In Vim, what is the command to correct the indentation of all the lines?
Often times I'll copy and paste code into a remote terminal and have the whole thing messed up. I want to fix this in one fell swoop.
=
, the indent command can take motions. So, gg
to get the start of the file, =
to indent, G
to the end of the file, gg=G
.
''
(two single quotes) takes you back to where you were so gg=G''
should indent then return.
Before pasting into the terminal, try :set paste
and then :set nopaste
after you're done. This will turn off the auto-indent, line-wrap and other features that are messing up your paste.
edit: Also, I should point out that a much better result than =
indenting can usually be obtained by using an external program. For example, I run :%!perltidy
all the time. astyle
, cindent
, etc. can also be used. And, of course, you can map those to a key stroke, and map different ones to the same keystroke depending on file type.
equalprg
option in a ftplugin to use an external filter for =
indenting, rather than a custom keybinding.
formatpgm
with tidy and astyle and then gq
. Here are some examples from my .vimrc
: au FileType xml set fp=tidy\ -q\ -i\ -xml
and au FileType java set fp=/usr/local/bin/astyle\ --mode=java\ --indent=tab
Feb 27, 2013 at 5:06
The master of all commands is
gg=G
This indents the entire file!
And below are some of the simple and elegant commands used to indent lines quickly in Vim or gVim.
To indent the all the lines below the current line
=G
To indent the current line
==
To indent n
lines below the current line
n==
For example, to indent 4 lines below the current line
4==
To indent a block of code, go to one of the braces and use command
=%
=G
enables you to repeat the command throughout tabs with the .
(dot) command.
If you want to reindent the block you're in without having to type any chords, you can do:
[[=]]
[
is a chord, just as =
is.
press escape and then type below combinations fast:
gg=G
You can use tidy application/utility to indent HTML & XML files and it works pretty well in indenting those files.
Prettify an XML file
:!tidy -mi -xml %
Prettify an HTML file
:!tidy -mi -html %
1G=G
. That should indent all the lines in the file. 1G
takes you the first line, =
will start the auto-indent and the final G
will take you the last line in the file.
if you do not want to use :set paste
, middle-click, set nopaste
, you can also paste the content of the clipboard:
"*p
"+p
That way you don't have to leave normal mode.
if you have to paste +
or *
depends on how you selected the text, see :help quoteplus
.
:set paste
is your friend I use putty and end up copying code between windows. Before I was turned on to :set paste
(and :set nopaste
) copy/paste gave me fits for that very reason.
In Vim, use :insert
. This will keep all your formatting and not do autoindenting. For more information help :insert
.
For complex C++ files vim does not always get the formatting right when using vim's =
filter command. So for a such situations it is better to use an external C++ formatter like astyle (or uncrustify) e.g.:
:%!astyle
Vim's '=' function uses its internal formatter by default (which doesn't always gets things right) but one can also set it use an external formatter, like astyle, by setting it up appropriately as discussed in this question.
vim-autoformat formats your source files using external programs specific for your language, e.g. the "rbeautify" gem for Ruby files, "js-beautify" npm package for JavaScript.
For XML files, I use this command
:1,$!xmllint --format --recover - 2>/dev/null
You need to have xmllint installed (package libxml2-utils)
(Source : http://ku1ik.com/2011/09/08/formatting-xml-in-vim-with-indent-command.html )
You can create a mapping to do this for you.
This one will auto indent the whole file and still keep your cursor in the position you are:
nmap <leader>ai mzgg=G`z
mz
will mark the current location as z
and `z
will jump back to the z
mark. So it's important to know that the z
mark will be overwritten.
Sep 30, 2022 at 21:20
Just go to visual mode in vim , and select from up to down lines after selecting just press = , All the selected line will be indented.
ggvG=
when you can gg=G
. What was the point in making the motion visible? That goes for all actions which take motions.
For vi Editor, use :insert. This will keep all your formatting and not insert auto-indenting.Once done press escape to view the actual formatted file otherwise you'l see some garbage characters. like ^I e.g:
public static void main(String[] args) {
^I
^I System.out.println("Some Garbage printed upon using :insert");
}
vi
one would:se noai
(disable auto-indent) before pasting. Also when pasting to a text terminal all TABs are most likely expanded to spaces. Personally I use Emacs for this type of tasks: When you copy withing Emacs, TABs are preserved, and (in current version) a mis-indented paste can be fixed by simply pressing TAB.