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Mastering Vim

You're reading from   Mastering Vim Efficient and effortless editing with Vim and Vimscript

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835081877
Length 300 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Ruslan Osipov Ruslan Osipov
Author Profile Icon Ruslan Osipov
Ruslan Osipov
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Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Getting Started 2. Chapter 2: Advanced Editing and Navigation FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: Follow the Leader Plugin Management 4. Chapter 4: Understanding Structured Text 5. Chapter 5: Build, Test, and Execute 6. Chapter 6: Refactoring Code with Regex and Macros 7. Chapter 7: Making Vim Your Own 8. Chapter 8: Transcending the Mundane with Vimscript 9. Chapter 9: Where to Go from Here 10. Index

How to execute Vimscript

Vimscript is made up of commands you run in command-line mode and really is just a sequence of Vim commands in a file. You can always execute Vimscript by running each command in command mode (the one you prefix with :), or by executing the file with commands using a :source command. Historically, Vim scripts have a .vim extension.

As you’re following along with this section, you may want to create *.vim files to experiment in. You can execute the files by running this:

:source <filename>

A much shorter version of that is this:

:so %

Here, :so is a short version of :source, and % refers to the currently open file.

For example, I just created a variables.vim file to play around with Vim’s variables. I could execute its contents with :so %:

Figure 8.1 – Output of the :so % command

Figure 8.1 – Output of the :so % command

Alternatively, I could run each command in command mode. For example, if I wanted to print the contents of a...

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