Is there a text editor on Linux that allows me to see line breaks and carriage returns? Does Vim support this feature?
9 Answers
To disagree with the official answer: :set list
alone will not show ^M characters (CRs).
Solutions that do work:
vim -b
(add the-b
option when starting vim) -or-:e ++ff=unix
(while vim is running)
-
5It's the Syntax.
:help edit
showse[dit]! [++opt] [+cmd]
. And:help ++e
says The [++opt] argument can be used to force the value of 'fileformat' [..].– dennisOct 6, 2015 at 11:35 -
28just to clarify,
:set list
shows newline ($
),:e ++ff=unix
shows CR (^M
); if you want to see both,:set list
then:e ++ff=unix
Aug 21, 2016 at 22:16 -
9To expand on @dennis's comment,
:set ff=unix
tells Vim to change the line endings to unix style (as part of setting the fileformat), so the ^M characters are no longer there (and so are not displayed).:e ++ff=unix
tells it to force-set the fileformat asunix
without actually changing the contents. So vim reads it like a Unix file, sees the CR characters as extra and displays them as ^M.– Sundar RApr 20, 2018 at 22:41 -
3Neither still doesn't work for me in
vim
for some reason... I mean neither-b
option, nor:e ++ff=unix
when inside :(– RAM237Oct 30, 2018 at 10:41 -
3
Assuming your vim settings for :set listchars=...
is set to visualize the characters you are attempting to see, in this case the carriage return characters (typed with CTL + V, CTRM + M) —— otherwise, as reported in many of the comments on this answer, the ^M character will not show on :set list
:set list
in Vim will show whitespace. End of lines show as '$
'.
-
2
-
299Incorrect,
:set list
will NOT show^M
characters (CRs). Supplying the-b
option to vi/vim will work. Or, once vim is loaded, type::e ++ff=unix
Apr 21, 2013 at 16:22 -
22
-
4WRONG answer. :set list will NOT show ^M characters (CRs). Use -b option to vi/vim will work.– nanosoftMar 13, 2018 at 13:10
-
1As I understand it, Vim will show the ^M characters only if it thinks the
fileformat
of the file isunix
. This usually happens when one or more lines ends with the\n
unix-style line break character, but the others end with\r\n
CRLF combination that Windows uses. Then the lines with the CRLF line ending will show the ^M character.– Sundar RApr 20, 2018 at 22:37
vi shows newlines (LF character, code x0A
) by showing the subsequent text on the next line.
Use the -b
switch for binary mode. For example , vi -b filename
or vim -b filename --
.
It will then show CR characters (x0D
), which are not normally used in Unix style files, as the characters ^M
.
-
I typically dont need to see the line ending, because I mostly work in
Unix
environment. But I would like to be warned about Windows type line endings if there is any in the file. Willvi -b filename
or:set binary
just show^M
if it is a windows type file and no other line endings otherwise? May 25, 2018 at 20:45
Just to clarify why :set list
won't show CR's as ^M
without e ++ff=unix
and why :set list
has nothing to do with ^M
's.
Internally when Vim reads a file into its buffer, it replaces all line-ending characters with its own representation (let's call it $
's). To determine what characters should be removed, it firstly detects in what format line endings are stored in a file. If there are only CRLF '\r\n'
or only CR '\r'
or only LF '\n'
line-ending characters, then the 'fileformat'
is set to dos
, mac
and unix
respectively.
When list
option is set, Vim displays $
character when the line break occurred no matter what fileformat
option has been detected. It uses its own internal representation of line-breaks and that's what it displays.
Now when you write buffer to the disc, Vim inserts line-ending characters according to what fileformat
options has been detected, essentially converting all those internal $
's with appropriate characters. If the fileformat
happened to be unix
then it will simply write \n
in place of its internal line-break.
The trick is to force Vim to read a dos
encoded file as unix
one. The net effect is that it will remove all \n
's leaving \r
's untouched and display them as ^M
's in your buffer. Setting :set list
will additionally show internal line-endings as $
. After all, you see ^M$
in place of dos
encoded line-breaks.
Also notice that :set list
has nothing to do with showing ^M
's. You can check it by yourself (make sure you have disabled list
option first) by inserting single CR using CTRL-V
followed by Enter
in insert mode. After writing buffer to disc and opening it again you will see ^M
despite list
option being set to 0.
You can find more about file formats on http://vim.wikia.com/wiki/File_format or by typing:help 'fileformat'
in Vim.
Try the following command.
:set binary
In Vim, this should do the same thing as using the "-b" command line option. If you put this in your startup (i.e., .vimrc) file, it will always be in place for you.
On many *nix systems, there is a "dos2unix" or "unix2dos" command that can process the file and correct any suspected line ending issues. If there aren't any problems with the line endings, the files will not be changed.
-
Unfortunately in my system (Ubuntu 16.04)
set binary
is not the same asvim -b filename.py
. Any idea why? I did check thehelp
and it does seem that what you say is generally correct. How do I figure out why this is so? May 25, 2018 at 20:52 -
:e ++ff=unix
does show the^M
correctly and doesn't show it when I useunix
type files.. So I guess the problem is solved for now... May 25, 2018 at 20:54
-
3'cat -A' is not as portable as 'cat -e'. -A is supported by GNU coreutils version of cat(1), but not other implementations (e.g., bsd, macos, etc.).– JuanJul 24, 2020 at 22:51
-
1And
:%!cat -A
to use in vim (although that changes the contents of the buffer of course) Oct 27, 2020 at 19:05 -
See answer here for more details: When you do
cat -A myfile
, thenhello^M$
means crlf endings,hello$
for lf endings.– RyanQueyApr 6, 2023 at 3:26
I suggest you to edit your .vimrc file, for running a list of commands.
Edit your .vimrc file, like this:
cat >> ~/.vimrc <<EOF
set ffs=unix
set encoding=utf-8
set fileencoding=utf-8
set listchars=eol:¶
set list
EOF
When you're executing Vim, the commands in file .vimrc are executed, and you can see this example:
My line with CRLF eol here ^M¶
You can view break lines using the gedit editor.
First, if you don't have it installed, for Debian/Ubuntu/Mint based distros:
sudo apt-get install gedit
For Fedora/CentOS/RedHat based distros:
sudo dnf install gedit
or
sudo yum install gedit
Now, install gedit plugins:
sudo apt-get install gedit-plugins
or
Under Gnome2, user plugins were put into ~/.gnome2/gedit/plugins/
For Gnome3: ~/.local/share/gedit/plugins/
Download the plugins from: https://help.gnome.org/users/gedit/stable/gedit-plugin-guide.html.en#gedit-additional-plugins
and select Draw Spaces plugin, enter on Preferences, and chose Draw new lines:
Using Visual Studio Code, you can install the Line endings extension.
Sublime Text 3 has a plugin called RawLineEdit that will display line endings and allow the insertion of arbitrary line-ending type
Shift + Ctrl + P and start type the name of the plugin, and toggle to show line endings.
-
apt-get
will not work on all Linux systems (this question's scope). Perhaps state the assumptions? Ubuntu? Linux Mint? Ubuntu MATE? Debian? Apr 8, 2021 at 11:11 -
@PeterMortensen, I added steps for CentOS,RedHad,Fedora (for Gnome desktop environments)– daniloJan 27, 2022 at 19:18
Add the following alias to your .bashrc
or .bash_aliases
:
alias vidos='vi -c ":e ++ff=unix" -c "set list"'
Then you can use vidos
to edit the file and see newline as $
and carriage return as ^M
.
fileformat
in the status bar. I have[dos]
or[unix]
display in my status bar.