This is an old revision of the document!
Table of Contents
Vim Cheat Sheet
Overview
Vim is a powerful, lightweight text editor which is primarily keyboard driven. Because it is keyboard-driven its power is often not fully realized. This cheat sheet will explore some of vim's features as well as serve as a quick reference.
Vim has three main modes.
- Navigation mode - The default mode is a navigation mode used to move around the document.
- Edit mode - Using an editing command puts vim into an edit mode where everything typed is either inserted or overwritten into the document. ESC will exit edit mode.
- Highlight mode - This similar to navigation mode but everything from the first position of the cursor to the current position is selected.
Navigation
In navigation mode, the following can be used to move around
- < h \/ j k ^ l > - Move by one letter - : h-left, l-right, j-down, k-up
- w b e - Move by words - w - next word, b - prev word, e - end of word
- W B E Move by sequences of non-blanks (Words) - W - next Word, B - prev Word, E - end of Word
- f F - find character, Find character backwards
- t T - stop before next/last instance of character
Basic Editing
- i I - insert / insert at start of line
- a A - append, append to end of line
- R - overwrite
- dd cc - delete or change line (enter insert mode)
- d c - delete or change - must be followed by an optional number and a navigation command (eg d2w). Change enters insert mode.
- o O - open new line for inserting below or above
Copying & Pasting
- d|y [n] X - delete or yank text into buffer
- dd yy - delete or yank line into buffer
- p P - paste after or before
- “[a-z] - used before delete/yank/paste to specify a register
- ”[A-Z] - used before delete/yank to append to previous contents of register
- “* ”+ - Use system clipboard as register