10 Advanced Vim Features (You Probably Didn't Know)
Ғылым және технология
In this video, I'm showing 10 advanced Vim features that you likely didn't know yet.
More information: blog.sebastian-daschner.com/e...
My dotfiles: github.com/sdaschner/dotfiles
Developer Productivity Course: blog.sebastian-daschner.com/e...
Пікірлер: 125
You don't need to use echo to do maths operations in Vim. In insert mode if you type = 1+200/4 you will get the same answer 51 appear in your doc. For the other example you can store 1 + 2 +...+13 in a register in normal mode: "lyy (this stores the line in a register called l, l can be any letter) then in insert mode: = l Basically = in insert mode is how to do maths in vim To quickly write a list of numbers on separate lines you can (in normal mode) :put(range(1,10))
@SebastianDaschnerIT
Жыл бұрын
Nice, thanks!
@elon3
Жыл бұрын
:put =range(1,10)
@not_ever
Жыл бұрын
@@elon3 Nice catch. Thank you
A note on recordings (or macros): if you save the macro in the a register, and after using it you realized that you need to correct (or add) one aspect of the commands that you recorded, you can print the a reg in the current file typing "app then you make the changes and to replace the new version of the macro, you can type "ayy. Amazing stuff.
@billtotman
Ай бұрын
The best tip in the comments. I was going to mention looping within a recording, this is much more useful. Thx!
It's refreshing to watch someone achieve so much with vanilla vim. It seems to me that today a lot of vim users including me look for plugins to do things instead of combing built in features. The Unix way is infinitely more powerful and adaptable. I learned a few new tricks today, Danke dir!
@rsmith31416
2 жыл бұрын
Well said! I'm glad to know even some new users are aware of that :)
@vorrnth8734
Жыл бұрын
But the unix way is not including everything in one program. That means a small core app + plugins would be more unix like. But I get your point. I am wondering about all the filetree plugins when this functionality is builtin for ages.
@rsmith31416
Жыл бұрын
@@vorrnth8734 In fact, even vim itself is built with that design in mind: makeprg, keywordprg, formatprg, equalprg, grepprg, cscopeprg
@auntiecarol
Жыл бұрын
As a long time Emacser but a noob Vimmer, I have to say I appreciate this very much as well. It's important to get used to the vernacular before relying on the crutch of packages... and those kinds of videos are very thin on the ground.
As a daily driver of vanilla vim for years (relatively recent neovim convert), i as not aware that during selection you could run commands (IN VISUAL MODE) with the "!". I've definitely used "command mode" before with the 'bang' , but i was not aware of THAT REALLY NEAT TRICK!! Thank you, subbed!
@ImperiumLibertas
Жыл бұрын
you should still use neovim even without plugins. there have been major refactors from the original codebase that makes it much more performant.
Great video. You can also use the last technique to increment a whole list, suppose you have: 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. Then in visual mode you can select from the second 1. to the end and type `g Ctrl-A` and it will increment the list.
@Phenomenal7
Жыл бұрын
This is Gold !!
@fickthissut
Ай бұрын
This trick is in help if i remember correctly
What an exceptional video! I have hours of watch time on the topic, but this is gold! Thank you for teaching me things that will improve my life. You are a true professional and you inspire me
I'd like to recommend the vim-speeddating plugin. It extends the and keys to operate on dates, ordinal numbers, and other similar patterns (customizable), and to operate on multiple visually-selected lines at once (creating incrementing lists).
Him writing goodbye world made me chuckle.
Awesome, so helpful! I would love more videos like this.
Ctrl-p/Ctrl-n isn't autocompletion. It's completion. The prefix "auto" usually refers to the popup showing up automatically on each keystroke. Your can use @@ to repeat your latest macro. While ! is very useful, Vim actually has :sort built in. You can also use g in visual mode to increment numbers in multiple lines linearly
@SebastianDaschnerIT
Жыл бұрын
Re autocompletion: Good point 🙂 Nice points, thanks for sharing!
Lots of great stuff here. Well done!
These commands work when you're in insert mode: Type Ctrl-r, then press the = key. Then type in a formula, like 3*3 and hit return. It will insert 9. Type the beginning of a line that is the same as some other line, for example, if you type "import", then type Ctrl-x Ctrl-l and it will present a pop-up menu with lines already in the file that begin with the same characters as what you've typed. Use Ctrl-p and Ctrl-n to navigate up and down that list, and hit return to insert the desired line. Ctrl-x Ctrl-f and it will display all the filenames in the current directory. Use Ctrl-p and Ctrl-n to navigate up and down that list, and hit return to insert the desired filename. If you select a path, you can type Ctrl-x Ctrl-f again to navigate one level down in that path. Ctrl-r % inserts the current filename. When not in insert mode: Ctrl-w f will open the file whose filename is under the cursor. : Ctrl-f will allow you to open and edit the command history, and re-execute a command (or a modified command if you modify it) by pressing return on it. :r !, and it will insert the results of that command. For example, :r !date will insert the current date, assuming you have the Unix date command in your path.
@SebastianDaschnerIT
5 ай бұрын
Nice, thanks for sharing! Most of them were new to me 🙂
You can apply-repeat your macro from the cursor until EOF via: VG:normal @x Where x is your chosen macro ('a', in this video) You Visually select until the End Of the File (G), then apply the "normal @x" command.
@ivanheffner2587
2 ай бұрын
You can make a recursive macro by having it call itself. In the example, appending @a to the macro it would repeatedly call itslelf until it hit an error, which in this case would be when it tried to move past the end of the file.
Great stuff! Followed along. Some stuff is new; some I'd forgotten. Will have to do it every day for a while to retain the info.
really useful, didn't know some of these, thanks for sharing!
The gx command really got me. Thank you.
Thanks Sebastian for this great video. Learned a lot from you.
Great video, this is the only place where I could find a great example for the norm command.
@yash1152
2 ай бұрын
timestamp or summary? > _"only place where I could find a great example for the norm command"_
The feature of writing to the end of line was all what I was looking for, many many thanks. keep these amazing tips and tricks posted always,
@Pameliux23
11 ай бұрын
What do you mean writing? Go to the end of the line with g?
vim seems like a tool that is always giving features. I have been using vim for years but I always learn something new like in your video here.
not just nice to know but incredibly productive when built in muscle memory, esp sending vim buffer in and out the unix cli pipelines
you can check surround commands to (y)add, (d)remove or (c)change brackets around a text object and it is repeatable too
Awesome video! I really enjoyed it!
This is really good. Thanks!
gx is super useful for me! I didn't know about it, thank you so much!!
Really nice and helpful... Thanks!
Autosource mit Gpg ist schon ziemlich nice! Danke fürs teilen)
Great video!
1. Sweet, I knew that one 2. Lmao. From the command line: vim -p [file1] [file2] opens two files in tabs, switch between by pressing 'gt' aka go tab. Edit your tab colors in .vimrc. Open all files in single directory, in tabs, with vim -p * 3. Recordings are great. Don't use that to comment out code though, that's something I did commonly. Use visual block at the top and comment downwards: Ctrl + v, go down, press shift + i, enter your language's comment character, press escape. All commented. 4. Pretty cool, didn't know that, but visual block mode will do that more intuitively imo. Ctrl + v, highlight lines to edit, shift + i, call(" , Ctrl + v again, shift + A, ");, done. 5. Love bash commands in Vim. So hot. Run git commands, create/delete files, append contents of files to other files.. Do anything. 6. What. That's dope. Fuck I wish this worked with like, web framework codebases but those paths are usually defined/appended based on their own rules :/ 7. Okay this one makes me really happy. I like this one. 8. I should really just read the manual at this point. Spelling good is nice. 9. What the fuck.
Thanks a lot! How did you get the syntax highlighting (at 20:33) when putting the regex together?
@SebastianDaschnerIT
Жыл бұрын
That's the regular search highlighting in Vim. If it looks different in your editor, check out my Vim config: github.com/sdaschner/dotfiles/blob/master/.vimrc
First, great video. I love your presentation. It's high quality. Thank you. I liked and subscribed with notifications. Would you mind making a video showing what tools you use to make your tutorial videos? I imagine you're using OBS Studio? It would be nice to see your setup and process. I do think it would be helpful if you would index your content in the comments of you post. I'm providing it for this video below: 0:28 - Auto-complete 1:50 - Buffers 4:02 - Recordings 6:32 - : normal 9:07 - : ! command 11:18 - Open files /URLs with gf / gx 12:36 - Encrypting files with :X 0:28 - Auto-complete 13:55 - AutoSource 16:00 - Spell Checking 18:10 - Arithmetics
@SebastianDaschnerIT
Жыл бұрын
Thanks! For my video process: blog.sebastian-daschner.com/entries/chroma-keying-video-setup
Great tips.
best feature of vim is neovim
@7xr1e20ln8
Жыл бұрын
This 💯 I gave up on Vim and switched completely to neovim.
@NostraDavid2
11 ай бұрын
False. While Neovim is neat, it's not made for productivity. The hours I wasted because something updated and broke one thing or another... If you want to tinker, Neovim is great. If you just want to be productive in Vim, stick with Vim. Much more stable API, no constant switching between whatever is the newest plugin manager, etc.
@dioticdrone
11 ай бұрын
@@NostraDavid2not if you know how to use it well. The productivity boost you get using it every day far out way the occasional hiccup you get sorting out broken plugins after an update. Usually doesn't take more than an hour, and that happens like once or twice a year.
@sohamchatterjee750
11 ай бұрын
💯
@shanewalsch
6 ай бұрын
@@NostraDavid2just don't update plugins
been using vim for years and didn't know some of this! gf to goto a file is great !
the zsh at the end is doped 😂😂😂
Encryption is not include in Neovim… Does someone know if there is some plugin to open vim’s encrypted file with neovim ?
Hi Sebastian, thanks for these tips. BTW is your terminal font JetBrains Mono?
@SebastianDaschnerIT
Жыл бұрын
Yes, it is!
@justmeandopensource
Жыл бұрын
@@SebastianDaschnerIT Cool. Thanks. I switched to it now and looks great.
good tips ..
Any recommended tips and trick for beginner using plain vim without the plugin?
@SebastianDaschnerIT
2 жыл бұрын
As for tips just try to get as much practice & exposure as possible, i.e. try to change it in the envs where you code the most (editors, IDEs with vi mode, ...). For tutorials I found this helpful: danielmiessler.com/study/vim/
Hello, is there trick or command or control to auto complete the brackets. like on typing open bracket we should get the closed bracket automatically. If yes please let me know.
@SebastianDaschnerIT
Ай бұрын
There are multiple Vim plugins for that such as AutoClose. Haven't use any of them so can't comment but you can start from there
I find weird that you call macros recordings and auto commands autosourcing. Besides that great video!
Awesome
Ok that recording thing is just crazyyyyyy
hey how do you use norm to enter insert mode and then back to normal mode?? I need to paste the first word of each line at the end of the same line and I don't know how to do it
@SebastianDaschnerIT
Жыл бұрын
I mostly use the :norm together with the visual mode, i.e. V -> select lines -> :norm ... -> Enter and you're back in normal mode
@davidh.4944
Жыл бұрын
To input a non-printing character into a command (or anywhere, really), you can press '' followed by the key you want (escape, in this case). I was able to globally copy the first word of each line to the end of it, with a space separator, using this: :v/^$/ norm ^yiWA ^[p Where '^[' is where I used ''. That's the _caret notation_ string for . So that's "go to start, yank inner Word, Append space, escape, paste", to clarify the string. :normal can take a line range, so '% norm' will run it on all lines, but in this case the command tries to duplicate blank lines, so I instead used ':v/^$/' to skip them. ( ':v' is the inverse form of ':(g)lobal', a "global not". ':g!' also works.) It's also possible to use the :execute command to build a normal command with text-based escapes: :v/^$/ exec "norm yiWA \p" A final option is to just record your actions for a single line as a macro, "qa", then use ":v/^$/ norm @a" to run it on every line. 'q' records everything as-is, including movements between modes.
Q: How can I activate a vim feature? My Register "+ and "* are not existing. when i watch :version there is a -(minus sign) before the -clipboard. How can i activate +clipboard to have the Register "+ and "* thanks for awnsering greatings Sven
@SebastianDaschnerIT
9 ай бұрын
IIRC there might be some steps that you need to do from your operating system and shell integration to have these system clipboard registers available... but your best bet is to search for your particular OS / distribution and shell setup.
do u use vim or idea for java development?
@SebastianDaschnerIT
2 жыл бұрын
Both, I use IdeaVim: blog.sebastian-daschner.com/entries/my-favorite-ideavim-features
great video, thanks! I only wish we could see your cmd line as you type
@SebastianDaschnerIT
4 ай бұрын
Thanks! Are there any commands from the cli that I typed that you missed? I don't quite get that comment
@odanabunaga2505
4 ай бұрын
@@SebastianDaschnerIT apologies, I meant that it would be nice to be able to see the entered keys for longer. And thanks for explaining recordings, up to now I never used those and hated to be entangled in that mode lol
Subbed
Buffers are even easier to use than how you present them: :ls gives you a list of all your open buffers :b lets you switch to any buffer by name *with completion* CTRL-^ and CTRL-6 let you switch between the two most recent buffers instantly. With this workflow, I pretty much never close buffers manually (I'd usually close Vim before the number of buffers becomes hard to manage anyway).
@SebastianDaschnerIT
10 ай бұрын
If that works for you great :) My mental model follows more a sorted list that I cycle though like left and right (like browser tabs) which works well for me
I need understand how to read help and use it like pro
For arithmetic bc is a better alternative than the shell - V :! bc
Last command is :.shell (bash, zsh itd.) is that true?
@SebastianDaschnerIT
2 жыл бұрын
:.!zsh yes My key mapping for that is `nmap !!zsh`
I thought I was a bit of a vi[m] ninja having been using it for 30 years, but I didn't know about 1/2 of these tips. Top work, this is great.
@SebastianDaschnerIT
Жыл бұрын
Thanks, yes same here, I'm also still seeing new things
should change the tilte 10 Advanced Vim Features (You Probably Didn't Know) (If you use it to create notes)
I’ve been using vi / vim for 25+ years. Usually when I watch these sorts of videos they are either pretty basic, rely on plugins, or are very niche to one person’s workflow. This one was pretty good and well above the average. gf / gx and being able to handle file encryption are things I didn’t know about that I can certainly see being very useful.
@antb533
2 ай бұрын
what are your favorite tips?
@ivanheffner2587
2 ай бұрын
@@antb533 from this video? Any video that discusses registers/macros gets a +1 from me; it’s a very underrated feature, which IIRC dates back to OG vi. :normal is a feature that I see the usefulness of, but rarely use. g is a Vimism that that introduces a lot functionality that rarely gets discussed in a lot of these “advanced vim” videos. I especially appreciate that this video focuses on Vim. Not NeoVim, but Vim. And not plugins. Outside of this video, some of the features I enjoy about Vim is the ability to use :grep and :make (along with their associated “prg” settings) to populate a QuickFix window that lets me quickly jump between occurrences of patterns or error/warnings. Touched on in this video: using ! to filter the buffer or selected lines through an extensor command. I use this frequently with jq to pretty format large json objects.
Teaching is not for everyone But thank you for sharing
Make Upercase with macro recording and norm: Record for 1 Line qavUwvUA! (every word Uppercase and ! and the end of line). Then marks the lines (sample 20 lines below): jV20j Now run the macro for each line: :norm @a You don't must go to the beginning of the line and to the next line in the macro. If you record a macro that finds text, like qa0f!a!!! (begin of line, find !, add !!!) And runs for 20 lines its only work if EVERY line has a ! Execution was break if one line has no ! !!!! The :norm @a execute the macro for each line, if one line has no ! this line was ignored, but it continues at the next... -> it works
12:35 It's not possible encrypt any file in Nvim I guess. Not worked for me.
@vaisakhkm783
2 жыл бұрын
yes in nvim it doesn't seems to be working, but in vim,it is there
@keycapslapper7080
2 жыл бұрын
Typing `:help encrypt` gives a note saying it has been removed. The github issue threads about it are pretty funny
I find norm to be most useful in a g or v command e.g: g/Pattern/norm A;
@SebastianDaschnerIT
Жыл бұрын
Oh, that's also a good one :)
Best vim feature, to configure your emacs, it's not a sin it's a penance :)
How to do “” in array arr[]={1,2,2} To arr[]={“1”,”2”,”3”}
@SebastianDaschnerIT
2 жыл бұрын
If it's only these three entries, I'd just jump to each number and insert it directly (`i"` and repeat two times with `.` and then `a"`). If it's many entries, I'd search-replace the comma to be on individual lines and use the `:norm` command like shown in the video.
@Awwe12675
2 жыл бұрын
@@SebastianDaschnerIT okay can u make in future video about set -o vi mode
@LuisCassih
2 жыл бұрын
I'm sure there should be a better way, but using regex and replace within the visual select you can achieve this. first select all inside {} -> vi{ :s/\%V\(\w*\)/"\1"/g \%V -> to affect only selected and not the entire line \( \w*\) -> capture word (which is (\w*) escaped) /"\1" -> replace with " and \1 is the previously captured word /g -> global It's a bit complex but well, it works lol
:X doesnt work in neovim :(
@SebastianDaschnerIT
Жыл бұрын
Yes, that's unfortunate :( Maybe a manual approach using PGP can help you
Normal is awesome
Thank you! Usefull, but please explane your stroks next time. Because your tipping was to fast for me. Understanding and watch the keys is hard work for the audience!
Using an ide over vim, never makes sense, never... =p
@SebastianDaschnerIT
2 жыл бұрын
Never is a strong word ;) I use Vim for smaller text editing tasks. Otherwise I kind of agree with you, I use IdeaVim in my IDE: blog.sebastian-daschner.com/entries/my-favorite-ideavim-features
--/\ who is
no timestamps? not even a summary list comment?
@ChrisCox-wv7oo
7 күн бұрын
Seriously? How do you leave a comment like that without doing a little bit of legwork yourself.
@yash1152
6 күн бұрын
@@ChrisCox-wv7oo i do legwork where i feel the need... other places, i simply ask. if someone does it, then good, otherwise, no harm given or took. pretty simple and str8forward. > _"Seriously? How do you leave a comment like that without doing a little bit of legwork yourself."_
What's the meaning of dot in front of the exclamation mark `:.!zsh` on the last bonus tip?
@SebastianDaschnerIT
Ай бұрын
It's a range declaration, in this case current line (text processing command have such a syntax: `: [ range ] command [ args ... ]`)
I often find that just using `s` on a range is faster than `:norm`. If you need to wrap a list often, consider `:'
Vim provides not only basic calculation Try 123*123
@Argletrough
10 ай бұрын
Think you mean Ctrl+R = in insert mode