undo.txt For Vim version 7.4. Last change: 2014 May 24LINK

VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar

Undo and redo undo-redoLINK

The basics are explained in section 02.5 of the user manual.

1. Undo and redo commands undo-commands

2. Two ways of undo undo-two-ways

3. Undo blocks undo-blocks

4. Undo branches undo-branches

5. Undo persistence undo-persistence

6. Remarks about undo undo-remarks

==============================================================================

1. Undo and redo commands undo-commandsLINK

<Undo> or undo <Undo> uLINK

u Undo [count] changes. {Vi: only one level}

:u :un :undoLINK

:u[ndo] Undo one change. {Vi: only one level}

E830LINK

:u[ndo] {N} Jump to after change number {N}. See undo-branches

for the meaning of {N}. {not in Vi}

CTRL-RLINK

CTRL-R Redo [count] changes which were undone. {Vi: redraw

screen}

:red :redo redoLINK

:red[o] Redo one change which was undone. {Vi: no redo}

ULINK

U Undo all latest changes on one line, the line where

the latest change was made. U itself also counts as

a change, and thus U undoes a previous U.

{Vi: while not moved off of the last modified line}

The last changes are remembered. You can use the undo and redo commands above

to revert the text to how it was before each change. You can also apply the

changes again, getting back the text before the undo.

The "U" command is treated by undo/redo just like any other command. Thus a

"u" command undoes a "U" command and a 'CTRL-R' command redoes it again. When

mixing "U", "u" and 'CTRL-R' you will notice that the "U" command will

restore the situation of a line to before the previous "U" command. This may

be confusing. Try it out to get used to it.

The "U" command will always mark the buffer as changed. When "U" changes the

buffer back to how it was without changes, it is still considered changed.

Use "u" to undo changes until the buffer becomes unchanged.

==============================================================================

2. Two ways of undo undo-two-waysLINK

How undo and redo commands work depends on the 'u' flag in 'cpoptions'.

There is the Vim way ('u' excluded) and the Vi-compatible way ('u' included).

In the Vim way, "uu" undoes two changes. In the Vi-compatible way, "uu" does

nothing (undoes an undo).

'u' excluded, the Vim way:

You can go back in time with the undo command. You can then go forward again

with the redo command. If you make a new change after the undo command,

the redo will not be possible anymore.

'u' included, the Vi-compatible way:

The undo command undoes the previous change, and also the previous undo command.

The redo command repeats the previous undo command. It does NOT repeat a

change command, use "." for that.

Examples Vim way Vi-compatible way

"uu" two times undo no-op

"u CTRL-R" no-op two times undo

Rationale: Nvi uses the "." command instead of CTRL-R. Unfortunately, this

is not Vi compatible. For example "dwdwu." in Vi deletes two

words, in Nvi it does nothing.

==============================================================================

3. Undo blocks undo-blocksLINK

One undo command normally undoes a typed command, no matter how many changes

that command makes. This sequence of undo-able changes forms an undo block.

Thus if the typed key(s) call a function, all the commands in the function are

undone together.

If you want to write a function or script that doesn't create a new undoable

change but joins in with the previous change use this command:

:undoj :undojoin E790LINK

:undoj[oin] Join further changes with the previous undo block.

Warning: Use with care, it may prevent the user from

properly undoing changes. Don't use this after undo

or redo.

{not in Vi}

This is most useful when you need to prompt the user halfway through a change.

For example in a function that calls getchar(). Do make sure that there was

a related change before this that you must join with.

This doesn't work by itself, because the next key press will start a new

change again. But you can do something like this:

:undojoin | delete

After this an "u" command will undo the delete command and the previous

change.

To do the opposite, break a change into two undo blocks, in Insert mode use

CTRL-G u. This is useful if you want an insert command to be undoable in

parts. E.g., for each sentence. i_CTRL-G_u

Setting the value of 'undolevels' also breaks undo. Even when the new value

is equal to the old value.

==============================================================================

4. Undo branches undo-branches undo-treeLINK

Above we only discussed one line of undo/redo. But it is also possible to

branch off. This happens when you undo a few changes and then make a new

change. The undone changes become a branch. You can go to that branch with

the following commands.

This is explained in the user manual: usr_32.txt.

:undol :undolistLINK

:undol[ist] List the leafs in the tree of changes. Example:

number changes when saved

88 88 2010/01/04 14:25:53

108 107 08/07 12:47:51

136 46 13:33:01 7

166 164 3 seconds ago

The "number" column is the change number. This number

continuously increases and can be used to identify a

specific undo-able change, see :undo.

The "changes" column is the number of changes to this

leaf from the root of the tree.

The "when" column is the date and time when this

change was made. The four possible formats are:

N seconds ago

HH:MM:SS hour, minute, seconds

MM/DD HH:MM:SS idem, with month and day

YYYY/MM/DD HH:MM:SS idem, with year

The "saved" column specifies, if this change was

written to disk and which file write it was. This can

be used with the :later and :earlier commands.

For more details use the undotree() function.

g-LINK

g- Go to older text state. With a count repeat that many

times. {not in Vi}

:ea :earlierLINK

:earlier {count} Go to older text state {count} times.

:earlier {N}s Go to older text state about {N} seconds before.

:earlier {N}m Go to older text state about {N} minutes before.

:earlier {N}h Go to older text state about {N} hours before.

:earlier {N}d Go to older text state about {N} days before.

:earlier {N}f Go to older text state {N} file writes before.

When changes were made since the last write

":earlier 1f" will revert the text to the state when

it was written. Otherwise it will go to the write

before that.

When at the state of the first file write, or when

the file was not written, ":earlier 1f" will go to

before the first change.

g+LINK

g+ Go to newer text state. With a count repeat that many

times. {not in Vi}

:lat :laterLINK

:later {count} Go to newer text state {count} times.

:later {N}s Go to newer text state about {N} seconds later.

:later {N}m Go to newer text state about {N} minutes later.

:later {N}h Go to newer text state about {N} hours later.

:later {N}d Go to newer text state about {N} days later.

:later {N}f Go to newer text state {N} file writes later.

When at the state of the last file write, ":later 1f"

will go to the newest text state.

Note that text states will become unreachable when undo information is cleared

for 'undolevels'.

Don't be surprised when moving through time shows multiple changes to take

place at a time. This happens when moving through the undo tree and then

making a new change.

EXAMPLE

Start with this text:

one two three

Delete the first word by pressing "x" three times:

ne two three

e two three

two three

Now undo that by pressing "u" three times:

e two three

ne two three

one two three

Delete the second word by pressing "x" three times:

one wo three

one o three

one three

Now undo that by using "g-" three times:

one o three

one wo three

two three

You are now back in the first undo branch, after deleting "one". Repeating

"g-" will now bring you back to the original text:

e two three

ne two three

one two three

Jump to the last change with ":later 1h":

one three

And back to the start again with ":earlier 1h":

one two three

Note that using "u" and CTRL-R will not get you to all possible text states

while repeating "g-" and "g+" does.

==============================================================================

5. Undo persistence undo-persistence persistent-undoLINK

When unloading a buffer Vim normally destroys the tree of undos created for

that buffer. By setting the 'undofile' option, Vim will automatically save

your undo history when you write a file and restore undo history when you edit

the file again.

The 'undofile' option is checked after writing a file, before the BufWritePost

autocommands. If you want to control what files to write undo information

for, you can use a BufWritePre autocommand:

au BufWritePre /tmp/* setlocal noundofile

Vim saves undo trees in a separate undo file, one for each edited file, using

a simple scheme that maps filesystem paths directly to undo files. Vim will

detect if an undo file is no longer synchronized with the file it was written

for (with a hash of the file contents) and ignore it when the file was changed

after the undo file was written, to prevent corruption. An undo file is also

ignored if its owner differs from the owner of the edited file, except when

the owner of the undo file is the current user. Set 'verbose' to get a

message about that when opening a file.

Undo files are normally saved in the same directory as the file. This can be

changed with the 'undodir' option.

When the file is encrypted, the text in the undo file is also crypted. The

same key and method is used. encryption

You can also save and restore undo histories by using ":wundo" and ":rundo"

respectively:

:wundo :rundoLINK

:wundo[!] {file}

Write undo history to {file}.

When {file} exists and it does not look like an undo file

(the magic number at the start of the file is wrong), then

this fails, unless the ! was added.

If it exists and does look like an undo file it is

overwritten. If there is no undo-history, nothing will be

written.

Implementation detail: Overwriting happens by first deleting

the existing file and then creating a new file with the same

name. So it is not possible to overwrite an existing undofile

in a write-protected directory.

{not in Vi}

:rundo {file} Read undo history from {file}.

{not in Vi}

You can use these in autocommands to explicitly specify the name of the

history file. E.g.:

au BufReadPost * call ReadUndo()

au BufWritePost * call WriteUndo()

func ReadUndo()

if filereadable(expand('%:h'). '/UNDO/' . expand('%:t'))

rundo %:h/UNDO/%:t

endif

endfunc

func WriteUndo()

let dirname = expand('%:h') . '/UNDO'

if !isdirectory(dirname)

call mkdir(dirname)

endif

wundo %:h/UNDO/%:t

endfunc

You should keep 'undofile' off, otherwise you end up with two undo files for

every write.

You can use the undofile() function to find out the file name that Vim would

use.

Note that while reading/writing files and 'undofile' is set most errors will

be silent, unless 'verbose' is set. With :wundo and :rundo you will get more

error messages, e.g., when the file cannot be read or written.

NOTE: undo files are never deleted by Vim. You need to delete them yourself.

Reading an existing undo file may fail for several reasons:

E822 It cannot be opened, because the file permissions don't allow it.LINK

E823 The magic number at the start of the file doesn't match. This usuallyLINK

means it is not an undo file.

E824 The version number of the undo file indicates that it's written by aLINK

newer version of Vim. You need that newer version to open it. Don't

write the buffer if you want to keep the undo info in the file.

"File contents changed, cannot use undo info"

The file text differs from when the undo file was written. This means

the undo file cannot be used, it would corrupt the text. This also

happens when 'encoding' differs from when the undo file was written.

E825 The undo file does not contain valid contents and cannot be used.LINK

E826 The undo file is encrypted but decryption failed.LINK

E827 The undo file is encrypted but this version of Vim does not supportLINK

encryption. Open the file with another Vim.

E832 The undo file is encrypted but 'key' is not set, the text file is notLINK

encrypted. This would happen if the text file was written by Vim

encrypted at first, and later overwritten by not encrypted text.

You probably want to delete this undo file.

"Not reading undo file, owner differs"

The undo file is owned by someone else than the owner of the text

file. For safety the undo file is not used.

Writing an undo file may fail for these reasons:

E828 The file to be written cannot be created. Perhaps you do not haveLINK

write permissions in the directory.

"Cannot write undo file in any directory in 'undodir'"

None of the directories in 'undodir' can be used.

"Will not overwrite with undo file, cannot read"

A file exists with the name of the undo file to be written, but it

cannot be read. You may want to delete this file or rename it.

"Will not overwrite, this is not an undo file"

A file exists with the name of the undo file to be written, but it

does not start with the right magic number. You may want to delete

this file or rename it.

"Skipping undo file write, nothing to undo"

There is no undo information to be written, nothing has been changed

or 'undolevels' is negative.

E829 An error occurred while writing the undo file. You may want to tryLINK

again.

==============================================================================

6. Remarks about undo undo-remarksLINK

The number of changes that are remembered is set with the 'undolevels' option.

If it is zero, the Vi-compatible way is always used. If it is negative no

undo is possible. Use this if you are running out of memory.

clear-undoLINK

When you set 'undolevels' to -1 the undo information is not immediately

cleared, this happens at the next change. To force clearing the undo

information you can use these commands:

:let old_undolevels = &undolevels

:set undolevels=-1

:exe "normal a \<BS>\<Esc>"

:let &undolevels = old_undolevels

:unlet old_undolevels

Marks for the buffer ('a to 'z) are also saved and restored, together with the

text. {Vi does this a little bit different}

When all changes have been undone, the buffer is not considered to be changed.

It is then possible to exit Vim with ":q" instead of ":q!" {not in Vi}. Note

that this is relative to the last write of the file. Typing "u" after ":w"

actually changes the buffer, compared to what was written, so the buffer is

considered changed then.

When manual folding is being used, the folds are not saved and restored.

Only changes completely within a fold will keep the fold as it was, because

the first and last line of the fold don't change.

The numbered registers can also be used for undoing deletes. Each time you

delete text, it is put into register "1. The contents of register "1 are

shifted to "2, etc. The contents of register "9 are lost. You can now get

back the most recent deleted text with the put command: '"1P'. (also, if the

deleted text was the result of the last delete or copy operation, 'P' or 'p'

also works as this puts the contents of the unnamed register). You can get

back the text of three deletes ago with '"3P'.

redo-registerLINK

If you want to get back more than one part of deleted text, you can use a

special feature of the repeat command ".". It will increase the number of the

register used. So if you first do ""1P", the following "." will result in a

'"2P'. Repeating this will result in all numbered registers being inserted.

Example: If you deleted text with 'dd....' it can be restored with

'"1P....'.

If you don't know in which register the deleted text is, you can use the

:display command. An alternative is to try the first register with '"1P', and

if it is not what you want do 'u.'. This will remove the contents of the

first put, and repeat the put command for the second register. Repeat the

'u.' until you got what you want.

vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl: