From dd5427baaf49f8de4355abeb6bc8c6dd14f74e25 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: René 'Necoro' Neumann Date: Wed, 7 Oct 2009 17:05:19 +0200 Subject: Initial check-in of files --- .vim/doc/surround.txt | 184 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 184 insertions(+) create mode 100644 .vim/doc/surround.txt (limited to '.vim/doc/surround.txt') diff --git a/.vim/doc/surround.txt b/.vim/doc/surround.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..1f3ba3d --- /dev/null +++ b/.vim/doc/surround.txt @@ -0,0 +1,184 @@ +*surround.txt* Plugin for deleting, changing, and adding "surroundings" + +Author: Tim Pope *surround-author* +License: Same terms as Vim itself (see |license|) + +This plugin is only available if 'compatible' is not set. + +INTRODUCTION *surround* + +This plugin is a tool for dealing with pairs of "surroundings." Examples +of surroundings include parentheses, quotes, and HTML tags. They are +closely related to what Vim refers to as |text-objects|. Provided +are mappings to allow for removing, changing, and adding surroundings. + +Details follow on the exact semantics, but first, consider the following +examples. An asterisk (*) is used to denote the cursor position. + + Old text Command New text ~ + "Hello *world!" ds" Hello world! + [123+4*56]/2 cs]) (123+456)/2 + "Look ma, I'm *HTML!" cs" Look ma, I'm HTML! + if *x>3 { ysW( if ( x>3 ) { + my $str = *whee!; vlllls' my $str = 'whee!'; + +While a few features of this plugin will work in older versions of Vim, +Vim 7 is recommended for full functionality. + +MAPPINGS *surround-mappings* + +Delete surroundings is *ds*. The next character given determines the target +to delete. The exact nature of the target are explained in +|surround-targets| but essentially it is the last character of a +|text-object|. This mapping deletes the difference between the "inner" +object and "an" object. This is easiest to understand with some examples: + + Old text Command New text ~ + "Hello *world!" ds" Hello world! + (123+4*56)/2 ds) 123+456/2 +
Yo!*
dst Yo! + +Change surroundings is *cs*. It takes two arguments, a target like with +|ds|, and a replacement. Details about the second argument can be found +below in |surround-replacements|. Once again, examples are in order. + + Old text Command New text ~ + "Hello *world!" cs"' 'Hello world!' + "Hello *world!" cs" Hello world! + (123+4*56)/2 cs)] [123+456]/2 + (123+4*56)/2 cs)[ [ 123+456 ]/2 +
Yo!*
cst

Yo!

+ +*ys* takes an valid Vim motion or text object as the first object, and wraps +it using the second argument as with |cs|. (Unfortunately there's no good +mnemonic for "ys"). + + Old text Command New text ~ + Hello w*orld! ysiw) Hello (world)! + +As a special case, *yss* operates on the current line, ignoring leading +whitespace. + + Old text Command New text ~ + Hello w*orld! yssB {Hello world!} + +There is also *yS* and *ySS* which indent the surrounded text and place it +on a line of its own. + +In visual mode, a simple "s" with an argument wraps the selection. This is +referred to as the *vs* mapping, although ordinarily there will be +additional keystrokes between the v and s. In linewise visual mode, the +surroundings are placed on separate lines. In blockwise visual mode, each +line is surrounded. + +An "S" in visual mode (*vS*) behaves similarly but always places the +surroundings on separate lines. Additionally, the surrounded text is +indented. In blockwise visual mode, using "S" instead of "s" instead skips +trailing whitespace. + +Note that "s" and "S" already have valid meaning in visual mode, but it is +identical to "c". If you have muscle memory for "s" and would like to use a +different key, add your own mapping and the existing one will be disabled. +> + vmap s Vsurround + vmap S VSurround +< +Finally, there is an experimental insert mode mapping on . Beware that +this won't work on terminals with flow control (if you accidentally freeze +your terminal, use to unfreeze it). The mapping inserts the specified +surroundings and puts the cursor between them. If, immediately after +and before the replacement, a second or carriage return is pressed, +the prefix, cursor, and suffix will be placed on three separate lines. If +this is a common use case you can add a mapping for it as well. +> + imap Isurround +< +TARGETS *surround-targets* + +The |ds| and |cs| commands both take a target as their first argument. The +possible targets are based closely on the |text-objects| provided by Vim. +In order for a target to work, the corresponding text object must be +supported in the version of Vim used (Vim 7 adds several text objects, and +thus is highly recommended). All targets are currently just one character. + +Eight punctuation marks, (, ), {, }, [, ], <, and >, represent themselves +and their counterpart. If the opening mark is used, contained whitespace is +also trimmed. The targets b, B, r, and a are aliases for ), }, ], and > +(the first two mirror Vim; the second two are completely arbitrary and +subject to change). + +Three quote marks, ', ", `, represent themselves, in pairs. They are only +searched for on the current line. + +A t is a pair of HTML or XML tags. See |tag-blocks| for details. Remember +that you can specify a numerical argument if you want to get to a tag other +than the innermost one. + +The letters w, W, and s correspond to a |word|, a |WORD|, and a |sentence|, +respectively. These are special in that they have nothing do delete, and +used with |ds| they are a no-op. With |cs|, one could consider them a +slight shortcut for ysi (cswb == ysiwb, more or less). + +A p represents a |paragraph|. This behaves similarly to w, W, and s above; +however, newlines are sometimes added and/or removed. + +REPLACEMENTS *surround-replacements* + +A replacement argument is a single character, and is required by |cs|, |ys|, +and |vs|. Undefined replacement characters (with the exception of +alphabetic characters) default to placing themselves at the beginning and +end of the destination, which can be useful for characters like / and |. + +If either ), }, ], or > is used, the text is wrapped in the appropriate +pair of characters. Similar behavior can be found with (, {, and [ (but not +<), which append an additional space to the inside. Like with the targets +above, b, B, r, and a are aliases for ), }, ], and >. + +If t or < is used, Vim prompts for an HTML/XML tag to insert. You may +specify attributes here and they will be stripped from the closing tag. +End your input by pressing or >. As an experimental feature, if , or + is used, the tags will appear on lines by themselves. + +An experimental replacement of a LaTeX environment is provided on \ and l. +The name of the environment and any arguments will be input from a prompt. +The following shows the resulting environment from csp\tabular}{lc +> + \begin{tabular}{lc} + \end{tabular} +< +CUSTOMIZING *surround-customizing* + +The following adds a potential replacement on "-" (ASCII 45) in PHP files. +(To determine the ASCII code to use, :echo char2nr("-")). The carriage +return will be replaced by the original text. +> + autocmd FileType php let b:surround_45 = "" +< +This can be used in a PHP file as in the following example. + + Old text Command New text ~ + print "Hello *world!" yss- + +Additionally, one can use a global variable for globally available +replacements. +> + let g:surround_45 = "<% \r %>" + let g:surround_61 = "<%= \r %>" +< +ISSUES *surround-issues* + +Vim could potentially get confused when deleting/changing occurs at the very +end of the line. Please report any repeatable instances of this. + +Do we need to use |inputsave()|/|inputrestore()| with the tag replacement? + +Customization isn't very flexible. Need a system that allows for prompting, +like with HTML tags and LaTeX environments. + +Indenting is handled haphazardly. Need to decide the most appropriate +behavior and implement it. Right now one can do :let b:surround_indent = 1 +(or the global equivalent) to enable automatic re-indenting by Vim via |=|; +should this be the default? + +It would be nice if |.| would work to repeat an operation. + vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl: -- cgit v1.2.3-70-g09d2