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Learning the vi and Vim Editors [Paperback]

Arnold Robbins , Elbert Hannah , Linda Lamb
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
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Book Description

22 July 2008 059652983X 978-0596529833 7

There's nothing that hard-core Unix and Linux users are more fanatical about than their text editor. Editors are the subject of adoration and worship, or of scorn and ridicule, depending upon whether the topic of discussion is your editor or someone else's.

vi has been the standard editor for close to 30 years. Popular on Unix and Linux, it has a growing following on Windows systems, too. Most experienced system administrators cite vi as their tool of choice. And since 1986, this book has been the guide for vi.

However, Unix systems are not what they were 30 years ago, and neither is this book. While retaining all the valuable features of previous editions, the 7th edition of Learning the vi and vim Editors has been expanded to include detailed information on vim, the leading vi clone. vim is the default version of vi on most Linux systems and on Mac OS X, and is available for many other operating systems too.

With this guide, you learn text editing basics and advanced tools for both editors, such as multi-window editing, how to write both interactive macros and scripts to extend the editor, and power tools for programmers -- all in the easy-to-follow style that has made this book a classic.

Learning the vi and vim Editors includes:

A complete introduction to text editing with vi:

  • How to move around vi in a hurry
  • Beyond the basics, such as using buffers
  • vi's global search and replacement
  • Advanced editing, including customizing vi and executing Unix commands


  • How to make full use of vim:
  • Extended text objects and more powerful regular expressions
  • Multi-window editing and powerful vim scripts
  • How to make full use of the GUI version of vim, called gvim
  • vim's enhancements for programmers, such as syntax highlighting, folding and extended tags


  • Coverage of three other popular vi clones -- nvi, elvis, and vile -- is also included. You'll find several valuable appendixes, including an alphabetical quick reference to both vi and ex mode commands for regular vi and for vim, plus an updated appendix on vi and the Internet.

    Learning either vi or vim is required knowledge if you use Linux or Unix, and in either case, reading this book is essential. After reading this book, the choice of editor will be obvious for you too.

    Frequently Bought Together

    Learning the vi and Vim Editors + sed and awk Pocket Reference (Pocket Reference (O'Reilly)) + bash Pocket Reference (Pocket Reference (O'Reilly))
    Price For All Three: £28.51

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    Product details

    • Paperback: 494 pages
    • Publisher: O'Reilly Media; 7 edition (22 July 2008)
    • Language: English
    • ISBN-10: 059652983X
    • ISBN-13: 978-0596529833
    • Product Dimensions: 17.8 x 2.5 x 23.3 cm
    • Average Customer Review: 3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
    • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 389,143 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
    • See Complete Table of Contents

    More About the Authors

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    Product Description

    Book Description

    Text processing at maximum speed and power

    About the Author

    Arnold Robbins, an Atlanta native, is a professional programmer and technical author. He has been working with Unix systems since 1980, when he was introduced to a PDP-11 running a version of Sixth Edition Unix. His experience also includes multiple commercial Unix systems, from Sun, IBM, HP and DEC. He has been working with GNU/Linux systems since 1996. He likes his Macintosh laptop, but it has been commandeered by one of his daughters.

    Arnold has also been a heavy awk user since 1987, when he became involved with gawk, the GNU project's version of awk. As a member of the POSIX 1003.2 balloting group, he helped shape the POSIX standard for awk. He is currently the maintainer of gawk and its documentation.

    O'Reilly has been keeping him busy: He is author and/or coauthor of the bestselling titles: Unix In A Nutshell, Effective awk Programming, sed & awk, Classic Shell Scripting, and several pocket references.

    Elbert is a professional software engineer and software architect recently finishing a 21-year career in the telcom industry. He wrote a full screen editor in assembler in 1983 as his first professional assignment, and has had special interest in editors since. He loves connecting Unix to anything and once wrote a stream editor program to automate JCL edits for mainframe monthly configurations by streaming mainframe JCL to a stream editor on an RJE connected Unix box.

    He loves tinkering with everything Unix and considers any environment incomplete without his suite of Unix work-alike tools and the latest version of vim. He is a Unix Shell specialist, writing entire applications with only the shell.

    His telcom honored him with their highest award for money-saving applications that he authored using a set of mainframe screen-scraping tools he wrote himself. They continue to use those applications today. He was also one of three founding team members that brought web 1.0 to the corporate consciousness in his telco position, and his team featured on the cover of CIO Magazine for their innovative and pioneering works.

    He also served a brief stint on the original Microsoft NT beta support team in 1992.

    He loves bicycling, music, and reading. Today he lives in the Chicago area where he occasionally takes on short term projects and works on personal software products.

    Linda Lamb is a former employee of O'Reilly Media, where she worked in various capacities, including technical writer, editor of technical books, and marketing manager. She also worked on O'Reilly's series of consumer health books, Patient Centered Guides.


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    Customer Reviews

    3.3 out of 5 stars
    3.3 out of 5 stars
    Most Helpful Customer Reviews
    5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars Learning the vi and Vim Editors 24 April 2009
    Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
    This books teaches you vi and Vim in at a very pleasant pace. It does not dive immediately into all kinds of details but starts with historical background on vi. That makes many characteristics of vi all of sudden much more logic. Then it investigates the functionality of vi step by step. It is remarquable how fast one learns vi considering the seemingly easy going pace of the writers. That emphasizes their skill to teach. In the same way Vim is treated. Highly recommended.
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    3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
    4.0 out of 5 stars vi is always there 8 Jan 2009
    Format:Paperback
    vi is always there in UNIX and vim usually not. This may change but until it does there is always room for volumes such as this that can help you discover those little tricks.

    While it's true that much of the content can be found on-line, especially if you use vim, it's useful to get it all collated and bound nicely in one place. I'm still working through the book.

    It would be nice if the test files were available. They may be but I haven't found them yet.
    Comment | 
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    8 of 11 people found the following review helpful
    1.0 out of 5 stars Not very interesting for Vim users 15 Nov 2008
    Format:Paperback
    I as many others are Vim users. The Vim coverage of this book is really poor and not worth the money. If you, in 2008, still use Vi you might get something out of this book, but the previous Vi book from O'Reilly might be worth considering in stead.

    There are other Vim books out there and plenty of internet resources. This book is not worth it. I'm actually surprised that this was published by O'Reilly
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