vim comes with extensive and comprehensive online help. This help is comprised of over 50 ASCII text files, totalling almost 25,500 lines of text!
The online help is hypertextual in nature; you use the tag
commands ^]
and ^T
to
follow a reference and to go back to a previous position.
If you have a color display, using the help with syntax coloring
is particularly pleasant and effective.
The hypertext format is unique to vim; however
the doc directory contains a Makefile
and awk scripts
that convert the files into HTML for perusal with a Web browser.
(The html
display mode in elvis
works just fine. :-))
The point to start from would be help.html,
generated from help.txt, the starting point
for the online help.
Also included, of course, is a UNIX man page for vim.
To start the help system, give the :help
command.
This splits the screen. With no arguments, vim displays
the help.txt file. With an argument
to :help
,
vim does its best to find the help on that topic.
In our experience, it does an excellent job.
(This facility seems to be built on top of the tags mechanism,
which has been applied to the text of the help files.)