11 KiB
Ch17. Fold
When you read a file, often there are many irrelevant text that hinders you from understanding what that file does. To hide this unnecessary information, you can use Vim fold.
In this chapter, you will learn how to use different folding methods.
Manual Fold
Imagine that you are folding a sheet of paper to cover some text. The actual text does not go away, it is still there. Vim fold works the same way. It folds a range of text, hiding it from display without actually deleting it.
The fold operator is z
. When you fold a paper, the fold looks like the letter "z" too.
Suppose you have this text:
Fold me
Hold me
Type zfj
. Vim folds both lines into one. You should see something like this:
+-- 2 lines: Fold me -----
Here is the breakdown:
zf
zf
is the fold operator.j
is the motion for the fold operator.
You can open a folded text with zo
. To close the fold, use zc
.
Vim fold follows the grammar rule. You can pass the fold operator with a motion or text object. To fold an outer paragraph, run zfap
. To fold to the end of a file, run zfG
. To fold the texts between {
and }
, run zfa{
.
You can fold from the visual mode. Highlight the area you want to fold (v
, V
, or Ctrl-v
), then run zf
.
A Vim operator is not complete without the command-line mode version. You can execute a fold from the command-line mode with the :fold
command. To fold the current line and the line after it, run:
:,+1fold
,+1
is the range. If you don't pass parameters to the range, it defaults to the current line. +1
is the range indicator for the next line. To fold the lines 5 to 10, run :5,10fold
. To fold from the current line to the end of the line, run :,$fold
.
There are many other fold and unfold commands. I find them too many to remember when starting out. The most useful ones are:
zR
to open all folds.zM
to close all folds.za
toggle a fold.
You can run zR
and zM
on any line, but za
only works when you are on a folded / unfolded line. To learn more folding commands, check out :h fold-commands
.
Different Fold Methods
The section above covers Vim's manual fold. There are six different folding methods in Vim:
- Manual
- Indent
- Expression
- Syntax
- Diff
- Marker
To see which folding method you are currently using, run :set foldmethod?
. By default, Vim uses the manual
method.
In the rest of the chapter, you will learn the other five folding methods. Let's get started with the indent fold.
Indent Fold
To use an indent fold, change the 'foldmethod'
to indent:
:set foldmethod=indent
Suppose that you have the text:
One
Two
Two again
If you run :set foldmethod=indent
, you will see:
One
+-- 2 lines: Two -----
With indent fold, Vim looks at how many spaces each line has at the beginning and compares it with the 'shiftwidth'
option to determine its foldability. 'shiftwidth'
returns the number of spaces required for each step of the indent. If you run:
:set shiftwidth?
Vim's default 'shiftwidth'
value is 2. On the text above, there are two spaces between the start of the line and the text "Two" and "Two again". When Vim sees the number of spaces and that the 'shiftwidth'
value is 2, Vim considers that line to have an indent fold level of one.
Suppose this time you only one space between the start of the line and the text:
One
Two
Two again
Right now if you run :set foldmethod=indent
, Vim does not fold the indented line because there isn't sufficient space on each line. However, if you change the 'shiftwidth'
to 1:
:set shiftwidth=1
The text is now foldable. Restore the shiftwidth back to two and the spaces between the texts to two again. In addition, add:
One
Two
Two again
Three
Three again
Run fold (zM
), you will see:
One
+-- 4 lines: Two -----
Unfold the folded lines (zR
), then put your cursor on "Three" and toggle the text's folding state (za
):
One
Two
Two again
+-- 2 lines: Three -----
What's this? A fold within a fold?
You can have nested folds. The text "Two" and "Two again" have fold level of one. The text "Three" and "Three again" have fold level of two. If you have a foldable text with a higher fold level within a foldable text, you can have multiple fold layers.
Marker Fold
To use a marker fold, run:
:set foldmethod=marker
Suppose you have the text:
Hello
{{{
world
vim
}}}
Run zM
, you will see:
hello
+-- 4 lines: -----
Vim sees {{{
and }}}
as fold indicators and folds the texts between them. With the marker fold, Vim looks for special markers, defined by 'foldmarker'
option, to mark folding areas. To see what markers Vim uses, run:
:set foldmarker?
By default, Vim uses {{{
and }}}
as indicators. If you want to change the indicator to another texts, like "foo1" and "foo2":
:set foldmarker=foo1,foo2
If you have the text:
hello
foo1
world
vim
foo2
Now Vim uses foo1
and foo2
as the new folding markers. As a side note, an indicator must be a literal string and cannot be a regex.
Syntax Fold
Vim has a syntax system to customize the text syntax (highlight, weight, color, etc). This chapter won't discuss how the syntax system works, but you can use this to indicate which text to fold. To use a syntax fold, run:
:set foldmethod=syntax
Suppose you have this text and you want to fold everything between the square brackets:
[
"one",
"two",
"three"
]
You need to define the proper syntax definition to capture the characters between the square brackets:
:syn region testFold start="\\[" end="\\]" transparent fold
You should see:
+-- 5 lines: [ -----
Here is the breakdown:
:syn
is the syntax command.region
constructs a syntax region that can span several lines. For more info, check out:h syntax.txt
start="\\[" end="\\]"
defines the starting and ending of a region. You have to escape (\\
) the square-brackets because they are considered special characters.transparent
to prevent highlights.fold
increases the fold level when the syntax matches the starting and ending characters.
Expression Fold
Expression folding allows you to define an expression to match for a fold. After you define the fold expressions, Vim scans each line for the value of 'foldexpr'
. This is the variable that you have to configure to return the appropriate value. If the 'foldexpr'
returns 0, then the line is not folded. If it returns 1, then that line has a fold level of 1. If it returns 2, then that line has a fold level of 2. There are more values other than integers, but I won't go over them. If you are curious, check out :h fold-expr
.
First, let's change the foldmethod:
:set foldmethod=expr
Suppose you have a list of breakfast foods and you want to fold all breakfast items starting with "p":
donut
pancake
pop-tarts
protein bar
salmon
scrambled eggs
Next, change the foldexpr
to capture the expressions starting with "p":
:set foldexpr=getline(v:lnum)[0]==\\"p\\"
The expression above looks intimidating. Let's break it down:
:set foldexpr
sets up the'foldexpr'
option to accept a custom expression.getline()
is a Vimscript function that returns the content of any given line. If you run:echo getline(5)
, it will return the content of line 5.v:lnum
is Vim's special variable for the'foldexpr'
expression. Vim scans each line and at that moment stores each line's number inv:lnum
variable.[0]
in the context ofgetline(v:lnum)[0]
is the first character of each line. When Vim scans a line,getline(v:lnum)
returns the content of each line.getline(v:lnum)[0]
returns the first character of each line. On the first line of our list, "donut",getline(v:lnum)[0]
returns "d". On the second line of our list, "pancake",getline(v:lnum)[0]
returns "p".==\\"s\\"
is the second half of an equality expression. It checks if the expression you just evaluated is equal to "s". If it is true, it returns 1. If it is false, it returns 0. In Vim, 1 is truthy and 0 is falsy. So on the lines that start with an "s", it returns 1. Recall at the beginning of this section, if a'foldexpr'
has a value of 1, then it has a fold level of 1.
After running this expression, you should see:
donut
+-- 3 lines: pancake -----
salmon
scrambled eggs
Diff Fold
Vim can do a diff procedure to compare two or more files.
If you have file1.txt
:
vim is awesome
vim is awesome
vim is awesome
vim is awesome
vim is awesome
vim is awesome
vim is awesome
vim is awesome
vim is awesome
vim is awesome
And file2.txt
:
vim is awesome
vim is awesome
vim is awesome
vim is awesome
vim is awesome
vim is awesome
vim is awesome
vim is awesome
vim is awesome
emacs is ok
Run vimdiff file1.txt file2.txt
:
+-- 3 lines: vim is awesome -----
vim is awesome
vim is awesome
vim is awesome
vim is awesome
vim is awesome
vim is awesome
[vim is awesome] / [emacs is ok]
Vim automatically folds some of the identical lines. When you are running the vimdiff
command, Vim automatically uses foldmethod=diff
. If you run :set foldmethod?
, it will return diff
.
Persisting Fold
You loses all fold information when you close the Vim session. If you have this file, count.txt
:
one
two
three
four
five
Then do a manual fold from line "three" down (:3,$fold
):
one
two
+-- 3 lines: three ---
When you exit Vim and reopen count.txt
, the folds are no longer there!
To preserve the folds, after folding, run:
:mkview
Then when you open up count.txt
, run:
:loadview
Your folds are restored. However, you have to manually run mkview
and loadview
. I know that one of these days, I will forget to run mkview
before closing the file and I will lose all the folds. Wouldn't it be nice if you can automate this?
Definitely! To automatically run mkview
when you close a .txt
file and run loadview
when you open a .txt
file, add this in your vimrc:
autocmd BufWinLeave *.txt mkview
autocmd BufWinEnter *.txt silent loadview
You have seen the autocommand
from the previous chapter. It is used to execute a command on an event trigger. There are two events to accomplish this:
BufWinLeave
for when you remove a buffer from a window.BufWinEnter
for when you load a buffer in a window.
Now after you fold inside a .txt
file and exit Vim, the next time you open that file, your fold information will be restored.
By default, Vim saves the fold information when running mkview
inside ~/.vim/view
for the Unix system. For more information, check out :h 'viewdir'
.
Learn Fold The Smart Way
When I first started Vim, I would skip learning Vim fold because I didn't think it was useful. However, the longer I code, the more useful I find folding is. Strategically placed folds can give you a better overview of the text structure, like a book's table of content.
When you learn fold, start with the manual fold because that can be used on-the-go. Then gradually learn different tricks to do indent and marker folds. Finally, learn how to do syntax and expression folds. You can even use the latter two to write your own Vim plugins.
Now that you know how to do fold, let's learn something different: version control with git.