Being able to search for complicated patterns quickly is an indispensable skill as a developer. I want to share some tips to use Vim's search to speed up your development. When used correctly, search can be a powerful navigation tool in Vim.
I hope you'll learn one or two things!
Searching in Vim
You can search using /{your-search-pattern}
. Go backwards with ?{your-search-pattern}
. To search for all foo
in a file, do /foo
.
Finding next/ previous instance
Once you enter your search pattern /foo
, pressing Enter (<CR>
) will put you into what I call "search mode". You can find next instance of "foo" by n
and previous instance of "foo" by N
.
One super convenient thing about n
is that you can do it anytime even when you are not in search mode anymore, invoke that search again by typing n
. Try it.
I think this is a powerful navigation tool in vim because you can quickly go up/down file with precision.
Turn on ignorecase and smartcase
I find it easier to search in case insensitive mode. To do that, in my vimrc
I have set ignorecase
. With ignorecase, typing /foo
will match "foo", "Foo", "FOO", etc.
I also have smartcase on (set smartcase
). These two usually go together.
What ignore + smartcase combo do, is that it will do case insensitive search only if we use all lowercase search. It will do case sensitive search if we use at least one uppercase.
For example:
foo
Foo
FoO
Searching /foo
will match all of the above. Searching /Foo
will match only "Foo". Searching /fOo
will find no match.
The former is case insensitive, the last two were case sensitive. A little weird, but I find it delightfully intuitive.
Disabling highlight
After finding matches, sometimes I found the highlighted matches distracting. You can turn it off with :noh
(no highlight). Because I use this often, I mapped :noh
to <esc><esc>
.
Here is what I have in .vimrc
:
nnoremap <esc><esc> :noh<return><esc>
Auto complete searching
Vim is smart enough to autocomplete your search keyword. While you are searching for "something", you can autocomplete with /somet<C-r><C-w>
gives /something
.
It is not foolproof, but I found 90% of the time it gives me the word I was thinking of.
Repeating last search
To repeat last search, you can do either /
or //
.
Finding word frequency
To see how many "foo" occurs in a file, you can type :%s/foo//gn
.
It uses substitute (:s
) command, for the whole file (%
) but we suppresses it (n
) (I think you can just use :%s/{word}//n
without g.
We can combine this with //
. If we had just searched for foo (/foo
) and we wanted to find how many "foo" in current file, we can do :%s///gn
.
Quickly find all word instances under cursor
There are two ways to find a word under cursor:
- To find within word boundary, use
*
or#
- To find without word boundary, use
g*
org#
.
I didn't get word boundaries at first, so let me explain:
[H]ello // [H] means cursor is on H
HelloWorld
Hello
Helloworld
If we use *
, we will see
[Hello] //highlights
HelloWorld
[Hello] //highlights
Helloworld
If we use g*
, we will see
[Hello] //highlights
[Hello]World //highlights
[Hello] //highlights
[Hello]world //highlights
Use n
or N
to jump to next/ previous instance.
That's all for now. I hope you guys find this helpful. Please feel free to share other searching tips - I am curious to hear from you guys.
Happy hacking!!
Top comments (1)
Thanks for tips. Liked the last example with word boundary.