  Vim Color Editor HOW-TO (Vi Improved with syntax color high
  lighting)
  Al Dev (Alavoor Vasudevan)        alavoor@yahoo.com
  v15.0, 09 Dec 2000

  This document is a guide to quickly setting up the Vim color editor on
  Linux or Unix systems. The information here will improve the produc
  tivity of programmers because the Vim editor supports syntax color
  highlighting and bold fonts, improving the "readability" of program
  code. A programmer's productivity improves 2 to 3 times with a color
  editor like Vim.  The information in this document applies to all
  operating sytems where Vim works, such as Linux, Windows 95/NT, Apple
  Mac, IBM OSes, VMS, BeOS and all flavors of Unix like Solaris, HPUX,
  AIX, SCO, Sinix, BSD, Ultrix etc.. (it means almost all operating sys
  tems on this planet!)
  ______________________________________________________________________

  Table of Contents



  1. Introduction

     1.1 Before you Install
     1.2 Install Vim on Redhat Linux
     1.3 Install Vim on GNU Debian Linux
     1.4 Install Vim on Unixes
     1.5 Install Vim on Microsoft Windows 95/NT
     1.6 Install Vim on VMS
        1.6.1 Download files
        1.6.2 Compiling
        1.6.3 Deploy
        1.6.4 Practical usage
        1.6.5 GUI mode questions
     1.7 Install Vim on OS/2
     1.8 Install Vim on Apple Macintosh

  2. Setup gvim init files

     2.1 Sample gvimrc file
     2.2 Xdefaults parameters

  3. Color Syntax init files

     3.1 Auto source-in method
     3.2 Manual method

  4. VIM Usage

  5. Vi companions

     5.1 Ctags for ESQL
     5.2 Ctags for JavaScript programs, Korn, Bourne shells
     5.3 Debugger gdb

  6. Online VIM help

  7. Vim Home page and Vim links

  8. Vim Tutorial

     8.1 Vim Hands-on Tutorial
     8.2 Vi Tutorials on Internet

  9. Vi Tutorial

     9.1 Cursor Movement Commands
     9.2 Repeat Counts
     9.3 Deleting Text
     9.4 Changing Text
     9.5 Yanking (Copying) Text
     9.6 Filtering text
     9.7 Marking Lines and Characters
     9.8 Naming Buffers
     9.9 Substitutions
     9.10 Miscellaneous "Colon Commands"
     9.11 Setting Options
     9.12 Key Mappings
     9.13 Editing Multiple Files
     9.14 Final Remarks

  10. Vim Reference Card

     10.1 Vi states
     10.2 Shell Commands
     10.3 Setting Options
     10.4 Notations used
     10.5 Interrupting, cancelling
     10.6 File Manipulation
     10.7 Movement
     10.8 Line Positioning
     10.9 Character positioning
     10.10 Words, sentences, paragraphs
     10.11 Marking and returning
     10.12 Corrections during insert
     10.13 Adjusting the screen
     10.14 Delete
     10.15 Insert, change
     10.16 Copy and Paste
     10.17 Operators (use double to affect lines)
     10.18 Search and replace
     10.19 General
     10.20 Line Editor Commands
     10.21 Other commands

  11. Related URLs

  12. Other Formats of this Document

  13. Copyright Notice



  ______________________________________________________________________

  1.  Introduction

  Vim stands for 'Vi Improved'. Vi is the most popular and powerful
  editors in the Unix world. Vi is an abbreviation for "Visual" editor.
  One of the first editors was a line editor called 'ed' (and 'ex'). The
  Visual editor like Vi was a vast improvement over line editors like
  'ed' (or 'ex'). The editors 'ed' and 'ex' are still available on
  Linux: see 'man ed' and 'man ex'.

  A good editor improves programmer productivity. Vim supports color
  syntax highlighting of program code and also emphasises text using
  different fonts like normal, bold or italics. A color editor like Vim
  can improve the productivity of programmers by 2 to 3 times!!
  Programmers can read the code much more rapidly as the code syntax is
  colored and highlighted.

  1.1.  Before you Install

  Before you install Vim, please refer to the OS specific release notes
  and information about compiling and usage of Vim at -

    Go to this location and look for files os_*.txt
     <http://cvs.vim.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/vim/runtime/doc>

     If you do not have the Vim package (RPM, DEB, tar, zip) then
     download the Vim source code by ftp from the official Vim site

    The home page of vim is at  <http://www.vim.org>

    Mirror site in US is at  <http://www.us.vim.org>

    Ftp site  <ftp://ftp.vim.org/pub/vim>

    Or use one of the mirrors  <ftp://ftp.vim.org/pub/vim/MIRRORS>



  1.2.  Install Vim on Redhat Linux

  To use Vim install the following RPM packages on Redhat Linux -

  ______________________________________________________________________
          rpm -i vim*.rpm
  OR do this -
          rpm -i vim-enhanced*.rpm
          rpm -i vim-X11*.rpm
          rpm -i vim-common*.rpm
          rpm -i vim-minimal*.rpm
  ______________________________________________________________________


  You can see the list of files the vim rpm installs by -

  ______________________________________________________________________
          rpm -qa | grep ^vim | xargs rpm -ql | less
  or
          rpm -qa | grep ^vim | awk '{print "rpm -ql " $1 }' | /bin/sh | less
  ______________________________________________________________________


  and browse output using j,k, CTRL+f, CTRL+D, CTRL+B, CTRL+U or using
  arrow keys, page up/down keys.  See 'man less'.

  Note that the RPM packages for Redhat Linux use a Motif interface. If
  you have installed the GTK libraries on your system, consider
  compiling Vim from the source code for a clean GUI interface. For
  information on compiling Vim from the source code, see "Install Vim on
  Unixes", below.


  1.3.  Install Vim on GNU Debian Linux

  To install Vim on Debian Linux (GNU Linux), login as root and when
  connected to internet type -

  ______________________________________________________________________
  apt-get install vim vim-rt
  ______________________________________________________________________


  It will download the latest version of vim, install it, configure it.
  The first package listed is vim, the standard editor, compiled with
  X11 support, vim-rt is the vim runtime, it holds all the syntax and
  help files.


  1.4.  Install Vim on Unixes

  For other flavors of unixes like Solaris, HPUX, AIX, Sinix, SCO
  download the source code file ( see ``'' )

  ______________________________________________________________________

          zcat vim.tar.gz | tar -xvf -
          cd vim-5.5/src
          ./configure --enable-gui=motif
          make
          make install
  ______________________________________________________________________



  1.5.  Install Vim on Microsoft Windows 95/NT

  For Windows 95/NT, download the Vim zip file. For Windows 95/NT you
  must download TWO zip files -

    Runtime support file vim*rt.zip

    Vim command file vim*56.zip. Where Vim version is 5.6.

  Get these two zip files ( see ``'' ) Unpack the zip files using the
  Winzip  <http://www.winzip.com>.  Both the zip files (vim*rt.zip and
  vim*56.zip) must be unpacked in the same directory like say c:\vim.

  For Windows 95/98, set the environment variable VIM in autoexec.bat by
  adding this line -

  ______________________________________________________________________
  set VIM=c:\vim\vim56
  ______________________________________________________________________


  For Windows NT, add the environment variable VIM to the Control Panel
  | System | Environment | System Properties dialog:

  ______________________________________________________________________
  VIM=c:\vim\vim56
  ______________________________________________________________________



  The VIM variable should point to whereever you installed the vim56
  directory.  You can also set your PATH to include the gvim.exe's path.

  You may need to logoff and relogin to set your environment. At an MS-
  DOS prompt type -

  ______________________________________________________________________
          set vim
  ______________________________________________________________________


  And you should see - VIM=c:\vim\vim56

  Create a short-cut on to your desktop by click-and-drag from
  c:\vim\vim56\gvim.exe. Copy the gvimrc_example file to the
  $VIM\_gvimrc. In my case it is c:\vim\vim56\_gvimrc.

  1.6.  Install Vim on VMS


  1.6.1.  Download files

  You will need both the Unix and Extra archives to build vim.exe for
  VMS.  For using Vim's full power you will need the runtime files as
  well.  Get these files ( see ``'' )

  You can download precompiled executables from:
  <http://www.polarfox.com/vim>

  VMS vim authors are -

     zoltan.arpadffy@essnet.se

     arpadffy@altavista.net


     cec@gryphon.gsfc.nasa.gov

     BNHunsaker@chq.byu.edu

     sandor.kopanyi@altavista.net

  1.6.2.  Compiling

  Unpack the Unix and Extra archives together into one directory.  In
  the <.SRC> subdirectory you should find the make file OS_VMS.MMS.  By
  editing this file you may choose between building the character, GUI
  and debug version. There are also additional options for Perl, Python
  and Tcl support.

  You will need either the DECSET mms utility or the freely available
  clone of it called mmk (VMS has no make utility in the standard
  distribution). You can download mmk from
  http://www.openvms.digital.com/freeware/MMK/

  If you have MSS on your system, the command

  >       mms /descrip=os_vms.mms

  will start building your own customised version of Vim.  The
  equivalent command for mmk is:

  >       mmk /descrip=os_vms.mms

  1.6.3.  Deploy

  Vim uses a special directory structure to hold the document and
  runtime files:


  ______________________________________________________________________
     vim (or wherever)
      |- tmp
      |- vim55
      |----- doc
      |----- syntax
      |- vim56
      |----- doc
      |----- syntax
      vimrc    (system rc files)
      gvimrc

  Use:

  >       define/nolog device:[leading-path-here.vim]       vim
  >       define/nolog device:[leading-path-here.vim.vim56] vimruntime
  >       define/nolog device:[leading-path-here.tmp]       tmp
  ______________________________________________________________________



  to get vim.exe to find its document, filetype, and syntax files, and
  to specify a directory where temporary files will be located. Copy the
  "runtime" subdirectory of the vim distribution to vimruntime.

  Note: Logicals $VIMRUNTIME and $TMP are optional. Read more at :help
  runtime

  1.6.4.  Practical usage

  Usually you want to run just one version of Vim on your system,
  therefore it is enough to dedicate one directory for Vim.  Copy all
  Vim runtime directory structure to the deployment position.  Add the
  following lines to your LOGIN.COM (in SYS$LOGIN directory).  Set up
  logical $VIM as:


  ______________________________________________________________________
  >       $ define VIM device: <path>
  ______________________________________________________________________



  Set up some symbols:


  ______________________________________________________________________
  >       $ ! vi starts Vim in chr. mode.
  >       $ vi*m  :== mcr device:<path>VIM.EXE

  >       $ !gvi starts Vim in GUI mode.
  >       $ gv*im :== spawn/nowait mcr device:<path>VIM.EXE -g
  ______________________________________________________________________



  Create .vimrc and .gvimrc files in your home directory (SYS$LOGIN).

  The easiest way is just rename example files. You may leave the menu
  file (MENU.VIM) and files vimrc and gvimrc in the original $VIM
  directory. It will be default setup for all users, and for users is
  enough just to have their own additions or resetting in home directory
  in files .vimrc and .gvimrc.  It should work without problems.

  Note: Remember, system rc files (default for all users) do not have
  the leading "." So, system rc files are:


  ______________________________________________________________________
  >       VIM$:vimrc
  >       VIM$:gvimrc
  >       VIM$:menu.vim
  ______________________________________________________________________


  and user's customised rc files are:

  ______________________________________________________________________
  >       sys$login:.vimrc
  >       sys$login:.gvimrc
  ______________________________________________________________________



  You can check that everything is on the right place with the :version
  command.


  ______________________________________________________________________
  Example LOGIN.COM:

  >       $ define/nolog VIM RF10:[UTIL.VIM]
  >       $ vi*m  :== mcr VIM:VIM.EXE
  >       $ gv*im :== spawn/nowait mcr VIM:VIM.EXE -g
  >       $ set disp/create/node=192.168.5.223/trans=tcpip
  ______________________________________________________________________


  Note: This set-up should be enough if you are working in a standalone
  server or clustered environment, but if you want to use Vim as an
  internode editor, it should suffice. You just have to define the
  "whole" path:


  ______________________________________________________________________
  >       $ define VIM "<server_name>[""user password""]::device:<path>"
  >       $ vi*m :== "mcr VIM:VIM.EXE"
  ______________________________________________________________________



  as for example:


  ______________________________________________________________________
  >       $ define VIM "PLUTO::RF10:[UTIL.VIM]"
  >       $ define VIM "PLUTO""ZAY mypass""::RF10:[UTIL.VIM]" ! if passwd required
  ______________________________________________________________________



  You can also use $VIMRUNTIME logical to point to proper version of Vim
  if you have multiple versions installed at the same time. If
  $VIMRUNTIME is not defined Vim will borrow value from $VIM logical.
  You can find more information about $VIMRUNTIME logical by typing
  :help runtime as a Vim command.

  1.6.5.  GUI mode questions

  VMS is not a native X window environment, so you can not start Vim in
  GUI mode "just like that". But it is not too complicated to get a
  running Vim.


  ______________________________________________________________________
  1) If you are working on the VMS X console:
     Start Vim with the command:

  >       $ mc device:<path>VIM.EXE -g

     or type :gui as a command to the Vim command prompt. For more info :help gui

  2) If you are working on other X window environment as Unix or some remote X
     VMS console. Set up display to your host with:

  >       $ set disp/create/node=<your IP address>/trans=<transport-name>

     and start Vim as in point 1. You can find more help in VMS documentation or
     type: help set disp in VMS prompt.
     Examples:

  >       $ set disp/create/node=192.168.5.159             ! default trans is DECnet
  >       $ set disp/create/node=192.168.5.159/trans=tcpip ! TCP/IP network
  >       $ set disp/create/node=192.168.5.159/trans=local ! display on the same node
  ______________________________________________________________________



  Note: you should define just one of these.  For more information type
  $help set disp in VMS prompt.



  1.7.  Install Vim on OS/2

  Read the release notes for Vim on OS/2, see ``'' .

  At present there is no native PM version of the GUI version of vim:
  The OS/2 version is a console application.  However, there is now a
  Win32s-compatible GUI version, which should be usable by owners of
  Warp 4 (which supports Win32s) in a Win-OS/2 session.  The notes in
  this file refer to the native console version.

  To run Vim, you need the emx runtime environment (at least rev. 0.9b).
  This is generally available as (ask Archie about it):

  ______________________________________________________________________
      emxrt.zip     emx runtime package
  ______________________________________________________________________



  1.8.  Install Vim on Apple Macintosh

  Read the release notes for Vim on OS/2, see ``'' .

  The author of Vim on Mac (old version vim 3.0) is

  ______________________________________________________________________
  Eric Fischer
  5759 N. Guilford Ave
  Indianapolis IN 46220 USA
  ______________________________________________________________________


  Email to enf@pobox.com

  Mac Bug Report When reporting any Mac specific bug or feature change,
  makes sure to include the following address in the "To:" or "Copy To:"
  field.

  dany.stamant@sympatico.ca

  Vim compiles out of the box with the supplied CodeWarrior project when
  using CodeWarrior 9. If you are using a more recent version (e. g. CW
  Pro) you have to convert the project first.  When compiling Vim for
  68k Macs you have to open the "size" resource in ResEdit and enable
  the "High level events aware" button to get drag and drop working.
  You have to increase the memory partition to at least 1024 kBytes to
  prevent Vim from crashing due to low memory.

  ______________________________________________________________________
   vim:ts=8:sw=8:tw=78:
  ______________________________________________________________________



  2.  Setup gvim init files

  To enable the syntax color highlighting you MUST copy the gvimrc file
  to your home directory. This will also put the "Syntax" Menu with gvim
  command.  You can click on Syntax Menu and select appropriate
  languages like C++, Perl, Java, SQL, ESQL etc..

  ______________________________________________________________________
  cd $HOME
  cp /usr/doc/vim-common-5.3/gvimrc_example  ~/.gvimrc
  ______________________________________________________________________

  Comment lines in .gvimrc begin with double-quotes (").  You can cus
  tomize gvim by editing the file $HOME/.gvimrc and put the following
  lines -

  ______________________________________________________________________
  " This line is a comment .... one which begins with double-quotes
  " The best is the bold font, try all of these and pick one....
  set guifont=8x13bold
  "set guifont=9x15bold
  "set guifont=7x14bold
  "set guifont=7x13bold
  "
  " Highly recommended to set tab keys to 4 spaces
  set tabstop=4
  set shiftwidth=4
  "
  " The opposite is 'set wrapscan' while searching for strings....
  set nowrapscan
  "
  " The opposite is set noignorecase
  set ignorecase
  ______________________________________________________________________


  It is very  strongly recommended that you set the tabstop to 4 and
  shiftwidth to 4.  The tabstop is the number of spaces the TAB key will
  indent while editing with gvim. The shiftwidth is the number of spaces
  the lines will be shifted with ">>" or "<<"  vi commands. Refer to Vi
  tutorials ``'' for more details.

  To see the list of available fonts on Linux/Unix see the command
  xlsfonts. Type -

  ______________________________________________________________________
          bash$ xlsfonts | less
          bash$ xlsfonts | grep -i bold | grep x
          bash$ man xlsfonts
  ______________________________________________________________________



  2.1.  Sample gvimrc file

  You can change the settings like color, bold/normal fonts in your
  $HOME/.gvimrc file.  It is very strongly recommended that you set the
  background color to lightyellow or white with black foreground.
  Ergonomics says that best background color is lightyellow or white
  with black foreground. Hence change the variable 'guibg' in your
  $HOME/.gvimrc file as follows:

  ______________________________________________________________________
          highlight Normal guibg=lightyellow
  ______________________________________________________________________



  The sample gvimrc from /usr/doc/vim-common-5.3/gvimrc_example is as
  follows:



  ______________________________________________________________________
  " Vim
  " An example for a gvimrc file.
  " The commands in this are executed when the GUI is started.
  "
  " To use it, copy it to
  "     for Unix and OS/2:  ~/.gvimrc
  "             for Amiga:  s:.gvimrc
  "  for MS-DOS and Win32:  $VIM\_gvimrc

  " Make external commands work through a pipe instead of a pseudo-tty
  "set noguipty

  " set the X11 font to use. See 'man xlsfonts' on unix/linux
  " set guifont=-misc-fixed-medium-r-normal--14-130-75-75-c-70-iso8859-1
  set guifont=8x13bold
  "set guifont=9x15bold
  "set guifont=7x14bold
  "set guifont=7x13bold
  "
  " Highly recommended to set tab keys to 4 spaces
  set tabstop=4
  set shiftwidth=4
  "
  " The opposite is 'set wrapscan' while searching for strings....
  set nowrapscan
  "
  " The opposite is set noignorecase
  set ignorecase

  " Make command line two lines high
  set ch=2

  " Make shift-insert work like in Xterm
  map <S-Insert> <MiddleMouse>
  map! <S-Insert> <MiddleMouse>

  " Only do this for Vim version 5.0 and later.
  if version >= 500

    " I like highlighting strings inside C comments
    let c_comment_strings=1

    " Switch on syntax highlighting.
    syntax on

    " Switch on search pattern highlighting.
    set hlsearch

    " For Win32 version, have "K" lookup the keyword in a help file
    "if has("win32")
    "  let winhelpfile='windows.hlp'
    "  map K :execute "!start winhlp32 -k <cword> " . winhelpfile <CR>
    "endif

    " Hide the mouse pointer while typing
    set mousehide

    " Set nice colors
    " background for normal text is light grey
    " Text below the last line is darker grey
    " Cursor is green
    " Constants are not underlined but have a slightly lighter background
    highlight Normal guibg=grey90
    highlight Cursor guibg=Green guifg=NONE
    highlight NonText guibg=grey80
    highlight Constant gui=NONE guibg=grey95
    highlight Special gui=NONE guibg=grey95

  endif
  ______________________________________________________________________


  See also sample vimrc used for console mode vim command from
  /usr/doc/vim-common-5.3/vimrc_example.

  2.2.  Xdefaults parameters

  You can set some of the Vim properties in Xdefaults file.

   WARNING: Do not set Vim*geometry as it will break the gvim menu, use
  Vim.geometry instead.

  Edit the $HOME/.Xdefaults file and add the following lines:

  ______________________________________________________________________
  ! GVim great Colors.
  Vim*useSchemes:         all
  Vim*sgiMode:            true
  Vim*useEnhancedFSB:     true
  Vim.foreground:         Black
  !Vim.background:        lightyellow2
  Vim*background:         white
  ! Do NOT use Vim*geometry , this will break the menus instead
  ! use Vim.geometry. Asterisk between Vim and geometry is not allowed.
  ! Vim.geometry: widthxheight
  Vim.geometry:           88x40
  !Vim*font:              -misc-fixed-medium-r-normal--20-200-75-75-c-100-iso8859-15-*5
  Vim*menuBackground: yellow
  Vim*menuForeground: black
  ______________________________________________________________________


  In order for this change to take effect, type -

  ______________________________________________________________________
          xrdb -merge $HOME/.Xdefaults
          man xrdb
  ______________________________________________________________________



  You can also edit the ~/.gvimrc file to change the background colors

  ______________________________________________________________________
          gvim $HOME/.gvimrc
  The best background color is lightyellow or white, with black foreground.
          highlight Normal guibg=lightyellow
  ______________________________________________________________________



  3.  Color Syntax init files


  3.1.  Auto source-in method

  This section below is obtained from gvim session by typing 'help
  syntax' -



  ______________________________________________________________________
  bash$ gvim some_test
  :help syntax
  ______________________________________________________________________


  Click on Menu Window=>Close_Others to close other Window. And then do
  CTRL+] on 'Syntax Loading Procedure' menu which will take you there.
  (Use CTRL+T to rewind and go back).

  If a file type that you want to use is not detected yet, there are two
  ways to add it.  It's better not modify the $VIMRUNTIME/filetype.vim
  file. It will be overwritten when installing a new version of Vim.
  Create a file in $HOME/vim/myfiletypes.vim and put these line in it -

  ______________________________________________________________________
  " Filename : $HOME/vim/myfiletypes.vim
  " myfiletypefile
  augroup filetype
          au! BufRead,BufNewFile *.mine   set filetype=mine
          au! BufRead,BufNewFile *.xyz    set filetype=drawing
          au! BufRead,BufNewFile *.prc    set filetype=plsql
  augroup END
  ______________________________________________________________________



  Then add a line in your $HOME/.vimrc and $HOME/.gvimrc file to set the
  "myfiletypefile" variable to the name of this file. (CAUTION: You MUST
  put this in both vimrc and gvimrc files in order for this to work)
  Example:

  ______________________________________________________________________
          let myfiletypefile = "~/vim/myfiletypes.vim"
  ______________________________________________________________________



  NOTE: Make sure that you set "myfiletypefile" before switching on file
  type detection.  This is must be before any ":filetype on" or ":syntax
  on" command.

  Your file will then be sourced after the default FileType autocommands
  have been installed.  This allows you to overrule any of the defaults,
  by using ":au!" to remove any existing FileType autocommands for the
  same pattern.  Only the autocommand to source the scripts.vim file is
  given later.  This makes sure that your autocommands in
  "myfiletypefile" are used before checking the contents of the file.

  3.2.  Manual method

  Instead of using "Syntax" menu you can also manually source in the
  syntax file. Edit the file with gvim and at : (colon) command give
  'so' command. For example -

  ______________________________________________________________________
          gvim foo.pc
          :so $VIM/syntax/esqlc.vim
  ______________________________________________________________________


  The syntax source files are at /usr/share/vim/syntax/*.vim. Vim sup
  ports more than 120 different syntax files for different languages
  like C++, PERL, VHDL, JavaScript,...and so on!!


  Each syntax file supports one or more default file name extensions,
  for example, JavaScript syntax file supports the *.js extension. If
  you happen to use an extension that conflicts with another default
  syntax file (such as adding JavaScript to a *.html file) than you can
  source in the additional syntax file with the command :so
  $VIM/syntax/javascript.vim.  To avoid all of this typing, you can
  create a soft link like -

  ______________________________________________________________________
          ln -s $VIM/syntax/javascript.vim js
          gvim foo.html  (... this file contains javascript functions and HTML)
          :so js
  ______________________________________________________________________



  4.  VIM Usage

  You can use Vim in two modes - one with GUI and other without GUI.  To
  use GUI use command -

  ______________________________________________________________________
          gvim foo.cpp
  ______________________________________________________________________


  To use non-gui mode give -

  ______________________________________________________________________
          vim foo.cpp
  OR plain vanilla mode
          vi foo.cpp
  ______________________________________________________________________


  It is very strongly recommended that you always use gvim instead of
  vim, since GUI mode with colors will definitely improve your produc
  tivity.

  GUI mode gvim provides the following -

    You can mark the text using the mouse to do cut, copy and paste.

    You can use the Menu bar which has - File, Edit, Window, Tools,
     Synatx and Help buttons.

    Also in near future in gvim - a second menu bar will display the
     list of files being edited, and you can switch files by clicking on
     the filenames, until then you can use vi commands - :e#, :e#1,
     :e#2, :e#3, :e#4, ....so on to select the files.

  5.  Vi companions

  Generally Vim is used in conjunction with other powerful tools like
  ctags and gdb. ctags is for very rapid navigation through millions of
  lines of "C/C++" code and gdb is for debugging the "C/C++" code.  A
  brief introduction of these two indispensable commands will be given
  in this chapter.

  ctags is the most powerful command available for coding C, C++, Java,
  Perl, Korn/Bourne shell scripts or Fortran. Developers very
  extensively use ctags to navigate through thousands of functions
  within C/C++ programs. See 'man ctags' on Unix.  It is very important
  that you learn how to use ctags to develop programs in C or C++, Java,
  etc.. Navigation is the single most important task while doing
  development of C or C++ code. Using ctags you can very quickly read
  the code by jumping from a calling line to the called function, drill
  down deeper into nested function calls, and unwind back all the way up
  to the top. You can go back and forth from function to function very
  quickly.

  Without NAVIGATION you will be completely lost! ctags is like the
  magnetic COMPASS needle for the programmers.

  Usage of ctags :

  ______________________________________________________________________
          ctags *.cpp
          gvim -t foo_function
          gvim -t main
  ______________________________________________________________________


  This will edit the C++ program file which contains the function
  foo_function() and will automatically place the cursor on the first
  line of the function foo_function(). The second command takes you to
  the line with the main() function definition.

  Inside the Vim editor, you can jump to a function by typing : (colon)
  tag < function name >as below -

  ______________________________________________________________________
          :tag sample_function
  ______________________________________________________________________


  This will place the cursor on first line of sample_function()

  If you want to jump into the function from a line in file which
  contains the function name, place the cursor just before the function
  name and press CTRL+] (press control key and left-square-bracket key
  simultaneously).

  ______________________________________________________________________
                  // example code
                  switch(id_number) {
                          Case 1:
                                  if ( foo_function( 22, "abcef") == 3 )
                                      ^
                                      |
                                      |
                                      |
                    Place the cursor here (just before foo_function) and press CTRL+]
                    This takes you to the function named "foo_function".
                    To come back to this line press CTRL+t
  ______________________________________________________________________


  To go back to the calling line press CTRL+t (Control key and letter
  't' together). Keep pressing CTRL+t to unwind and go to the first line
  where you started the navigation. That is you can keep pressing CTRL+]
  and then keep pressing CTRL+t to go back. You can repeat these as many
  times as you want to have complete navigation through all the func
  tions of C or C++.

  5.1.  Ctags for ESQL

  Since ctags does not directly support the Embedded SQL/C (ESQL)
  language, the following shell script can be used to create tags for
  esql. ESQL/C is database SQL commands embedded inside the "C"
  programs.  Oracle's ESQL/C is called Pro*C and Sybase, Informix have
  ESQL/C and PostgreSQL has product "ecpg".
  Save this file as "sqltags.sh" and do chmod a+rx tags_gen.sh.



  ______________________________________________________________________
  #!/bin/sh

  # Program to create ctags for ESQL, C++ and C files
  ESQL_EXTN=pc
  tag_file1=tags_file.1
  tag_file2=tags_file.2

  which_tag=ctags

  rm -f $tag_file1 $tag_file2 tags

  aa=`ls *.$ESQL_EXTN`
  #echo $aa
  for ii in $aa
  do
          #echo $ii
          jj=`echo $ii | cut -d'.' -f1`
          #echo $jj

          if [ ! -f $jj.cpp ]; then
                  echo " "
                  echo " "
                  echo "***********************************************"
                  echo "ESQL *.cpp files does not exist.. "
                  echo "You must generate the *.cpp from *.pc file"
                  echo "using the Oracle Pro*C pre-compiler or Sybase"
                  echo "or Informix esql/c pre-compiler."
                  echo "And then re-run this command"
                  echo "***********************************************"
                  echo " "
                  exit
          fi

          rm -f tags
          $which_tag $jj.cpp
          kk=s/$jj\.cpp/$jj\.pc/g

          #echo $kk > sed.tmp
          #sed -f sed.tmp tags >> $tag_file1

          #sed -e's/sample\.cpp/sample\.pc/g' tags >> $tag_file1
          sed -e $kk tags >> $tag_file1
  done

  # Now handle all the C++/C files - exclude the ESQL *.cpp files
  rm -f tags $tag_file2
  bb=`ls *.cpp *.c`
  aa=`ls *.$ESQL_EXTN`
  for mm in $bb
  do
          ee=`echo $mm | cut -d'.' -f1`
          file_type="NOT_ESQL"
          # Exclude the ESQL *.cpp and *.c files
          for nn in $aa
          do
                  dd=`echo $nn | cut -d'.' -f1`
                  if [ "$dd" = "$ee" ]; then
                          file_type="ESQL"
                          break
                  fi
          done

          if [ "$file_type" = "ESQL" ]; then
                  continue
          fi
          rm -f tags
          $which_tag $mm
          cat tags >> $tag_file2
  done

  mv -f $tag_file2 tags
  cat  $tag_file1 >> tags
  rm -f $tag_file1

  # Must sort tags file for it work properly ....
  sort tags > $tag_file1
  mv $tag_file1 tags
  ______________________________________________________________________



  5.2.  Ctags for JavaScript programs, Korn, Bourne shells

  The shell script given below can be used to generate tags for a very
  large variety of programs written in JavaScript, PHP/FI scripts, Korn
  shell, C shell, Bourne shell and many others. This is a very generic
  module.

  Save this file as tags_gen.sh and do chmod a+rx tags_gen.sh.



  ______________________________________________________________________
  #!/bin/sh

  tmp_tag=tags_file
  tmp_tag2=tags_file2

  echo " "
  echo " "
  echo " "
  echo " "
  echo " "
  echo "Generate tags for ...."
  while :
  do
          echo "    Enter file extension for which you want to generate tags."
          echo -n "    File-extension should be like sh, js, ksh, etc... : "
          read ans

          if [ "$ans" == "" ]; then
                  echo " "
                  echo "Wrong entry. Try again!"
          else
                  break
          fi
  done

  \rm -f $tmp_tag

  aa=`ls *.$ans`

  for ii in $aa
  do
          jj=`echo $ii | cut -d'.' -f1`
          #echo $jj
          cp $ii $jj.c
          ctags $jj.c
          echo "s/$jj.c/$ii/g" > $tmp_tag2
          sed -f $tmp_tag2 tags >> $tmp_tag
          \rm -f tags $jj.c
  done

  sort $tmp_tag > tags

  \rm -f $tmp_tag $tmp_tag2
  ______________________________________________________________________



  5.3.  Debugger gdb

  You would be using gdb extensively along with Vi.  Debugging is the
  most important aspect of programming as the major cost of software
  projects goes into debugging and testing.

  To debug C++/C programs use 'gdb' tool. See 'man gdb'.  You must
  compile your programs with -g3 option like


               gcc -g3 foo.c foo_another.c sample.c



  To set up easy aliases do -


    Setup an alias in your ~/.bash_profile
          alias gdb='gdb -directory=/home/src -directory=/usr/myname/src '
    Give -
          gdb foo.cpp
          gdb> dir /hom2/another_src
          This will add to file search path
          gdb> break 'some_class::func<TAB><TAB>
    This will complete the function name saving you typing time... and will output like -
          gdb> break 'some_class::function_foo_some_where(int aa, float bb)'



  Pressing TAB key twice is the command line completion, which will save
  you lots of typing time. This is one of the most important technique
  of using gdb.

  To get online help do -


               gdb> help
         Gives online help
               gdb> help breakpoints
         Gives more details about breakpoints.



  To set breakpoints and do debugging


               unixprompt> gdb exe_filename
               gdb> b main
         This will put breakpoint in main() function
               gdb> b 123
         This will put breakpoint in line 123 of the current file
               gdb> help breakpoints
         Gives more details about breakpoints.



  To analyze the core dumps do


               unixprompt> gdb exe_filename  core
               gdb> bt
         Gives backtrace of functions and line numbers where the program failed
               gdb> help backtrace
         Gives more details about backtrace.



  You can also use GUI version of gdb called xxgdb.

  Memory leak tools -

    Freeware Electric Fence on linux cd,

    Commercial tools Purify  <http://www.rational.com>

    Insure++  <http://www.insure.com>



  6.  Online VIM help

  See the online man pages. At unix shell prompt type 'man vim' and 'man
  gvim'.

  Or inside the gvim session type :help to get the help page. See also
  ``''



                               VIM - main help file

             Move around:  Use the cursor keys, or "h" to go left,
                           "j" to go down, "k" to go up, "l" to go right.
                           ":1" takes you to 1st line of page
                           ":n" takes you to nth line of page
                           "<SHIFT>g" takes you to bottom of page
                           ":/someword/ will search for "someword" in doc

       Close this window:  Use ":q<Enter>".

       Jump to a subject:  Position the cursor on a tag between |bars| and hit CTRL-].

          With the mouse:  ":set mouse=a" to enable the mouse (in xterm or GUI).
                           Double-click the left mouse button on a tag between |bars|.

               jump back:  Type CTRL-T or CTRL-O.

       Get specific help:  It is possible to go directly to whatever you want help
                           on, by giving an argument to the ":help" command |:help|.
                           It is possible to further specify the context:
                                 WHAT                  PREPEND    EXAMPLE      ~
                             Normal mode commands     (nothing)   :help x
                             Visual mode commands        v_       :help v_u
                             Insert mode commands        i_       :help i_<Esc>
                             command-line commands       :        :help :quit
                             command-line editing        c_       :help c_<Del>
                             Vim command arguments       -        :help -r
                             options                     '        :help 'textwidth'

       list of documentation files:

       |howto.txt|     how to do the most common things
       |intro.txt|     introduction to Vim
       |index.txt|     alphabetical index for each mode
       |autocmd.txt|   automatically executing commands on an event
       |change.txt|    delete and replace text



  7.  Vim Home page and Vim links

  The home page of vim is at  <http://www.vim.org> and mirror site in US
  is at  <http://www.us.vim.org>

  Vim FAQ is at  <http://www.grafnetix.com/~laurent/vim/faq.html> and at
  <http://www.vim.org/faq>

  Eli's Vim Page at  <http://www.netusa.net/~eli/src/vim.html>

  The Vi Lovers Home Page  <http://www.cs.vu.nl/~tmgil/vi.html>

  Vim Reference Guide at  <http://scisun.sci.ccny.cuny.edu/~olrcc/vim/>


  Vim mailing list at
  <http://www.findmail.com/listsaver/vimannounce.html> and
  <http://www.vim.org/mail.html>

  Mailing list archives are kept at:

    <http://www.egroups.com/group/vim>

    <http://www.egroups.com/group/vimdev>

    <http://www.egroups.com/group/vimannounce>

  Vim macros  <http://www.grafnetix.com/~laurent/vim/macros.html>

  8.  Vim Tutorial


  8.1.  Vim Hands-on Tutorial

  On Linux system see the tutorial at /usr/doc/vim-common-5.*/tutor, on
  other unix systems go to directory where vim is installed and look for
  doc directory.

  ______________________________________________________________________
          bash$ cd /usr/doc/vim-common*/tutor
          bash$ less README.txt
          bash$ cp tutor $HOME
          bash$ cd $HOME
          bash$ less tutor
  ______________________________________________________________________



  8.2.  Vi Tutorials on Internet


    Purdue University
     <http://ecn.www.ecn.purdue.edu/ECN/Documents/VI/>



    Quick Vi tutorial  <http://linuxwww.db.erau.edu/LUG/node165.html>



    Advanced Vi tutorial  <http://www.yggdrasil.com/bible/bible-
     src/user-alpha-4/guide/node171.html>



    Tutorials  <http://www.cfm.brown.edu/Unixhelp/vi_.html>



    Tutorials
     <http://www.linuxbox.com/~taylor/4ltrwrd/section3_4.html>



    Unix world online vi tutorial
     <http://www.networkcomputing.com/unixworld/unixhome.html>



    Univ of Hawaii tutorial  <http://www.eng.hawaii.edu/Tutor/vi.html>

    InfoBound   <http://www.infobound.com/vi.html>



    Cornell Univ  <http://www.tc.cornell.edu/Edu/Tutor/Basics/vi/>



    Vi Lovers home page:  <http://www.cs.vu.nl/~tmgil/vi.html>

    After Sept 2000, will moveto
     <http://www.thomer.com/thomer/vi/vi.html>



    Beginner's Guide to vi
     <http://www.cs.umr.edu/unixinfo/general/packages/viguide.html>



    vi Help file  <http://www.vmunix.com/~gabor/vi.html>



    vim FAQ  <http://www.math.fu-berlin.de/~guckes/vim/faq/>

     There are many Vi Tutorials on internet. In Yahoo (Lycos, excite or
     Hotbot) enter "Vi Tutorial" in search field and search engine will
     return many pointers.

  9.  Vi Tutorial

  In this tutorial, we describe some "advanced" vi concepts and
  commands, so you can appreciate the power of vi and so you decide how
  to build your knowledge of vi commands. Nearly all vi references list
  the available commands, but many don't bother to discuss how the
  commands interrelate; this topic is the main purpose of this tutorial.

  9.1.  Cursor Movement Commands

  The vi cursor movement commands allow you to position the cursor in
  the file and/or on the screen efficiently, with a minimum number of
  keystrokes. There are oodles of cursor movement commands - don't try
  memorizing them all at once! Later, we'll see that much of the power
  of vi comes from mixing cursor movement commands with other commands
  to delete, change, yank (copy), and filter text.

  Please edit a large text file (say, wknight) so you can experiment
  with each command as it is described. Keep in mind these commands will
  only work in Command Mode, not Insert Mode; if you start getting your
  "commands" in your text, press the ESC key to return to Command Mode.


    cursor keys : As we've seen, cursor keys move by single character
     amounts left, down, up, and right. Movement above the top of the
     file, below the bottom, to the right of the end of a line, or left
     of the beginning is not allowed (no line wrapping).



    hjkl : When vi was written (around 1978), many terminals on UNIX
     systems did not have cursor keys! h, j, k, and l were chosen as
     commands to move left, down, up, and right, respectively.  Try
     them! Most vi diehards prefer these to the cursor keys because


    (a) they are in the same place on all keyborads, and

    (b) they fit nicely under the fingers, unlike most cursor keys,
     which are arranged in a box or "T" or some other nonlinear shape.


     Why h, j, k, and l? Well, in the ASCII character set, CTRL-H is
     backspace (moves left), CTRL-J is linefeed (moves down), and, of
     course, k and l are next to h and j, so you see, they're mnemonic.



    0 : ("zero", not "oh") Move to the beginning of current line. (To
     try this and the next few commands, use the cursor keys or h j k l
     to move to an indented text line that contains few "e" characters.
     If you can't find an indented line in your file, create one by
     inserting a few space characters at the beginning of a line.)



     ^  : Move to first non-white character of current line. (For
     indented line, 0 and ^ are different.)



     $  : Move to last character of current line.



     tC  : Move to (but not on) next character c in current line.
     (Press 0, then press te. This will move to the first e in the
     curent line.)



     fC  : Find (move on top of) next character c in current line.
     (Press fe, and the cursor will find - that is, move on top - the
     next e in the current line.)



     TC  : Move to (but not on) the previous character c in current
     line (Press $, then Te.)



     FC  : Find (move on top of) the previous character c in current
     line.  (Press Fe.)



     n|  : Move to column n in current line. (Try 20 |. The digits 2
     and 0 will not be displayed as you type them, but when you press |
     the cursor will move to column 20.)

     Try some experiments with t f T F | . When you do something
     illegal, vi will beep your terminal.



     w  : Forward to beginning of next "small" word ( a "small" word
     consists of unbroken alphanumeric characters or punctuation
     characters, but not mixed alphanumeric and punctuation). Try
     tapping w a dozen times or so - note what happens at punctuation.


     W  : Forward to beginning of next "big" word (alphanumeric and
     punctuation mixed). Try W a dozen times or so.



     b  : Backward to beginning of "small" word.



     B  : Backward to beginning of "big" word.



     e  : Forward to end of "small" word.


     E  : Forward to end of "big" word.



     + Return  : Move to first non-white space character on next line.
     (+ and the Return key have the same effect.)



     -  : Move to first non-white space character on previous line.



     )  : Move to the end of sentence. (A sentence ends either at a
     blank line or at a period or examination mark followed by two space
     characters or at the end of a line. A period or exclamation mark
     followed by one space character does not end a sentence; this is
     correct behaviour, according to traditional rules of how sentences
     should appear in typed documents, but often appears wrong to those
     who have never suffered through a formal typing class.)



     (  : Move to beginning of sentence.



     }  : Move to end of paragraph. (Paragraphs are seperated with
     blank lines, by vi's definition.)



     {  : Move to beginning of paragraph.



     H  : Move to home position (top line) on the screen



     M  : Move to middle line on the screen.



     L  : Move to last line on the screen.



     nG  : Move to line n. If n is not given, move to the last line in
     the file.  (Try 15G to move to line 15, for example. The CTRL-G
     command displays the name of the file, some status information, and
     the current line number. To move to the top of the file: 1G)



     CTRL-d  : Scroll down half-screen (see note).

     CTRL-u  : Scroll up half-screen (see note).

     CTRL-f  : Move forward one-screen (see note).

     CTRL-b  : Move backward one-screen (see note).

     Note  : These four scrolling/paging commands cannot be used with
     the delete, change, yank, or filter commands.



     /reg_exp  : Move to next occurrence of the regular expression
     reg_exp When you press /, the cursor drops to the lower left corner
     of the screen and waits for you to type in the regular expression.
     Press the Return key to finish; vi then searches forward for the
     next occurrence of the regular expression. For example, press /the
     followed by Return. This moves forward to the next occurrence of
     the, perhaps imbedded in the middle of some longer word (other,
     weather, etc.). If you just press / and then Return, vi searches
     for the next occurrence of whatever the last regular expression was
     that you searched for.



     n  : Has the same effect as pressing / and then Return; i.e.,
     searches for the next occurrence of whatever the last regular
     expression was that you searched for.



     ?reg_exp  : Searches backward, rather than forward. If no reg_exp
     is given, it searches for the last regular expression that was
     entered.  Both / and ? wrap around, so searching "below" the bottom
     or "above" the top of the file is legal.



     N  : Same as pressing ? and then Return.

  9.2.  Repeat Counts

  Many of the movement commands discussed above can be preceded with a
  repeat count; the movement is simply repeated the given number of
  times:

     3w  : Move forward three words

     5k  : Move up four characters

     3fa  : Find the third succeeding a in current line

     6+  : Move down six lines

     For some commands, the "repeat counts" has special meaning:

     4H  : Move to Line 4 on the screen (home plus 3)

     8L  : Move to the eigth line from the bottom of the screen

     3$  : Move to the end of the third line down

     For some commands (e.g., ^) the repeat count is ignored; for others
     (e.g., / and ? ) it is illegal

  9.3.  Deleting Text

  We've seen that dd deletes the current line. This can be used with a
  repeat count: 3dd deletes three lines, the current line, and the two
  following lines.

  The d command can be used as a "prefix" on most of the movement
  commands above to delete nearly arbitrary chunks of text. When used
  with d, the movement commands are called target specifiers. d can be
  given a repeat count. (As you try these experiments, remember to press
  u after each command to undo the deletion).


     dw  : Delete "small" word forward

     d3w  : Delete three "small" words forward

     3dw  : Three times, delete "small" word forward

     3d3w  : Three times, delete three "small" words forward (that is,
     delete nine "small" words forward)

     d+  : Delete current line and next line down

     d/the : Delete from current character up to but not including the
     next occurrence of the pattern the.

     d$  : Delete to end of line

     d0  : Delete to beginning of line

     d30G  : Delete from the curent line to and including Line 30

     dG  : Delete from current line to and including last line

     d1G  : Delete from current line to and including Line 1

     To delete single characters, use x. x can be given a repeat count:

     15x  : Delete current and 14 following characters

     x is actually just an abbreviation of d1; that is, delete one
     character right.

  9.4.  Changing Text

  The c command is similar to d, except it toggles vi into Insert Mode,
  allowing the original (unwanted) text to be changed to something else.

  For example, put the cursor on the beginning of a word (press w to get
  to the beginning of the next word). Then, press cw to change that
  word. On the screen, the last character in the word being changed will
  be replaced with a $ symbol indicating the boundary of the change;
  type in a new word (you will overwrite the original word on the
  screen) and press the ESC key when done.  Your input may be longer or
  shorter than the word being changed.

  Put the cursor at the beginning of a line containing at least three
  words, and try c3w to change three words. Try c$ to change to the end
  of the current line.  In all cases where the change affects only the
  current line, the boundary of the change is indicated with $.
  When a change affects more than just the current line, vi deletes the
  original text from the screen and toggles into Insert Mode. For
  example, try c3+ to change the current and the next three lines; vi
  deletes the four original lines from the screen and toggles into
  Insert Mode in a new blank line.  As usual, press the ESC key when you
  have finished entering your new text.

  Some other change commands:

     cc  : Change current line

     5cc  : Change five lines (current and next four)

     c/the  : Change from current character up to but not including the
     next occurrence of the pattern the

     c$  : Change to end of line

     c30G  : Change from the current line to and including Line 30

     cG  : Change from curernt line to and including last line

     c1G  : Change from curernt line to and including Line 1

  9.5.  Yanking (Copying) Text

  The y command yanks a copy of  text into a buffer; the yanked text can
  then be put (or pasted) elsewhere in the file using p or P.

  The simplest form of yank is yy to yank the current line; after yy,
  try p to put a copy of the yanked line after the cursor. Following yy,
  you can make as many copies of the yanked line as you want by moving
  up and down in the file and pressing p.

  To copy multiple lines, try, for example, 5yy (yank the current and
  next four lines). p puts a copy of the yanked lines after the cursor;
  the sequence 5yyp "works" but it probably doesn't do what you would
  like. The P command is like p, but puts a copy of the yanked text
  ahead of the cursor; try the sequence 5yyP.

  Other yank commands:

     y3w  : Yank three words

     y$  :  Yank to end of current line

     y1G  : Yank from current line to and including Line 1

  9.6.  Filtering text

  The filter command !, prompts for the name of a UNIX command (which
  should be a filter), then passes selected lines through the filter,
  replacing those selected line in the vi buffer with the output of the
  filter command. vi's ability to pass nearly arbitrary chunks of text
  through any UNIX filter adds incredible flexibility to vi, at no
  "additional cost" in size or performance to vi itself.

  Some examples will help illustrate. Create a line in your file
  containing just the word who and absolutely no other text. Put the
  cursor on this line, and press !!  This command is analogous to dd,
  cc, or yy, but instead of deleting, changing, or yanking the current
  line, it filters the current line. When you press the second !, the
  cursor drops down to the lower left corner of the screen and a single
  ! is displayed, prompting you to enter the name of a filter. As the
  filter name, type sh and press the Return key. sh (the Bourne shell)
  is a filter!  It reads standard input, does some processing of its
  input (that is, executes commands), and sends its output (the output
  of those commands) to standard output. Filtering the line containing
  who through sh causes the line containing who to be replaced with a
  list of the current users on the system - right in your file!

  Try repeating this process with date. That is, create a line
  containing nothing but the word date, then put the cursor on the line,
  and press !!sh and the Return key. The line containing date is
  replaced with the output of the date command.

  Put your cursor on the first line of the output of who. Count the
  number of lines.  Suppose, for example, the number is six. Then select
  those six lines to be filtered through sort; press 6!!sort and the
  Return key. The six lines will be passed through sort, and sort's
  output replaces the original six lines.

  The filter command can only be used on complete lines, not on
  characters or words.

  Some other filter commands (here, < CR > means press Return):

    !/the < CR > sort < CR > : Sort from the current line up to and
     including the next line containing the

     !1Ggrep the < CR > : Replace from the current line to and
     including Line 1 with just the lines that contain the

     !Gawk '{print $1}' < CR > : From the current line to the end of
     file, replace every line with just its first word.

  9.7.  Marking Lines and Characters

  You can mark lines and characters to be used as targest for movement,
  deletion, change, yanking, and filtering using the command mc, where c
  is a lowercase letter.

  For example, put the cursor in the middle of some word and press ma.
  This marks the character under the cursor as mark a.

  Now, move the cursor off the marked character and to a different line
  ( use the cursor keys, CTRL-u, or whatever). To return to the marked
  line, press 'a (that is, single quote, then a). This moves to the
  first non-white space character on the line containing mark a.

  Move off that line again. To return to the marked character, press `a
  (that is, backquote, then a). This moves on top of the character
  marked with a.

  Marking is usually used with deleting, changing, yanking or filtering.
  For example, move the cursor to a line other than the one containing
  mark a, and then press d'a (d, single quote, a). This deletes from the
  current line to and including the line marked with a.

  Put the cursor in the middle of a different word and press mb to set
  mark b.  Now, move the cursor away from that word (but only a few
  lines, so you can see what we're about to do more easily), and then
  press d`b (d, backquote, b).  This deletes from the current CHARACTER
  to and including the CHARACTER marked with b.

  As another example, to sort the output of who, mark the first line
  (ma), then move the cursor to the last line and press !'asort and the
  Return key.

  If you jump to a mark and decide you want to jump back to whatever you
  jumped from, you can press '' (jump back to line) or `` (jump back to
  character).
  9.8.  Naming Buffers

  When you delete, change, or yank text, the original text is stored
  (until the next delete, change, or yank) in an unnamed buffer from
  which it can be put using p or P. Using the unnamed buffer, only the
  most recently deleted, changed or yanked text may be recovered.

  If you wish to delete, change, or yank multiple sections of text and
  remember them all (up to a maximum of 26), you can give a buffer name
  ahead of the delete change or yank command. A buffer name has the form
  "c (double quote, lowercase c).

  For example, press "ayy to yank the current line into buffer a, then
  move to a different line and press "byy to yank that line into buffer
  b. Now, move elsewhere in the file and press "ap and "bp to put copies
  of the text stored in buffers a and b.

  Some other named buffer commands:

     "a6yy  : Yank six lines (current and next five) into buffer a

     "bd1G  : Delete from the curernt line to and including Line 1,
     storing the deleted lines in buffer b

     "cy'c  : Yank from the current line to the line marked c into
     buffer c (marks and buffers are distinct, and may have the same
     name without confusing vi)

  9.9.  Substitutions

  To substitute one chunk of text for another in lines throughout your
  file, use the :s command. Some substitute examples:

     :1,$s/the/THE/g   From Line 1 to the last line (line $),
     substitute for the text THE; do this globally in each line where
     the occurrs

     :'a,.s/.*/ha ha/  From the line marked a to the current line (line
     .), substitute for everything on the line the text ha ha

  9.10.  Miscellaneous "Colon Commands"

  All colon commands begin with a colon; when you press the colon, the
  cursor drops to the lower left corner of the screen, and a colon
  prompt is displayed waiting for you to finish your colon command.

  Some important examples:

    :w  Write the buffer contents to the file without quitting from vi

    :w abc Write the buffer contents to the file abc (creating abc if
     it doesn't exist, or overwriting current contents if it does exist)
     without quitting from vi

    :1,10w  abc  Write lines 1 through 10 to file abc

    :'a,$w abc  Write from the line marked a to the last line into file
     abc

    :e abc Edit file abc, instead of the current file. vi prints an
     error message if changes have been made to the curernt file that
     have not been saved with :w

    :e! abc Edit file abc, throwing away any changes that may have been
     made to the current file

    :e #  Edit the prior file edited (successive :e# commands toggle
     back and forth between two files)

    :f abc  Change the file anme for the current vi buffer to abc

    :q Quit, unless unsaved chanegs have been made

    :q! Quit, throwing away any changes that may have been made

    :r abc Read the file abc into current vi buffer, after the line the
     cursor is on (try :r croc to read in a copy of the croc file)

    :!cmd Execute command cmd (who, sort, ls, etc.)

  9.11.  Setting Options

  Various options affect the "feel" of vi. You can display all the
  various options that can be set using the colon command :set all. You
  can also use set to change options.

  For example, if you want to see line numbers for the lines in the file
  you're editing, use the command :set number. To turn off line
  numbering, use the command :set nonumber. Most options can be
  abbreviated; :set nu turns on line numbering and :set nonu turns off
  line numbering.

  If you :set nomagic, the special meanings of regular expression
  characters (period, asterisk, square bracket, etc.) are switched off.
  Use :set magic to restore the special meanings.

  Some options take a value. For example, :set tabstop=4 causes tabs to
  be displayed as four space characters, rather than the usual eight.

  If you find you always want certain options set certain ways, you can
  put the set commands you want ina file .exrc, or you can set up the
  environment variable EXINIT to specify the options you want.

  For example, if your login shell is Bourne shell, this line could go
  in your .profile file:

  ______________________________________________________________________
          EXINIT='set nomagic nu tabstop=4'; export EXINIT
  ______________________________________________________________________


  If your login shell is a C shell, this line could go in your .login
  file:

  ______________________________________________________________________
          setenv EXINIT 'set nomagic nu tabstop=4'
  ______________________________________________________________________



  9.12.  Key Mappings

  If you find you're performing a series of simple commands over and
  over, you can map the command series to an unused command key using
  the :map command. If your mapping must include control characters such
  as Return key (CTRL-M in ASCII) or the ESC (CTRL-[ in ASCII) key,
  precede such characters with CTRL-v to suppress their usual special
  meaning.

  For example, this command maps CTRL-A to move the cursor forward 55
  lines, then back up to the most recent blank line, then change that
  blank line to a formfeed (CTRL-L) and three blank lines. That is, each
  CTRL-A will paginate the next page, without splitting paragraphs
  across pages.

  Note: In this command, each control character is shown as ^C, where C
  is some uppercase letter. For example, CTRL-M is shown as ^M. Also,
  when you enter this command you will not see the CTRL-v characters as
  shown: each CTRL-v merely suppresses the usual special meaning of the
  following control character, so when you press the sequence ^V^M, all
  you will see on the screen is ^M. In this command, ^M is the Return
  key and ^[ is the ESC key.

  ______________________________________________________________________
          :map ^A  55+?^$^V^Mcc^V^L^V^M^V^M^V^M^V^[
  ______________________________________________________________________



  9.13.  Editing Multiple Files

  You can edit multiple files with vi by giving multiple file names as
  command line arguments:

  ______________________________________________________________________
          vi croc fatherw  wknight
  ______________________________________________________________________


  Three colon commands are used to move through the multiple files:

     :n  Move to the next file in the argument list (you must save
     changes with :w or vi will print an error message)

     :N  Move to the previous file in the argument list (you must save
     changes with :w or vi will print an error message)

     :rew Rewind and start over with the first file in the argument
     list

     The :n, :N, and :rew commands are somewhat clumsy, but there are
     some important benefits: the contents of named buffers ("a, "b, "c,
     etc.) are remembered across files, so you can use :n and :rew with
     p and P to copy text back and forth between files. Also, the most
     recent search string for the / and ? commands remembered across
     files, so you can do repetitive searches in multiple files rather
     easily.

  For example, try the following experiment: First get out of vi, then
  execute vi with croc and wknight as arguments:

  ______________________________________________________________________
          $ vi croc wknight
  ______________________________________________________________________


  In croc, search for the

       /the < CR >

  Yank this line into buffer a:

       "ayy

  Now go to the next file (you've made no change to croc, so this will
  work):


       :n < CR >

  Search for the "next" line containing the, without retyping the search
  string:

       n

  Put a copy of buffer a after the current line in wknight:

       "ap

  Move down two lines, and yank the current line into buffer b:

       jj"byy

  Save the changes to wknight

       :w < CR >

  Now, rewind to croc

       :rew < CR >

  Search again, and put a copy of buffer b after the found line:

       n"bp

  Save the changes, and exit vi

       ZZ

  9.14.  Final Remarks

  This tutorial was intended to introduce some of the vi capabilities
  that you might overlook in your system's vi manual or that might not
  be mentioned in the manual (different systems have manuals of widely
  varying quality).

  You will not be a vi expert after reading this tutorial, but you will
  have a good appreciation of vi's capabilities. Only time and effort
  can make a vi expert. But the efficiency and universality of vi make
  this effort pay off in the long run.

  You may have decided you hate vi. So be it! But be aware that vi
  remains the standard UNIX text editor - the one editor you can count
  on being available on every UNIX system you'll use - so even if you
  prefer to use something else day-to-day, you'd be well advised to know
  the bare minimum vi material covered in this tutorial.

  10.  Vim Reference Card


  10.1.  Vi states

  Vi has 3 modes:

  1. command mode - Normal and initial state; others return here (use
     ESC to abort a partially typed command)

  2. input mode - entered by specific commands a i A I o O c C s S R
     and ended by ESC or abnormally with interrupt

  3. line mode - i.e. waiting for input after a : , / , ?  or a !
     command (end with CR, abort with CTRL-c). CTRL is the control key:
     CTRL-c means "control c"

  10.2.  Shell Commands


  1. TERM= code Puts a code name for your terminal into the variable
     TERM

  2. export TERM Conveys the value of TERM (the terminal code) to any
     UNIX system program that is terminal dependant.

  3. tput init Initializes the terminal so that it will function
     properly with various UNIX system programs.

  4. vi  filename Accesses the vi screen editor so that you can edit a
     specified file.

  5. vi  file1 file2 file3 Enters three files into the vi buffer to be
     edited. Those files are file1, file2, and file3.

  6. view  file Invoke vi editor on file in read-only mode

  7. vi -R  file Invoke vi editor on file in read-only mode

  8. vi -r  file Recover file and recent edits after system crash

  9. vi -r  file Recover file and recent edits after system crash

  10.3.  Setting Options


  1. :set option Activate option

  2. :set option=value Assign value to option

  3. :set no option Deactivate option

  4. :set  Display options set by user

  5. :set all Display list of all current options, both default and
     those set by the user

  6. :set  option? Display values of option

  10.4.  Notations used

  Notations:

  1. CTRL-c CTRL is the control key: CTRL-c means "control c"

  2. CR is Carriage return (ENTER key)

  10.5.  Interrupting, cancelling


    ESC end insert or incomplete command

    CTRL-? CTRL is the control key: CTRL-? means "control ?" delete or
     rubout interrupts

    CTRL-l reprint/refresh screen if CTRL-? scrambles it

  10.6.  File Manipulation


    ZZ Save the file and exit vi


    :wq Save the file and exit vi

    :w Write the current file

    :w! Force write the current file, if file is read-only

    :wname Write to file name

    :q Exit from vi

    :q! Force exit from vi (discarding changes)

    :e name Edit file name

    :e! reedit, discard changes

    :e + name edit file name, starting at end

    :e + n edit starting at line n

    :e # edit alternate file

    :n edit next file in arglist

    :args list files in current filelist

    :rew rewind current filelist and edit first file

    :n args specify new arglist

    :f  show current file and line

    CTRL-G synonym for :f , show current file and line

    :ta tag  to tag file entry tag

    CTRL-]  :ta, following word is tag

  10.7.  Movement


    Arrows Move the cursor

    CTRL-d Scroll half page down

    CTRL-u Scroll half page up

    CTRL-f Scroll a full page down

    CTRL-b Scroll a full page up

    :0 Move to start of file

    :n Move to line number n

    :$ Move to end of file

    0 Move to start of line

    ^ Move to first non-blank character

    $ Move to end of line

    CR Move to the start of next line


    - Move to the start of previous line

    % Find matching bracket

    G  goto line (last line default)

    ]]  next section/function

    [[  previous section/function

  10.8.  Line Positioning


    H  Home window line

    L  Last window line

    M  Middle window line

    +  Next line, at first non-white

    -  Previous line, at first non-white

    CR  return, same as +

    j  next line, same column

    k  previous line, same column

  10.9.  Character positioning


    0  beginning of line

    $  end of line

    h  forward

    l  backwards

    SPACE  same as l

    fx  find x forward

    Fx  find x backward

    ;  repeat last f F

    ,  inverse of ;

    |  to specified column

    %  find matching { or }

  10.10.  Words, sentences, paragraphs


    w  Word forward

    b  Word backward

    e  End of word

    )  To next sentence


    (  Back sentence

    }  To next paragraph

    {  Back paragraph

    W  Blank delimited word

    B  Back W

    E  To end of W

  10.11.  Marking and returning


    `` (press twice the back-quote ` key) Previous context

    .nr bi 1

     mx mark position with letter x

    `x (back quote key and letter x) goto mark x

  

  10.12.  Corrections during insert


    CTRL-h Erase last character

    CTRL-w Erase last word

    erase  Press DELETE key, same as CTRL-h

    kill  Your kill key, erase input this line

    \  Escapes CTRL-h, DELETE and kill

    ESC  Ends insertion, back to command

    CTRL-?  Interrupt, terminates insert

    CTRL-d  Backtab over autoindent

    CTRL-v  Quote non-printing character

  10.13.  Adjusting the screen


    CTRL-l Clear and redraw

    CTRL-r retype, eliminate @lines

    z-CR redraw, current line at window top

    z- redraw, current line at window bottom

    z. redraw, current line at window center

    /pat/z- pat line bottom

    tn Use n line window

    CTRL-e Scroll window down 1 line


    CTRL-y Scroll window up 1 line

  10.14.  Delete


    x Delete the character under the cursor

    X Delete the charater before the cursor

    D Delete to the end of line

    d^ Delete back to start of line

    dd Delete the current line

    ndd Delete n lines starting with the current one

    dnw Delete n words starting from cursor

  10.15.  Insert, change


    i Enter input mode inserting before the cursor

    I Enter input mode inserting before the first non-blank character

    a Enter input mode inserting after the cursor

    A Enter input mode inserting after the end of the line

    o Open a new line below current line and enter input mode

    O Open a new line above current line and enter input mode

    r Replace the character under the cursor (does NOT enter input
     mode)

    R Enter input mode replacing characters

    C shift-c. Change rest of line

    D shift-d. Delete rest of line

    s Substitute chars

    S Substitute lines

    J Join lines

    J Join lines

  10.16.  Copy and Paste

  The "yank buffer" is filled by EVERY delete command, or explicitely by
  Y and yy.

    Y Copy the current line to the yank buffer

    nyy Copy n lines starting from the current to the yank buffer

    p Paste the yank buffer after the cursor (or below the current
     line)

    P Paste the yank buffer before the cursor (or above the current
     line)

    "xp  Put from buffer x

    "xy  Yank to buffer x

    "xd  Delete into buffer x

  10.17.  Operators (use double to affect lines)


    d  delete

    c  change

    <  left shift

    >  right shift

    !  filter through command

    =  indent for LISP

    y  yank text to buffer

  10.18.  Search and replace


    /text Search forward for text

    ?text Search backward for text

    n Repeat the last search in the same direction

    N Repeat the last search in the reverse direction

    / Repeat the last search forward

    ? Repeat the last search backward

    [ addr ] s/from/to/ [ g ]  Search for the occurence of from and
     replace it with to in the current line, or in the range addr (two
     line numbers seperated by command; 1,$ is the whole file).
     Replaces one occurrence per line, or all occurrences if g is
     specified.  For example, :3,20s/someword/anotherword/g  Will
     replace "someword" with "anotherword" starting from line 3 to line
     20. 'g' is global means replace all occurrences of "someword".

  10.19.  General


    :sh Forks a shell (to be exited with CTRL-d)

    :!command Forks a shell to execute command

    :set number Switch on line numbering

    :set nonumber Switch off line numbering

  10.20.  Line Editor Commands


    : Tells vi that the next commands you issue will be line editor
     commands.

    :sh Temporarily returns to the shell to perform some shell commands
     without leaving vi.

    CTRL-d Escapes the temporary return to the shell and returns to vi
     so you can edit the current window.

    :n Goes to the nth line of the buffer.

    :x,zw filename Writes lines from the numbers x through the number z
     into a new file called filename.

    :$ Moves the cursor to the beginning of the last line in the
     buffer.

    :.,$d Deletes all the lines from the current line to the last line

    :r filename Inserts the contents of the file filename under the
     current line of the buffer.

    :s/text/new_text/ Replaces the first instance of text on the
     current line with new_text

    :s/text/new_text/g Replaces the every occurrence of text on the
     current line with new_text

    :g/text/s//new_text/g Changes every occurrence of text on the
     buffer to new_text.

  10.21.  Other commands


    u Undo the last change

    U Restore the current line

    ~ Change case

    J Join the currentline with the next line

    . Repeat last text changing command

    CTRL-g Show file name and line number

  11.  Related URLs

  Related VIM URLs are at -

    C and C++ Beautifer  <http://www.metalab.unc.edu/LDP/HOWTO/C-
     C++Beautifier-HOWTO.html>

    Linux goodies  <http://www.aldev.8m.com> or at
     <http://www.aldev.webjump.com>

  12.  Other Formats of this Document

  This document is published in 11 different formats namely - DVI,
  Postscript, Latex, Adobe Acrobat PDF, LyX, GNU-info, HTML, RTF(Rich
  Text Format), Plain-text, Unix man pages and SGML.

    You can get this HOWTO document as a single file tar ball in HTML,
     DVI, Postscript or SGML formats from -
     <ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/docs/HOWTO/other-formats/>

    Plain text format is in:
     <ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/docs/HOWTO>

    Translations to other languages like French, German, Spanish,
     Chinese, Japanese are in
     <ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/docs/HOWTO> Any help from you to
     translate to other languages is welcome.

     The document is written using a tool called "SGML-Tools" which can
     be got from - <http://www.sgmltools.org> Compiling the source you
     will get the following commands like

    sgml2html CVS-HOWTO.sgml     (to generate html file)

    sgml2rtf  CVS-HOWTO.sgml     (to generate RTF file)

    sgml2latex CVS-HOWTO.sgml    (to generate latex file)

  LaTeX documents may be converted into PDF files simply by producing a
  Postscript output using sgml2latex ( and dvips) and running the output
  through the Acrobat distill ( <http://www.adobe.com>) command as
  follows:

  ______________________________________________________________________
  bash$ man sgml2latex
  bash$ sgml2latex filename.sgml
  bash$ man dvips
  bash$ dvips -o filename.ps filename.dvi
  bash$ distill filename.ps
  bash$ man ghostscript
  bash$ man ps2pdf
  bash$ ps2pdf input.ps output.pdf
  bash$ acroread output.pdf &
  ______________________________________________________________________


  Or you can use Ghostscript command ps2pdf.  ps2pdf is a work-alike for
  nearly all the functionality of Adobe's Acrobat Distiller product: it
  converts PostScript files to Portable Document Format (PDF) files.
  ps2pdf is implemented as a very small command script (batch file) that
  invokes Ghostscript, selecting a special "output device" called
  pdfwrite. In order to use ps2pdf, the pdfwrite device must be included
  in the makefile when Ghostscript was compiled; see the documentation
  on building Ghostscript for details.

  This howto document is located at -

    <http://sunsite.unc.edu/LDP/HOWTO/CVS-HOWTO.html>

  Also you can find this document at the following mirrors sites -

    <http://www.caldera.com/LDP/HOWTO/CVS-HOWTO.html>

    <http://www.WGS.com/LDP/HOWTO/CVS-HOWTO.html>

    <http://www.cc.gatech.edu/linux/LDP/HOWTO/CVS-HOWTO.html>

    <http://www.redhat.com/linux-info/ldp/HOWTO/CVS-HOWTO.html>

    Other mirror sites near you (network-address-wise) can be found at
     <http://sunsite.unc.edu/LDP/hmirrors.html> select a site and go to
     directory /LDP/HOWTO/CVS-HOWTO.html


  In order to view the document in dvi format, use the xdvi program. The
  xdvi program is located in tetex-xdvi*.rpm package in Redhat Linux
  which can be located through ControlPanel | Applications | Publishing
  | TeX menu buttons.  To read dvi document give the command -



          xdvi -geometry 80x90 howto.dvi
          man xdvi



  And resize the window with mouse.  To navigate use Arrow keys, Page
  Up, Page Down keys, also you can use 'f', 'd', 'u', 'c', 'l', 'r',
  'p', 'n' letter keys to move up, down, center, next page, previous
  page etc.  To turn off expert menu press 'x'.

  You can read postscript file using the program 'gv' (ghostview) or The
  ghostscript program is in ghostscript*.rpm package and gv program is
  in gv*.rpm package in Redhat Linux which can be located through
  ControlPanel | Applications | Graphics menu buttons. The gv program is
  much more user friendly than ghostscript.  Also ghostscript and gv are
  available on other platforms like OS/2, Windows 95 and NT, you view
  this document even on those platforms.


    Get ghostscript for Windows 95, OS/2, and for all OSes from
     <http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~ghost>

  To read postscript document give the command -


                       gv howto.ps
                       ghostscript howto.ps



  You can read HTML format document using Netscape Navigator, Microsoft
  Internet explorer, Redhat Baron Web browser or any of the 10 other web
  browsers.

  You can read the latex, LyX output using LyX a X-Windows front end to
  latex.

  13.  Copyright Notice

  Copyright policy is GNU/GPL as per LDP (Linux Documentation project).
  LDP is a GNU/GPL project.  Additional restrictions are - you must
  retain the author's name, email address and this copyright notice on
  all the copies. If you make any changes or additions to this document
  then you should notify all the authors of this document.



