I've been trying to find something that will let me run multiple commands on the same line in Vim, akin to using semicolons to separate commands in *nix systems or &
in Windows. Is there a way to do this?
7 Answers
A bar |
will allow you to do this. From :help :bar
'|'
can be used to separate commands, so you can give multiple commands in one line. If you want to use'|'
in an argument, precede it with'\'
.
Example:
:echo "hello" | echo "goodbye"
Output:
hello
goodbye
NB: You may find that your ~/.vimrc
doesn't support mapping |
, or \|
. In these cases, try using <bar>
instead.
-
13Just watch out for the handful of commands that don't work with
|
! Jul 14, 2010 at 22:53 -
36When you find yourself wanting to use multiple commands in a
map
statement (and believe me, you will), check out:help map_bar
. Jul 14, 2010 at 23:36 -
10That's true. I asked that very question on superuser a few months ago. My
.vimrc
doesn't support an escaped bar (\|
) for mappings. I learned I have to actually type out<bar>
. Jul 15, 2010 at 15:23 -
Thanks for the working solution!
:help bar
shows motion.txt though and nothing about multiple commands.– geekQSep 13, 2012 at 17:52 -
1
Put <CR>
(Carriage Return/Enter) between and after commands. For example:
map <F5> :w<CR>:!make && ./run<CR>
Don't use |
because:
Some commands have problems if you use
|
after them|
does not work consistently in configuration files, see:help map_bar
-
From
:h map_bar
I got that it was ok to use<bar>
. But you're right, it is complicated. Reading:h map_bar
is the way to go here.– fbicknelOct 28, 2023 at 13:43
You could define a function that executes your commands.
function Func()
:command
:command2
endfunction
And place this in, for example, your vimrc. Run the function with
exec Func()
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2Clean solution. Would definitely be handy for more than two or just long commands.– elimirksNov 7, 2013 at 20:18
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1Very useful also for the ability to hand errors with try/catch. Sep 23, 2016 at 9:11
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4It's more conventional to use
:call Func()
because:execute Func()
means something more. It means to perform the return value of the function as a command. The function described here will not usually have a command that starts with:return
, so its return value will be the number zero. Performing that as a command will move the cursor to the first line of the current buffer, which is not always what you had in mind.– minopretOct 18, 2018 at 8:21 -
@minopret thank you so much! I was debugging and turned out only
call
works;exec
produces unexpected results. Thank you!– kohane15Jul 1, 2022 at 7:50
Thought this might help someone trying to do substitutions in a chain and one fails
from a comment
%s/word/newword/ge | %s/word2/newword2/ge
You can use the e
flag to ignore the error when the string is not found.
I've always used ^J
to separate multiple commands by pressing Ctrl+v, Ctrl+j.
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2This seems to be the only solution that actually works. Who do I specify this if I want to use it in a string?– DerWehJun 23, 2017 at 13:51
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You cannot use
^J
as command separator in a string because it is inserting the NULL character terminating the string. however you can use <CR> = "\n". Aug 10, 2017 at 13:24 -
-
-
You can create a new file, and write your commands on it. Then :so %
, which means source current file.
;
instead of&&
to separate Unix shell commands too!&&
is 'boolean and' in shell commands so if you havecommand1 && command2
,command2
will only execute ifcommand1
executed successfully. with;
you're just manually specifying the end of that line and starting a new one. It's the same as writing each command on a different line in a shell script.