Difference between revisions of "Vim"

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! Mode Name !! Description !! How to Reach the Mode from Normal
 
! Mode Name !! Description !! How to Reach the Mode from Normal
 
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|normal || For navigation and manipulation of text. This is the mode that vim will usually start in, which you can usually get back to with pressing <code>ESC</code>. || you are already there
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|normal || For navigation and manipulation of text. This is the mode that vim will usually start in, which you can usually get back to with pressing <code>ESC</code>. || you are already there or <code>ESC</code>
 
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|insert || For inserting new text. Insert mode works more or less like you would expect a normal text editor to work with arrow keys for navigation, backspace for deletion and characters for text. || <code>a</code>
 
|insert || For inserting new text. Insert mode works more or less like you would expect a normal text editor to work with arrow keys for navigation, backspace for deletion and characters for text. || <code>a</code>

Revision as of 16:47, 16 April 2018

General

Vi or Vim (VI IMproved) is a visual text editor that can be run inside a shell. This has the advantage, that you can quickly write or edit text files in the shell, even over an ssh connection without needing a graphical user interface. Alternatively there is the option to edit files locally (on your desktop computer) in your favourite editor or IDE (e.g. Notepad++, VSCode, ...) and then transfer the files to the remote (super)computer. Visit the file transfer page for more information on that topic. As these tansfers can be a lot of effort, just to fix a missing ; or typo, Vi/Vim can come in handy, as they are available on practically every Unix system.

While it's usage is far from intuitive, a few basics are generally helpful. For a more complete coverage of this editor, why people use it and why you should probably do that too, please take a look at the vimtutor, the References or the internet in general. There are lots of great resources, presenting reasons for using Vi/Vim and giving detailed instructions for its effective usage.

Modes

In Vi/Vim there are six modes from which the four most important ones are listed below.

Mode Name Description How to Reach the Mode from Normal
normal For navigation and manipulation of text. This is the mode that vim will usually start in, which you can usually get back to with pressing ESC. you are already there or ESC
insert For inserting new text. Insert mode works more or less like you would expect a normal text editor to work with arrow keys for navigation, backspace for deletion and characters for text. a
visual For navigation and manipulation of text selections, this mode allows you to perform most normal commands, and a few extra commands, on selected text. v
command-line For entering editor commands. :

More information about different modes and their uses can be found in the References or the internet.

Absolute Basics

To open yourfile.txt in Vi/Vim simply enter

$ vim yourfile.txt

From normal mode (press Esc to get there) you can type

:q to quit Vi/Vim
:w to save the current file
:q! to quit Vi/Vim without saving (discarding changes)
:x to quit Vi/Vim with saving changes

For a tutorial you can call the

$ vimtutor

and follow the instructions on screen.

References

Interactive Vim Tutorial

Vim/Guide in the Gentoo wiki

Why should you use vi (or vim)

Vim Game