Chris Hartjes today was on a quest for a "find in project" feature for Vim. "Find in Project" was a feature of Textmate that he'd grown accustomed to and was having trouble finding an equivalent for.

The funny thing is that Textmate is a newcomer, and, of course, vim has had such a feature for years. The thing to remember with vim, of course, is its unix roots; typically if you know the unix command for doing something, you can find what you need in vim. In this case, the key is the vimgrep plugin, which ships in the standard vim distribution.

There are a variety of resources on vimgrep. The vim documentation includes a chapter on it, and a quick google search on the subject turns up some nice tutorials immediately. If you've ever used grep, the syntax is very straightforward:

vimgrep /{pattern}/[g][j] {file} ...

The "g" option indicates that all matches for a search will be returned instead of just one per line, and the "j" option tells vim not to jump to the first match automatically. What does the "g" flag really mean, though, and how are searches returned?

Vimgrep returns search results in what's known as a "quickfix" window, and this is where the vimgrep documentation falls apart… it doesn't explain what this is, or link to it (which would be a nice indication that it actually has a separate topic for this).

The Quickfix window is a pane that shows a search result per line. Each line shows the file that matches, the line number, and the contents of that line:

/home/matthew/git/bugapp/application/controllers/helpers/GetForm.php|10| * @var Zend_Loader_PluginLoader

You can't do much from this window; it simply serves as a visual indicator of what file you're currently looking at from the list. However, in the main window, you can start iterating through the results one at a time, using a subset of the Quickfix commands. As a quick summary:

:cc will move to the next match in the list

will move to the next match in the list :cn will move to the next match in the list

will move to the next match in the list :cp will move to the previous match in the list

will move to the previous match in the list :cr will rewind to the first match in the list

will rewind to the first match in the list :cla will fast forward to the last match in the list

When done, you can simply close the Quickfix window/pane, and continue working.

I should note that vimgrep is cross-platform. On *nix-based systems, it defaults to using the native grep command, but it also contains an internal (slower) implementation for use on operating systems that do not provide grep by default. You may also map the command to alternate implementations if desired.