Vi Short Command Reference

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Vi short command reference

(Learn or review your Vi commands with this concise reference)
by: Krissy J. krissyj@robotz.com

Operation

i input mode
esc command mode
:se number display line numbers
:se nonumber don't display line numbers
:e open file
:w save (write) file to disk
:wq save and quit
:q! quit but don't save
number,command apply command number times (e.g. 4,x = delete 4 characters)
. repeat last effective cmd
esc,u undo it
ctrl-r redo it

 

Navigation and movement

- go to beginning of previous line
0 (zero) or ^ go to beginning of this line
$ go to end of this line
ret or + = go to beginning of next line (NOT THE SAME AS INPUT RETURN)
w go to beginning of next word
b go to beginning of this word
e go to end of this word
sft-h go to first line onscreen
sft-l go to last line onscreen
ctrl-f forward (down) one screen
ctrl-b backward (up) one screen
1,sft-g top of the buffer
sft-g bottom of the buffer (i.e. EOF)
line,sft-g go to line (e.g. 3,5,sft-g = line 35)
= column 4)
sft-J Join / bring next line up (append next line to end)

 

Deletion

deleted text is put to the general purpose buffer; use the p cmd to retrieve it you can also use yanks to not delete it but still put it in the GPB basically delete = cut and yank = copy in your OS's Edit menu

x delete this character
d,w delete word
d,d delete line
sft-d delete to end of line (same as emacs ctrl-k)
y,w yank to beginning of next word
sft-y or y,$ yank to end of line
y,y yank entire line
buffer"lines"y,y yank lines number of lines into buffer buffer (a-z)
p paste contents of general-purpose buffer

 

Replacement

To use replacers type the sequence and then type the string of characters to replace with, e.g. 2,c,w,"Bored Zo" to replace from the cursor to the end of the next word to "Bored Zo"

r replace a single character
shift-r is the cursor and your text is "I AM the |Entertained Zo!" shift-r,"Bored" will give you "I AM the Boredtained Zo!")
c,w or c,e change from cursor to end of word
c,b change from beginning of word to before cursor
c,$ or sft-c change from cursor to end of line
c,c change the ENTIRE line
:x,ys/oldstring/newstring/ substitute one occurrence of newstring for oldstring from line x to line y (if y = $ then to EOF)
:x,ys/oldstr/newstr/g substitute all occurrences per line of newstring for oldstring
:%s/oldstr/newstr/g substitution from start of document to end of document all lines, all occurrences per line.
~ toggle a character's case

 

Searching

/ search forward from cursor for a pattern
 ? search backward from cursor for a pattern
n next result
sft-n previous result

 

Insertion

o insert a blank line below this one
sft-o ...above this one
:r file insert file at cursor

 

Customizing Vim

Vim is an editor designed to work like the traditional UNIX vi. Vim extends the features of vi and supports syntax coloring. You can control vim's default behavior by creating a custom .vimrc file in your home directory (or move .exrc to .vimrc). The table below shows some common options you can include in your custom .vimrc file. You may also type these interactively within vim by preceding with a colon.

 

Vim Custom Options

set incsearch incremental searching
set ignorecase disregards upper and lowercase distinctions
set smartcase ignore case of search if pattern is lower-case
set scrolloff=2 two lines of context visible around cursor
set wildmode=longest,list Tab, Enter, Esc filename completion
set cindent C code indentation
set nocindent disable C code indentation
set compatible behave more like old vi
set nowrap disable line wrap for long lines
set textwidth=72 supplement to line wrap annoyance
filetype off disable file type recognition and behavior
set uc=0 No swap file will be used
set number display line numbers in editor
set nonumber disable display line numbers in editor

 

Vim command line history

(Thu Nov 10 18:12:47 CST 2005) The command-lines that you enter are remembered in a history table. You can recall them with the up and down cursor keys. Example, .viminfo in the user profile. When this doesn't work you might see :<Up> appear in the editor instead of the last command. Reason: You have invoked vim-minimal (/bin/vi) rather than vim-enhanced (/usr/bin/bim). The vim-minimal package doesn't seem to support cmd-line history. The libgpm.so.1 console mouse library is required to use vim-enhanced. Applies when: Linux OS, Linux Terminal Emulation correct, also relates to command complete <Tab>.

 

about the author

Krissy is an enthusiastic member in a growing trend of linux geek girls. The females place in computer technology is not well defined and very few are exploring this realm. Krissy specializes in documentation for various linux related projects and her contributions are highly valued. Krissy has a linux related web site and is a member of lazygirl.net.


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