &expandtab
set shiftwidth=8
set softtabstop=0
set noexpandtab
else
set shiftwidth=4
set softtabstop=4
set expandtab
endif
endfunction
nmap <F9> mz:execute TabToggle()<CR>'z
It enables using 4 spaces for every tab and a mapping to F9 to toggle the settings.
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1I do not get the "au!" line : seems to say to start using UseSpaces only when saving a buffer with those extensions? not when opening them? Jan 25, 2022 at 15:12
I copied and pasted this into my .vimrc file:
" size of a hard tabstop
set tabstop=4
" always uses spaces instead of tab characters
set expandtab
" size of an "indent"
set shiftwidth=4
The first 2 settings mean that when I press Tab I get 4 spaces.
The third setting means that when I do V>
(i.e. visual and indent) I also get 4 spaces.
Not as comprehensive as the accepted answer but it might help people who just want something to copy and paste.
One more thing, use
:retab
to convert existing tab to spaces
http://vim.wikia.com/wiki/Converting_tabs_to_spaces
Put your desired settings in the ~/.vimrc file -- See below for some guidelines and best practices.
There are four main ways to use tabs in Vim:
Always keep 'tabstop' at 8, set 'softtabstop' and 'shiftwidth' to 4 (or 3 or whatever you prefer) and use 'noexpandtab'. Then Vim will use a mix of tabs and spaces, but typing and will behave like a tab appears every 4 (or 3) characters.
Note: Setting 'tabstop' to any other value than 8 can make your file appear wrong in many places (e.g., when printing it).
Set 'tabstop' and 'shiftwidth' to whatever you prefer and use 'expandtab'. This way you will always insert spaces. The formatting will never be messed up when 'tabstop' is changed.
Set 'tabstop' and 'shiftwidth' to whatever you prefer and use a |modeline| to set these values when editing the file again. Only works when using Vim to edit the file.
Always set 'tabstop' and 'shiftwidth' to the same value, and 'noexpandtab'. This should then work (for initial indents only) for any tabstop setting that people use. It might be nice to have tabs after the first non-blank inserted as spaces if you do this though. Otherwise aligned comments will be wrong when 'tabstop' ischanged.
Source:
- vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/options.html#'tabstop'
:help tabstop
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3This is great, but you should note that this is verbatim from vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/options.html#'tabstop' or
:help tabstop
in vim.– belacquaJan 13, 2016 at 2:47
Add line
set ts=4
in
~/.vimrc
file for per user
or
/etc/vimrc
file for system wide
My basic ~/.vimrc with comment:
set number " show line number
set tabstop=2 " set display width of tab; 1 tab = x space with
set expandtab " transform tab to x space (x is tabstop)
set autoindent " auto indent; new line with number of space at the beginning same as previous
set shiftwidth=2 " number of space append to lines when type >>
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great! the autoindent introduces double indentation when copy pasting text that already has indents. bit of caution. paste/nopaste mode might help in such cases– Amit MSep 21, 2020 at 14:06
Permanent for all users (when you alone on server):
# echo "set tabstop=4" >> /etc/vim/vimrc
Appends the setting in the config file.
Normally on new server apt-get purge nano mc
and all other to save your time. Otherwise, you will redefine editor in git
, crontab
etc.
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2
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@D.BenKnoble you are right. i've tried. for now i prefer to save my time and nerves. can't check what exactly runs with
F10
innano
but i always do some tricks with save (maybeF10
is a solution). or it doesn't work inscreen
? I can't remember, just hate it) Mar 1, 2020 at 14:54
For permanent change, create the file ~/.vim/plugin/tab_expander.vim
with the content
set tabstop=4 softtabstop=4 expandtab shiftwidth=4 smarttab
To prevent touching the ~/.vimrc
, thus keeping other default settings untouched.