Smart Wrap in Vim
I have been wondering if Vim has the capability to smart wrap lines of code, so that it keeps the same indentation as the line that it is indenting. I have noticed it on some other text editor, such as e-text editor, and found that it helped me to comprehend what I'm looking at easier.
For example rather than
<p>
<a href="http://www.example.com">
This is a bogus link, used to demonstrate
an example
</a>
</p>
it would appear as
<p>
<a href="somelink">
This is a bogus link, used to demonstrate
an example
</a>
</p>
This feature has been implemented on June 25, 2014 as patch 7.4.338. There followed a few patches refining the feature, last one being 7.4.354, so that's the version you'll want.
:help breakindent
:help breakindentopt
Excerpts from vim help below:
'breakindent' 'bri' boolean (default off)
local to window
{not in Vi}
{not available when compiled without the |+linebreak|
feature}
Every wrapped line will continue visually indented (same amount of
space as the beginning of that line), thus preserving horizontal blocks
of text.
'breakindentopt' 'briopt' string (default empty)
local to window
{not in Vi}
{not available when compiled without the |+linebreak|
feature}
Settings for 'breakindent'. It can consist of the following optional
items and must be seperated by a comma:
min:{n} Minimum text width that will be kept after
applying 'breakindent', even if the resulting
text should normally be narrower. This prevents
text indented almost to the right window border
occupying lot of vertical space when broken.
shift:{n} After applying 'breakindent', wrapped line
beginning will be shift by given number of
characters. It permits dynamic French paragraph
indentation (negative) or emphasizing the line
continuation (positive).
sbr Display the 'showbreak' value before applying the
additional indent.
The default value for min is 20 and shift is 0.
Also relevant to this is the showbreak
setting, this will suffix your shift amount with character(s) you specify.
Example configuration
" enable indentation
set breakindent
" ident by an additional 2 characters on wrapped lines, when line >= 40 characters, put 'showbreak' at start of line
set breakindentopt=shift:2,min:40,sbr
" append '>>' to indent
set showbreak=>>
Note on behaviour
If you don't specify the sbr
option, any showbreak
any characters put appended to the indentation. Removing sbr
from the above example causes an effective indent of 4 characters; with that setting, if you just want to use showbreak
without additional indentation, specify shift:0
.
You can also give a negative shift, which would have the effect of dragging showbreak
characters, and wrapped text, back into any available indent space.
When specifying a min
value, the shifted amount will be squashed if you terminal width is narrower, but showbreak
characters are always preserved.
There is a patch for this, but it's been lingering for years and last time I checked did not apply cleanly. See the "Correctly indent wrapped lines" entry in http://groups.google.com/group/vim_dev/web/vim-patches -- I really wish this would get in the mainline.
Update: that link seems to have bitrotted. Here is a more up to date version of the patch.
Update 2: it has been merged upstream (as of 7.4.345), so now you only have to :set breakindent
.
I don't think it's possible to have exactly the same indentation, but you can still get a better view by setting the 'showbreak' option.
:set showbreak=>>>
Example:
<p>
<a href="http://www.example.com">
This is a bogus link, used to demonstrate
>>>an example
</a>
</p>
The real thing looks better than the example code above, because Vim uses a different colour for '>>>'.
UPDATE: In June 2014, a patch to support a breakindent
option was merged into Vim (version 7.4.346 or later for best support).
You might also try :set nowrap
which will allow vim to display long lines by scrolling to the right. This may be useful for examining the overall structure of a document, but can be less convenient for actually editing.
Other options close to what you're looking for are linebreak
and showbreak
. With showbreak
, you can modify what is displayed at the left margin of lines that are wrapped, but unfortunately it doesn't allow a variable indent depending on the current context.
The only way I know of that you could do this would be to use a return character (as mentioned by Cfreak) and combine the textwidth
option with the various indentation options. If your indent is configured correctly (as it is by default with the html syntax I believe, but otherwise see the autoindent
and smartindent
options), you can:
:set formatoptions = tcqw
:set textwidth = 50
gggqG
If you have any customisation of the formatoptions
setting, it may be better to simply do:
:set fo += w
:set tw = 50
gggqG
What this does:
:set fo+=w " Add the 'w' flag to the formatoptions so
" that reformatting is only done when lines
" end in spaces or are too long (so your <p>
" isn't moved onto the same line as your <a...).
:set tw=50 " Set the textwidth up to wrap at column 50
gg " Go to the start of the file
gq{motion} " Reformat the lines that {motion} moves over.
G " Motion that goes to the end of the file.
Note that this is not the same as a soft wrap: it will wrap the lines in the source file as well as on the screen (unless you don't save it of course!). There are other settings that can be added to formatoptions
that will auto-format as you type: details in :help fo-table
.
For more information, see:
:help 'formatoptions'
:help fo-table
:help 'textwidth'
:help gq
:help gg
:help G
:help 'autoindent'
:help 'smartindent'