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This is a summary of the differences between VIM and vi.
The most interesting additions:
Multi level undo.
'u' goes backward in time, 'ctrl-R' goes forward again. Set option
'undolines' to the number of changes to be remembered (default 100). Set
'undolines' to 0 for vi-compatible one level undo.
Repeat a series of commands.
'v'<c> starts recording typed characters into named buffer <c> (append to the
buffer if buffer name is upper case). A subsequent 'v' stops recording. The
buffer can then be executed with the '@'<c> command. This is very useful to
repeat a complex action.
Flexible insert mode.
The arrow keys can be used in insert mode to move around in the file. This
breaks the insert in two parts as far as undo and redo is concerned.
CTRL-O can be used to execute a single command-mode command. This is almost
the same as hitting ESC, typing the command and hitting 'a'. For undo/redo
only those inserts are remembered where something was actually inserted.
Quoting.
Quoting can be used to first choose a piece of text and then give a command
to do something with it. This is an (easy to use) alternative to first giving
the operator and then moving to the end of the text to be operated upon. 'q'
and 'Q' are used to start quoting a piece of text. 'q' works on characters
and 'Q' on lines. Move the cursor to extend the quoted part. It is shown
highlighted on the screen. By typing 'o' the other end of the quoted text can
be moved. The quoted text can be affected by an operator:
d delete
c change
y yank
> or < insert or delete indent
! filter through external program
= filter through indent
: start ":" command for the quoted lines.
V format text to 'textwidth' columns
J join lines
~ swap case
u make uppercase
U make lowercase
Block operators.
With quoting a rectangular block of text can be selected. Start quoting with
CTRL-Q. The block can be deleted ('d'), yanked ('d') or its case can be
swapped ('~'). A deleted or yanked block can be put into the text with the
'p' and 'P' commands.
Online help.
':help' command and help key (F1 for MSDOS) display several pages of concise
help. The name of the help file can be set with the "helpfile" option.
Command line editing.
You can insert or delete at any place in the command line using the cursor
keys. The right/left cursor keys can be used to move forward/backward one
character. The shifted right/left cursor keys can be used to move
forward/backward one word.
The command lines are remembered. The up/down cursor keys can be used to
recall previous command lines. The 'history' option can be set to the number
of lines that will be remembered.
Filename completion.
While entering a command line (on the bottom line of the screen) <ESC> can be
typed after an (incomplete) file name wildcard; the wildcard will be
expanded. If there are multiple matches, CTRL-N (next) and CTRL-P (previous)
will walk through the matches. CTRL-D can be typed after an (incomplete) file
name wildcard; all matching files will be listed.
Text formatting.
The 'textwidth' (tw) option can be used to automatically limit the line
length. This replaces the 'wrapmargin' option of Vi, which was not very
useful. The 'V' operator can be used to format a piece of text ("V}" formats
a paragraph).
Command line options:
When Vim is started with "-v" (View) then readonly mode is used (includes
"-n").
When Vim is started with "-s scriptfile", the characters read from
"scriptfile" are treated as if you typed them. If end of file is reached
before the editor exits, further characters are read from the console.
The "-w" option can be used to record all typed characters in a script file.
This file can then be used to redo the editing, possibly on another file or
after changing some commands in the script file.
The "-n" option disables the writing of a ".vim" file (see below).
The "-c command" option does the same as the the "+command" option.
The "-T terminal" option sets the terminal type.
In command mode:
Missing command: 'Q' (go to Ex mode).
Missing Ex commands: append, change, insert, open, preserve, recover,
(un)abbreviate, visual, z and ~.
The command characters are shown in the last line of the screen. They are
removed when the command is finished. If you do not want this (on a slow
terminal) reset the 'showcmd' option.
If the 'ruler' option is set, the current cursor position is shown in the
last line of the screen.
'u' and CTRL-R accept a count for the number of undos/redos.
'U' still works after having moved off of the last changed line and after
'u'.
Nulls in the file are replaced by newlines internally. This allows editing of
binary files (more or less). When searching for nulls, use a newline in the
search pattern.
Characters with the 8th bit set are displayed. The characters between '~' and
0xa0 are displayed as "~?", "~@", "~A", etc., unless the "graphic' option is
set.
'=' is an operator to filter lines through an external command (vi: lisp
stuff). The name of the command can be set with the 'equalprg' option. The
default is "indent".
'][' goes to the next ending of a C function ('}' in column 1).
'[]' goes to the previous ending of a C function ('}' in column 1).
'*' searches forward for the identifier under the cursor, '#' backward.
'K' runs the program defined by the "keywordprg" option, with the identifier
under the cursor as argument.
'%' can be preceded with a count. The cursor jumps to the line that
percentage down in the file.
With the CTRL-] command, the cursor may be in the middle of the identifier.
The used tags are remembered. Commands that can be used with the tag stack
are CTRL-T, ':pop' and ':tag'. ':tags' lists the tag stack.
The 'tags' option can be set to a list of tag file names. Thus multiple
tag files can be used.
Previously used file names are remembered in the alternate file name list.
CTRL-^ accepts a count, which is an index in this list.
Search patterns have more features.
Searches can find the end of a match and may include a character offset.
Count added to '~', ':next', ':Next', 'n' and 'N'.
Added :wnext command. Same as ":write" followed by ":next".
If option "tildeop" has been set, '~' is an operator (must be followed by a
movement command).
With the 'J' (join) command you can reset the 'joinspaces' (js) option to
have only one space after a period (Vi inserts two spaces).
'cw' can be used to change white space formed by several characters (Vi is
confusing: 'cw' only changes one space, while 'dw' deletes all white space).
'o' and 'O' accept a count for repeating the insert (Vi clears a part of
display).
':dis' command shows the contents of the yank buffers.
Previously used file names are remembered in the alternate file name list.
':files' command shows the list of alternate filenames.
'#'<N> means <N>th alternate filename in the list.
Flags after command not supported (no plans to include it).
QuickFix commands included, almost the same as with Manx's Z editor.
The 'errorfile' option has the name of the file with error messages.
":cd" command shows current directory instead of going to the home directory.
":cd ~" goes to home directory.
':source!' command reads Vi commands from a file.
':mkexrc' command writes current modified options and mappings to a ".exrc"
file. ':mkvimrc' writes to a ".vimrc" file.
The :put! command inserts the contents of a register above the current line.
The named register '.' can be used with commands p, P and :put. The contents
of the register is the last inserted text.
':noremap' command can be used to enter a mapping that will not be remapped.
This is useful to exchange the meaning of two keys.
':@r' command executes buffer r (is in some versions of vi).
CTRL-O/CTRL-I can be used to jump to older/newer positions. These are the
same positions as used with the '' command, but may be in another file. The
':jumps' command lists the older positions.
If the 'shiftround' option is set, an indent is rounded to a multiple of
'shiftwidth' with '>' and '<' commands.
The 'scrolljump' option can be set to the minimal number of lines to scroll
when the cursor gets off the screen. Use this when scrolling is slow.
Uppercase marks can be used to jump between files. The ':marks' command lists
all currently set marks. The commands "']" and "`]" jump to the end of the
previous operator or end of the text inserted with the put command. "'[" and
"`[" do jump to the start.
The 'shelltype' option can be set to reflect the type of shell used.
The CTRL-A (add) and CTRL-S (subtract) commands are new. The count to the
command (default 1) is added to/subtracted from the number at or after the
cursor. That number may be decimal, octal (starts with a '0') or hexadecimal
(starts with '0x'). Very useful in macros.
With the :set command the prefix "inv" can be used to invert toggle options.
In insert mode:
The backspace key can be used just like CTRL-D to remove auto-indents.
You can backspace, ctrl-U and CTRL-W over newlines if the 'backspace' (bs)
option is set to non-zero. You can backspace over the start of insert if the
'backspace' option is set to 2.
If the 'repdel' option is reset, a <BS> in replace mode will not delete a
character.
CTRL-T/CTRL-D always insert/delete an indent in the current line, no matter
what column the cursor is in. '0' and '^' before CTRL-D are ignored.
CTRL-@ (insert previously inserted text) works always (Vi: only when typed as
first character).
CTRL-A works like CTRL-@ but does not leave insert mode.
CTRL-B <0-9a-z> can be used to insert the contents of a register.
When the 'smartindent' (si) option is set, C programs will be better
auto-indented.
CTRL-R and CTRL-E can be used to copy a character from above/below the
current cursor position.
After CTRL-V you can enter a three digit decimal number. This byte value is
inserted in the text as a single character. Useful for international
characters that are not on your keyboard.
When the 'expandtab' (et) option is set, a <TAB> is expanded to the
appropriate number of spaces.
The window always reflects the contents of the buffer (Vi does not do this
when changing text and in some other cases).
If Vim is compiled with DIGRAPHS defined, digraphs are supported. A set of
normal Amiga digraphs is included. They are shown with the :digraph" command.
More can be added with ":digraph {char1}{char2} {number}". A digraph is
entered with "CTRL-K {char1} {char2}" or "{char1} BS {char2}" (only when
'digraph' option is set).
general:
Missing options: autoprint (ap), beautify (bf), edcompatible, hardtabs (ht),
lisp, mesg, open, optimize (op), prompt, redraw, slowopen (slow),
warn, window, w300, w1200 and w9600. Terse option ignored.
When the 'compatible' option is set, all options are set for maximum
vi-compatibility
The 'ttimeout' option is like 'timeout', but only works for cursor and
function keys, not for ordinary mapped characters.
There is an option for each terminal string. Can be used when termcap is not
supported or to change individual strings.
On systems that have no job control (most systems but BSD-UNIX) the CTRL-Z
and ":stop" command starts a new shell.
If Vim is started on the Amiga without an interactive window for output, a
window is opened (and :sh still works). You can give a device to use for
editing with the '-d' argument, e.g. "-d con:20/20/600/150".
On startup the VIMINIT or EXINIT environment variables, the file s:.vimrc or
s:.exrc and .vimrc or .exrc are read for initialization commands. When
reading .vimrc and .exrc some commands are not allowed because of security
reasons (shell commands and writing to a file, :map commands are echoed).
Line lenght can be upto 32767 characters, file length upto 2147483646 lines.
If a line is larger than the screen, the last line is filled with <@>s and
only the part of the line before that is shown.
The 'columns' option is used to set or get the width of the display.
The name of the current file name is shown in the title bar of the window.
Wildcards in file names are expanded.
Option settings are read from the first and last few lines of the file.
Option 'modelines' determines how many lines are tried (default is 5). Note
that this is different from the Vi versions that can execute any Ex command
in a modeline (a major security problem).
If the 'insertmode' option is set (e.g. in .exrc), Vim starts in insert mode.
All text is kept in memory. Available memory limits the file size (and other
things such as undo). This may be a problem with MSDOS, is hardly a problem
ont the Amiga and almost never with Unix.
If the "backup" or "writebackup" option is set: Before a file is overwritten,
a backup file (.bak) is made. If the "backup" option is set it is left
behind.
All entered commands and text is written into a script file, ending in
".vim". This can be used to recover your work if the machine crashes during
an edit session. This can be switched off by setting the 'updatecount' option
to 0 or starting Vim with the "-n" option. Use the 'directory' option for
placing the .vim file somewhere else.
The 'shortname' (sn) option, when set, tells Vim that ".bak" and ".vim"
filenames are to be MSDOS-like: 8 characters plus 3 for extention. This
should be used on messydos or crossdos filesystems on the Amiga. If this
option is off, Vim tries to guess if MSDOS filename restrictions are
effective.
Recovery after a crash has a smaller chance for success, because there is no
temporary file.
Error messages are shown at least one second (Vi overwrites error messages).
If Vim asks to "Hit RETURN to continue", you can hit any key. Characters
other than <CR>, <NL> and <SPACE> are interpreted as the (start of) a
command. (Vi only accepts a command starting with ':').
The contents of the numbered registers is remembered when changing files.
The AUX: device of the Amiga is supported.
vi:tw=77: