/obsidian-vimrc-support

A plugin for the Obsidian.md note-taking software

Primary LanguageTypeScript

Obsidian Vimrc Support Plugin

"Buy Me A Coffee"

This plugin loads a file of Vim commands from VAULT_ROOT/.obsidian.vimrc. For users of the Obsidian.md Vim mode, this is very useful for making various settings (most notably keymaps) persist.

Note that this plugin is not the Vim support of Obsidian -- that support is built-in and you can perfectly use Obsidian in Vim mode without this plugin. This plugin merely implements the ability to load a persistent configuration and adds a few extras.

Usage

First and foremost, make sure you have the Obsidian Vim key bindings turned on -- see Editor -> Vim key bindings.

Now to keep some of your Vim settings permanent, install this plugin and put a file named .obsidian.vimrc in your vault root. If you're using multiple vaults, you'll need this file on each one.

Here's a simple & useful .obsidian.vimrc that I'm using:

" Have j and k navigate visual lines rather than logical ones
nmap j gj
nmap k gk
" I like using H and L for beginning/end of line
nmap H ^
nmap L $
" Quickly remove search highlights
nmap <F9> :nohl

" Yank to system clipboard
set clipboard=unnamed

" Go back and forward with Ctrl+O and Ctrl+I
" (make sure to remove default Obsidian shortcuts for these to work)
exmap back obcommand app:go-back
nmap <C-o> :back
exmap forward obcommand app:go-forward
nmap <C-i> :forward

Supported Commands

The commands that can be used are whatever CodeMirror supports. I couldn't find a formal list anywhere but you can look for defaultExCommandMap in the source code, or play around with trying commands in Obsidian's Vim mode.

In addition to that:

  • The plugin skips blank lines and lines starting with Vimscript comments (" ...).
  • Special support for yanking to system clipboard can be activated by set clipboard=unnamed (unnamedplus will do the same thing).
  • Support for the tabstop Vim option (e.g. set tabstop=4).
  • Custom mapping/unmapping commands in addition to the defaults: noremap and iunmap (PRs are welcome to implement more :) )
  • exmap [commandName] [command...]: a command to map Ex commands. This should basically be supported in regular :map, but doesn't work with multi-argument commands due to a CodeMirror bug, so this is a workaround.
  • obcommand - execute Obsidian commands, see more details below.
  • cmcommand - execute arbitrary CodeMirror commands, see details below.
  • surround - surround your selected text in visual mode or word in normal mode with text.
  • pasteinto - paste your current clipboard into your selected text in visual mode or word in normal mode. Useful for creating hyperlinks.
  • jscommand and jsfile - extend Vim mode using JavaScript snippets.

Commands that fail don't generate any visible error for now.

Important tip! Before adding commands to your Vimrc file, you should try them in Obsidian's normal mode (type ':' in the editor) to make sure they work as expected. CodeMirror's Vim mode has some limitations and bugs and not all commands will work like you'd expect. In some cases you can find workarounds by experimenting, and the easiest way to do that is by trying interactively rather than via the Vimrc file.

Installation

In the Obsidian.md settings under "Third-party plugin", turn off Safe mode, then browse to this plugin.

Alternatively (and less recommended), you can install it manually: just copy main.js and manifest.json to your vault VaultFolder/.obsidian/plugins/obsidian-vimrc-support/.

Support the Development

If you want to support the development of this plugin, please consider to buy me a coffee.

"Please implement [some Vim feature here]..."

I'd like to emphasize again that this plugin is a tweak to Obsidian's built-in Vim mode, which is in turn mostly the Vim mode of CodeMirror. And while I am personally very fond of helping everybody make use of Vim modes everywhere, this plugin is often not the best place to implement some types of features.

  1. Vim editor features (e.g. new motions) would best be implemented in CodeMirror, so other editors using this component would enjoy them too! Please consider submitting issues or pull requests there first.
  2. Features that are already implemented by other Obsidian plugins are best to stay in these plugins. Please consider asking these plugin authors to add Vim support for their features (using the CodeMirror API), or even better -- help them out :)

Having said that, adding features here in this plugin is often very easy thanks to the CodeMirror API for extending its Vim mode, so as the path of least resistance I will occassionally implement some requested Vim features and be happy to accept PRs.

Things I'd love to add:

  • Implement some standard vim-markdown motions for Obsidian, e.g. [[, or implement for CodeMirror the 1-2 missing Ex commands required to define these keymaps in the Vimrc.

Change Vimrc File Location/Name

If you want the Vimrc file name or path to be different than the default, there is a plugin setting (under Settings | Plugin Options | Vimrc Support) to change that.

Executing Obsidian Commands with obcommand

The plugin defines a custom Ex command named obcommand to execute various Obsidian commands as an Ex command. This is useful to map external functionality of Obsidian or other plugins to Vim shortcuts, but it's not as easy to use as one would hope.

If you just type :obcommand you'll get in the Developer Console (Ctrl+Shift+I) the list of commands that are currently defined by the app. The simple syntax :obcommand [commandName] will execute the named command.

Some useful examples:

  • obcommand editor:insert-link
  • obcommand editor:toggle-comment
  • obcommand app:go-back
  • obcommand workspace:split-vertical

And many more.

WARNING: this is not a formal API that Obsidian provides and is done in a rather hacky manner. It's definitely possible that some future version of Obsidian will break this functionality.

Mapping Obsidian Commands Within Vim

Next thing you probably wanna ask is "how do I map the great Obsidian commands to Vim commands?"

The trivial answer should have been something along the line of :nmap <C-o> :obcommand app:go-back, but this does not work because of an annoying CodeMirror bug. Turns out that the various mapping commands of CodeMirror pass only the first argument, so when you execute your mapping if defined as above, :obcommand would execute with no arguments.

Here comes a custom command to the rescue, exmap, which you can use to "alias" Ex commands for longer Ex commands: :exmap back obcommand app:go-back. You now have a simple (0 argument) Ex command named back that goes back in Obsidian, and that is something you can map.

To summarize, here's how you map C-o to Back:

exmap back obcommand app:go-back
nmap <C-o> :back

Note how exmap lists command names without colons and in nmap the colon is required.

Surround Text with surround

The plugin defines a custom Ex command named surround to surround either your currently selected text in visual mode or the word your cursor is over in normal mode with text. This is particularly useful for creating wikilinks in Obsidian [[WikiLink]].

The syntax follows :surround [prefixText] [postfixText].

Some examples:

  • surround ( )
  • surround [[ ]]

Here's my surround config as an example:

" Surround text with [[ ]] to make a wikilink
" NOTE: must use 'map' and not 'nmap'
exmap wiki surround [[ ]]
map [[ :wiki

Inserting Links/Hyperlinks with pasteinto

The plugin defines a custom Ex command named pasteinto to paste text into your currently selected text in visual mode, or the word your cursor is over in normal mode. This is particularly useful for creating links/hyperlinks [selected-text](paste).

Here's my hyperlink config as an example:

" Maps pasteinto to Alt-p
map <A-p> :pasteinto

Some Help with Binding Space Chords (Doom and Spacemacs fans)

<Space> can be bound to make chords, such as <Space>fs in conjunction with obcommand to save your current file and more. But first <Space> must be unbound with unmap <Space>. Afterwards <Space> can be mapped normally as any other key.

Emulate Common Vim Commands via Obsidian commands

Using obcommand, it is possible to emulate some additional Vim commands that aren't included in Obsidian's Vim mode, like for example gt and zo.

" Emulate Folding https://vimhelp.org/fold.txt.html#fold-commands
exmap togglefold obcommand editor:toggle-fold
nmap zo :togglefold
nmap zc :togglefold
nmap za :togglefold

exmap unfoldall obcommand editor:unfold-all
nmap zR :unfoldall

exmap foldall obcommand editor:fold-all
nmap zM :foldall

" Emulate Tab Switching https://vimhelp.org/tabpage.txt.html#gt
" requires Cycle Through Panes Plugins https://obsidian.md/plugins?id=cycle-through-panes
exmap tabnext obcommand cycle-through-panes:cycle-through-panes
nmap gt :tabnext
exmap tabprev obcommand cycle-through-panes:cycle-through-panes-reverse
nmap gT :tabprev

Fixed Keyboard Layout in Normal Mode

Note: this is currently unsupported for the new (CM6-based) editor.

In many languages and keyboard layouts it becomes problematic or plain impossible to use Vim keys. The Vim keys are located in different positions on some keyboard layouts, which could be confusing when switching layouts, and on some layouts (e.g. non-Western languages) the keys for Vim movements just don't exist. To be able to use Vim mode with those layouts & languages, you can turn on the "fixed keyboard layout" feature in the plugin settings.

When turned on for the first time, or when you click "capture current layout", your current keyboard layout is saved, and that will be the layout that is used when you are in Vim normal or visual mode. When you enter insert mode, you will type in your actual current system layout/language.

This feature is experimental and may have unintended side-effects relating to Obsidian or editor shortcuts.

Relative Line Numbers

Relative line numbers work very nicely with this Obsidian plugin (thank you @piotryordanov for bringing it to my attention!)

Extending Vim Commands with JavaScript Snippets

The plugin allows to define Vim commands that map to JavaScript snippets, which adds exciting new possibilities to what you can achieve with Vim key bindings. But -- this comes with a price of a security risk, and is therefore disabled by default.

⚠️ Security Warning

Before using this feature, you must be sure that you understand its potential security implications.

Running JavaScript snippets with Vim commands stored in your vault means that anyone who gains access to your notes can run arbitrary code inside your Obsidian app.

If you understand the risks and choose to use this feature, turn on "Support JS Commands" in the plugin settings and continue reading.

JavaScript Command Usage

There are two ways to define JS-based commands.

The jscommand Ex command defines a JS function that has an editor: Editor, a view: MarkdownView and a selection: EditorSelection arguments (see the Obsidian API if you're not sure what these are). You define only the body of the function, in a single line wrapped by curly braces, e.g.:

jscommand { console.log(editor.getCursor()); }

This will immediately log your current cursor position to the developer console. If you want, you can make this an Ex command using exmap:

exmap logCursor jscommand { console.log(editor.getCursor()); }
nmap <C-q> :logCursor

Another version of the same functionality is the jsfile Ex command, which executes code from a file you give as a parameter, then appends another optional piece of code to it (e.g. in case you want to store several helper methods in a file and launch different ones as part of different commands).

As above, the code running as part of jsfile has the arguments editor: Editor, view: MarkdownView and selection: EditorSelection.

Here's an example from my own .obsidian.vimrc that maps ]] and [[ to jump to the next/previous Markdown header:

exmap nextHeading jsfile mdHelpers.js {jumpHeading(true)}
exmap prevHeading jsfile mdHelpers.js {jumpHeading(false)}
nmap ]] :nextHeading
nmap [[ :prevHeading

See here for the full example, and please contribute your own!

Changelog

0.7.3

Fixed an issue in updating the last selection variable, leading to jsFile receiving an incorrect argument and (thanks @zjhcn!)

0.7.2

Fixed the plugin breaking for some users after Obsidian's recent updates, plus some optimizations.

0.7.1

Fixed jscommand and jsfile broken in the latest Obsidian update.

0.7.0

IMPORTANT: this version drops support for the legacy (CM5) Obsidian editor. If you are sticking to the legacy editor until Obsidian removes it, you cannot upgrade to this version of the plugin.

  • Fixed multiple issues (like this one) related to bad detection of the editor type.
    • They were fixed by no longer trying to detect the editor type ;) Support for the legacy editor has become clumsy and it was time to drop it.
  • Support for Obsidian 0.15 multi windows (esm7#110).

0.6.3

Added selection also to jsfile (thanks @twio142!)

0.6.2

  • Fixed the default Vimrc file name not used if the setting is overriden & empty.
  • Added a selection argument to jscommand (esm7#99).

0.6.1

  • Fixed backward selection error in surround (esm7#91)

0.6.0

  • The surround and pasteinto commands now work with the new (CM6-based) editor.
  • Made the existence of the Vimrc file not required for other plugin features to work (esm7#89)
  • New exciting, but dangerous, jscommand and jsfile commands, that allow extending the plugin with JavaScript snippets.

0.5.2

  • Fixed wrong detection of the editor (legacy vs new) on some occasions, leading to the plugin not really working in these situations.
  • Fixed issues related to Vim mode display with the new editor.

0.5.1

  • Fixed a possible exception.

0.5.0

Added partial support to the new (CM6-based) editor.

Personal note: the CM6 update landed while I'm going through extremely busy weeks. I was therefore not yet able to give it the full attention it deserves, but since many users need this plugin updated, I'm releasing it in a slightly immature state. The core functionality works, but some plugin features are not yet supported in CM6, most notably surround (and its derivatives) and cmcommand.

I'll do my best to find the time to complete the missing pieces in the next few days and handle reported issues quickly.

0.4.6

  • Added the cmcommand command for executing arbitrary CodeMirror commands.

0.4.5

Apparently the fix in version 0.4.4 was not good enough. Hopefully we're done with this issue now.

0.4.4

  • Fix to an error constantly displayed in the console.

0.4.3

  • Another fix to "fixed keyboard layout in Normal mode".
  • Added escape character backslash to surround command.

0.4.2

  • Attempted fix to esm7#42 (thanks @Andr3wD!)
  • Fix to "fixed keyboard layout in Normal mode" which was often not really working.

0.4.1

  • Small fix in surround.

0.4.0

  • surround and pasteinto commands (thanks @Andr3wD!)
  • Vim chord display (thanks @Andr3wD!)
  • Vim mode display (thanks @Andr3wD!)
  • Fixed fold and unfold bug.
  • The plugin now supports maintaining a fixed keyboard layout when in normal mode, if configured to do so.

0.3.1

  • Fixed some commands not working via obcommand (esm7#32)

0.3.0

  • Added a settings file for the Vimrc file name (thank you @SalmanAlSaigal!)
  • Added the exmap Ex command.
  • Added the obcommand Ex command.

0.2.4

Fixed a race condition with yank & paste: esm7#11

0.2.3

Added the noremap command, thanks @nadavspi!

0.2.2

Added the iunmap command, thanks @hnsol!

0.2.1

  • Fixed this issue: setting clipboard=unnamed also works for pasting now (it monitors the system clipboard and updates the yank buffer if a change is detected).
  • Support for the tabstop Vim option as asked here.

0.2.0

Added support for yanking to system clipboard (see above), comments and blank lines.

0.1.1

Fixed an issue caused by the plugin injecting the Vimrc on every file load. The plugin now injects the Vimrc just once for the CodeMirror class (for the class -- not object instance, because that's where CodeMirror keeps the Vim settings.)

This seems to work well, but in theory there could be Vimrc settings that are CodeMirror-object bound and not class-bound, and in that case we'll be in trouble (these settings will be lost when Obsidian replaces CodeMirror objects).