Skip to content

netoctone/fzf.vim

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

fzf ❤️ vim

Things you can do with fzf and Vim.

Rationale

fzf in itself is not a Vim plugin, and the official repository only provides the basic wrapper function for Vim and it's up to the users to write their own Vim commands with it. However, I've learned that many users of fzf are not familiar with Vimscript and are looking for the "default" implementation of the features they can find in the alternative Vim plugins.

This repository is a bundle of fzf-based commands and mappings extracted from my .vimrc to address such needs. They are not designed to be flexible or configurable, and there's no guarantee of backward-compatibility.

Why you should use fzf on Vim

Because you can and you love fzf.

fzf runs asynchronously and can be orders of magnitude faster than similar Vim plugins. However, the benefit may not be noticeable if the size of the input is small, which is the case for many of the commands provided here. Nevertheless I wrote them anyway since it's really easy to implement custom selector with fzf.

fzf is an independent command-line program and thus requires an external terminal emulator when on GVim. You may or may not like the experience. Also note that Windows support is experimental at the moment.

Installation

fzf.vim depends on the basic Vim plugin of the main fzf repository, which means you need to set up both "fzf" and "fzf.vim" on Vim. To learn more about fzf/Vim integration, see README-VIM.

Using vim-plug

If you already installed fzf using Homebrew, the following should suffice:

Plug '/usr/local/opt/fzf'
Plug 'junegunn/fzf.vim'

But if you want to install fzf as well using vim-plug:

Plug 'junegunn/fzf', { 'dir': '~/.fzf', 'do': './install --all' }
Plug 'junegunn/fzf.vim'
  • dir and do options are not mandatory
  • Use ./install --bin instead if you don't need fzf outside of Vim
  • Make sure to use Vim 7.4 or above

Commands

Command List
Files [PATH] Files (similar to :FZF)
GFiles [OPTS] Git files (git ls-files)
GFiles? Git files (git status)
Buffers Open buffers
Colors Color schemes
Ag [PATTERN] ag search result (ALT-A to select all, ALT-D to deselect all)
Lines [QUERY] Lines in loaded buffers
BLines [QUERY] Lines in the current buffer
Tags [QUERY] Tags in the project (ctags -R)
BTags [QUERY] Tags in the current buffer
Marks Marks
Windows Windows
Locate PATTERN locate command output
History v:oldfiles and open buffers
History: Command history
History/ Search history
Snippets Snippets (UltiSnips)
Commits Git commits (requires fugitive.vim)
BCommits Git commits for the current buffer
Commands Commands
Maps Normal mode mappings
Helptags Help tags 1
Filetypes File types
  • Most commands support CTRL-T / CTRL-X / CTRL-V key bindings to open in a new tab, a new split, or in a new vertical split
  • Bang-versions of the commands (e.g. Ag!) will open fzf in fullscreen
  • You can set g:fzf_command_prefix to give the same prefix to the commands
    • e.g. let g:fzf_command_prefix = 'Fzf' and you have FzfFiles, etc.

(1: Helptags will shadow the command of the same name from pathogen. But its functionality is still available via call pathogen#helptags(). )

Customization

Global options

See README-VIM.md of the main fzf repository for details.

" This is the default extra key bindings
let g:fzf_action = {
  \ 'ctrl-t': 'tab split',
  \ 'ctrl-x': 'split',
  \ 'ctrl-v': 'vsplit' }

" Default fzf layout
" - down / up / left / right
let g:fzf_layout = { 'down': '~40%' }

" In Neovim, you can set up fzf window using a Vim command
let g:fzf_layout = { 'window': 'enew' }
let g:fzf_layout = { 'window': '-tabnew' }
let g:fzf_layout = { 'window': '10split enew' }

" Customize fzf colors to match your color scheme
let g:fzf_colors =
\ { 'fg':      ['fg', 'Normal'],
  \ 'bg':      ['bg', 'Normal'],
  \ 'hl':      ['fg', 'Comment'],
  \ 'fg+':     ['fg', 'CursorLine', 'CursorColumn', 'Normal'],
  \ 'bg+':     ['bg', 'CursorLine', 'CursorColumn'],
  \ 'hl+':     ['fg', 'Statement'],
  \ 'info':    ['fg', 'PreProc'],
  \ 'border':  ['fg', 'Ignore'],
  \ 'prompt':  ['fg', 'Conditional'],
  \ 'pointer': ['fg', 'Exception'],
  \ 'marker':  ['fg', 'Keyword'],
  \ 'spinner': ['fg', 'Label'],
  \ 'header':  ['fg', 'Comment'] }

" Enable per-command history.
" CTRL-N and CTRL-P will be automatically bound to next-history and
" previous-history instead of down and up. If you don't like the change,
" explicitly bind the keys to down and up in your $FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS.
let g:fzf_history_dir = '~/.local/share/fzf-history'

Command-local options

" [Buffers] Jump to the existing window if possible
let g:fzf_buffers_jump = 1

" [[B]Commits] Customize the options used by 'git log':
let g:fzf_commits_log_options = '--graph --color=always --format="%C(auto)%h%d %s %C(black)%C(bold)%cr"'

" [Tags] Command to generate tags file
let g:fzf_tags_command = 'ctags -R'

" [Commands] --expect expression for directly executing the command
let g:fzf_commands_expect = 'alt-enter,ctrl-x'

Advanced customization

You can use autoload functions to define your own commands.

" Command for git grep
" - fzf#vim#grep(command, with_column, [options], [fullscreen])
command! -bang -nargs=* GGrep
  \ call fzf#vim#grep(
  \   'git grep --line-number '.shellescape(<q-args>), 0,
  \   { 'dir': systemlist('git rev-parse --show-toplevel')[0] }, <bang>0)

" Override Colors command. You can safely do this in your .vimrc as fzf.vim
" will not override existing commands.
command! -bang Colors
  \ call fzf#vim#colors({'left': '15%', 'options': '--reverse --margin 30%,0'}, <bang>0)

" Augmenting Ag command using fzf#vim#with_preview function
"   * fzf#vim#with_preview([[options], preview window, [toggle keys...]])
"     * For syntax-highlighting, Ruby and any of the following tools are required:
"       - Highlight: http://www.andre-simon.de/doku/highlight/en/highlight.php
"       - CodeRay: http://coderay.rubychan.de/
"       - Rouge: https://github.com/jneen/rouge
"
"   :Ag  - Start fzf with hidden preview window that can be enabled with "?" key
"   :Ag! - Start fzf in fullscreen and display the preview window above
command! -bang -nargs=* Ag
  \ call fzf#vim#ag(<q-args>,
  \                 <bang>0 ? fzf#vim#with_preview('up:60%')
  \                         : fzf#vim#with_preview('right:50%:hidden', '?'),
  \                 <bang>0)

" Similarly, we can apply it to fzf#vim#grep. To use ripgrep instead of ag:
command! -bang -nargs=* Rg
  \ call fzf#vim#grep(
  \   'rg --column --line-number --no-heading --color=always '.shellescape(<q-args>), 1,
  \   <bang>0 ? fzf#vim#with_preview('up:60%')
  \           : fzf#vim#with_preview('right:50%:hidden', '?'),
  \   <bang>0)

" Likewise, Files command with preview window
command! -bang -nargs=? -complete=dir Files
  \ call fzf#vim#files(<q-args>, fzf#vim#with_preview(), <bang>0)

Mappings

Mapping Description
<plug>(fzf-maps-n) Normal mode mappings
<plug>(fzf-maps-i) Insert mode mappings
<plug>(fzf-maps-x) Visual mode mappings
<plug>(fzf-maps-o) Operator-pending mappings
<plug>(fzf-complete-word) cat /usr/share/dict/words
<plug>(fzf-complete-path) Path completion using find (file + dir)
<plug>(fzf-complete-path-relative) Generate relative path (starting ./ or ../)
<plug>(fzf-complete-file) File completion using find
<plug>(fzf-complete-file-ag) File completion using ag
<plug>(fzf-complete-line) Line completion (all open buffers)
<plug>(fzf-complete-buffer-line) Line completion (current buffer only)

Usage

" Mapping selecting mappings
nmap <leader><tab> <plug>(fzf-maps-n)
xmap <leader><tab> <plug>(fzf-maps-x)
omap <leader><tab> <plug>(fzf-maps-o)

" Insert mode completion
imap <c-x><c-k> <plug>(fzf-complete-word)
imap <c-x><c-f> <plug>(fzf-complete-path)
imap <c-x><c-j> <plug>(fzf-complete-file-ag)
imap <c-x><c-l> <plug>(fzf-complete-line)

" Advanced customization using autoload functions
inoremap <expr> <c-x><c-k> fzf#vim#complete#word({'left': '15%'})

Completion helper

fzf#complete is a helper function for creating custom fuzzy completion using fzf. If the first parameter is a command string or a Vim list, it will be used as the source.

" Replace the default dictionary completion with fzf-based fuzzy completion
inoremap <expr> <c-x><c-k> fzf#complete('cat /usr/share/dict/words')

For advanced uses, you can pass an options dictionary to the function. The set of options is pretty much identical to that for fzf#run only with the following exceptions:

  • reducer (funcref)
    • Reducer transforms the output lines of fzf into a single string value
  • prefix (string or funcref; default: \k*$)
    • Regular expression pattern to extract the completion prefix
    • Or a function to extract completion prefix
  • Both source and options can be given as funcrefs that take the completion prefix as the argument and return the final value
  • sink or sink* are ignored

Reducer example

function! s:make_sentence(lines)
  return substitute(join(a:lines), '^.', '\=toupper(submatch(0))', '').'.'
endfunction

inoremap <expr> <c-x><c-s> fzf#complete({
  \ 'source':  'cat /usr/share/dict/words',
  \ 'reducer': function('<sid>make_sentence'),
  \ 'options': '--multi --reverse --margin 15%,0',
  \ 'left':    20})

Status line of terminal buffer

When fzf starts in a terminal buffer (see fzf/README-VIM.md), you may want to customize the statusline of the containing buffer.

Hide statusline

autocmd! FileType fzf
autocmd  FileType fzf set laststatus=0 noshowmode noruler
  \| autocmd BufLeave <buffer> set laststatus=2 showmode ruler

Custom statusline

function! s:fzf_statusline()
  " Override statusline as you like
  highlight fzf1 ctermfg=161 ctermbg=251
  highlight fzf2 ctermfg=23 ctermbg=251
  highlight fzf3 ctermfg=237 ctermbg=251
  setlocal statusline=%#fzf1#\ >\ %#fzf2#fz%#fzf3#f
endfunction

autocmd! User FzfStatusLine call <SID>fzf_statusline()

License

MIT

About

fzf ❤️ vim

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Vim Script 95.4%
  • Ruby 2.3%
  • Shell 1.9%
  • Perl 0.4%