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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I found this article helpful to pick the right answer.– M Imam PratamaOct 23, 2021 at 6:29
9 Answers
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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9but this will lead to a problem: pressing
zm
will not close all folds, unless you enter it 99 times– bitboxerApr 5, 2013 at 7:20 -
24You could also
set nofoldenable
, which temporarily disables folding when you open the file, but all folds are restored as soon as you hitzc
– 79E09796May 30, 2013 at 8:22 -
1To 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.– wisbuckyJun 3, 2014 at 21:34 -
2
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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16For some reason this only partially unfolded the file. I had to use
BufWinEnter
instead.– KelvinJul 26, 2012 at 18:26 -
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4
-
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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3Useful - 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.– womMay 11, 2018 at 14:30
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?– MarkHuDec 21, 2016 at 23:02
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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 -
You can add
set foldlevelstart=99
to your .vimrc file, and it will start editing any new file with all folds open.
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.
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
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.