208

I was wondering if there was any key mapping in Vim to allow me to indent certain lines of code (whether those lines have been selected in visual mode, or n lines above/below current cursor position).

So basically something that converts the following

def my_fun(x, y):
    return x + y

to

#def my_fun(x, y):
#    return x + y

I am okay with using either # or """ for commenting out the relevant lines. Ideally, I would also like the same keymapping to uncomment the lines if the given lines have been commented out.

1
  • No need to reinvent the wheel, there is a plugin: tComment for you, which supports (un)comment code for multiple languages.
    – Meow
    Feb 12, 2015 at 14:41

13 Answers 13

450

Step 1: Go to the the first column of the first line you want to comment.

Initial State

Step 2: Press: Ctrl+v and select the lines you want to comment:

Select lines

Step 3: Shift-I#space (Enter Insert-at-left mode, type chars to insert. The selection will disappear, but all lines within it will be modified after Step 4.)

Comment

Step 4: Esc

<Esc>

13
  • 4
    Commenting the lines this way works great. Is there some way to uncomment these lines? Shift-I # <ESC> didn't work (maybe I'm doing it wrong). Apr 1, 2010 at 16:14
  • 50
    @rishabh-manocha: use visual block (Ctrl-V) to select all the added # and type x to delete them.
    – theosp
    Apr 1, 2010 at 16:18
  • 5
    You gotta remember that Shift-I means "insert at the first non-blank in the line", so it can't be used to delete. Doing a visual selection with Ctrl-V marks the characters to modify, then "x" deletes one character in the selected area, ending up deleting the '#' characters. See ":h I" and ":h CTRL-V" in vim for more information. Apr 2, 2010 at 9:39
  • 5
    @Samaursa Ctrl-V is probably not working on Windows. Try Ctrl-Q instead.
    – AZ.
    Apr 10, 2012 at 22:57
  • 3
    To delete 2 characters (if you inserted '# '), locate the cursor at the top line you want to modify, press ctrl-v to enter visual block mode, press j (or down arrow) to highlight all lines to modify, press l (or right arrow) to highlight a 2-char width (press once per column to highlight), and then press d to delete the highlighted text. Aug 26, 2014 at 18:46
79

one way manually

:set number
:10,12s/^/#
3
  • 4
    how do you remove them though? Dec 5, 2013 at 22:30
  • 18
    @CharlieParker: :10,12s/^#//
    – bstpierre
    Dec 17, 2013 at 14:40
  • 2
    Thumbs up for ex answer (old school :)
    – mlv
    Jun 3, 2015 at 16:00
57

You could add the following mapping to your .vimrc

vnoremap <silent> # :s/^/#/<cr>:noh<cr>
vnoremap <silent> -# :s/^#//<cr>:noh<cr>

Highlight your block with:

Shift+v

# to comment your lines from the first column.

-# to uncomment the same way.

10
  • 2
    @architectonic it doesn't have an effect unless you are in visual mode, and '#' is unbound in visual mode vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/visual.html#visual-operators
    – cdated
    Dec 13, 2015 at 5:16
  • 1
    I have modified a bit : Ctrl + k for comment "vnoremap <silent> <C-k> :s#^#\##<cr>:noh<cr>" > Ctrl + u for uncomment : "vnoremap <silent> <C-u> :s#^\###<cr>:noh<cr>"
    – Pradip Das
    Mar 21, 2016 at 10:15
  • 2
    @JonathanHartley you don't have to use '/' in this case '#' is the delimiter. So :s/^/#/ and :s/^#// are the equivalent substitutions. So replace beginning of line with '#' and replace '#' at first column with ''. <cr>:noh<cr> just clears the search string so nothing is left highlighted when you are done.
    – cdated
    Sep 22, 2016 at 16:06
  • 2
    @JonathanHartley honestly I think I just followed a pattern without thinking about it. Now I'm surprised # vs / didn't come up sooner. Changed the answer based on common sense. Thanks!
    – cdated
    Sep 28, 2016 at 20:30
  • 1
    Just recovered my password so I could let you know that you are my hero.
    – anshanno
    Mar 15, 2017 at 14:58
35

Highlight your block with: ShiftV

Comment the selected block out with: :norm i# (lower case i)

To uncomment, highlight your block again, and uncomment with: :norm ^x

The :norm command performs an action for every selected line. Commenting will insert a # at the start of every line, and uncommenting will delete that #.

1
  • With an up-to-date Vim and a plain config, selecting lines in visual mode (with Shift+v) and then using :norm i# only changes the first selected line. This works for me to comment lines 389 to 391: :389,391norm i #
    – mmell
    Nov 5, 2014 at 22:21
27

I usually sweep out a visual block (<C-V>), then search and replace the first character with:

:'<,'>s/^/#

(Entering command mode with a visual block selected automatically places '<,'> on the command line) I can then uncomment the block by sweeping out the same visual block and:

:'<,'>s/^#//
18

There are some good plugins to help comment/uncomment lines. For example The NERD Commenter.

Sample shortcuts from the NERD Commenter:

[count]|<Leader>|cc |NERDCommenterComment|
Comment out the current line or text selected in visual mode.

[count]|<Leader>|cu |NERDCommenterUncomment|
Uncomments the selected line(s).

Full documentation is located here.

10

I have the following lines in my .vimrc:

" comment line, selection with Ctrl-N,Ctrl-N
au BufEnter *.py nnoremap  <C-N><C-N>    mn:s/^\(\s*\)#*\(.*\)/\1#\2/ge<CR>:noh<CR>`n
au BufEnter *.py inoremap  <C-N><C-N>    <C-O>mn<C-O>:s/^\(\s*\)#*\(.*\)/\1#\2/ge<CR><C-O>:noh<CR><C-O>`n
au BufEnter *.py vnoremap  <C-N><C-N>    mn:s/^\(\s*\)#*\(.*\)/\1#\2/ge<CR>:noh<CR>gv`n

" uncomment line, selection with Ctrl-N,N
au BufEnter *.py nnoremap  <C-N>n     mn:s/^\(\s*\)#\([^ ]\)/\1\2/ge<CR>:s/^#$//ge<CR>:noh<CR>`n
au BufEnter *.py inoremap  <C-N>n     <C-O>mn<C-O>:s/^\(\s*\)#\([^ ]\)/\1\2/ge<CR><C-O>:s/^#$//ge<CR><C-O>:noh<CR><C-O>`n
au BufEnter *.py vnoremap  <C-N>n     mn:s/^\(\s*\)#\([^ ]\)/\1\2/ge<CR>gv:s/#\n/\r/ge<CR>:noh<CR>gv`n

The shortcuts preserve your cursor position and your comments as long as they start with # (there is space after #). For example:

# variable x
x = 0

After commenting:

# variable x
#x = 0

After uncomennting:

# variable x
x = 0
1
  • Nice, but I think you'd be better off using the simpler s/^/#/ regexp. I prefer the comment char to occur at the beginning of the line... but much more importantly, 'commenting comments' is really rather important. I'd also drop the au BufEnter *.py, since # comments are general enough for the commands to be used in all buffers by default.
    – travc
    Oct 11, 2014 at 12:09
10

No plugins or mappings required. Try the built-in "norm" command, which literally executes anything you want on every selected line.

Add # Comments

1. shift V to visually select lines
2. :norm i#

Remove # Comments

1. visually select region as before
2. :norm x

Or if your comments are indented you can do :norm ^x

Notice that these are just ordinary vim commands being preceded by ":norm" to execute them on each line.

More detailed answer for using "norm" command in one of the answers here

What's a quick way to comment/uncomment lines in Vim?

6

NERDcommenter is an excellent plugin for commenting which automatically detects a number of filetypes and their associated comment characters. Ridiculously easy to install using Pathogen.

Comment with <leader>cc. Uncomment with <leader>cu. And toggle comments with <leader>c<space>.

(The default <leader> key in vim is \)

5

Frankly I use a tcomment plugin for that link. It can handle almost every syntax. It defines nice movements, using it with some text block matchers specific for python makes it a powerful tool.

0
5

There's a lot of comment plugins for vim - a number of which are multi-language - not just python. If you use a plugin manager like Vundle then you can search for them (once you've installed Vundle) using e.g.:

:PluginSearch comment

And you will get a window of results. Alternatively you can just search vim-scripts for comment plugins.

As mentioned in other answers NERDCommenter is good one - for more info on using it see this answer. Note: That the <leader> key is usually \. E.g. so to comment out a line - type: \cc

4

A very minimal light weight plugin: vim-commentary.

gcc to comment a line
gcgc to uncomment. check out the plugin page for more.

v+k/j highlight the block then gcc to comment that block.

0

CtrlK for comment (Visual Mode):

vnoremap <silent> <C-k> :s#^#\##<cr>:noh<cr>

CtrlU for uncomment (Visual Mode):

vnoremap <silent> <C-u> :s#^\###<cr>:noh<cr>

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