Formatting
This sections of Vem's documentation covers many actions that allow you to format and edit your code or text. It is important to get familiar with them as they may save you from a lot of manual work and considerably reduce the number of times that you have to switch between normal and insert mode.
Adding white-space
The following actions allow you to add different forms of white-space without having to leave Normal mode:
- Tab:
indent current line or text selection
- Shift-Tab:
unindent current line or text selection
- y:
insert blank line above the cursor
- n:
insert blank line below the cursor
- (:
insert space before the cursor
- ):
insert space after the cursor
- Enter:
insert newline character (also in normal mode)
- (:
insert space before the cursor
- ):
insert space after the cursor
- z:
insert blank line above the cursor
- n:
insert blank line below the cursor
- Tab:
indent current line or text selection
- Shift-Tab:
unindent current line or text selection
- Enter:
insert newline character
- (:
insert space before the cursor
- ):
insert space after the cursor
- y:
insert blank line above the cursor
- n:
insert blank line below the cursor
- Tab:
indent current line or text selection
- Shift-Tab:
unindent current line or text selection
- Enter:
insert newline character
Replacing a single character
Sometimes you just have to change the character the cursor is on. You can switch to insert mode, delete the character, type the new one and switch back to normal mode, which means 4 key strokes for such an easy task. To change a character in a quicker way, just press r when the cursor is over the character to replace and then type the new one:
- r:
replace character under the cursor
If you have an active selection when you press r, all the characters of the selection will be replaced by the new character that you enter:
My Title -------- ↓ After 'r=' My Title -=======
Joining lines
You can remove newlines between lines with:
- &:
join lines
For example:
Hello World ↓ After '&' Hello█World
If you want to join more than two lines, just select them first and then press &.
Changing case
You can change the case of text with:
- Ctrl-u:
toggle case of character under the cursor. If there's an active selection, all the characters in the selection are toggled.
Formatting code
To automatically (re)format your code, you can use:
- =:
format current file automatically. If there's an active visual selection, only the selected code is formatted.
Vim provides basic re-indenting of Lisp and C-style programming languages out of the box. However, for other languages and more advanced formatting, you may want to provide your own tool using the equalprg option.
Formatting text
If you don't want your text to extend past a given width, you can wrap your lines at a certain column width textwidth (or tw for short):
set textwidth=80
Once set, the lines will be arranged automatically when you reach the specified column. Lines will be wrapped at the last white space character before the maximum width column. To disable it, set the option back to its default value (0):
set textwidth=0
Setting textwidth doesn't change the already existing text in your document, for that, you can use:
- |:
format text. It wraps lines according to the value of textwidth. When used with an active visual selection, all non-blank, consecutive lines are treated as a paragraph and formatted together. When used without a visual selection, only the current line is formatted. This action may also take into account other formatting aspects such as the handling of lists or indentation. To check all available options see :help fo-table.
If textwidth is 0, then | will wrap your lines at 79 characters (or the width of the screen if it is smaller than that).
Sometimes, it is useful to set the text width according to file types. For example, you may want to set automatic line wrapping for Markdown or Restructured text files while leaving in its disabled, default value for code. To set an option according to the file type, check Configuration per filetype.