*various.txt* For Vim version 6.4. Last change: 2005 Oct 14 VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar Various commands *various* 1. Various commands |various-cmds| 2. Online help |online-help| 3. Printing |printing| 4. Using Vim like less or more |less| ============================================================================== 1. Various commands *various-cmds* *CTRL-L* CTRL-L Clear and redraw the screen (later). *:redr* *:redraw* :redr[aw][!] Redraw the screen right now. When ! is included it is cleared first. Useful to update the screen halfway executing a script or function. Also when halfway a mapping and 'lazyredraw' is set. *:redraws* *:redrawstatus* :redraws[tatus][!] Redraw the status line of the current window. When ! is included all status lines are redrawn. Useful to update the status line(s) when 'statusline' includes an item that doesn't cause automatic updating. *N* When entering a number: Remove the last digit. Note: if you like to use for this, add this mapping to your .vimrc: > :map CTRL-V CTRL-V < See |:fixdel| if your key does not do what you want. :as[cii] or *ga* *:as* *:ascii* ga Print the ascii value of the character under the cursor in decimal, hexadecimal and octal. For example, when the cursor is on a 'R': 82, Hex 52, Octal 122 ~ When the character is a non-standard ASCII character, but printable according to the 'isprint' option, the non-printable version is also given. When the character is larger than 127, the form is also printed. For example: <~A> 129, Hex 81, Octal 201 ~

<|~> 254, Hex fe, Octal 376 ~ (where

is a special character) The character in a file is stored internally as , but it will be shown as: <^@> 0, Hex 00, Octal 000 ~ Mnemonic: Get Ascii value. {not in Vi} *g8* g8 Print the hex values of the bytes used in the character under the cursor, assuming it is in |UTF-8| encoding. This also shows composing characters. Example of a character with three composing characters: e0 b8 81 + e0 b8 b9 + e0 b9 89 ~ {not in Vi} *:p* *:pr* *:print* :[range]p[rint] Print [range] lines (default current line). Note: If you are looking for a way to print your text file, you need an external program for that. In the GUI you can use the File.Print menu entry. (For printing on paper see |:hardcopy|) :[range]p[rint] {count} Print {count} lines, starting with [range] (default current line |cmdline-ranges|). *:P* *:Print* :[range]P[rint] [count] Just as ":print". Was apparently added to Vi for people that keep the shift key pressed too long... *:l* *:list* :[range]l[ist] [count] Same as :print, but display unprintable characters with '^'. *:nu* *:number* :[range]nu[mber] [count] Same as :print, but precede each line with its line number. (See also 'highlight' option). *:#* :[range]# [count] synonym for :number. *:z* *E144* :{range}z[+-^.=]{count} Display several lines of text surrounding the line specified with {range}, or around the current line if there is no {range}. If there is a {count}, that's how many lines you'll see; otherwise, the current window size is used. :z can be used either alone or followed by any of several punctuation marks. These have the following effect: mark first line last line new location ~ ---- ---------- --------- ------------ + current line 1 scr forward 1 scr forward - 1 scr back current line current line ^ 2 scr back 1 scr back 1 scr back . 1/2 scr back 1/2 scr fwd 1/2 scr fwd = 1/2 scr back 1/2 scr fwd current line Specifying no mark at all is the same as "+". If the mark is "=", a line of dashes is printed around the current line. :{range}z#[+-^.=]{count} *:z#* Like ":z", but number the lines. {not in all versions of Vi, not with these arguments} *:=* := Print the last line number. :{range}= Prints the last line number in {range}. For example, this prints the current line number: > :.= :norm[al][!] {commands} *:norm* *:normal* Execute Normal mode commands {commands}. This makes it possible to execute Normal mode commands typed on the command-line. {commands} is executed like it is typed. For undo all commands are undone together. If the [!] is given, mappings will not be used. {commands} should be a complete command. If {commands} does not finish a command, the last one will be aborted as if or was typed. The display isn't updated while ":normal" is busy. This implies that an insert command must be completed (to start Insert mode, see |:startinsert|). A ":" command must be completed as well. {commands} cannot start with a space. Put a 1 (one) before it, 1 space is one space. The 'insertmode' option is ignored for {commands}. This command cannot be followed by another command, since any '|' is considered part of the command. This command can be used recursively, but the depth is limited by 'maxmapdepth'. When this command is called from a non-remappable mapping |:noremap|, the argument can be mapped anyway. An alternative is to use |:execute|, which uses an expression as argument. This allows the use of printable characters. Example: > :exe "normal \\" < {not in Vi, of course} {not available when the |+ex_extra| feature was disabled at compile time} :{range}norm[al][!] {commands} *:normal-range* Execute Normal mode commands {commands} for each line in the {range}. Before executing the {commands}, the cursor is positioned in the first column of the range, for each line. Otherwise it's the same as the ":normal" command without a range. {not in Vi} Not available when |+ex_extra| feature was disabled at compile time. *:sh* *:shell* *E371* :sh[ell] This command starts a shell. When the shell exits (after the "exit" command) you return to Vim. The name for the shell command comes from 'shell' option. *E360* Note: This doesn't work when Vim on the Amiga was started in QuickFix mode from a compiler, because the compiler will have set stdin to a non-interactive mode. *:!cmd* *:!* *E34* :!{cmd} Execute {cmd} with the shell. See also the 'shell' and 'shelltype' option. Any '!' in {cmd} is replaced with the previous external command (see also 'cpoptions'). But not when there is a backslash before the '!', then that backslash is removed. Example: ":!ls" followed by ":!echo ! \! \\!" executes "echo ls ! \!". After the command has been executed, the timestamp of the current file is checked |timestamp|. There cannot be a '|' in {cmd}, see |:bar|. A newline character ends {cmd}, what follows is interpreted as a following ":" command. However, if there is a backslash before the newline it is removed and {cmd} continues. It doesn't matter how many backslashes are before the newline, only one is removed. On Unix the command normally runs in a non-interactive shell. If you want an interactive shell to be used (to use aliases) set 'shellcmdflag' to "-ic". For Win32 also see |:!start|. Vim redraws the screen after the command is finished, because it may have printed any text. This requires a hit-enter prompt, so that you can read any messages. To avoid this use: > :silent !{cmd} < The screen is not redrawn then, thus you have to use CTRL-L or ":redraw!" if the command did display something. Also see |shell-window|. *:!!* :!! Repeat last ":!{cmd}". *:ve* *:version* :ve[rsion] Print the version number of the editor. If the compiler used understands "__DATE__" the compilation date is mentioned. Otherwise a fixed release-date is shown. The following lines contain information about which features were enabled when Vim was compiled. When there is a preceding '+', the feature is included, when there is a '-' it is excluded. To change this, you have to edit feature.h and recompile Vim. To check for this in an expression, see |has()|. Here is an overview of the features. The first column shows the smallest version in which they are included: T tiny S small N normal B big H huge m manually enabled or depends on other features (none) system dependent Thus if a feature is marked with "N", it is included in the normal, big and huge versions of Vim. *+feature-list* *+ARP* Amiga only: ARP support included B *+arabic* |Arabic| language support N *+autocmd* |:autocmd|, automatic commands m *+balloon_eval* |balloon-eval| support N *+browse* |:browse| command N *+builtin_terms* some terminals builtin |builtin-terms| B *++builtin_terms* maximal terminals builtin |builtin-terms| N *+byte_offset* support for 'o' flag in 'statusline' option, "go" and ":goto" commands. N *+cindent* |'cindent'|, C indenting N *+clientserver* Unix and Win32: Remote invocation |clientserver| *+clipboard* |clipboard| support N *+cmdline_compl* command line completion |cmdline-completion| N *+cmdline_hist* command line history |cmdline-history| N *+cmdline_info* |'showcmd'| and |'ruler'| N *+comments* |'comments'| support N *+cryptv* encryption support |encryption| B *+cscope* |cscope| support N *+dialog_gui* Support for |:confirm| with GUI dialog. N *+dialog_con* Support for |:confirm| with console dialog. N *+dialog_con_gui* Support for |:confirm| with GUI and console dialog. N *+diff* |vimdiff| and 'diff' N *+digraphs* |digraphs| *E196* *+dnd* Support for DnD into the "~ register |quote_~|. B *+emacs_tags* |emacs-tags| files N *+eval* expression evaluation |eval.txt| N *+ex_extra* Vim's extra Ex commands: |:center|, |:left|, |:normal|, |:retab| and |:right| N *+extra_search* |'hlsearch'| and |'incsearch'| options. B *+farsi* |farsi| language N *+file_in_path* |gf|, |CTRL-W_f| and || N *+find_in_path* include file searches: |[I|, |:isearch|, |CTRL-W_CTRL-I|, |:checkpath|, etc. N *+folding* |folding| *+footer* |gui-footer| *+fork* Unix only: |fork| shell commands N *+gettext* message translations |multi-lang| *+GUI_Athena* Unix only: Athena |GUI| *+GUI_neXtaw* Unix only: neXtaw |GUI| *+GUI_BeOS* BeOS only: BeOS |GUI| *+GUI_GTK* Unix only: GTK+ |GUI| *+GUI_Motif* Unix only: Motif |GUI| *+GUI_Photon* QNX only: Photon |GUI| m *+hangul_input* Hangul input support |hangul| *+iconv* Compiled with the |iconv()| function, may have |/dyn| N *+insert_expand* |insert_expand| Insert mode completion N *+jumplist* |jumplist| B *+keymap* |'keymap'| B *+langmap* |'langmap'| N *+libcall* |libcall()| N *+linebreak* |'linebreak'|, |'breakat'| and |'showbreak'| N *+lispindent* |'lisp'| N *+listcmds* Vim commands for the list of buffers |buffer-hidden| and argument list |:argdelete| N *+localmap* Support for mappings local to a buffer |:map-local| N *+menu* |:menu| N *+mksession* |:mksession| N *+modify_fname* |filename-modifiers| N *+mouse* Mouse handling |mouse-using| N *+mouseshape* |'mouseshape'| B *+mouse_dec* Unix only: Dec terminal mouse handling |dec-mouse| N *+mouse_gpm* Unix only: Linux console mouse handling |gpm-mouse| B *+mouse_netterm* Unix only: netterm mouse handling |netterm-mouse| N *+mouse_pterm* QNX only: pterm mouse handling |qnx-terminal| N *+mouse_xterm* Unix only: xterm mouse handling |xterm-mouse| B *+multi_byte* Korean and other languages |multibyte| *+multi_byte_ime* Win32 input method for multibyte chars |multibyte-ime| N *+multi_lang* non-English language support |multi-lang| m *+netbeans_intg* |netbeans| m *+ole* Win32 GUI only: |ole-interface| *+osfiletype* Support for the 'osfiletype' option and filetype checking in automatic commands. |autocmd-osfiletypes| N *+path_extra* Up/downwards search in 'path' and 'tags' m *+perl* Perl interface |perl| m *+perl/dyn* Perl interface |perl-dynamic| |/dyn| *+postscript* |:hardcopy| writes a PostScript file N *+printer* |:hardcopy| command m *+python* Python interface |python| m *+python/dyn* Python interface |python-dynamic| |/dyn| N *+quickfix* |:make| and |quickfix| commands B *+rightleft* Right to left typing |'rightleft'| m *+ruby* Ruby interface |ruby| m *+ruby/dyn* Ruby interface |ruby-dynamic| |/dyn| N *+scrollbind* |'scrollbind'| B *+signs* |:sign| N *+smartindent* |'smartindent'| m *+sniff* SNiFF interface |sniff| N *+statusline* Options 'statusline', 'rulerformat' and special formats of 'titlestring' and 'iconstring' m *+sun_workshop* |workshop| N *+syntax* Syntax highlighting |syntax| *+system()* Unix only: opposite of |+fork| N *+tag_binary* binary searching in tags file |tag-binary-search| N *+tag_old_static* old method for static tags |tag-old-static| m *+tag_any_white* any white space allowed in tags file |tag-any-white| m *+tcl* Tcl interface |tcl| m *+tcl/dyn* Tcl interface |tcl-dynamic| |/dyn| *+terminfo* uses |terminfo| instead of termcap N *+termresponse* support for |t_RV| and |v:termresponse| N *+textobjects* |text-objects| selection *+tgetent* non-Unix only: able to use external termcap N *+title* Setting the window title |'title'| N *+toolbar* |gui-toolbar| N *+user_commands* User-defined commands. |user-commands| N *+viminfo* |'viminfo'| N *+vertsplit* Vertically split windows |:vsplit| N *+virtualedit* |'virtualedit'| S *+visual* Visual mode |Visual-mode| N *+visualextra* extra Visual mode commands |blockwise-operators| N *+vreplace* |gR| and |gr| N *+wildignore* |'wildignore'| N *+wildmenu* |'wildmenu'| S *+windows* more than one window m *+writebackup* |'writebackup'| is default on m *+xim* X input method |xim| *+xfontset* X fontset support |xfontset| *+xsmp* XSMP (X session management) support *+xsmp_interact* interactive XSMP (X session management) support N *+xterm_clipboard* Unix only: xterm clipboard handling m *+xterm_save* save and restore xterm screen |xterm-screens| N *+X11* Unix only: can restore window title |X11| */dyn* *E370* *E448* To some of the features "/dyn" is added when the feature is only available when the related library can be dynamically loaded. :ve[rsion] {nr} Is now ignored. This was previously used to check the version number of a .vimrc file. It was removed, because you can now use the ":if" command for version-dependent behavior. {not in Vi} *:redi* *:redir* :redi[r][!] > {file} Redirect messages to file {file}. The messages which are the output of commands are written to that file, until redirection ends. The messages are also still shown on the screen. When [!] is included, an existing file is overwritten. When [!] is omitted, and {file} exists, this command fails. Only one ":redir" can be active at a time. Calls to ":redir" will close any active redirection before starting redirection to the new target. To stop the messages and commands from being echoed to the screen, put the commands in a function and call it with ":silent call Function()". {not in Vi} :redi[r] >> {file} Redirect messages to file {file}. Append if {file} already exists. {not in Vi} :redi[r] @{a-zA-Z} Redirect messages to register {a-z}. Append to the contents of the register if its name is given uppercase {A-Z}. {not in Vi} :redi[r] @* Redirect messages to the clipboard. {not in Vi} :redi[r] @" Redirect messages to the unnamed register. {not in Vi} :redi[r] END End redirecting messages. {not in Vi} *:sil* *:silent* :sil[ent][!] {command} Execute {command} silently. Normal messages will not be given or added to the message history. When [!] is added, error messages will also be skipped, and commands and mappings will not be aborted when an error is detected. |v:errmsg| is still set. When [!] is not used, an error message will cause further messages to be displayed normally. Redirection, started with |:redir|, will continue as usual, although there might be small differences. This will allow redirecting the output of a command without seeing it on the screen. Example: > :redir >/tmp/foobar :silent g/Aap/p :redir END < To execute a Normal mode command silently, use the |:normal| command. For example, to search for a string without messages: > :silent exe "normal /path\" < ":silent!" is useful to execute a command that may fail, but the failure is to be ignored. Example: > :let v:errmsg = "" :silent! /^begin :if v:errmsg != "" : ... pattern was not found < ":silent" will also avoid the hit-enter prompt. When using this for an external command, this may cause the screen to be messed up. Use |CTRL-L| to clean it up then. ":silent menu ..." defines a menu that will not echo a Command-line command. The command will still produce messages though. Use ":silent" in the command itself to avoid that: ":silent menu .... :silent command". *:verb* *:verbose* :[count]verb[ose] {command} Execute {command} with 'verbose' set to [count]. If [count] is omitted one is used. The additional use of ":silent" makes messages generated but not displayed. The combination of ":silent" and ":verbose" can be used to generate messages and check them with |v:statusmsg| and friends. For example: > :let v:statusmsg = "" :silent verbose runtime foobar.vim :if v:statusmsg != "" : " foobar.vim could not be found :endif < When concatenating another command, the ":verbose" only applies to the first one: > :4verbose set verbose | set verbose < verbose=4 ~ verbose=0 ~ *K* K Run a program to lookup the keyword under the cursor. The name of the program is given with the 'keywordprg' (kp) option (default is "man"). The keyword is formed of letters, numbers and the characters in 'iskeyword'. The keyword under or right of the cursor is used. The same can be done with the command > :!{program} {keyword} < There is an example of a program to use in the tools directory of Vim. It is called 'ref' and does a simple spelling check. Special cases: - If 'keywordprg' is empty, the ":help" command is used. It's a good idea to include more characters in 'iskeyword' then, to be able to find more help. - When 'keywordprg' is equal to "man", a count before "K" is inserted after the "man" command and before the keyword. For example, using "2K" while the cursor is on "mkdir", results in: > !man 2 mkdir < - When 'keywordprg' is equal to "man -s", a count before "K" is inserted after the "-s". If there is no count, the "-s" is removed. {not in Vi} *v_K* {Visual}K Like "K", but use the visually highlighted text for the keyword. Only works when the highlighted text is not more than one line. {not in Vi} [N]gs *gs* *:sl* *:sleep* :[N]sl[eep] [N] [m] Do nothing for [N] seconds. When [m] is included, sleep for [N] milliseconds. The count for "gs" always uses seconds. The default is one second. > :sleep "sleep for one second :5sleep "sleep for five seconds :sleep 100m "sleep for a hundred milliseconds 10gs "sleep for ten seconds < Can be interrupted with CTRL-C (CTRL-Break on MS-DOS). "gs" stands for "goto sleep". While sleeping the cursor is positioned in the text (if visible). {not in Vi} *g_CTRL-A* g CTRL-A Only when Vim was compiled with MEM_PROFILING defined (which is very rare): print memory usage statistics. Only useful for debugging Vim. ============================================================================== 2. Online help *online-help* *help* ** *:h* *:help* ** *i_* *i_* or :h[elp] Open a window and display the help file in read-only mode. If there is a help window open already, use that one. Otherwise, if the current window uses the full width of the screen or is at least 80 characters wide, the help window will appear just above the current window. Otherwise the new window is put at the very top. The 'helplang' option is used to select a language, if the main help file is available in several languages. {not in Vi} *{subject}* *E149* *E661* :h[elp] {subject} Like ":help", additionally jump to the tag {subject}. {subject} can include wildcards like "*", "?" and "[a-z]": :help z? jump to help for any "z" command :help z. jump to the help for "z." If there is no full match for the pattern, or there are several matches, the "best" match will be used. A sophisticated algorithm is used to decide which match is better than another one. These items are considered in the computation: - A match with same case is much better than a match with different case. - A match that starts after a non-alphanumeric character is better than a match in the middle of a word. - A match at or near the beginning of the tag is better than a match further on. - The more alphanumeric characters match, the better. - The shorter the length of the match, the better. The 'helplang' option is used to select a language, if the {subject} is available in several languages. To find a tag in a specific language, append "@ab", where "ab" is the two-letter language code. See |help-translated|. Note that the longer the {subject} you give, the less matches will be found. You can get an idea how this all works by using commandline completion (type CTRL-D after ":help subject"). If there are several matches, you can have them listed by hitting CTRL-D. Example: > :help cont < To use a regexp |pattern|, first do ":help" and then use ":tag {pattern}" in the help window. The ":tnext" command can then be used to jump to other matches, "tselect" to list matches and choose one. > :help index| :tse z. < This command can be followed by '|' and another command, but you don't need to escape the '|' inside a help command. So these both work: > :help | :help k| only < Note that a space before the '|' is seen as part of the ":help" argument. You can also use or to separate the help command from a following command. You need to type CTRL-V first to insert the or . Example: > :help soonly < {not in Vi} :h[elp]! [subject] Like ":help", but in non-English help files prefer to find a tag in a file with the same language as the current file. See |help-translated|. *:helpg* *:helpgrep* :helpg[rep] {pattern} Search all help text files and make a list of lines in which {pattern} matches. Jumps to the first match. You can navigate through the matches with the |quickfix| commands, e.g., |:cnext| to jump to the next one. Or use |:cwindow| to get the list of matches in the quickfix window. {pattern} is used as a Vim regexp |pattern|. 'ignorecase' is not used, add "\c" to ignore case. Example for case sensitive search: > :helpgrep Uganda < Example for case ignoring search: > :helpgrep uganda\c < Cannot be followed by another command, everything is used as part of the pattern. But you can use |:execute| when needed. Compressed help files will not be searched (Debian compresses the help files). {not in Vi} When no argument is given to |:help| the file given with the 'helpfile' option will be opened. Otherwise the specified tag is searched for in all "doc/tags" files in the directories specified in the 'runtimepath' option. The initial height of the help window can be set with the 'helpheight' option (default 20). Jump to specific subjects by using tags. This can be done in two ways: - Use the "CTRL-]" command while standing on the name of a command or option. This only works when the tag is a keyword. "" and "g" work just like "CTRL-]". - use the ":ta {subject}" command. This also works with non-keyword characters. Use CTRL-T or CTRL-O to jump back. Use ":q" to close the help window. If there are several matches for an item you are looking for, this is how you can jump to each one of them: 1. Open a help window 2. Use the ":tag" command with a slash prepended to the tag. E.g.: > :tag /min 3. Use ":tnext" to jump to the next matching tag. It is possible to add help files for plugins and other items. You don't need to change the distributed help files for that. See |add-local-help|. To write a local help file, see |write-local-help|. Note that the title lines from the local help files are automagically added to the "LOCAL ADDITIONS" section in the "help.txt" help file |local-additions|. This is done when viewing the file in Vim, the file itself is not changed. It is done by going through all help files and obtaining the first line of each file. The files in $VIMRUNTIME/doc are skipped. *help-xterm-window* If you want to have the help in another xterm window, you could use this command: > :!xterm -e vim +help & < *:helpfind* *:helpf* :helpf[ind] Like |:help|, but use a dialog to enter the argument. Only for backwards compatibility. It now executes the ToolBar.FindHelp menu entry instead of using a builtin dialog. {only when compiled with |+GUI_GTK|} < {not in Vi} *:helpt* *:helptags* *E154* *E150* *E151* *E152* *E153* *E670* :helpt[ags] {dir} Generate the help tags file(s) for directory {dir}. All "*.txt" and "*.??x" files in the directory are scanned for a help tag definition in between stars. The "*.??x" files are for translated docs, they generate the "tags-??" file, see |help-translated|. The generated tags files are sorted. When there are duplicates an error message is given. An existing tags file is silently overwritten. To rebuild the help tags in the runtime directory (requires write permission there): > :helptags $VIMRUNTIME/doc < {not in Vi} TRANSLATED HELP *help-translated* It is possible to add translated help files, next to the original English help files. Vim will search for all help in "doc" directories in 'runtimepath'. This is only available when compiled with the |+multi_lang| feature. A set of translated help files consists of these files: help.abx howto.abx ... tags-ab "ab" is the two-letter language code. Thus for Italian the names are: help.itx howto.itx ... tags-it The 'helplang' option can be set to the preferred language(s). The default is set according to the environment. Vim will first try to find a matching tag in the preferred language(s). English is used when it cannot be found. To find a tag in a specific language, append "@ab" to a tag, where "ab" is the two-letter language code. Example: > :he user-manual@it :he user-manual@en The first one finds the Italian user manual, even when 'helplang' is empty. The second one finds the English user manual, even when 'helplang' is set to "it". When using command-line completion for the ":help" command, the "@en" extention is only shown when a tag exists for multiple languages. When the tag only exists for English "@en" is omitted. When using |CTRL-]| or ":help!" in a non-English help file Vim will try to find the tag in the same language. If not found then 'helplang' will be used to select a language. Help files must use latin1 or utf-8 encoding. Vim assumes the encoding is utf-8 when finding non-ASCII characters in the first line. Thus you must translate the header with "For Vim version". The same encoding must be used for the help files of one language in one directory. You can use a different encoding for different languages and use a different encoding for help files of the same language but in a different directory. Hints for translators: - Do not translate the tags. This makes it possible to use 'helplang' to specify the preferred language. You may add new tags in your language. - When you do not translate a part of a file, add tags to the English version, using the "tag@en" notation. - Make a package with all the files and the tags file available for download. Users can drop it in one of the "doc" directories and start use it. Report this to Bram, so that he can add a link on www.vim.org. - Use the |:helptags| command to generate the tags files. It will find all languages in the specified directory. ============================================================================== 3. Printing *printing* On MS-Windows Vim can print your text on any installed printer. On other systems a PostScript file is produced. This can be directly sent to a PostScript printer. For other printers a program like ghostscript needs to be used. 3.1 PostScript Printing |postscript-printing| 3.2 PostScript Printing Encoding |postscript-print-encoding| 3.3 PostScript Printing Troubleshooting |postscript-print-trouble| 3.4 PostScript Utilities |postscript-print-util| 3.5 Formfeed Characters |printing-formfeed| {not in Vi} {only available when compiled with |+printer| feature} *:ha* *:hardcopy* *E237* *E238* *E324* :[range]ha[rdcopy][!] [arguments] Send [range] lines (default whole file) to the printer. On MS-Windows a dialog is displayed to allow selection of printer, paper size etc. To skip the dialog, use the [!]. In this case the printer defined by 'printdevice' is used, or, if 'printdevice' is empty, the system default printer. For systems other than MS-Windows, PostScript is written in a temp file and 'printexpr' is used to actually print it. Then [arguments] can be used by 'printexpr' through |v:cmdarg|. Otherwise [arguments] is ignored. 'printoptions' can be used to specify paper size, duplex, etc. :[range]ha[rdcopy][!] >{filename} As above, but write the resulting PostScript in file {filename}. Things like "%" are expanded |cmdline-special| Careful: An existing file is silently overwritten. {only available when compiled with the |+postscript| feature} On MS-Windows use the "print to file" feature of the printer driver. Progress is displayed during printing as a page number and a percentage. To abort printing use the interrupt key (CTRL-C or, on MS-systems, CTRL-Break). Printer output is controlled by the 'printfont' and 'printoptions' options. 'printheader' specifies the format of a page header. The printed file is always limited to the selected margins, irrespective of the current window's 'wrap' or 'linebreak' settings. The "wrap" item in 'printoptions' can be used to switch wrapping off. The current highlighting colors are used in the printout, with the following considerations: 1) The normal background is always rendered as white (i.e. blank paper.) 2) White text or the default foreground is rendered as black, so that it shows up! 3) If 'background' is "dark", then the colours are darkened to compensate for the fact that otherwise they would be too bright to show up clearly on white paper. 3.1 PostScript Printing *postscript-printing* *E455* *E456* *E457* *E624* Provided you have enough disk space there should be no problems generating a PostScript file. You need to have the runtime files correctly installed (if you can find the help files, they probably are). There are currently a number of limitations with PostScript printing: - 'printfont' - The font name is ignored (the Courier family is always used - it should be available on all PostScript printers) but the font size is used. - 'printoptions' - The duplex setting is used when generating PostScript output, but it is up to the printer to take notice of the setting. If the printer does not support duplex printing then it should be silently ignored. Some printers, however, don't print at all. - 8-bit support - While a number of 8-bit print character encodings are supported it is possible that some characters will not print. Whether a character will print depends on the font in the printer knowing the character. Missing characters will be replaced with an upside down question mark, or a space if that character is also not known by the font. It may be possible to get all the characters in an encoding to print by installing a new version of the Courier font family. - Multi-byte support - Currently VIM will try to convert multi-byte characters to the 8-bit encoding specified by 'printencoding' (or latin1 if it is empty). Any characters that are not successfully converted are shown as unknown characters. Printing will fail if VIM cannot convert the multi-byte to the 8-bit encoding. 3.2 Custom 8-bit Print Character Encodings *postscript-print-encoding* *E618* *E619* To use your own print character encoding when printing 8-bit character data you need to define your own PostScript font encoding vector. Details on how to to define a font encoding vector is beyond the scope of this help file, but you can find details in the PostScript Language Reference Manual, 3rd Edition, published by Addison-Wesley and available in PDF form at http://www.adobe.com/. The following describes what you need to do for VIM to locate and use your print character encoding. i. Decide on a unique name for your encoding vector, one that does not clash with any of the recognized or standard encoding names that VIM uses (see |encoding-names| for a list), and that no one else is likely to use. ii. Copy $VIMRUNTIME/print/latin1.ps to the print subdirectory in your 'runtimepath' and rename it with your unique name. iii. Edit your renamed copy of latin1.ps, replacing all occurrences of latin1 with your unique name (don't forget the line starting %%Title:), and modify the array of glyph names to define your new encoding vector. The array must have exactly 256 entries or you will not be able to print! iv. Within VIM, set 'printencoding' to your unique encoding name and then print your file. VIM will now use your custom print character encoding. VIM will report an error with the resource file if you change the order or content of the first 3 lines, other than the name of the encoding on the line starting %%Title: or the version number on the line starting %%Version:. [Technical explanation for those that know PostScript - VIM looks for a file with the same name as the encoding it will use when printing. The file defines a new PostScript Encoding resource called /VIM-name, where name is the print character encoding VIM will use.] 3.3 PostScript Printing Troubleshooting *postscript-print-trouble* *E621* Usually the only sign of a problem when printing with PostScript is that your printout does not appear. If you are lucky you may get a printed page that tells you the PostScript operator that generated the error that prevented the print job completing. There are a number of possible causes as to why the printing may have failed: - Wrong version of the prolog resource file. The prolog resource file contains some PostScript that VIM needs to be able to print. Each version of VIM needs one particular version. Make sure you have correctly installed the runtime files, and don't have any old versions of a file called prolog in the print directory in your 'runtimepath' directory. - Paper size. Some PostScript printers will abort printing a file if they do not support the requested paper size. By default VIM uses A4 paper. Find out what size paper your printer normally uses and set the appropriate paper size with 'printoptions'. If you cannot find the name of the paper used, measure a sheet and compare it with the table of supported paper sizes listed for 'printoptions', using the paper that is closest in both width AND height. Note: The dimensions of actual paper may vary slightly from the ones listed. If there is no paper listed close enough, then you may want to try psresize from PSUtils, discussed below. - Two-sided printing (duplex). Normally a PostScript printer that does not support two-sided printing will ignore any request to do it. However, some printers may abort the job altogether. Try printing with duplex turned off. Note: Duplex prints can be achieved manually using PS utils - see below. - Collated printing. As with Duplex printing, most PostScript printers that do not support collating printouts will ignore a request to do so. Some may not. Try printing with collation turned off. - Syntax highlighting. Some print management code may prevent the generated PostScript file from being printed on a black and white printer when syntax highlighting is turned on, even if solid black is the only color used. Try printing with syntax highlighting turned off. A safe printoptions setting to try is: > :set printoptions=paper:A4,duplex:off,collate:n,syntax:n Replace "A4" with the paper size that best matches your printer paper. 3.4 PostScript Utilities *postscript-print-util* 3.4.1 Ghostscript Ghostscript is a PostScript and PDF interpreter that can be used to display and print on non-PostScript printers PostScript and PDF files. It can also generate PDF files from PostScript. Ghostscript will run on a wide variety of platforms. There are three available versions: - AFPL Ghostscript (formerly Aladdin Ghostscript) which is free for non-commercial use. It can be obtained from: http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~ghost/ - GNU Ghostscript which is available under the GNU General Public License. It can be obtained from: ftp://mirror.cs.wisc.edu/pub/mirrors/ghost/gnu/ - A commercial version for inclusion in commercial products. Additional information on Ghostscript can also be found at: http://www.ghostscript.com/ Support for a number of non PostScript printers is provided in the distribution as standard, but if you cannot find support for your printer check the Ghostscript site for other printers not included by default. 3.4.2 Ghostscript Previewers. The interface to Ghostscript is very primitive so a number of graphical front ends have been created. These allow easier PostScript file selection, previewing at different zoom levels, and printing. Check supplied documentation for full details. X11 - Ghostview. Obtainable from: http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~ghost/gv/ - gv. Derived from Ghostview. Obtainable from: http://wwwthep.physik.uni-mainz.de/~plass/gv/ Copies (possibly not the most recent) can be found at: http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~ghost/gv/ OpenVMS - Is apparently supported in the main code now (untested). See: http://wwwthep.physik.uni-mainz.de/~plass/gv/ Windows and OS/2 - GSview. Obtainable from: http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~ghost/gsview/ DOS - ps_view. Obtainable from: ftp://ftp.pg.gda.pl/pub/TeX/support/ps_view/ ftp://ftp.dante.de/tex-archive/support/ps_view/ Linux - GSview. Linux version of the popular Windows and OS/2 previewer. Obtainable from: http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~ghost/gsview/ - BMV. Different from Ghostview and gv in that it doesn't use X but svgalib. Obtainable from: ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/apps/graphics/viewers/svga/bmv-1.2.tgz 3.4.3 PSUtils PSUtils is a collection of utility programs for manipulating PostScript documents. Binary distributions are available for many platforms, as well as the full source. PSUtils can be found at: http://knackered.org/angus/psutils The utilities of interest include: - psnup. Convert PS files for N-up printing. - psselect. Select page range and order of printing. - psresize. Change the page size. - psbook. Reorder and lay out pages ready for making a book. The output of one program can be used as the input to the next, allowing for complex print document creation. N-UP PRINTING The psnup utility takes an existing PostScript file generated from VIM and convert it to an n-up version. The simplest way to create a 2-up printout is to first create a PostScript file with: > :hardcopy > test.ps Then on your command line execute: > psnup -n 2 test.ps final.ps Note: You may get warnings from some Ghostscript previewers for files produced by psnup - these may safely be ignored. Finally print the file final.ps to your PostScript printer with your platform's print command. (You will need to delete the two PostScript files afterwards yourself.) 'printexpr' could be modified to perform this extra step before printing. ALTERNATE DUPLEX PRINTING It is possible to achieve a poor man's version of duplex printing using the PS utility psselect. This utility has options -e and -o for printing just the even or odd pages of a PS file respectively. First generate a PS file with the 'hardcopy' command, then generate a new files with all the odd and even numbered pages with: > psselect -o test.ps odd.ps psselect -e test.ps even.ps Next print odd.ps with your platform's normal print command. Then take the print output, turn it over and place it back in the paper feeder. Now print even.ps with your platform's print command. All the even pages should now appear on the back of the odd pages. There a couple of points to bear in mind: 1. Position of the first page. If the first page is on top of the printout when printing the odd pages then you need to reverse the order that the odd pages are printed. This can be done with the -r option to psselect. This will ensure page 2 is printed on the back of page 1. Note: it is better to reverse the odd numbered pages rather than the even numbered in case there are an odd number of pages in the original PS file. 2. Paper flipping. When turning over the paper with the odd pages printed on them you may have to either flip them horizontally (along the long edge) or vertically (along the short edge), as well as possibly rotating them 180 degrees. All this depends on the printer - it will be more obvious for desktop ink jets than for small office laser printers where the paper path is hidden from view. 3.5 Formfeed Characters *printing-formfeed* By default VIM does not do any special processing of |formfeed| control characters. Setting the 'printoptions' formfeed item will make VIM recognize formfeed characters and continue printing the current line at the beginning of the first line on a new page. The use of formfeed characters provides rudimentary print control but there are certain things to be aware of. VIM will always start printing a line (including a line number if enabled) containing a formfeed character, even if it is the first character on the line. This means if a line starting with a formfeed character is the first line of a page then VIM will print a blank page. Since the line number is printed at the start of printing the line containing the formfeed character, the remainder of the line printed on the new page will not have a line number printed for it (in the same way as the wrapped lines of a long line when wrap in 'printoptions' is enabled). If the formfeed character is the last character on a line, then printing will continue on the second line of the new page, not the first. This is due to VIM processing the end of the line after the formfeed character and moving down a line to continue printing. Due to the points made above it is recommended that when formfeed character processing is enabled, printing of line numbers is disabled, and that form feed characters are not the last character on a line. Even then you may need to adjust the number of lines before a formfeed character to prevent accidental blank pages. ============================================================================== 4. Using Vim like less or more *less* If you use the less or more program to view a file, you don't get syntax highlighting. Thus you would like to use Vim instead. You can do this by using the shell script "$VIMRUNTIME/macros/less.sh". This shell script uses the Vim script "$VIMRUNTIME/macros/less.vim". It sets up mappings to simulate the commands that less supports. Otherwise, you can still use the Vim commands. This isn't perfect. For example, when viewing a short file Vim will still use the whole screen. But it works good enough for most uses, and you get syntax highlighting. The "h" key will give you a short overview of the available commands. vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl: