vim-easy-align
A simple, easy-to-use Vim alignment plugin without too much ambition.
Features:
- Optimized for code editing
- Requires minimal keystrokes
- Extensible alignment rules
- Aligns text around either all or n-th occurrence(s) of the delimiter
- Ignores comment lines
- Ignores lines without a matching delimiter
Demo
Installation
Either download zip file and extract in ~/.vim or use Vundle (recommended) or Pathogen.
With Vundle
Bundle 'junegunn/vim-easy-align'
Usage
vim-easy-align defines interactive :EasyAlign command in the visual mode.
For convenience, it is advised that you define a mapping for triggering it in your .vimrc.
vnoremap <silent> <Enter> :EasyAlign<cr>
With the mapping, you can align selected lines with a few keystrokes.
<Enter>key to start interactive EasyAlign command- Optional Enter keys to toggle right-justification mode
- Optional field number (default: 1)
1Around the 1st occurrences of delimiters2Around the 2nd occurrences of delimiters- ...
*Around all occurrences of delimiters**Left-right alternating alignment around all delimiters-Around the last occurrences of delimiters (-1)-2Around the second to last occurrences of delimiters- ...
- Delimiter key (a single keystroke;
<space>,=,:,.,|,,)
Alignment rules for the following delimiters have been defined to meet the most needs.
| Delimiter key | Description/Use cases |
|---|---|
<space> |
General alignment around spaces |
= |
Operators containing equals sign (=, ==, !=, +=, &&=, ...) |
: |
Suitable for formatting JSON or YAML |
. |
Multi-line method chaining |
, |
Multi-line method arguments |
| | | Table markdown |
Example command sequences
| With visual map | Description | Equivalent command |
|---|---|---|
<Enter><space> |
Alignment around 1st whitespaces | :'<,'>EasyAlign\ |
<Enter>2<space> |
Alignment around 2nd whitespaces | :'<,'>EasyAlign2\ |
<Enter>-<space> |
Alignment around the last whitespaces | :'<,'>EasyAlign-\ |
<Enter>: |
Alignment around 1st colon | :'<,'>EasyAlign: |
<Enter>= |
Alignment around 1st equals signs (and the likes) | :'<,'>EasyAlign= |
<Enter>2= |
Alignment around 2nd equals signs (and the likes) | :'<,'>EasyAlign2= |
<Enter>3= |
Alignment around 3rd equals signs (and the likes) | :'<,'>EasyAlign3= |
<Enter>*= |
Alignment around all equals signs (and the likes) | :'<,'>EasyAlign*= |
<Enter>**= |
Left-right alternating alignment around all equals signs | :'<,'>EasyAlign**= |
<Enter><Enter>= |
Right-justified alignment around 1st equals signs | :'<,'>EasyAlignRight= |
<Enter><Enter>**= |
Right-left alternating alignment around all equals signs | :'<,'>EasyAlignRight**= |
| ... | ... |
Partial alignment in blockwise-visual mode
In blockwise-visual mode (CTRL-V), EasyAlign command aligns only the selected
text in the block, instead of the whole lines in the range.
Consider the following case where you want to align text around => operators.
my_hash = { :a => 1,
:aa => 2,
:aaa => 3 }
In non-blockwise visual mode (v / V), <Enter>= won't work since the assignment
operator in the first line gets in the way.
So we instead enter blockwise-visual mode (CTRL-V), and select the text around
=> operators, then press <Enter>=.
my_hash = { :a => 1,
:aa => 2,
:aaa => 3 }
However, in this case, we don't really need blockwise visual mode
since the same can be easily done using the negative field number: <Enter>-=
Options
| Option | Type | Default | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| g:easy_align_ignore_comment | boolean | 1 |
Ignore comment lines |
| g:easy_align_ignore_unmatched | boolean | 1 |
Ignore lines without matching delimiter |
| g:easy_align_delimiters | dictionary | {} |
Extend or override alignment rules |
Ignoring comment lines
EasyAlign by default ignores comment lines.
For example,
{
# Quantity of apples: 1
apple: 1,
# Quantity of bananas: 2
bananas: 2,
# Quantity of grapefruits: 3
grapefruits: 3
}
becomes
{
# Quantity of apples: 1
apple: 1,
# Quantity of bananas: 2
bananas: 2,
# Quantity of grapefruits: 3
grapefruits: 3
}
Since finding comment lines is done heuristically using syntax highlighting feature, this only works when syntax highlighting is enabled.
If you do not want comment lines to be ignored, you can unset g:easy_align_ignore_comment as follows.
let g:easy_align_ignore_comment = 0
Then you get,
{
# Quantity of apples: 1
apple: 1,
# Quantity of bananas: 2
bananas: 2,
# Quantity of grapefruits: 3
grapefruits: 3
}
Ignoring unmatched lines
Lines without a matching delimiter are ignored as well (except in right-justification mode).
For example, when aligning the following code block around the colons,
{
apple: proc {
this_line_does_not_have_a_colon
},
bananas: 2,
grapefruits: 3
}
this is usually what we want.
{
apple: proc {
this_line_does_not_have_a_colon
},
bananas: 2,
grapefruits: 3
}
However, this default behavior is also configurable.
let g:easy_align_ignore_unmatched = 0
Then we get,
{
apple: proc {
this_line_does_not_have_a_colon
},
bananas: 2,
grapefruits: 3
}
Extending alignment rules
let g:easy_align_delimiters = {
\ '>': { 'pattern': '>>\|=>\|>' },
\ '/': { 'pattern': '//\+\|/\*\|\*/' },
\ '#': { 'pattern': '#\+' },
\ ']': {
\ 'pattern': '[\[\]]',
\ 'margin_left': '',
\ 'margin_right': '',
\ 'stick_to_left': 0
\ },
\ ')': {
\ 'pattern': '[()]',
\ 'margin_left': '',
\ 'margin_right': '',
\ 'stick_to_left': 0
\ }
\ }
Author
License
MIT
