*if_perl.txt* Nvim VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Jacques Germishuys The perl Interface to Vim *if_perl* *perl* See |provider-perl| for more information. Type |gO| to see the table of contents. ============================================================================== 1. Commands *perl-commands* *:perl* :[range]perl {stmt} Execute perl statement {stmt}. The current package is "main". A simple check if the `:perl` command is working: > :perl print "Hello" :[range]perl << [endmarker] {script} {endmarker} Execute perl script {script}. Useful for including perl code in Vim scripts. Requires perl, see |script-here|. The {endmarker} below the {script} must NOT be preceded by any white space. If [endmarker] is omitted from after the "<<", a dot '.' must be used after {script}, like for the |:append| and |:insert| commands. Example: > function! MyVimMethod() perl << EOF sub my_vim_method { print "Hello World!\n"; } EOF endfunction To see what version of perl you have: > :perl print $^V < *:perldo* :[range]perldo {cmd} Execute perl command {cmd} for each line in the[range], with $_ being set to the test of each line in turn, without a trailing . In addition to $_, $line and $linenr is also set to the line content and line number respectively. Setting $_ will change the text, but note that it is not possible to add or delete lines using this command. The default for [range] is the whole file: "1,$". Examples: > :perldo $_ = reverse($_); :perldo $_ = "".$linenr." => $line"; One can use `:perldo` in conjunction with `:perl` to filter a range using perl. For example: > :perl << EOF sub perl_vim_string_replace { my $line = shift; my $needle = $vim->eval('@a'); my $replacement = $vim->eval('@b'); $line =~ s/$needle/$replacement/g; return $line; } EOF :let @a='somevalue' :let @b='newvalue' :'<,'>perldo $_ = perl_vim_string_replace($_) < *:perlfile* :[range]perlfile {file} Execute the perl script in {file}. The whole argument is used as a single file name. Both of these commands do essentially the same thing - they execute a piece of perl code, with the "current range" set to the given line range. In the case of :perl, the code to execute is in the command-line. In the case of :perlfile, the code to execute is the contents of the given file. perl commands cannot be used in the |sandbox|. To pass arguments you need to set @ARGV explicitly. Example: > :perl @ARGV = ("foo", "bar"); :perlfile myscript.pl Here are some examples *perl-examples* > :perl print "Hello" :perl $current->line (uc ($current->line)) :perl my $str = $current->buffer->[42]; print "Set \$str to: $str" Note that changes (such as the "use" statements) persist from one command to the next. ============================================================================== 2. The VIM module *perl-vim* Note: Perl codes does not currently have access to the legacy "VIM" package. ============================================================================== vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl: