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ed(1)

edit(1)

ex(1)



vi(1)                    USER COMMANDS                      vi(1)



NAME
     vi, view, vedit - screen-oriented  (visual)  display  editor
     based on ex

SYNOPSIS
     vi [-t tag] [-r file] [-l] [-L] [-wn]  [-R]  [-x]  [-C]  [-c
     command] file...
     view [-t tag] [-r file] [-l] [-L] [-wn] [-R] [-x]  [-C]  [-c
     command] file...
     vedit [-t tag] [-r file] [-l] [-L] [-wn] [-R] [-x] [-C]  [-c
     command] file...

DESCRIPTION
     vi (visual) is a display-oriented text editor  based  on  an
     underlying  line  editor ex.  It is possible to use the com-
     mand mode of ex from within vi and vice-versa.   The  visual
     commands  are  described  on  this  manual  page; how to set
     options (like automatically numbering  lines  and  automati-
     cally  starting  a  new  output  line when you type carriage
     return) and all ex line editor commands are described on the
     ex(1) manual page.

     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.

  Invocation Options
     The following invocation options are interpreted by vi (pre-
     viously  documented  options are discussed in the NOTES sec-
     tion of this manual page):

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

     -r file       Edit file after an  editor  or  system  crash.
                   (Recovers  the version of file that was in the
                   buffer when the crash occurred.)

     -l            Set up for editing LISP programs.

     -L            List the name of all files saved as the result
                   of an editor or system crash.

     -wn           Set the default window size to n. This is use-
                   ful  when  using  the editor over a slow speed
                   line.

     -R            Readonly  mode;  the  readonly  flag  is  set,
                   preventing accidental overwriting of the file.

     -x            Encryption option; when used, vi simulates the
                   X  command  of  ex  and prompts the user for a



                                                                1





vi(1)                    USER COMMANDS                      vi(1)



                   key.  This key is used to encrypt and  decrypt
                   text using the algorithm of the crypt command.
                   The X  command  makes  an  educated  guess  to
                   determine whether text read in is encrypted or
                   not.  The temporary buffer file  is  encrypted
                   also,  using  a transformed version of the key
                   typed in for the  -x  option.   See  crypt(1).
                   Also,  see  the  WARNING section at the end of
                   this manual page.

     -C            Encryption option;  same  as  the  -x  option,
                   except  that vi simulates the C command of ex.
                   The C command is like the  X  command  of  ex,
                   except  that  all  text  read in is assumed to
                   have been encrypted.

     -c  command   Begin editing by executing the specified  edi-
                   tor  command  (usually a search or positioning
                   command).

     The file argument indicates one or more 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.  It  is  the
     same  as  vi  except  that  the report flag is set to 1, the
     showmode and novice flags are set, and magic is turned  off.
     These defaults make it easier to learn how to use vi.

  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  setting  any  of  the  following
                    options:   a A i I o O c C s S R .  Arbitrary
                    text may then be entered. Input mode is  nor-
                    mally  terminated  with  ESC  character,  or,
                    abnormally, with an interrupt.

     Last line      Reading input for : / ? or  !;  terminate  by
                    typing  a  carriage return; an interrupt can-
                    cels termination.











                                                                2





vi(1)                    USER COMMANDS                      vi(1)



COMMAND SUMMARY
     In the descriptions, CR stands for carriage return  and  ESC
     stands for the escape key.

  Sample commands
     <- | | ->         arrow keys move the cursor
     h j k l           same as arrow keys
     itextESC          insert text
     cwnewESC          change word to new
     easESC            pluralize word (end of word; append s;
                         escape from input state)
     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
     :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
      DEL       (delete or rubout) interrupts

  File manipulation
      ZZ              if file modified, write and exit; otherwise, exit
      :wCR            write back changes
      :w!CR           forced write, if permission originally not valid
      :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
      :e! #CR         edit alternate file, discard changes
      :w nameCR       write file name
      :w! nameCR      overwrite file name
      :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



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vi(1)                    USER COMMANDS                      vi(1)



      :ta tagCR       position cursor to tag
     In general, any ex or ed command (such as substitute or glo-
     bal)  may  be  typed,  preceded by a colon and followed by a
     carriage return.

  Positioning within file
      ^F          forward screen
      ^B          backward screen
      ^D          scroll down half screen
      ^U          scroll up half screen
      nG          go to the beginning of the specified line
                    (end default), where n is a line number
      /pat        next line matching pat
      ?pat        previous line matching pat
      n           repeat last / or ? command
      N           reverse last / or ? command
      /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 window
      ^R            clear and redraw window if ^L is -> key
      zCR           redraw screen with current line at top of window
      z-CR          redraw screen with current line at bottom of window
      z.CR          redraw screen with current line at center of window
      /pat/z-CR     move pat line to bottom of window
      zn.CR         use n-line window
      ^E            scroll window down 1 line
      ^Y            scroll window up 1 line

  Marking and returning
      ``      move cursor to previous context
      ''      move cursor to first non-white space in line
      mx      mark current position with the ASCII lower-case letter x
      `x      move cursor to mark x
      'x      move cursor to first non-white space in line marked by x












                                                                4





vi(1)                    USER COMMANDS                      vi(1)



  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-space character
      0           beginning of line
      $           end of line
      h or ->     forward
      l or <-     backward
      ^H          same as <- (backspace)
      space       same as -> (space bar)
      fx          find next x
      Fx          find previous x
      tx          move to character prior to next x
      Tx          move to character following previous x
      ;           repeat last f F t or T
      ,           repeat inverse of last f F t or T
      n|          move to column n
      %           find matching ( { ) or }

  Words, sentences, paragraphs
      w       forward a word
      b       back a word
      e       end of word
      )       to next sentence
      }       to next paragraph
      (       back a sentence
      {       back a paragraph
      W       forward a blank-delimited word
      B       back a blank-delimited word
      E       end of a blank-delimited word

















                                                                5





vi(1)                    USER COMMANDS                      vi(1)



  Corrections during insert
      ^H        erase last character (backspace)
      ^W        erase last word
      erase     your erase character, same as ^H (backspace)
      kill      your kill character, erase this line of input
      \         quotes your erase and kill characters
      ESC       ends insertion, back to command mode
      DEL       interrupt, terminates insert mode
      ^D        backtab one character; reset left margin
                  of autoindent
      ^^D       caret (^) followed by control-d (^D);
                  backtab to beginning of line;
                  do not reset left margin of autoindent
      0^D       backtab to beginning of line;
                  reset left margin of autoindent
      ^V        quote non-printable character

  Insert and replace
      a            append after cursor
      A            append at end of line
      i            insert before cursor
      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

  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       delete characters before cursor (dh)
      Y       yank lines (yy)







                                                                6





vi(1)                    USER COMMANDS                      vi(1)



  Yank and Put
     Put inserts the text most recently deleted or  yanked;  how-
     ever,  if  a  buffer  is  named  (using the ASCII lower-case
     letters a - z), the text in that buffer is put instead.
      3yy     yank 3 lines
      3yl     yank 3 characters
      p       put back text after cursor
      P       put back text 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

AUTHOR
     vi and ex were developed by The  University  of  California,
     Berkeley  California,  Computer Science Division, Department
     of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science.

FILES
     /tmp                     default directory  where  temporary
                              work  files  are  placed; it can be
                              changed using the directory  option
                              [see the ex(1) set command]
     /usr/share/lib/terminfo/?/*
                              compiled terminal description data-
                              base
     /usr/lib/.COREterm/?/*   subset   of    compiled    terminal
                              description database

NOTES
     Two options, although they continue to  be  supported,  have
     been  replaced  in  the documentation by options that follow
     the Command Syntax Standard [see  intro(1)].   A  -r  option
     that  is  not  followed  with  an  option-argument  has been
     replaced by -L and +command has been replaced by -c command.
     The  encryption  options  are  provided  with  the  Security
     Administration Utilities package, which is available only in
     the United States.

     Tampering with  entries  in  /usr/share/lib/terminfo/?/*  or
     /usr/share/lib/terminfo/?/* (for example, changing or remov-
     ing an entry) can affect programs such as vi that expect the
     entry  to  be  present and correct.  In particular, removing
     the "dumb" terminal may cause unexpected problems.

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



                                                                7





vi(1)                    USER COMMANDS                      vi(1)



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

SEE ALSO
     ed(1), edit(1), ex(1).
     User's Guide.
     Editing Guide.
     curses/terminfo chapter of the Programmer's Guide.














































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