1# Vim Mode
2
3Zed includes a vim emulation layer known as “vim mode”. This document aims to describe how it works, and how to make the most out of it.
4
5## Philosophy
6
7Vim mode in Zed is supposed to primarily "do what you expect": it mostly tries to copy vim exactly, but will use Zed-specific functionality when available to make things smoother.
8
9This means Zed will never be 100% vim compatible, but should be 100% vim familiar! We expect that our vim mode already copes with 90% of your workflow, and we'd like to keep improving it. If you find things that you can’t yet do in vim mode, but which you rely on in your current workflow, please leave feedback in the editor itself (`:feedback`), or [file an issue](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed/issues).
10
11## Zed-specific features
12
13Zed is built on a modern foundation that (among other things) uses tree-sitter to understand the content of the file you're editing, and supports multiple cursors out of the box.
14
15Vim mode has several "core Zed" key bindings, that will help you make the most of Zed's specific feature set.
16
17```
18# Normal mode
19g d Go to definition
20g D Go to type definition
21c d Rename (change definition)
22g A Go to All references to the current word
23
24g <space> Open the current search excerpt in its own tab
25
26g s Find symbol in current file
27g S Find symbol in entire project
28
29g n Add a visual selection for the next copy of the current word
30g N The same, but backwards
31g > Skip latest word selection, and add next.
32g < The same, but backwards
33g a Add a visual selection for every copy of the current word
34
35g h Show inline error (hover)
36
37# Insert mode
38ctrl-x ctrl-o Open the completion menu
39ctrl-x ctrl-c Request GitHub Copilot suggestion (if configured)
40ctrl-x ctrl-a Open the inline AI assistant (if configured)
41ctrl-x ctrl-l Open the LSP code actions
42ctrl-x ctrl-z Hides all suggestions
43```
44
45Vim mode uses Zed to define concepts like "brackets" (for the `%` key) and "words" (for motions like `w` and `e`). This does lead to some differences, but they are mostly positive. For example `%` considers `|` to be a bracket in languages like Rust; and `w` considers `$` to be a word-character in languages like Javascript.
46
47Vim mode emulates visual block mode using Zed's multiple cursor support. This again leads to some differences, but is much more powerful.
48
49Finally, Vim mode's search and replace functionality is backed by Zed's. This means that the pattern syntax is slightly different, see the section on [Regex differences](#regex-differences) for details.
50
51## Custom key bindings
52
53Zed does not yet have an equivalent to vim’s `map` command to convert one set of keystrokes into another, however you can bind any sequence of keys to fire any Action documented in the [Key bindings documentation](https://zed.dev/docs/key-bindings).
54
55You can edit your personal key bindings with `:keymap`.
56For vim-specific shortcuts, you may find the following template a good place to start:
57
58```json
59[
60 {
61 "context": "Editor && VimControl && !VimWaiting && !menu",
62 "bindings": {
63 // put key-bindings here if you want them to work in normal & visual mode
64 }
65 },
66 {
67 "context": "Editor && vim_mode == normal && !VimWaiting && !menu",
68 "bindings": {
69 // put key-bindings here if you want them to work only in normal mode
70 }
71 },
72 {
73 "context": "Editor && vim_mode == visual && !VimWaiting && !menu",
74 "bindings": {
75 // visual, visual line & visual block modes
76 }
77 },
78 {
79 "context": "Editor && vim_mode == insert && !menu",
80 "bindings": {
81 // put key-bindings here if you want them to work in insert mode
82 }
83 }
84]
85```
86
87You can see the bindings that are enabled by default in vim mode [here](https://zed.dev/ref/vim.json).
88
89The details of the context are a little out of scope for this doc, but suffice to say that `menu` is true when a menu is open (e.g. the completions menu), `VimWaiting` is true after you type `f` or `t` when we’re waiting for a new key (and you probably don’t want bindings to happen). Please reach out on [GitHub](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed) if you want help making a key bindings work.
90
91## Command palette
92
93Vim mode allows you to enable Zed’s command palette with `:`. This means that you can use vim's command palette to run any action that Zed supports.
94
95Additionally vim mode contains a number of aliases for popular vim commands to ensure that muscle memory works. For example `:w<enter>` will save the file.
96
97We do not (yet) emulate the full power of vim’s command line, in particular we special case specific patterns instead of using vim's range selection syntax, and we do not support arguments to commands yet. Please reach out on [GitHub](https://github.com/zed-industries/zed) as you find things that are missing from the command palette.
98
99As mentioned above, one thing to be aware of is that the regex engine is slightly different from vim's in `:%s/a/b`.
100
101Currently supported vim-specific commands (as of Zed 0.106):
102
103```
104# window management
105:w[rite][!], :wq[!], :q[uit][!], :wa[ll][!], :wqa[ll][!], :qa[ll][!], :[e]x[it][!], :up[date]
106 to save/close tab(s) and pane(s) (no filename is supported yet)
107:cq
108 to quit completely.
109:vs[plit], :sp[lit]
110 to split vertically/horizontally (no filename is supported yet)
111:new, :vne[w]
112 to create a new file in a new pane above or to the left
113:tabedit, :tabnew
114 to create a new file in a new tab.
115:tabn[ext], :tabp[rev]
116 to go to previous/next tabs
117:tabc[lose]
118 to close the current tab
119
120# navigating diagnostics
121:cn[ext], :cp[rev], :ln[ext], :lp[rev]
122 to go to the next/prev diagnostics
123:cc, :ll
124 to open the errors page
125
126# jump to position
127:<number>
128 to jump to a line number
129:$
130 to jump to the end of the file
131:/foo and :?foo
132 to jump to next/prev line matching foo
133
134# replacement
135:%s/foo/bar/
136 to replace instances of foo with bar (/g is always assumed, the range must always be %, and Zed uses different regex syntax to vim)
137
138# editing
139:j[oin]
140 to join the current line (no range is yet supported)
141:d[elete][l][p]
142 to delete the current line (no range is yet supported)
143:s[ort] [i]
144 to sort the current selection (with i, case-insensitively)
145```
146
147## Related settings
148
149There are a few Zed settings that you may also enjoy if you use vim mode:
150
151```json
152{
153 // disable cursor blink
154 "cursor_blink": false,
155 // use relative line numbers
156 "relative_line_numbers": true,
157 // hide the scroll bar
158 "scrollbar": { "show": "never" }
159}
160```
161
162## Regex differences
163
164Zed uses a different regular expression engine from Vim. This means that you will have to use a different syntax for some things.
165
166Notably:
167
168- Vim uses `\(` and `\)` to represent capture groups, in Zed these are `(` and `)`.
169- On the flip side, `(` and `)` represent literal parentheses, but in Zed these must be escaped to `\(` and `\)`.
170- When replacing, Vim uses `\0` to represent the entire match, in Zed this is `$0`, same for numbered capture groups `\1` -> `$1`.
171- Vim uses `\<` and `\>` to represent word boundaries, in Zed these are both handled by `\b`
172- Vim uses `/g` to indicate "all matches on one line", in Zed this is implied
173- Vim uses `/i` to indicate "case-insensitive", in Zed you can either use `(?i)` at the start of the pattern or toggle case-sensitivity with `cmd-option-c`.
174
175To help with the transition, the command palette will fix parentheses and replace groups for you when you run `:%s//`. So `%s:/\(a\)(b)/\1/` will be converted into a search for "(a)\(b\)" and a replacement of "$1".
176
177For the full syntax supported by Zed's regex engine see the [regex crate documentation](https://docs.rs/regex/latest/regex/#syntax).