NEATVI ====== Neatvi is a vi/ex editor. It can edit bidirectional UTF-8 text. CONFIGURATION ------------- Edit conf.h to adjust syntax highlighting rules and text direction patterns. To define a new keymap, create a new array in kmap.h, like kmap_fa, and add it to kmaps array in the same header (the first entry of the new array specifies its name). The current keymap may be changed with :cm ex command. When in input mode, ^e activates the English keymap and ^f switches to the alternate keymap (the last keymap specified with :cm). Sadly, VTE-based terminals such as GNOME's implement a backward-incompatible extension of virtual terminal escape codes to render bidirectional text by default. When using these terminal, the value of LNPREF macro in conf.h needs to be edited. COMMANDS -------- Commands not available in ex(1): :cm[ap][!] [kmap] Without kmap, prints the current keymap name. When kmap is specified, sets the alternate keymap to kmap and, unless ! is given, switches to this keymap. :ft [filetype] Without filetype, prints the current file type. When filetype is specified, sets the file type of the current ex buffer. :ta[g] tag Jumps to tag (tags file: TAGPATH environment variable or ./tags). :tn[ext] Jumps to the next matching tag. :tp[rev] Jumps to the previous matching tag. :po[p] Pops tag stack. :b[uffer] [buf] Switch to buffer buf (buffer number or alias); lists buffers if buf is missing. New key mappings: - ^a in normal mode: searches for the word under the cursor. - ^p in insert mode: inserts the contents of the default yank buffer. - zL, zl, zr, and zR in normal mode: change the value of td option. - ^e and ^f in insert mode: switches to the English and alternate keymap. - ze and zf in normal mode: switches to the English and alternate keymap. - gu, gU, and g~ in normal mode: switches character case. - ^l in normal mode: updates terminal dimensions (after resizing it). - ^] and ^t in normal mode: jumps to tag and pops tag stack. - gf in normal mode: edits the file whose address is under the cursor. - gl in normal mode: like gf, but it reads line and column numbers too. - ^ws, ^wo, ^wc, ^wj, ^wk, ^wx in normal mode: manages windows. - ^wgf, ^wgl, ^w^] in normal mode: executes gf, gl, ^] in a new window. - qX in normal mode: see q-commands section (X can be any letter). Other noteworthy differences with vi(1): - Neatvi assumes POSIX extended regular expressions (ERE) in search patterns, conf.h variables, and even tags files. - If paths start with =, they are assumed to be relative to the directory of the current file. - Neatvi highlights files whose names ends with ls as directory listings; the gl command can be used to edit its files. OPTIONS ------- To improve Neatvi's performance, shaping, character reordering, and syntax highlighting can be disabled by defining the EXINIT environment variable as "set noshape | set noorder | set nohl | set td=+2". Options supported in Neatvi: td, textdirection Current direction context. The following values are meaningful: * +2: always left-to-right. * +1: follow conf.h's dircontexts[]; left-to-right for others. * -1: follow conf.h's dircontexts[]; right-to-left for others. * -2: always right-to-left. shape If set (default), performs Arabic/Farsi letter shaping. order If set, reorder characters based on the rules defined in conf.h. hl, highlight If set (default), text will be highlighted based on syntax highlighting rules in conf.h. hll, highlightline If set, highlight current line. lim, linelimit Lines longer than this value are not reordered or highlighted. ai, autoindent As in vi(1). aw, autowrite As in vi(1). ic, ignorecase As in vi(1). MARKS AND BUFFERS ----------------- Special marks: - * the position of the previous change - [ the first line of the previous change - ] the last line of the previous change Special yank buffers: - / the previous search keyword - : the previous ex command Q-COMMANDS ---------- For qX command in normal mode, Neatvi executes ECMD (defined in conf.h) with the following parameters: - X (the key following q) - current file - current line number - current line offset ECMD must print a line of ex commands and Neatvi executes this line. Q-commands can be used to add interesting features to Neatvi, such as language-dependent IDE features, for instance by connecting to an LSP (language server protocol) server. As an example, the following script shows how to use gopls to implement goto defintion and find references for Go. # Compile. if test "$1" = "c"; then go build >.make.ls 2>&1 echo ":e +1 .make.ls | :e" fi # Goto definition; uses gopls (not very efficient without using LSP). if test "$1" = "d"; then loc=`gopls definition $2:$3:$4` if test -n "$loc"; then echo $loc | sed -E 's/^([^:]+):([^:]+):([^:]+).*$/:e +\2 \1/' fi fi # Find references. Use gl command on each line. if test "$1" = "f"; then gopls references $2:$3:$4 >$OUT/.out.ls echo ":e +1 $OUT/.out.ls | :e" fi