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PROGRAM:
NAME
vile, xvile, uxvile, lxvile - VI Like Emacs
SYNOPSIS
vile [@cmdfile] [+command] [-FhIiRVv] [-gNNN] [-kcryptkey] [-spattern] [-ttag]
[filename]...
DESCRIPTION
vile is a text editor. This man page is fairly terse. More information can be obtained
from the internal help, available with the -h option or by using the ":help" command from
within vile.
xvile is the same text editor, built as an X-windows application, with fully integrated
mouse support, scrollbars, etc.
uxvile is a wrapper around xvile which invokes the latter program with the correct locale
environment required to use a unicode character set and the "UXVile" X resource class set.
lxvile is a wrapper around xvile which invokes the latter program with a font chosen to
match the current locale environment.
SPIRIT
vile retains the "finger-feel", if you will, of vi, while adding the multiple buffer and
multiple window features of emacs and other editors. It is definitely not a vi clone, in
that some substantial stuff is missing, and the screen doesn't look quite the same. The
things that you tend to type over and over probably work. Things done less frequently,
like configuring a startup file, are somewhat (or very, depending on how ambitious you
are) different. But what matters most is that one's "muscle memory" does the right thing
to the text in front of you, and that is what vile tries to do for vi users.
OPTIONS
Vile accumulates most options into two temporary buffers [vileinit] and [vileopts]. The
former is executed before reading the first file into a buffer. The latter is executed
after reading the first file into a buffer. Each is removed after executing (unless an
error is detected).
COMMON OPTIONS
-ccommand
vile will begin the session on the first file invoking the given command. Legal
commands include many ex-style commands, vile-commands, etc., subject to shell
quoting. This option is used most often with a line number or search pattern. For
example
vile -c123 filename
vile -c/pattern filename
They correspond to ex-style commands on the given file:
:123
:/pattern
These are more verbose equivalents:
vile -c'123 goto-line' filename
vile -c'search-forward /pattern/' filename
You can use more than one command, e.g.,
vile -c'123' -c'10*goto-col' filename
to put the cursor on column 10 of line 123. The "*" (or ":") separates the repeat
count (used by goto-col) from the line- or range-specification used by line-
oriented commands.
@cmdfile
vile will run the specified file as its startup file, and will bypass any normal
startup file (i.e. .vilerc) or environment variable (i.e. $VILEINIT). This is
added to [vileinit].
-D tells vile to trace the results of macro execution into the hidden buffer
"[Trace]".
-e | -E
Invokes vile in "noview" mode - changes are permitted to any buffer while in this
mode (see "-v").
-F will run the syntax filter that applies to each filename on the command-line, and
write the attributed text to the standard output.
-h Invokes vile on the helpfile.
-i | -I
Tells vile to use vileinit.rc (which is installed) as the initialization file. If
you do not have a .vilerc, vile will make a short one that sources vileinit.rc This
is added to [vileinit].
-k cryptkey | -K cryptkey
Specifies an encryption/decryption key. See below for further discussion. This
option applies only locally to the buffers named on the command-line, and is not
added to [vileopts], since that is executed too late.
-R Invokes vile in "readonly" mode - no writes are permitted while in this mode.
(This will also be true if vile is invoked as view, or if "readonly" mode is set in
the startup file.)
-s pattern | -S pattern
In the first file, vile will execute an initial search for the given pattern. This
is not the same as "-c/pattern", since that positions the cursor to the line
matching the pattern. This option positions the cursor within the line.
-t tag
vile will edit the correct file and move the cursor to the location of the tag.
This requires a tagsfile created with the ctags(1) command. The option -T is
equivalent, and can be used when X11 option parsing eats the -t.
-U overrides the $system-crlf variable, making new buffers start in dos mode.
-u overrides the $system-crlf variable, making new buffers start in nodos mode.
-v Invokes vile in "view" mode - no changes are permitted to any buffer while in this
mode (see "-e").
-V vile will report its version number.
-25 -43 -50 -60
On PC systems you may be able to set the initial screen resolution from the command
line.
-80 -132
On VMS systems you may be able to set the initial screen resolution from the
command line. See vile.hlp for details.
X11 OPTIONS
xvile-specific command-line options are detailed in the help file (see "Standard X command
line arguments"). The standard ones (e.g. -display, -fn, -geometry, -name, etc.) are all
supported.
OBSOLETE OPTIONS
vile recognizes some options which duplicate the functionality of the POSIX "-c" option:
+command
This has the same effect as "-ccommand".
-g NNN | -G NNN
This has the same effect as "-cNNN". vile will begin the session on the first file
jumping to the given line number NNN.
INVOCATION
vile will edit the files specified on the command line. If no files are specified, and
standard input is not connected to a terminal, then vile will bring up a buffer containing
the output of the pipe it is connected to, and will re-open /dev/tty for commands. Files
(except for the first) are not actually read into buffers until "visited". All buffers
are kept in memory: machines with not much memory or swap space may have trouble with
this.
STARTUP
If the @cmdfile option is given, then the file given as "cmdfile" will be run before any
files are loaded. If no @ option appears, startup commands will be taken from the user's
VILEINIT variable, if it is set, from the file .vilerc in the current directory, if it
exists, or from $HOME/.vilerc, as a last resort. See the help file for examples of what
sorts of things might go into these command files.
COMMANDS
Please refer to the help available within vile for vile-specific commands. (That
document, however, assumes familiarity with vi.) Short descriptions of each vile command
may be obtained with the ":describe-function" and ":describe-key" commands. All commands
may be listed with ":show-commands".
Additional documentation on writing macros using the internal scripting language can be
found in the file macros.doc, distributed with the vile source.
RELATED PROGRAMS
vile may also be built and installed as xvile, in which case it behaves as a native X
Windows application, with scrollbars, better mouse support, etc. The help file has more
information on this.
There is a program distributed with the vile source which is usually installed as vile-
manfilt. (Two versions of the source for vile-manfilt are available, in C (manfilt.c) and
in Perl (manfilt.pl).) It may be used in conjunction with vile or xvile (with the help of
the macro in the file manpage.rc) to filter and view system manual pages. xvile will even
(with your font set properly) display certain portions of the manual page text in bold or
italics as appropriate. See the help file for details.
Likewise, there are several language filters, e.g., vile-c-filt for C, which can embolden,
underline, or perform coloring on program source code. Again, see the help file for more
information.
ENCRYPTION
The program vile-crypt can be used to encrypt/decrypt files using the same algorithm as
microEmac's internal crypt algorithm. This program, which uses public domain code written
by by Dana Hoggatt, is no longer used in vile, though it is provided for compatibility.
vile currently uses the crypt(3) function for encryption/decryption, which is available on
most Unix systems. This ensures that vile is able to read and write files compatibly with
vi (but not vim, which uses an different algorithm derived from info-zip). The editor's
encryption/decryption key can be specified on the command line with "-k key". Text to be
encrypted can be specified as filenames on the command line, or provided as the standard
input. On systems with a getpass() library routine, the user will be prompted for the
encryption key if it is not given on the command line. To accommodate systems (such as
linux) where the getpass() library routine is not interruptible from the keyboard,
entering a crypt-key password which ends in ^C will cause the program to quit. See the
help file for more information on vile's encryption support, including a discussion of a
collection of macros that interface with GNU's gpg package.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
VILEINIT
Editor initialization commands in lieu of a startup file. These are copied into
[vileinit], and executed.
VILE_HELP_FILE
Override the name of the help file, normally ``vile.hlp''.
VILE_LIBDIR_PATH
Augment $PATH when searching for a filter program.
VILE_STARTUP_FILE
Override the name of the startup file, normally ``.vilerc'' (or ``vile.rc'' for
non-UNIX systems).
VILE_STARTUP_PATH
Override the search path for the startup and help files.
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