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In my .vimrc I've put set foldmethod=syntax to enable folding of methods etc. However, I don't like the default that everytime I open a file, the whole thing is folded. Is there a way to enable foldmethod, yet have files unfolded when I open them?

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9 Answers 9

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set foldlevel=99

should open all folds, regardless of method used for folding. With foldlevel=0 all folded, foldlevel=1 only somes, ... higher numbers will close fewer folds.

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  • 9
    but this will lead to a problem: pressing zm will not close all folds, unless you enter it 99 times
    – bitboxer
    Apr 5, 2013 at 7:20
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    You could also set nofoldenable, which temporarily disables folding when you open the file, but all folds are restored as soon as you hit zc
    – 79E09796
    May 30, 2013 at 8:22
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    To set the exact foldlevel you can use :autocmd BufWinEnter * let &foldlevel = max(map(range(1, line('$')), 'foldlevel(v:val)')) (taken from an answer on superuser). Sep 13, 2013 at 21:16
  • 9
    @bitboxer "but this will lead to a problem: pressing zm will not close all folds" Use zM to close all folds.
    – wisbucky
    Jun 3, 2014 at 21:34
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    @79E09796 You should move your comment to an answer of its own.
    – Josh
    May 14, 2016 at 1:18
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You can put this in your .vimrc: au BufRead * normal zR

It declares an automatic command (au), triggered when a buffer is read (BufRead), matching all files (*) and executes the zR (opens all folds) command in normal mode.

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    For some reason this only partially unfolded the file. I had to use BufWinEnter instead.
    – Kelvin
    Jul 26, 2012 at 18:26
  • just out of curiousity what is the opposite to zR
    – puk
    May 1, 2013 at 3:03
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    nvm, it's zM to close ALL the folds
    – puk
    May 1, 2013 at 3:04
  • Better with:if has("autocmd") ... endif
    – DrBeco
    Aug 29, 2014 at 5:08
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set nofoldenable

Adding this to your .vimrc will temporarily disable folding when you open the file, but folds can still be restored with zc

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    Useful - but when you zc a fold it then hides all other folds also all-at-once. I think i like personally defaulting to foldlevel=99 as it keeps 'zc' then localized to individual chunk you are looking at when invoked.
    – wom
    May 11, 2018 at 14:30
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In .vimrc add an autocmd for BufWinEnter to open all folds automatically like this:

autocmd BufWinEnter * silent! :%foldopen!

That tell vim to execute the silent :%foldopen! after opening BunWinEnter event (see :h BufWinEnter). The silent %foldopen! will execute foldopen on the whole buffer thanks to the % and will open all folds recursively because of the !. Any eventual error message will be suppressed by silent. (You could get error messages like E490: No fold found if the buffer actually didn't contain any fold yet)

Note: You could use BufRead instead of BufWinEnter but then if the file has a modeline that enables the folding that will override this autocmd. I mean BufRead autocmds run before the modeline is processed and BufWinEnter will run them after. I find the later to be more useful

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  • Why not just use a modeline that set different fold options per file?
    – MarkHu
    Dec 21, 2016 at 23:02
  • using autocmd here allows to open all folds for all files using a modeline it just to apply to that file and assumes that you can modify the file (it could be a read only file). The modeline would look like # vim: set foldlevel=99 at the top or bottom of the file Oct 5, 2018 at 8:14
  • How can this be achieved in Lua?
    – 71GA
    Jan 13 at 16:25
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You can add

set foldlevelstart=99

to your .vimrc file, and it will start editing any new file with all folds open.

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If you want a way to have it display unfolded as soon as it is opened, you can use set foldlevelstart=99 as a lot of answers explained.

But, if you just want to see them unfolded, you can just press zi and it will unfold everything. Another, zi will close them back.

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You could map it to keys to enable it. For example,

nmap ,f :set foldmethod=syntax<CR>

Then while in normal mode hit the ",f" key combination

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You can open unfolded file when you put set nofoldenable into your .vimrc file.

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autocmd BufReadPost * silent! :%foldopen!

This worked best for me. After a buffer gets opened all folds are opened. This opens them to the correct level.

The set foldenable method was not good, because if I choose to close one fold level, it enabled folding again, and folded every thing to 0 level, instead of just going down one level on the one I activated.

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