There are lots of little blog posts containing advice about various one-line options you can do in Vim. This post falls into that category, but I'm hoping to do a more comprehensive view into one small subsystem of Vim's configuration: automatic line wrapping.

When programming, automatic line wrapping can be a little obnoxious because even if a piece of code is hanging past the recommended 72/80 column width line, you probably don't want to immediately break it; but if you're writing a text document or an email message, that is specifically the behavior you want. By default, vim does no automatic line wrapping for you; turning it on is a question of being able to toggle it on and off when you want it.

Here are the configuration options you care about:

textwidth (or tw): controls the wrap width you would like to use. Use :set tw=72 to set the wrap width; by default it's unset and thus disables line-wrapping. If this value is set, you're entirely at the whimsy of the below formatoptions, which is often filetype sensitive.

to set the wrap width; by default it's unset and thus disables line-wrapping. If this value is set, you're entirely at the whimsy of the below formatoptions, which is often filetype sensitive. formatoptions (or fo): controls whether or not automatic text wrapping is enabled, depending on whether or not the t flag is set. Toggle the flag on with :set fo+=t , and toggle it off with :set fo-=t . There are also a number of auxiliary format options, but they're not as important.

flag is set. Toggle the flag on with , and toggle it off with . There are also a number of auxiliary format options, but they're not as important. wrapmargin (or wm): controls when to wrap based on terminal size; I generally find using this to be a bad idea.

Understanding the interaction between these two options is important. Here is a short table of interactions:

tw=0 fo=cq wm=0: No automatic wrapping, rewrapping will wrap to 80

tw=72 fo=cq wm=0: No automatic wrapping, rewrapping will wrap to 72

tw=0 fo=cqt wm=0: No automatic wrapping, rewrapping will wrap to 72

tw=0 fo=cqt wm=5: Automatic wrapping at a 5 col right margin

tw=72 fo=cqt wm=0: Automatic wrapping at col 72

Notice that to get automatic wrapping you need both fo+=t as well as tw or wm to be nonzero. Note also that some filetype will automatically give you fo+=t, while others won't.

Here are the keystrokes you care about:

gq: performs a "formatting operation", which in our universe means "rewrap the text." This will respect leading indent and symbolic characters, which is usually nice but a little obnoxious if you're reflowing a bullet point (since the text will suddenly acquire asterisks in front of everything).

The paragraph motions. The big one is vip (preceding v puts us in visual mode, for selection), which selects an "inner paragraph"; this means that if you're anywhere inside of a paragraph, you can type vip and have the entire thing instantly selected for you, possibly for you to run gq subsequently. vap is also equivalent, although it selects a whole paragraph and is more appropriate if you want to, say, delete it. The curly braces move you between paragraphs.

The value of format-options will drastically change the way Vim behaves, so I highly recommend keeping it displayed some where you can reference it quickly. I use:

set statusline=...[%{&fo}]...

You probably have a statusline of your own; just add that small snippet minus the ellipses in somewhere convenient. For further good measure, I explicitly say set fo-=t in my vimrc, to prevent myself from being surprised (since I do primarily coding in vim).

One more neat trick:

augroup vimrc_autocmds autocmd BufEnter * highlight OverLength ctermbg=darkgrey guibg=#592929 autocmd BufEnter * match OverLength /\%74v.*/ augroup END

This will highlight all characters past 74 columns (tweak that number as desired) in dark grey (tweak that color as desired), and is a nice visual cue when auto linewrapping isn't turned on when you should think about breaking things.