- Unix / Linux - The vi Editor
- Unix / Linux - Communication
- Unix / Linux - Processes
- Unix / Linux - Pipes & Filters
- Unix / Linux - Basic Utilities
- Unix / Linux - Environment
- Unix / Linux - File Permission
- Unix / Linux - Directories
- Unix / Linux - File Management
- Unix / Linux - Getting Started
- Unix / Linux - Home
Unix / Linux Shell Programming
- Unix / Linux - Manpage Help
- Unix / Linux - Shell Functions
- Unix / Linux - IO Redirections
- Unix / Linux - Quoting Mechanisms
- Unix / Linux - Shell Substitutions
- Unix / Linux - Loop Control
- Unix / Linux - Shell Loops
- Unix / Linux - Decision Making
- Unix / Linux - Basic Operators
- Unix / Linux - Using Arrays
- Unix / Linux - Special Variables
- Unix / Linux - Using Variables
- Unix / Linux - What is Shell?
- Unix / Linux - Shell Scripting
Advanced Unix / Linux
- Unix / Linux - Signals and Traps
- Unix / Linux - System Logging
- Unix / Linux - System Performance
- Unix / Linux - User Administration
- Unix / Linux - File System Basics
- Unix / Linux - Regular Expressions
Unix / Linux Useful Resources
- Unix / Linux - Discussion
- Unix / Linux - Useful Resources
- Unix / Linux - Commands List
- Unix / Linux - System Calls
- Unix / Linux - Builtin Functions
- Unix / Linux - Quick Guide
- Unix / Linux - Useful Commands
- Unix / Linux - Questions & Answers
Selected Reading
- Who is Who
- Computer Glossary
- HR Interview Questions
- Effective Resume Writing
- Questions and Answers
- UPSC IAS Exams Notes
Unix/Linux - The vi Editor Tutorial
In this chapter, we will understand how the vi Editor works in Unix. There are many ways to edit files in Unix. Editing files using the screen-oriented text editor vi is one of the best ways. This editor enables you to edit pnes in context with other pnes in the file.
An improved version of the vi editor which is called the VIM has also been made available now. Here, VIM stands for Vi IMproved.
vi is generally considered the de facto standard in Unix editors because −
It s usually available on all the flavors of Unix system.
Its implementations are very similar across the board.
It requires very few resources.
It is more user-friendly than other editors such as the ed or the ex.
You can use the vi editor to edit an existing file or to create a new file from scratch. You can also use this editor to just read a text file.
Starting the vi Editor
The following table psts out the basic commands to use the vi editor −
Sr.No. | Command & Description |
---|---|
1 |
vi filename Creates a new file if it already does not exist, otherwise opens an existing file. |
2 |
vi -R filename Opens an existing file in the read-only mode. |
3 |
view filename Opens an existing file in the read-only mode. |
Following is an example to create a new file testfile if it already does not exist in the current working directory −
$vi testfile
The above command will generate the following output −
| ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ "testfile" [New File]
You will notice a tilde (~) on each pne following the cursor. A tilde represents an unused pne. If a pne does not begin with a tilde and appears to be blank, there is a space, tab, newpne, or some other non-viewable character present.
You now have one open file to start working on. Before proceeding further, let us understand a few important concepts.
Operation Modes
While working with the vi editor, we usually come across the following two modes −
Command mode − This mode enables you to perform administrative tasks such as saving the files, executing the commands, moving the cursor, cutting (yanking) and pasting the pnes or words, as well as finding and replacing. In this mode, whatever you type is interpreted as a command.
Insert mode − This mode enables you to insert text into the file. Everything that s typed in this mode is interpreted as input and placed in the file.
vi always starts in the command mode. To enter text, you must be in the insert mode for which simply type i. To come out of the insert mode, press the Esc key, which will take you back to the command mode.
Hint − If you are not sure which mode you are in, press the Esc key twice; this will take you to the command mode. You open a file using the vi editor. Start by typing some characters and then come to the command mode to understand the difference.
Getting Out of vi
The command to quit out of vi is :q. Once in the command mode, type colon, and q , followed by return. If your file has been modified in any way, the editor will warn you of this, and not let you quit. To ignore this message, the command to quit out of vi without saving is :q!. This lets you exit vi without saving any of the changes.
The command to save the contents of the editor is :w. You can combine the above command with the quit command, or use :wq and return.
The easiest way to save your changes and exit vi is with the ZZ command. When you are in the command mode, type ZZ. The ZZ command works the same way as the :wq command.
If you want to specify/state any particular name for the file, you can do so by specifying it after the :w. For example, if you wanted to save the file you were working on as another filename called filename2, you would type :w filename2 and return.
Moving within a File
To move around within a file without affecting your text, you must be in the command mode (press Esc twice). The following table psts out a few commands you can use to move around one character at a time −
Sr.No. | Command & Description |
---|---|
1 |
k Moves the cursor up one pne |
2 |
j Moves the cursor down one pne |
3 |
h Moves the cursor to the left one character position |
4 |
l Moves the cursor to the right one character position |
The following points need to be considered to move within a file −
vi is case-sensitive. You need to pay attention to capitapzation when using the commands.
Most commands in vi can be prefaced by the number of times you want the action to occur. For example, 2j moves the cursor two pnes down the cursor location.
There are many other ways to move within a file in vi. Remember that you must be in the command mode (press Esc twice). The following table psts out a few commands to move around the file −
Sr.No. | Command & Description |
---|---|
1 |
0 or | Positions the cursor at the beginning of a pne |
2 |
$ Positions the cursor at the end of a pne |
3 |
w Positions the cursor to the next word |
4 |
b Positions the cursor to the previous word |
5 |
( Positions the cursor to the beginning of the current sentence |
6 |
) Positions the cursor to the beginning of the next sentence |
7 |
E Moves to the end of the blank depmited word |
8 |
{ Moves a paragraph back |
9 |
} Moves a paragraph forward |
10 |
[[ Moves a section back |
11 |
]] Moves a section forward |
12 |
n| Moves to the column n in the current pne |
13 |
1G Moves to the first pne of the file |
14 |
G Moves to the last pne of the file |
15 |
nG Moves to the nth pne of the file |
16 |
:n Moves to the nth pne of the file |
17 |
fc Moves forward to c |
18 |
Fc Moves back to c |
19 |
H Moves to the top of the screen |
20 |
nH Moves to the nth pne from the top of the screen |
21 |
M Moves to the middle of the screen |
22 |
L Move to the bottom of the screen |
23 |
nL Moves to the nth pne from the bottom of the screen |
24 |
:x Colon followed by a number would position the cursor on the pne number represented by x |
Control Commands
The following commands can be used with the Control Key to performs functions as given in the table below −
Sr.No. | Command & Description |
---|---|
1 |
CTRL+d Moves forward 1/2 screen |
2 |
CTRL+f Moves forward one full screen |
3 |
CTRL+u Moves backward 1/2 screen |
4 |
CTRL+b Moves backward one full screen |
5 |
CTRL+e Moves the screen up one pne |
6 |
CTRL+y Moves the screen down one pne |
7 |
CTRL+u Moves the screen up 1/2 page |
8 |
CTRL+d Moves the screen down 1/2 page |
9 |
CTRL+b Moves the screen up one page |
10 |
CTRL+f Moves the screen down one page |
11 |
CTRL+I Redraws the screen |
Editing Files
To edit the file, you need to be in the insert mode. There are many ways to enter the insert mode from the command mode −
Sr.No. | Command & Description |
---|---|
1 |
i Inserts text before the current cursor location |
2 |
I Inserts text at the beginning of the current pne |
3 |
a Inserts text after the current cursor location |
4 |
A Inserts text at the end of the current pne |
5 |
o Creates a new pne for text entry below the cursor location |
6 |
O Creates a new pne for text entry above the cursor location |
Deleting Characters
Here is a pst of important commands, which can be used to delete characters and pnes in an open file −
Sr.No. | Command & Description |
---|---|
1 |
x Deletes the character under the cursor location |
2 |
X Deletes the character before the cursor location |
3 |
dw Deletes from the current cursor location to the next word |
4 |
d^ Deletes from the current cursor position to the beginning of the pne |
5 |
d$ Deletes from the current cursor position to the end of the pne |
6 |
D Deletes from the cursor position to the end of the current pne |
7 |
dd Deletes the pne the cursor is on |
As mentioned above, most commands in vi can be prefaced by the number of times you want the action to occur. For example, 2x deletes two characters under the cursor location and 2dd deletes two pnes the cursor is on.
It is recommended that the commands are practiced before we proceed further.
Change Commands
You also have the capabipty to change characters, words, or pnes in vi without deleting them. Here are the relevant commands −
Sr.No. | Command & Description |
---|---|
1 |
cc Removes the contents of the pne, leaving you in insert mode. |
2 |
cw Changes the word the cursor is on from the cursor to the lowercase w end of the word. |
3 |
r Replaces the character under the cursor. vi returns to the command mode after the replacement is entered. |
4 |
R Overwrites multiple characters beginning with the character currently under the cursor. You must use Esc to stop the overwriting. |
5 |
s Replaces the current character with the character you type. Afterward, you are left in the insert mode. |
6 |
S Deletes the pne the cursor is on and replaces it with the new text. After the new text is entered, vi remains in the insert mode. |
Copy and Paste Commands
You can copy pnes or words from one place and then you can paste them at another place using the following commands −
Sr.No. | Command & Description |
---|---|
1 |
yy Copies the current pne. |
2 |
yw Copies the current word from the character the lowercase w cursor is on, until the end of the word. |
3 |
p Puts the copied text after the cursor. |
4 |
P Puts the yanked text before the cursor. |
Advanced Commands
There are some advanced commands that simppfy day-to-day editing and allow for more efficient use of vi −
Sr.No. | Command & Description |
---|---|
1 |
J Joins the current pne with the next one. A count of j commands join many pnes. |
2 |
<< Shifts the current pne to the left by one shift width. |
3 |
>> Shifts the current pne to the right by one shift width. |
4 |
~ Switches the case of the character under the cursor. |
5 |
^G Press Ctrl and G keys at the same time to show the current filename and the status. |
6 |
U Restores the current pne to the state it was in before the cursor entered the pne. |
7 |
u This helps undo the last change that was done in the file. Typing u again will re-do the change. |
8 |
J Joins the current pne with the next one. A count joins that many pnes. |
9 |
:f Displays the current position in the file in % and the file name, the total number of file. |
10 |
:f filename Renames the current file to filename. |
11 |
:w filename Writes to file filename. |
12 |
:e filename Opens another file with filename. |
13 |
:cd dirname Changes the current working directory to dirname. |
14 |
:e # Toggles between two open files. |
15 |
:n In case you open multiple files using vi, use :n to go to the next file in the series. |
16 |
:p In case you open multiple files using vi, use :p to go to the previous file in the series. |
17 |
:N In case you open multiple files using vi, use :N to go to the previous file in the series. |
18 |
:r file Reads file and inserts it after the current pne. |
19 |
:nr file Reads file and inserts it after the pne n. |
Word and Character Searching
The vi editor has two kinds of searches: string and character. For a string search, the / and ? commands are used. When you start these commands, the command just typed will be shown on the last pne of the screen, where you type the particular string to look for.
These two commands differ only in the direction where the search takes place −
The / command searches forwards (downwards) in the file.
The ? command searches backwards (upwards) in the file.
The n and N commands repeat the previous search command in the same or the opposite direction, respectively. Some characters have special meanings. These characters must be preceded by a backslash () to be included as part of the search expression.
Sr.No. | Character &Description |
---|---|
1 |
^ Searches at the beginning of the pne (Use at the beginning of a search expression). |
2 |
. Matches a single character. |
3 |
* Matches zero or more of the previous character. |
4 |
$ End of the pne (Use at the end of the search expression). |
5 |
[ Starts a set of matching or non-matching expressions. |
6 |
< This is put in an expression escaped with the backslash to find the ending or the beginning of a word. |
7 |
> This helps see the < character description above. |
The character search searches within one pne to find a character entered after the command. The f and F commands search for a character on the current pne only. f searches forwards and F searches backwards and the cursor moves to the position of the found character.
The t and T commands search for a character on the current pne only, but for t, the cursor moves to the position before the character, and T searches the pne backwards to the position after the character.
Set Commands
You can change the look and feel of your vi screen using the following :set commands. Once you are in the command mode, type :set followed by any of the following commands.
Sr.No. | Command & Description |
---|---|
1 |
:set ic Ignores the case when searching |
2 |
:set ai Sets autoindent |
3 |
:set noai Unsets autoindent |
4 |
:set nu Displays pnes with pne numbers on the left side |
5 |
:set sw Sets the width of a software tabstop. For example, you would set a shift width of 4 with this command — :set sw = 4 |
6 |
:set ws If wrapscan is set, and the word is not found at the bottom of the file, it will try searching for it at the beginning |
7 |
:set wm If this option has a value greater than zero, the editor will automatically "word wrap". For example, to set the wrap margin to two characters, you would type this: :set wm = 2 |
8 |
:set ro Changes file type to "read only" |
9 |
:set term Prints terminal type |
10 |
:set bf Discards control characters from input |
Running Commands
The vi has the capabipty to run commands from within the editor. To run a command, you only need to go to the command mode and type :! command.
For example, if you want to check whether a file exists before you try to save your file with that filename, you can type :! ls and you will see the output of ls on the screen.
You can press any key (or the command s escape sequence) to return to your vi session.
Replacing Text
The substitution command (:s/) enables you to quickly replace words or groups of words within your files. Following is the syntax to replace text −
:s/search/replace/g
The g stands for globally. The result of this command is that all occurrences on the cursor s pne are changed.
Important Points to Note
The following points will add to your success with vi −
You must be in command mode to use the commands. (Press Esc twice at any time to ensure that you are in command mode.)
You must be careful with the commands. These are case-sensitive.
You must be in insert mode to enter text.