Museum

Home

Lab Overview

Retrotechnology Articles

Online Manuals

⇒ vi(1) — HP-UX 6.20

Media Vault

Software Library

Restoration Projects

Artifacts Sought

Related Articles

ex(1)

edit(1)

VI(1)  —  HP-UX

NAME

vi − screen-oriented (visual) display editor based on ex

SYNOPSIS

vi [ −t tag ] [ −r file ] [ −l ] [ −wn ] [ −x ] [ −R ] [ +command ]  name ... 
view [ -t tag ] [ −r file ] [ −l ] [ −wn ] [ −x ] [ −R ] [ +command ]  name ... 
vedit [ −t tag ] [ −r file ] [ −l ] [ −wn ] [ −x ] [ −R ] [ +command ]  name ... 

REMARKS

The decryption facilities provided by this software are under control by the United States Government and cannot be exported without special licenses.  These capabilities are only available by special arrangement with HP. 

DESCRIPTION

Vi (visual) is a display-oriented text editor based on an underlying line editor ex(1). It is possible to use the command mode of ex from within vi and vice-versa. 

When using vi, changes you make to the file are reflected in what you see on your terminal screen. The position of the cursor on the screen indicates the position within the file. Additional details on using vi and ex can be found in the vi/ex Editor tutorial in the Text Editors and Processors volume of HP-UX Concepts and Tutorials.

INVOCATION

The following invocation options are interpreted by vi:

−t tag Edit the file containing the tag and position the editor at its definition. 

−rfile Recover file after an editor or system crash.  If file is not specified a list of all saved files will be printed. 

−l LISP mode; indents appropriately for lisp code, the () {} [[ and ]] commands in vi and open are modified to have meaning for lisp . 

−wn Set the default window size to n. This is useful when using the editor over a slow speed line. 

−x Encryption mode; a key is prompted for allowing creation or editing of an encrypted file. 

−R Read only mode; the readonly flag is set, preventing accidental overwriting of the file. 

+command The specified ex command is interpreted before editing begins. 

The name argument indicates files to be edited. 

The view invocation is the same as vi except that the readonly flag is set. 

The vedit invocation is intended for beginners.  The report flag is set to 1, and the showmode and novice flags are set.  These defaults make it easier to get started learning the editor. 

VI MODES

Command Normal and initial mode.  Other modes return to command mode upon completion.  ESC (escape) is used to cancel a partial command. 

Input Entered by a i A I o O c C s S R.  Arbitrary text may then be entered.  Input mode is normally terminated with ESC character, or abnormally with interrupt. 

Last line Reading input for : / ? or !; terminate with  CR to execute, interrupt to cancel. 

COMMAND SUMMARY

Sample commands

← ↓ ↑ → arrow keys move the cursor
h j k l same as arrow keys
itextESC insert text abc
cwnewESC change word to new
easESC pluralize word
x delete a character
dw delete a word
dd delete a line
3dd delete 3 lines
u undo previous change
ZZ exit vi, saving changes
:q!CR quit, discarding changes
/textCR search for text
^U ^D scroll up or down
:ex cmdCR any ex or ed command

Counts before vi commands

Numbers may be typed as a prefix to some commands.  They are interpreted in one of these ways. 

line/column number z  G  |
scroll amount ^D  ^U
repeat effect most of the rest

Interrupting, canceling

ESC end insert or incomplete cmd
^? (delete or rubout) interrupts
^L reprint screen if ^? scrambles it
^R reprint screen if ^L is → key

File manipulation

:wCR write back changes
:qCR quit
:q!CR quit, discard changes
:e nameCR edit file name
:e!CR reedit, discard changes
:e + nameCR edit, starting at end
:e +nCR edit starting at line n
:e #CR edit alternate file
^^ (control ^) synonym for :e #
:w nameCR write file name
:w! nameCR overwrite file name
:r nameCR read file name into text
:<lineno>r nameCR read file name into text starting at
line <lineno>
:r !cmd read output from cmd into text at cursor line
:shCR run shell, then return
:!cmdCR run cmd, then return
:nCR edit next file in arglist
:n argsCR specify new arglist
^G show current file and line
:ta tagCR to tag file entry tag
^] :ta, following word is tag

In general, any ex or ed command (such as substitute or global) may be typed, preceded by a colon and followed by a CR. 

Positioning within file

^F forward screen
^B backward screen
^D scroll down half screen
^U scroll up half screen
G go to specified line (end default)
/pat next line matching pat
?pat prev line matching pat
n repeat last / or ?
N reverse last / or ?
/pat/+n nth line after pat
?pat?−n nth line before pat
]] next section/function
[[ previous section/function
( beginning of sentence
) end of sentence
{ beginning of paragraph
} end of paragraph
% find matching ( ) { or }

Adjusting the screen

^L clear and redraw
^R retype, eliminate @ lines
zCR redraw, current at window top
z−CR ... at window bottom
z.CR ... at window center
/pat/z−CR pat line at window bottom
zn. use n line window
^E scroll window down 1 line
^Y scroll window up 1 line

Marking and returning

`` move cursor to previous context
´´ ... at first non-white in line
mx mark current position with letter x
`x move cursor to mark x
´x ... at first non-white in line

Line positioning

H top line on screen
L last line on screen
M middle line on screen
+ next line, at first non-white
− previous line, at first non-white
CR return, same as +
↓ or j next line, same column
↑ or k previous line, same column

Character positioning

^ first non white
0 beginning of line
$ end of line
h or → forward
l or ← backwards
^H same as ←
space same as →
fx find x forward
Fx f backward
tx upto x forward
Tx back upto x
; repeat last f F t or T
, inverse of ;
| to specified column
% find matching ( { ) or }

Words, sentences, paragraphs

w word forward
b back word
e end of word
) to next sentence
} to next paragraph
( back sentence
{ back paragraph
W blank delimited word
B back W
E to end of W

Commands for LISP Mode

) Forward s-expression
} ... but do not stop at atoms
( Back s-expression
{ ... but do not stop at atoms

Corrections during insert

^H erase last character
^W erase last word
erase your erase, same as ^H
kill your kill, erase input this line
\ quotes ^H, your erase and kill
ESC ends insertion, back to command
^? interrupt, terminates insert
^^D ("caret cntl-D") kill autoindent for one line
0^D kill autoindent for duration of insertion
^V quote non-printing character

Insert and replace

a append after cursor
i insert before cursor
A append at end of line
I insert before first non-blank
o open line below
O open above
rx replace single char with x
RtextESC replace characters

Operators

Operators are followed by a cursor motion, and affect all text that would have been moved over.  For example, since w moves over a word, dw deletes the word that would be moved over.  Double the operator, e.g.  dd to affect whole lines. 

d delete
c change
y yank lines to buffer
< left shift
> right shift
! filter through command
= indent for LISP

Miscellaneous Operations

C change rest of line (c$)
D delete rest of line (d$)
s substitute chars (cl)
S substitute lines (cc)
J join lines
x delete characters (dl)
X ... before cursor (dh)
Y yank lines (yy)

Yank and Put

Put inserts the text most recently deleted or yanked.  However, if a buffer is named, the text in that buffer is put instead. 

p put back text after cursor
P put before cursor
"xp put from buffer x
"xy yank to buffer x
"xd delete into buffer x

Undo, Redo, Retrieve

u undo last change
U restore current line
. repeat last change
"dp retrieve d’th last delete

WARNINGS

Software tabs using ^T work only immediately after the autoindent. 

Left and right shifts on intelligent terminals do not make use of insert and delete character operations in the terminal. 

AUTHOR

Vi was developed by the University of California, Berkeley.  The 16-bit extensions to vi are based in part on software of the Toshiba Corporation. 

SEE ALSO

ex(1), edit(1).  The vi/ex Editor tutorial in the Text Editors and Processors volume of HP-UX Concepts and Tutorials.

INTERNATIONAL SUPPORT

8- and 16-bit data, 8-bit filenames, messages. 

Hewlett-Packard Company  —  May 11, 2021

Typewritten Software • bear@typewritten.org • Edmonds, WA 98026