Moving around
These commands help you move around in a file:
h
Move left one character on the current line
j
Move down to the next line
k
Move up to the previous line
l
Move right one character on the current line
w
Move to the next word on the current line
e
Move to the next end of word on the current line
b
Move to the previous beginning of the word on the current line
Ctrl-f
Scroll forward one page
Ctrl-b
Scroll backward one page
If you type a number before any of these commands, then the command will be
executed that many times. This number is called a repetition count or simply count.
For example, 5h will move left five characters. You can use repetition counts with
many vi commands.
Moving to lines
The following commands help you move to specific lines in your file:
G
Moves to a specific line in your file. For example, 3G moves to line 3. With no
parameter, G moves to the last line of the file.
H
Moves relative to the top line on the screen. For example, 3H moves to the line
currently 3rd from the top of your screen.
L
Is like H, except that movement is relative to the last line on screen. Thus, 2L
moves to the second-to-last line on your screen.
Getting out of vi
One of the most useful things to know about a new editor is how to get out of it
before you do anything you shouldn't do, such as destroying an important
configuration file. You can get out of vi by saving or abandoning your changes, or by
restarting from the beginning. If these commands don't seem to work for you, you
may be in insert mode, which you will learn about in a moment. If in doubt, pressing
Esc will leave insert mode and return you to command mode where these
commands should work.
:q!
Quit editing the file and abandon all changes. This is a very common idiom for
getting out of trouble.
:w!
Write the file (whether modified or not). Attempt to overwrite existing files or
read-only or other unwritable files. You may give a filename as a parameter,
and that file will be written instead of the one your started with. It's generally
safer to omit the ! unless you know what you're doing here.
ZZ
Write the file if it has been modified. Then exit. This is a very common idiom for
normal vi exit.
:e!
Edit the current disk copy of the file. This will reload the file, abandoning
changes you have made. You may also use this if the disk copy has changed
for some other reason and you want the latest version.
:!
Run a shell command. Type the command and press Enter. When the
command completes, you will see the output and a prompt to return to vi
editing.
Notes:
1. When you type the colon (:), your cursor will move to the bottom line of
your screen where you can type in the command and any parameters.
2. If you omit the exclamation point from the above commands, you may
receive an error message such as one saying changes have not been
saved, or the output file cannot be written (for example, you are editing a
read-only file).
3. The : commands have longer forms (:quit, :write, :edit), but the longer
forms are seldom used.
vi modes
The vi editor has two modes of operation:
Command mode
In command mode, you move around the file and perform editing operations
such as searching for text, deleting text, changing text, and so on. You usually
start in command mode.
Insert mode
In insert mode, you type new text into the file at the insertion point. To return to
command mode, press the Esc (Escape) key.
These two modes determine the way the editor behaves. Anything you type in insert
mode is considered text to be inserted into the file. If you are trying to type a
command and nothing happens, or the character appears under the cursor, then you
probably forgot to press Esc to escape from insert mode.
Editing text
Now that you can open a file in vi, move around it and get out, it's time to learn how
to edit the text in the file.
Modifying text
Use the following commands when you need to insert, delete, or modify text. Note
that some of these commands have an uppercase form that is similar to the
lowercase form; see the descriptions below.
i
Enter insert mode before the character at the current position. Type your text
and press Esc to return to command mode. Use I to insert at the beginning of
the current line.
a
Enter insert mode after the character at the current position. Type your text and
press Esc to return to command mode. Use A to insert at the end of the current
line.
c
Use c to change the current character and enter insert mode to type
replacement characters.
o
Open a new line for text insertion below the current line. Use O to open a line
above the current line.
cw
Delete the remainder of the current word and enter insert mode to replace it.
Use a repetition count to replace multiple words. Use c$ to replace to end of
line.
dw
Same as for cw (and c$) above, except that insert mode is not entered.
dd
Delete the current line. Use a repetition count to delete multiple lines.
x
Delete the character at the cursor position. Use a repetition count to delete
multiple characters.
p
Put the last deleted text after the current character. Use P to put it before the
current character.
xp
This combination of x and p is a useful idiom. This swaps the character at the
cursor position with the one on its right.
Searching text
You can search for text in your file using regular expressions:
/
Use / followed by a regular expression to search forward in your file.
?
Use ? followed by a regular expression to search backward in your file.
n
Use n to repeat the last search in either direction.
You may precede any of the above search commands with a number indicating a
repetition count. So 3/x will find the third occurrence of x from the current point, as
will /x followed by 2n. Similarly, 2/^e will find the second line from the current position
that starts with e.
Note that search will wrap around to the top once the bottom of file is reached.
Getting help
Another useful command in vi is the help command, which you invoke by typing
:help. Help will open inside vi; use the :q command to leave help and go back to
your work. If you want help on some particular topic, say wrapping of lines, try
adding a word after the :help command, for example: :help wrap.
Putting it together
We began by wanting to add a line to our count1.sh file. To keep the original and
save the modified version as count2.sh, we could use these vi commands once we
open the file with vi. Note that <Esc> means to press the Esc key.
Listing 3. Editor commands to add a line to count1.sh
1G
O
sleep 20<Esc>
:w! count2.sh
:q
These commands do the following:
1G
Move to the first line of the file
O
Open a new line above it and enter insert mode
sleep 20
The new text that you want to add
<Esc>
Press the Esc key to return to command mode
:w! count2.sh
Write the file to disk
:q
Close vi
Simple when you know how.
This is the last article for Exam 101 - Topic 103: GNU and UNIX commands. See our
series roadmap for a description of and link to other articles in this series.
from:
IBM Developer works
posted on 2010-03-16 15:04
chatler 阅读(318)
评论(0) 编辑 收藏 引用 所属分类:
vi