Aprende-Vim/ch03_opening_and_searching_files.md
2020-09-08 22:33:03 +02:00

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Opening and Searching Files

The goal of this chapter is to introduce you to opening and searching files in Vim. Being able to search quickly is a great way to jump-start your Vim productivity. One reason it took me a long time to get onboard with Vim is because I didn't know how to find things quickly like many popular text editors.

This chapter is divided into two parts. In the first part, I will show you how to open and search files without plugins. In the second part, I will show you how to open and search files with FZF.vim plugin. Feel free to jump to whichever section you need to learn. However, I highly recommend you to go through everything. With that said, let's get started!

Opening and Editing Files with :edit

:edit is the simplest way to open a file in Vim.

:edit file.txt
  • If file.txt exists, it opens file.txt buffer.
  • If file.txt doesn't exist, it creates a new buffer for file.txt.

Autocomplete (tab) works with :edit. For example, if your file is inside a Rails controller directory ./app/controllers/users_controllers.rb, you can use tab to expand the terms quickly:

:edit a<tab>c<tab>u<tab>

:edit accepts wildcards arguments. * matches any file in the current directory. If you are only looking for files with .yml extension in the current directory, you can run:

:edit *.yml<tab>

After pressing tab, Vim will give you a list of all .yml files in the current directory to choose from.

You can use ** to search recursively. If you want to look for all *.md files in your project, but you are not sure in which directories, you can do this:

:edit **/*.md<tab>

:edit can be used to run netrw, Vim's built-in file explorer (I will cover this later in this chapter). To do that, give :edit a directory argument instead of file. For example:

:edit .
:edit test/unit/

:edit also accepts an Ex command as an argument (I will cover more on Ex commands in later chapter) when followed by +. Here are some examples:

  • To go to line number 5 (:5): :edit +5 /test/unit/helper.spec.js
  • To go to the first line containing "const" (/const): :edit +/const /test/unit/helper.spec.js
  • To delete all empty lines (:g/^$/d): :edit +g/^$/d test/unit/helper.spec.js

Searching Files with :find

You can find files with :find. For example:

:find package.json
:find app/controllers/users_controller.rb

Autocomplete also works with :find:

:find p<tab>                to find package.json
:find a<tab>c<tab>u<tab>    to find app/controllers/users_controller.rb

You may notice that :find syntax and behavior look like :edit's. The difference is that :find finds file in path, :edit doesn't.

Let's learn a little bit about this path. Once you learn how to modify your paths, :find can become a powerful searching tool. To check what your paths are, do:

:set path?

By default, yours probably look like this:

path=.,/usr/include,,

Here are what they mean:

  • . means to search relative to the directory of the current file
  • , means to search in the current directory
  • /usr/include is a directory.

The take-home here is that you can modify your own paths. Let's assume this is your project structure:

▾ app/
  ▸ assets/
  ▾ controllers/
      application_controller.rb
      comments_controller.rb
      users_controller.rb
  ...

If you want to go to users_controller.rb from root directory, you have to go through several directories (and pressing a considerable amount of tabs). Sometimes you only care about controllers/ directory, so you want to search immediately inside that directory without going through app/ and controllers/ each time you find a file. path can shorten that journey.

You can add the controllers/ directory to path with:

:set path+=app/controllers/

Now that your path is updated, when you type :find u<tab>, Vim will also search for app/controllers/ directory for files starting with "u".

If you have a nested controllers/ directory, like app/controllers/account/users_controller.rb, Vim won't find users_controllers. You need to instead add :set path+=app/controllers/** so autocomplete will find users_controller.rb.

You might be thinking to add the entire project directories so when you press tab, Vim will search everywhere for that file, like this:

:set path+=$PWD/**

$PWD is the current working directory. If you try to add your entire project to path so all files are reachable upon a tab press, although this may work for a small project, doing this may slow down your search significantly if you have many files in your project. I recommend adding only the path of your most visited files / directories.

Updating path takes only a few seconds and doing this will save you a lot of time.

Searching in Files with :grep

If you need to find in files, you can use grep. Vim has two ways of doing that:

  • Internal grep (:vim. Yes, it is spelled :vim. It is short for :vimgrep).
  • External grep (:grep).

Let's go through internal grep first. :vim has the following syntax:

:vim /pattern/ file
  • /pattern/ is a regex pattern of your search term.
  • file is the file(s) argument. Just like :find, you can pass it * and ** wildcards.

For example, to look for all occurrences of "foo" string inside all ruby files (.rb) inside app/controllers/ directory:

:vim /foo/ app/controllers/**/*.rb

After running that command, you will be redirected to the first result. Vim's vim search command uses quickfix operation. To see all search results, run :copen. This opens a quickfix window. Here are some useful quickfix commands to get you productive immediately:

:copen        Open the quickfix window
:cclose       Close the quickfix window
:cnext        Go to the next error
:cprevious    Go to the previous error
:colder       Go to the older error list
:cnewer       Go to the newer error list

I won't cover quickfix too deep here. To learn more about quickfix, check out :h quickfix.

You may notice that running internal grep (:vim) can get slow if you have a large number of matches. This is because it reads them into memory. Vim loads each matching files as if they are being edited.

Let's talk about external grep. By default, it uses grep terminal command. To search for "foo" inside a ruby file inside app/controllers/ directory, you can do this:

:grep "foo" app/controllers/**/*.rb

Just like :vim, :grep accepts * and ** wildcards. It also displays all matches using quickfix.

Vim uses grepprg variable to determine which external program to run when running :grep so you don't have to always use the terminal grep command. Later in this article, I will show you how to change default the external command.

Browsing Files with netrw

netrw is Vim's built-in file explorer. It is useful to see a project's structural hierarchy. To run netrw, you need these two settings in your .vimrc:

set nocp
filetype plugin on

I will only cover the basic use of netrw here, but it should be enough to get you started. You can start netrw when you launch Vim and passing it a directory instead of a file. For example:

vim .
vim src/client/
vim app/controllers/

To launch netrw from inside Vim, you can use :edit and pass it a directory instead of a filename:

:edit .
:edit src/client/
:edit app/controllers/

There are other ways to launch netrw window without passing a directory:

:Explore     Starts netrw on current file
:Sexplore    Not kidding. Starts netrw on split top half of the screen
:Vexplore    Starts netrw on split left half of the screen

You can navigate netrw with Vim motions (I will cover these on chapter 5). If you need to create, delete, and rename file/directory, here is a list of useful netrw commands:

%    Create a new file
d    Create a new directory
R    Rename a file or directory
D    Delete a file or directory

:h netrw is very comprehensive. Check it out if you have time.

If you find netrw too bland and need more flavor, vim-vinegar is a good plugin to improve netrw. If you're looking for a different file explorer, NERDTree is a good alternative. Check them out!

FZF

Now that you've learned how to open and search files in Vim with built-in tools, it's time to use plugins to level up your search game.

One thing that modern text editors got right that Vim didn't is how easy it is to find files and to find in files . In this second half of the chapter, I will show you how to use FZF.vim to make searching in Vim easy and powerful.

Setup

But first, make sure you have FZF and ripgrep download. Follow the instruction on their github repo. The commands fzf and rg should now be available after successful installs.

Ripgrep is a search tool much like grep (hence the name). It is generally faster than grep and has many useful features. FZF is a general-purpose command-line fuzzy finder. You can use it with any commands, including ripgrep. Together, they make a powerful search tool combination.

FZF does not use ripgrep by default, so we need to tell FZF to use ripgrep with FZF_DEFAULT_COMMAND variable. In my .zshrc (.bashrc if you use bash), I have these:

if type rg &> /dev/null; then
  export FZF_DEFAULT_COMMAND='rg --files'
  export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS='-m'
fi

Pay attention to -m in FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS. This option allows us to make multiple selections with tab or shift-tab. You don't have to have this line to make FZF work with Vim, but I think it is a useful option to have. It will come in handy when you want to perform search and replace in multiple files which I'll cover in just a little bit. FZF accepts more options, to learn more, check out fzf's repo or man fzf. At minimum you should have export FZF_DEFAULT_COMMAND='rg'.

After installing FZF and ripgrep, let's set up FZF plugin. I am using vim-plug plugin manager in this example, but you can use any plugin managers.

Add these inside your .vimrc plugins. You need to use FZF.vim plugin (created by the same FZF author).

Plug 'junegunn/fzf.vim'
Plug 'junegunn/fzf', { 'do': { -> fzf#install() } }

For more info about this plugin, you can check out FZF.vim repo.

FZF Syntax

To be able to use FZF efficiently, you should learn some basic FZF syntax. Fortunately, the list is short:

  • ^ is a prefix exact match. To search for a phrase starting with "welcome": ^welcome.
  • $ is a suffix exact match. To search for a phrase ending with "my friends": friends$.
  • ' is an exact match. To search for the phrase "welcome my friends": 'welcome my friends.
  • | is an "or" match. To search for either "friends" or "foes": friends | foes.
  • ! is an inverse match. To search for phrase containing "welcome" and not "friends": welcome !friends

You can mix and match these options. For example, ^hello | ^welcome friends$ will search for the phrase starting with either "welcome" or "hello" and ending with "friends".

Finding Files

To search for files inside Vim using FZF.vim plugin, you can use the :Files method. Run :Files from Vim and you will be prompted with FZF search prompt.

Finding files in FZF

Since you will be using this command frequently, it is good to have this mapped. I map mine with Ctrl-f. In my .vimrc, I have this:

nnoremap <silent> <C-f> :Files<CR>

Finding in Files

To search inside files, you can use the :Rg command.

FInding in Files in FZF

Again, since you will probably use this frequently, let's map it. I map mine with <Leader>f.

nnoremap <silent> <Leader>f :Rg<CR>

Other Searches

FZF.vim provides many other search commands. I won't go through each one of them here, but you can check them out here.

Here's what my FZF mappings look like. Feel free to borrow from mine to create your own powerful set of mappings!

nnoremap <silent> <Leader>b :Buffers<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <C-f> :Files<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <Leader>f :Rg<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <Leader>/ :BLines<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <Leader>' :Marks<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <Leader>g :Commits<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <Leader>H :Helptags<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <Leader>hh :History<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <Leader>h: :History:<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <Leader>h/ :History/<CR> 

Replacing grep with rg

As I mentioned earlier, Vim has two ways to search in files: :vim and :grep. :grep uses external search tool that you can reassign using grepprg keyword. I will show you how to configure Vim to use ripgrep instead of terminal grep when running the :grep command.

Now let's setup grepprg so :grep uses ripgrep. Add this in your vimrc.

set grepprg=rg\ --vimgrep\ --smart-case\ --follow

Feel free to modify some of the options above! For more information what the options above mean, check out man rg.

After you update grepprg, now when you run :grep, it will actually run rg --vimgrep --smart-case --follow instead of running grep. If you want to search for "foo" using ripgrep, you can now run a more succinct command :grep "foo" instead of :grep "foo" . -R (in addition, ripgrep searches faster than grep).

Just like the old :grep, this new :grep still uses quickfix to display results.

You might wonder, "Well, this is nice but I never used :grep in Vim, plus can't I just use :Rg to find phrases in files? When will I ever need to use :grep?

That is a very good question. You may need to use :grep in Vim to do search and replace in multiple files, which I will cover next.

Search and Replace in Multiple Files

Modern text editors like VSCode make it very easy to search and replace a string across multiple files. In my early Vim days, when I had to search and replace a string in multiple files, I would use Atom because I couldn't do it easily in Vim. In this section, I will show you two different methods to easily do that in Vim.

The first method is to replace all matching phrases in your project. You will need to use :grep. If you want to replace all instances of "pizza" with "donut", here's what you do:

:grep "pizza"
:cfdo %s/pizza/donut/g | update

That's it? Yup! Let me break down the steps:

  1. :grep pizza uses ripgrep to succinctly search for all instances of "pizza" (by the way, this would still work even if you didn't reassign grepprg to use ripgrep. You would have to do :grep "pizza" . -R instead of :grep "pizza"). I prefer ripgrep for this task because of its concise syntax.
  2. :cfdo executes any command you pass to all files in your quickfix list. In this case, your command is the substitution command %s/pizza/donut/g. The pipe (|) is a chain operator. You need to run update to save each file after you substitute it. I will cover substitute command in depth in later chapter.

The second method is to search and replace in select files. With this method, you can manually choose which files you want to perform select and replace on. Here is what you do:

  1. Clear your buffers first. It is imperative that your buffer list contains only the files you need. You can clear it with %bd | e# | bd# (or restart Vim).
  2. Run :Files.
  3. Select all files you want to perform search and replace on. To select multiple files, use tab / shift+tab. This is only possible if you have -m option in FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS (refer to earlier FZF setup section for the -m option).
  4. Run :bufdo %s/pizza/donut/g | update. The command :bufdo %s/pizza/donut/g | update looks similar to the earlier :cfdo %s/pizza/donut/g | update command. That's because they are. The difference is instead of substituting all quickfix entries (:cfdo), you are substituting all buffer entries (:bufdo).

Learn Search the Smart Way

Searching is the bread-and-butter of text editing. Learning how to search well in Vim will help your text editing workflow.

FZF.vim is a game-changer. I can't imagine using Vim without it. I think it is very important to have a good search tool when starting Vim. I've seen people struggling to transition to Vim because it is missing critical features modern text editors have, like a powerful and easy search. I was one. I hope this chapter addresses one of the issues and help to make the transition to Vim easier. To improve your searching prowess even more, I suggest to check out fzf repo.

You also just saw Vim's extensibility in action - the ability to extend search functionality with a plugin and / or an external program. In the future, keep in mind of what other features you wish to extend in Vim. Chances are, someone has created a plugin or there is a program for it already.

Next, let's talk about a very important topic in Vim: grammar.