Simple Editing (Learning the vi Editor, Sixth Edition)
Chapter 2. Simple Editing
Contents:
vi Commands
Moving the Cursor
Simple Edits
More Ways to Insert Text
Joining Two Lines with J
Review of Basic vi Commands
This chapter introduces you to editing with vi, and
it is set up to be read as a tutorial.
In it you will learn how to move the cursor and how to make some simple
edits.
If you've never worked with vi, you should read
the entire chapter.Later chapters show you how to expand your skills to perform faster
and more powerful edits.
One of the biggest advantages for an adept user of vi is
that there are so many options to choose from. (One of the
biggest disadvantages for a newcomer to vi is that
there are so many different editor commands.)You can't learn vi by memorizing every single vi
command.
Start out by learning the basic commands introduced in this chapter.
Note the patterns of use that the commands have in common.As you learn
vi, be on the lookout for more tasks that you can delegate
to the editor, and then find the command that accomplishes it.
In later chapters you will learn more
advanced features of
vi, but before you can handle the advanced, you must master the
simple.This chapter covers:Moving the cursorAdding and changing textDeleting, moving, and copying textMore ways to enter insert mode
2.1. vi Commands
vi has two modes: command mode and insert mode.
As soon as you enter a file, you are in command mode, and the editor is
waiting for you to enter a command.
Commands enable you to move anywhere in the file, to perform edits,
or to enter insert mode to add new text.
Commands can also be given to exit the file (saving or
ignoring your edits) in order to return to the UNIX prompt.
You can think of the different modes as representing two different
keyboards.
In insert mode, your keyboard functions like a typewriter.
In command mode, each key has a new meaning or initiates some
instruction.
There are several ways to tell vi that you want to begin insert mode.
One of the most common is to press i.
The i doesn't appear on the screen, but after you press
it, whatever you type will appear on the
screen and will be entered into the buffer. The cursor marks the current
insertion point.
To tell vi that you want to stop inserting text, press
ESC.
Pressing
ESC
moves the cursor back one space (so that it is on the last character you typed) and returns vi to command mode.
For example, suppose you have opened a new file and want to insert
the word "introduction". If you type the keystrokes
iintroduction,
what appears on the screen is:
introduction
When you open a new file, vi starts in command mode and
interprets the first
keystroke (i) as the insert command.
All keystrokes made after the insert command are considered text
until you press
ESC.
If you need to correct a mistake while in insert mode, backspace and
type over the error. Depending on the type of terminal you are using,
backspacing may erase what you've previously typed or may just back
up over it.
In either case, whatever you back up over will be
deleted. Note that you
can't use the backspace key to back up beyond the point where you
entered insert mode.
vi has an option that lets you
define a right margin and provides a carriage return
automatically when you reach it. For right now,
while you are inserting text, press
RETURN
to break the lines.
Sometimes you don't know whether you are in insert mode or command mode.
Whenever vi does not respond as you expect, press
ESC
once or twice to check which mode you are in.
When you hear the beep, you are in command mode.
1.2. Quitting Without Saving Edits 2.2. Moving the Cursor
Copyright © 2003 O'Reilly & Associates. All rights reserved.
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