help.txt        Nvim

                        VIM - main help file
                                                                         k
      Move around:  Use the cursor keys, or "h" to go left,            h   l
                    "j" to go down, "k" to go up, "l" to go right.       j
Close this window:  Use ":q<Enter>".
   Get out of Vim:  Use ":qa!<Enter>" (careful, all changes are lost!).

Jump to a subject:  Position the cursor on a tag (e.g. bars) and hit CTRL-].
   With the mouse:  Double-click the left mouse button on a tag, e.g. bars.
        Jump back:  Type CTRL-T or CTRL-O.  Repeat to go further back.

Get specific help:  It is possible to go directly to whatever you want help
                    on, by giving an argument to the :help command.
                    Prepend something to specify the context:  help-context

                          WHAT                  PREPEND    EXAMPLE      
                      Normal mode command                  :help x
                      Visual mode command         v_       :help v_u
                      Insert mode command         i_       :help i_<Esc>
                      Command-line command        :        :help :quit
                      Command-line editing        c_       :help c_<Del>
                      Vim command argument        -        :help -r
                      Option                      '        :help 'textwidth'
                      Regular expression          /        :help /[
                    See help-summary for more contexts and an explanation.

  Search for help:  Type ":help word", then hit CTRL-D to see matching
                    help entries for "word".
                    Or use ":helpgrep word". :helpgrep

Vim stands for Vi IMproved.  Most of Vim was made by Bram Moolenaar, but only
through the help of many others.  See credits.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                doc-file-list Q_ct
BASIC:
quickref        Overview of the most common commands you will use
tutor           30 minutes training course for beginners
copying         About copyrights
iccf            Helping poor children in Uganda
sponsor         Sponsor Vim development, become a registered Vim user
www             Vim on the World Wide Web
bugs            Where to send bug reports

USER MANUAL: These files explain how to accomplish an editing task.

usr_toc.txt     Table Of Contents

Getting Started 
usr_01.txt  About the manuals
usr_02.txt  The first steps in Vim
usr_03.txt  Moving around
usr_04.txt  Making small changes
usr_05.txt  Set your settings
usr_06.txt  Using syntax highlighting
usr_07.txt  Editing more than one file
usr_08.txt  Splitting windows
usr_09.txt  Using the GUI
usr_10.txt  Making big changes
usr_11.txt  Recovering from a crash
usr_12.txt  Clever tricks

Editing Effectively 
usr_20.txt  Typing command-line commands quickly
usr_21.txt  Go away and come back
usr_22.txt  Finding the file to edit
usr_23.txt  Editing other files
usr_24.txt  Inserting quickly
usr_25.txt  Editing formatted text
usr_26.txt  Repeating
usr_27.txt  Search commands and patterns
usr_28.txt  Folding
usr_29.txt  Moving through programs
usr_30.txt  Editing programs
usr_31.txt  Exploiting the GUI
usr_32.txt  The undo tree

Tuning Vim 
usr_40.txt  Make new commands
usr_41.txt  Write a Vim script
usr_42.txt  Add new menus
usr_43.txt  Using filetypes
usr_44.txt  Your own syntax highlighted
usr_45.txt  Select your language

REFERENCE MANUAL: These files explain every detail of Vim. reference_toc

General subjects intro.txt general introduction to Vim; notation used in help files help.txt overview and quick reference (this file) helphelp.txt about using the help files index.txt alphabetical index of all commands help-tags all the tags you can jump to (index of tags) tips.txt various tips on using Vim message.txt (error) messages and explanations develop.txt development of Nvim debug.txt debugging Vim itself uganda.txt Vim distribution conditions and what to do with your money Basic editing starting.txt starting Vim, Vim command arguments, initialisation editing.txt editing and writing files motion.txt commands for moving around scroll.txt scrolling the text in the window insert.txt Insert and Replace mode change.txt deleting and replacing text indent.txt automatic indenting for C and other languages undo.txt Undo and Redo repeat.txt repeating commands, Vim scripts and debugging visual.txt using the Visual mode (selecting a text area) various.txt various remaining commands recover.txt recovering from a crash Advanced editing cmdline.txt Command-line editing options.txt description of all options pattern.txt regexp patterns and search commands map.txt key mapping and abbreviations tagsrch.txt tags and special searches quickfix.txt commands for a quick edit-compile-fix cycle windows.txt commands for using multiple windows and buffers tabpage.txt commands for using multiple tab pages syntax.txt syntax highlighting spell.txt spell checking diff.txt working with two to four versions of the same file autocmd.txt automatically executing commands on an event filetype.txt settings done specifically for a type of file eval.txt expression evaluation, conditional commands fold.txt hide (fold) ranges of lines Special issues print.txt printing remote.txt using Vim as a server or client digraph.txt list of available digraphs mbyte.txt multi-byte text support mlang.txt non-English language support arabic.txt Arabic language support and editing farsi.txt Farsi (Persian) editing hebrew.txt Hebrew language support and editing russian.txt Russian language support and editing ft_ada.txt Ada (the programming language) support ft_rust.txt Filetype plugin for Rust ft_sql.txt about the SQL filetype plugin rileft.txt right-to-left editing mode GUI gui.txt Graphical User Interface (GUI) Interfaces if_cscop.txt using Cscope with Vim if_pyth.txt Python interface if_ruby.txt Ruby interface sign.txt debugging signs Versions vim_diff.txt Main differences between Nvim and Vim vi_diff.txt Main differences between Vim and Vi standard-plugin-list Standard plugins pi_gzip.txt Reading and writing compressed files pi_netrw.txt Reading and writing files over a network pi_paren.txt Highlight matching parens pi_spec.txt Filetype plugin to work with rpm spec files pi_tar.txt Tar file explorer pi_zip.txt Zip archive explorer

LOCAL ADDITIONS: local-additions

------------------------------------------------------------------------------ bars Bars example Now that you've jumped here with CTRL-] or a double mouse click, you can use CTRL-T, CTRL-O, g<RightMouse>, or <C-RightMouse> to go back to where you were. Note that tags are within | characters, but when highlighting is enabled these characters are hidden. That makes it easier to read a command. Anyway, you can use CTRL-] on any word, also when it is not within |, and Vim will try to find help for it. Especially for options in single quotes, e.g. 'hlsearch'. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 vim:tw=78:fo=tcq2:isk=!-~,^*,^\|,^\":ts=8:ft=help:norl: