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ultimate-vim/sources_non_forked/tabular/doc/Tabular.txt
2016-11-09 18:22:55 +01:00

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*Tabular.txt* Configurable, flexible, intuitive text aligning
*tabular* *tabular.vim*
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For Vim version 7.0 or newer
By Matt Wozniski
mjw@drexel.edu
Reference Manual ~
*tabular-toc*
1. Description |tabular-intro|
2. Walkthrough |tabular-walkthrough|
3. Scripting |tabular-scripting|
The functionality mentioned here is a plugin, see |add-plugin|.
You can avoid loading this plugin by setting the "Tabular_loaded" global
variable in your |vimrc| file: >
:let g:tabular_loaded = 1
==============================================================================
1. Description *tabular-intro*
Sometimes, it's useful to line up text. Naturally, it's nicer to have the
computer do this for you, since aligning things by hand quickly becomes
unpleasant. While there are other plugins for aligning text, the ones I've
tried are either impossibly difficult to understand and use, or too simplistic
to handle complicated tasks. This plugin aims to make the easy things easy
and the hard things possible, without providing an unnecessarily obtuse
interface. It's still a work in progress, and criticisms are welcome.
==============================================================================
2. Walkthrough *tabular-walkthrough* *:Tabularize*
Tabular's commands are based largely on regular expressions. The basic
technique used by Tabular is taking some regex to match field delimiters,
splitting the input lines at those delimiters, trimming unnecessary spaces
from the non-delimiter parts, padding the non-delimiter parts of the lines
with spaces to make them the same length, and joining things back together
again.
For instance, consider starting with the following lines:
>
Some short phrase,some other phrase
A much longer phrase here,and another long phrase
<
Let's say we want to line these lines up at the commas. We can tell
Tabularize to do this by passing a pattern matching , to the Tabularize
command:
>
:Tabularize /,
Some short phrase , some other phrase
A much longer phrase here , and another long phrase
<
I encourage you to try copying those lines to another buffer and trying to
call :Tabularize. You'll want to take notice of two things quickly: First,
instead of requiring a range, Tabularize tries to figure out what you want to
happen. Since it knows that you want to act on lines matching a comma, it
will look upwards and downwards for lines around the current line that match a
comma, and consider all contiguous lines matching the pattern to be the range
to be acted upon. You can always override this by specifying a range, though.
The second thing you should notice is that you'll almost certainly be able to
abbreviate :Tabularize to :Tab - using this form in mappings and scripts is
discouraged as it will make conflicts with other scripts more likely, but for
interactive use it's a nice timesaver. Another convenience feature is that
running :Tabularize without providing a new pattern will cause it to reuse the
last pattern it was called with.
So, anyway, now the commas line up. Splitting the lines on commas, Tabular
realized that 'Some short phrase' would need to be padded with spaces to match
the length of 'A much longer phrase here', and it did that before joining the
lines back together. You'll also notice that, in addition to the spaces
inserting for padding, extra spaces were inserted between fields. That's
because by default, Tabular prints things left-aligned with one space between
fields. If you wanted to print things right-aligned with no spaces between
fields, you would provide a different format to the Tabularize command:
>
:Tabularize /,/r0
Some short phrase, some other phrase
A much longer phrase here,and another long phrase
<
A format specifier is either l, r, or c, followed by one or more digits. If
the letter is l, the field will be left aligned, similarly for r and right
aligning and c and center aligning. The number following the letter is the
number of spaces padding to insert before the start of the next field.
Multiple format specifiers can be added to the same command - each field will
be printed with the next format specifier in the list; when they all have been
used the first will be used again, and so on. So, the last command right
aligned every field, then inserted 0 spaces of padding before the next field.
What if we wanted to right align the text before the comma, and left align the
text after the comma? The command would look like this:
>
:Tabularize /,/r1c1l0
Some short phrase , some other phrase
A much longer phrase here , and another long phrase
<
That command would be read as "Align the matching text, splitting fields on
commas. Print everything before the first comma right aligned, then 1 space,
then the comma center aligned, then 1 space, then everything after the comma
left aligned." Notice that the alignment of the field the comma is in is
irrelevant - since it's only 1 cell wide, it looks the same whether it's right,
left, or center aligned. Also notice that the 0 padding spaces specified for
the 3rd field are unused - but they would be used if there were enough fields
to require looping through the fields again. For instance:
>
abc,def,ghi
a,b
a,b,c
:Tabularize /,/r1c1l0
abc , def, ghi
a , b
a , b , c
<
Notice that now, the format pattern has been reused; field 4 (the second comma)
is right aligned, field 5 is center aligned. No spaces were inserted between
the 3rd field (containing "def") and the 4th field (the second comma) because
the format specified 'l0'.
But, what if you only wanted to act on the first comma on the line, rather than
all of the commas on the line? Let's say we want everything before the first
comma right aligned, then the comma, then everything after the comma left
aligned:
>
abc,def,ghi
a,b
a,b,c
:Tabularize /^[^,]*\zs,/r0c0l0
abc,def,ghi
a,b
a,b,c
<
Here, we used a Vim regex that would only match the first comma on the line.
It matches the beginning of the line, followed by all the non-comma characters
up to the first comma, and then forgets about what it matched so far and
pretends that the match starts exactly at the comma.
But, now that this command does exactly what we want it to, it's become pretty
unwieldy. It would be unpleasant to need to type that more than once or
twice. The solution is to assign a name to it.
>
:AddTabularPattern first_comma /^[^,]*\zs,/r0c0l0
<
Now, typing ":Tabularize first_comma" will do the same thing as typing the
whole pattern out each time. Of course this is more useful if you store the
name in a file to be used later.
NOTE: In order to make these new commands available every time vim starts,
you'll need to put those new commands into a .vim file in a plugin directory
somewhere in your 'runtimepath'. In order to make sure that Tabular.vim has
already been loaded before your file tries to use :AddTabularPattern or
:AddTabularPipeline, the new file should be installed in an after/plugin
directory in 'runtimepath'. In general, it will be safe to find out where the
TabularMaps.vim plugin was installed, and place other files extending
Tabular.vim in the same directory as TabularMaps.vim. For more information,
and some suggested best practices, check out the |tabular-scripting| section.
Lastly, we'll approach the case where tabular cannot achieve your desired goal
just by splitting lines appart, trimming whitespace, padding with whitespace,
and rejoining the lines. As an example, consider the multiple_spaces command
from TabularMaps.vim. The goal is to split using two or more spaces as a
field delimiter, and join fields back together, properly lined up, with only
two spaces between the end of each field and the beginning of the next.
Unfortunately, Tabular can't do this with only the commands we know so far:
>
:Tabularize / /
<
The above function won't work, because it will consider "a b" as 5 fields
delimited by two pairs of 2 spaces ( 'a', ' ', '', ' ', 'b' ) instead of as
3 fields delimited by one set of 2 or more spaces ( 'a', ' ', 'b' ).
>
:Tabularize / \+/
<
The above function won't work either, because it will leave the delimiter as 4
spaces when used against "a b", meaning that we would fail at our goal of
collapsing everything down to two spaces between fields. So, we need a new
command to get around this:
>
:AddTabularPipeline multiple_spaces / \{2,}/
\ map(a:lines, "substitute(v:val, ' \{2,}', ' ', 'g')")
\ | tabular#TabularizeStrings(a:lines, ' ', 'l0')
<
Yeah. I know it looks complicated. Bear with me. I probably will try to add
in some shortcuts for this syntax, but this verbose will be guaranteed to
always work.
You should already recognize the name being assigned. The next thing to
happen is / \{2,}/ which is a pattern specifying which lines should
automatically be included in the range when no range is given. Without this,
there would be no pattern to use for extending the range. Everything after
that is a | separated list of expressions to be evaluated. In the context in
which they will be evaluated, a:lines will be set to a List of Strings
containing the text of the lines being filtered as they procede through the
pipeline you've set up. The \ at the start of the lines are just vim's line
continuation marker; you needn't worry much about them. So, the first
expression in the pipeline transforms each line by replacing every instance of
2 or more spaces with exactly two spaces. The second command in the pipeline
performs the equivalent of ":Tabularize / /l0"; the only difference is that
it is operating on a List of Strings rather than text in the buffer. At the
end of the pipeline, the Strings in the modified a:lines (or the return value
of the last expression in the pipeline, if it returns a List) will replace the
chosen range.
==============================================================================
3. Extending *tabular-scripting*
As mentioned above, the most important consideration when extending Tabular
with new maps or commands is that your plugin must be loaded after Tabular.vim
has finished loading, and only if Tabular.vim has loaded successfully. The
easiest approach to making sure it loads after Tabular.vim is simply putting
the new file (we'll call it "tabular_extra.vim" as an example) into an
"after/plugin/" directory in 'runtimepath', for instance:
>
~/.vim/after/plugin/tabular_extra.vim
<
The default set of mappings, found in "TabularMaps.vim", is installed in
the after/plugin/ subdirectory of whatever directory Tabular was installed to.
The other important consideration is making sure that your commands are only
called if Tabular.vim was actually loaded. The easiest way to do this is by
checking for the existence of the :Tabularize command at the start of your
plugin. A short example plugin would look like this:
>
" after/plugin/my_tabular_commands.vim
" Provides extra :Tabularize commands
if !exists(':Tabularize')
finish " Give up here; the Tabular plugin musn't have been loaded
endif
" Make line wrapping possible by resetting the 'cpo' option, first saving it
let s:save_cpo = &cpo
set cpo&vim
AddTabularPattern! asterisk /*/l1
AddTabularPipeline! remove_leading_spaces /^ /
\ map(a:lines, "substitute(v:val, '^ *', '', '')")
" Restore the saved value of 'cpo'
let &cpo = s:save_cpo
unlet s:save_cpo
<
==============================================================================
vim:tw=78:fo=tcq2:isk=!-~,^*,^\|,^\":ts=8:ft=help:norl: