I am making the effort to learn Vim.
When I paste code into my document from the clipboard, I get extra spaces at the start of each new line:
line
line
line
I know you can turn off auto indent but I can't get it to work because I have some other settings conflicting or something (which look pretty obvious in my .vimrc but don't seem to matter when I take them out).
How do I turn off auto indenting when I paste code but still have vim auto indent when I am writing code? Here is my .vimrc
file:
set expandtab
set tabstop=2
set shiftwidth=2
set autoindent
set smartindent
set bg=dark
set nowrap
cat > mynewfile.txt
press Enter, paste your text, press Enter again, and then Ctr+D to save. The file is now created and you can edit it with vim mynewfile.txt
.
Update: Better answer here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/38258720/62202
To turn off autoindent when you paste code, there's a special "paste" mode.
Type
:set paste
Then paste your code. Note that the text in the tooltip now says -- INSERT (paste) --
.
After you pasted your code, turn off the paste-mode, so that auto-indenting when you type works correctly again.
:set nopaste
However, I always found that cumbersome. That's why I map <F3>
such that it can switch between paste and nopaste modes while editing the text! I add this to .vimrc
set pastetoggle=<F3>
To avoid undesired effects while pasting, there is an option that needs to be set:
set paste
A useful command to have in your .vimrc is set pastetoggle=<F10>
or some other button, to easily toggle between paste and nopaste.
nmap <silent> <leader>p :set paste<CR>"*p:set nopaste<CR>
I usually use :r! cat
and then paste ( shift + insert )
the content, and CTRL+D
.
No need to enable & disable, direct usage.
:r! cat
works.
:r
inserts the contents of a file into the current document. !cat
says, run cat which essentially opens stdin (*nix shells) (shift + insert)
or for some terminals, right mouse click will paste the contents of the clipboard to the terminal CTRL+D
is end-of-file, so it close the :r !cat
session.
paste
made solely for this purpose? @jvriesem This isn't a 'direct' option, if what I assume of your understanding of that word is correct.
:r! cat
then CTRL+SHIFT+V
to paste in the terminal (then CTRL+D
).
If you are working locally, you can paste from the system clipboard with the key sequence:
"+p
This is a proper vim command, so no need to worry about entering an insert mode or switching off autoindent first.
Of course if you are working remotely (console over SSH, for example) then this won't work and you should go the :set noai
, insert mode, paste into console, leave insertmode, :set ai
route as described elsewhere.
:set paste
and :set nopaste
instead because despite being longer, it's easier to remember and I don't have to look it up every time!
:set paste
is not implemented, so :set noai
should be used instead.
<leader>p
.. very useful!
While setting the paste mode with paste/nopaste/pastetoggle
is perfectly fine, you still have to manually enable paste mode before pasting and disable paste mode after pasting. Being the lazy person that I am, below is the best solution that I've found so far, which automatically toggles the paste mode when you paste.
Here's a little trick that uses terminal's bracketed paste mode to automatically set/unset Vim's paste mode when you paste. Put following in your .vimrc: let &t_SI .= "\
Source: Coderwall
Note: This solution doesn't work in WSL (Windows 10 Subsystem for Linux). If anyone has a solution for WSL, please update this answer or add it in the comments.
Tmux If using tmux, then the declarations need to be double escaped. The code for this is also in Coderwall
t_SI
and t_EI
variables are enabling paste bracketing and disabling it. When paste bracketing is on, pasted text is prefixed by esc[200~
and followed by esc[201~
.
Mac users can avoid auto formatting by reading directly from the pasteboard with:
:r !pbpaste
:.!pbpaste
, this should work by replacing the current line with the output of the paste buffer. In general, vim allows you to pipe data that is in your current file to another program and replace the text with the output of the command. So :1,3!pbpaste
replaces the first three lines of your file with the paste buffer. I use :.!ppjson
to take a very long (unformatted JSON string) and format it and replace the long string with the formatted equivalent. ppjson is just a bash script that runs python -m json.tool
.
xsel --clipboard
instead of pbpaste
does the same thing.
Here is a post by someone who figured out how to remap the paste event to automatically turn paste mode on and then back off. Works for me in tmux/iTerm on MacOSX.
I just put set clipboard=unnamed
in my .vimrc. That makes the default paste buffer map to X's clipboard.
So, if I mark a bit of text in a terminal, I can simply press p
to paste it in vim. Similarly, I can yank things in vim (e.g. YY
to yank the current line into the buffer) and middle click in any window to paste it.
I don't know. I find it super convenient.
Add this to your ~/.vimrc
and you will only have to press F2 before and after pasting:
set pastetoggle=<F2>
When working inside a terminal the vim-bracketed-paste vim plugin will automatically handle pastes without needing any keystrokes before or after the paste.
It works by detecting bracketed paste mode which is an escape sequence sent by "modern" x-term compatible terminals like iTerm2, gnome-terminal, and other terminals using libvte. As an added bonus it works also for tmux sessions. I am using it successfully with iTerm2 on a Mac connecting to a linux server and using tmux.
Stick this in your ~/.vimrc and be happy:
" enables :Paste to just do what you want
command Paste execute 'set noai | insert | set ai'
Edit: on reflection, :r !cat
is a far better approach since it's short, semantic, and requires no custom vimrc. Use that instead!
Another answer I did not see until now:
:se paste noai
I am a Python user who sometimes copy and paste into Vim. (I switched from Mac to Windows WSL) and this was one of the glitches that bothered me.
If you touch a script.py
and then vi script.py
, Vi will detect it is a Python script and tried to be helpful, autoindent, paste with extra indents, etc. This won't happen if you don't tell it is a Python script.
However, if that is already happening to you, the default autoindent could be a nightmare when you paste already fully indented code (see the tilted ladder shape below).
I tried three options and here are the results
set paste # works perfect
set noai # still introduced extra whitespace
set noautoindent # still introduced extra whitespace
https://i.stack.imgur.com/4TdUY.png
set pastetoggle=<F2>
in my .vimrc
so pressing F2 toggles paste on and off.
Although :pastetoggle
or :paste
and :nopaste
should be working fine (if implemented - they are not always as we can see from the discussion) I highly recomment pasting using the direct approach "+p
or "*p
and reading with "+r
or "*r
:
Vim has acess to ten types of registers (:help registers
) and the questioner is interested in quotestar
and quoteplus
from section
Selection and drop registers "*, "+ and "~ Use these registers for storing and retrieving the selected text for the GUI. See quotestar and quoteplus. When the clipboard is not available or not working, the unnamed register is used instead. For Unix systems the clipboard is only available when the +xterm_clipboard feature is present. {not in Vi} Note that there is only a distinction between "* and "+ for X11 systems.
:help x11-selection
further clarifies the difference of *
and +
:
quoteplus quote+ There are three documented X selections: PRIMARY (which is expected to represent the current visual selection - as in Vim's Visual mode), SECONDARY (which is ill-defined) and CLIPBOARD (which is expected to be used for cut, copy and paste operations). Of these three, Vim uses PRIMARY when reading and writing the "* register (hence when the X11 selections are available, Vim sets a default value for 'clipboard' of "autoselect"), and CLIPBOARD when reading and writing the "+ register. Vim does not access the SECONDARY selection. Examples: (assuming the default option values) Select an URL in Visual mode in Vim. Go to your browser and click the middle mouse button in the URL text field. The selected text will be inserted (hopefully!). Note: in Firefox you can set the middlemouse.contentLoadURL preference to true in about:config, then the selected URL will be used when pressing middle mouse button in most places in the window. Select some text in your browser by dragging with the mouse. Go to Vim and press the middle mouse button: The selected text is inserted. Select some text in Vim and do "+y. Go to your browser, select some text in a textfield by dragging with the mouse. Now use the right mouse button and select "Paste" from the popup menu. The selected text is overwritten by the text from Vim. Note that the text in the "+ register remains available when making a Visual selection, which makes other text available in the "* register. That allows overwriting selected text.
Another way to paste is via <C-r>
in insert mode and dropping the contents of the register (here the global register). See: :h i_ctrl-r
and h i_CTRL-R_CTRL-O
.
From the vim help documentation:
Insert the contents of a register literally and don't auto-indent. Does the same as pasting with the mouse. Does not replace characters! The '.' register (last inserted text) is still inserted as typed.{not in Vi}
So to paste contents into vim without auto indent, use <C-r><C-o>*
in most unix systems.
You can add a mapping in the your vimrc inoremap <C-r> <C-r><C-o>
so you can paste the contents of the *
register normally without the auto indent by using <C-r>*
.
Note: this only works if vim is compiled with clipboard
.
This works for me ( case for + register, what i use like exchange buffer between aps ):
imap <silent> <S-Insert> <C-O>:set noai<CR><C-R>+<C-O>:set ai<CR>
From vim: ]p
From outside: "*]p
or "+]p
If you are on a mac, macvim seems to handle it well without having to toggle paste.
brew install macvim --override-system-vim
.vimrc
file?
This issue has already been answered, but I though I could also add my own solution:
If you simply want to disable auto-indent system wise, for every file type (basically, disable the auto-indent feature completely), you can do the following:
Backup the indent.vim file: sudo mv /usr/share/vim/vim81/indent.vim /usr/share/vim/vim81/indent.vim.orig Create a new empty indent.vim file: sudo touch /usr/share/vim/vim81/indent.vim
Please read this article: Toggle auto-indenting for code paste
Some people like the visual feedback shown in the status line by the following alternative for your vimrc:
nnoremap <F2> :set invpaste paste?<CR>
set pastetoggle=<F2>
set showmode
The fastest way I’m aware of to quickly go to paste-insert mode for a one-shot paste is tpope’s unimpaired, which features yo
and yO
, presumably mnemonics for “you open”. They’re only documented in his vimdoc, as:
A toggle has not been provided for 'paste' because the typical use case of wrapping of a solitary insertion is so wasteful: You toggle twice, but you only paste once (YOPO). Instead, press yo or yO to invoke o or O with 'paste' already set. Leaving insert mode sets 'nopaste' automatically.
Native paste / bracketed paste is the best and simplest way since vim 8
(released in 2016). It even works over ssh! (Bracketed paste works on Linux and Mac, but not Windows Git Bash)
Make sure you have vim 8+ (you don't need the +clipboard or +xterm_clipboard options). vim --version | head -1 Simply use the OS native paste command (e.g. ctrl+shift+V or cmd+V) in Normal Mode. Do not press i for Insert Mode.
Test
Copy (ctrl+shift+C or cmd+C) the output of this (2 lines with a tab indent) to the system clipboard: echo -e '\ta\n\tb' Launch a clean vim 8+ with autoindent: vim -u NONE --noplugin -c 'set autoindent' Paste from the system clipboard (ctrl+shift+V or cmd+V) in Normal Mode. Do not press i for Insert Mode. The a and b should be aligned with a single tab indent. You can even do this while ssh-ing to a remote machine (the remote machine will need vim 8+). Now try the old way, which will autoindent the second line with an extra tab: Press i for Insert Mode. Then paste using ctrl+shift+V or cmd+V. The a and b are misaligned now.
Installing Vim 8
Ubuntu 18.04 - comes with Vim 8 by default.
Ubuntu 16.04 - install from a PPA. sudo add-apt-repository ppa:jonathonf/vim sudo apt update sudo apt install vim
Mac: brew install vim
Featured snippet
for my search 'paste content no tabs vim', maybe because, I used 'tab' keyword, only in this answer mentioned :)
The following vim plugin handles that automatically through its "Bracketed Paste" mode: https://github.com/wincent/terminus
Sets up "Bracketed Paste" mode, which means you can forget about manually setting the 'paste' option and simply go ahead and paste in any mode.
Sadly I found the vim plugin mentioned not to be working with iTerm2 3.0.15 (to be fair I don't know if this broke on older versions) - but I found this hack instead.
Map command-p to do the paste and using iTerm2 vim keys. Obviously this only works for iTerm2.
How it works. I use "jk" to enter escape mode so you will also need:
:inoremap jk
in your .vimrc.
Then it just invokes P to enter paste mode, "+p to paste from the clipboard and then P to disable paste mode. hth.
https://i.stack.imgur.com/CKXUt.png
If you use the vim above v8.2
, you can check with :help tmux-integration
.
If you experience issues when running Vim inside tmux, here are a few hints. You can comment-out parts if something doesn't work (it may depend on the terminal that tmux is running in):
if !has('gui_running') && &term =~ '^\%(screen\|tmux\)'
" Better mouse support, see :help 'ttymouse'
set ttymouse=sgr
" Enable true colors, see :help xterm-true-color
let &termguicolors = v:true
let &t_8f = "\<Esc>[38;2;%lu;%lu;%lum"
let &t_8b = "\<Esc>[48;2;%lu;%lu;%lum"
" Enable bracketed paste mode, see :help xterm-bracketed-paste
let &t_BE = "\<Esc>[?2004h"
let &t_BD = "\<Esc>[?2004l"
let &t_PS = "\<Esc>[200~"
let &t_PE = "\<Esc>[201~"
" Enable focus event tracking, see :help xterm-focus-event
let &t_fe = "\<Esc>[?1004h"
let &t_fd = "\<Esc>[?1004l"
" Enable modified arrow keys, see :help xterm-modifier-keys
execute "silent! set <xUp>=\<Esc>[@;*A"
execute "silent! set <xDown>=\<Esc>[@;*B"
execute "silent! set <xRight>=\<Esc>[@;*C"
execute "silent! set <xLeft>=\<Esc>[@;*D"
endif
Success story sharing
:set noai
followed by:set ai
. The suggestion of:r! cat
is shorter.set paste
is easier, definitely. It is much more semantic thannoai
or evennoautoindent
, which is more important when typing "noai" and "paste" take about the same insignificant amount of time when you are proficient enough as a touch typist.:set noai
doesn't always work, depending on how the other indent-related settings are configured as per the OP.:set paste
appears to be a shorthand for several settings all at once.set copyindent
will take care of this for you seamlessly.:set paste
also disables other features like braces completion, which is also not wanted when pasting code.