Typing in Uppercase Without CAPS LOCK
[You may want to input text in all uppercase letters - maybe for a FORTRAN program. Using CAPS LOCK in vi can be a pain because you have to release CAPS LOCK almost every time you want to type a vi command. Here's a nice way to type lowercase letters during input and ex modes; they'll be mapped to uppercase automatically. -JP]
Try putting this in your exrc () file:
map! a A map! b B map! c C ... map! z Z
Anytime you type (during text-input mode) an a
, the editor will map it into A
. What's that you say? You don't want this all the time? Just put it in a file called f (for FORTRAN), and type:
:source .f
when you want FORTRAN mode. Of course, you can define a function key () to :source
this.
[After that, anywhere you want a lowercase letter, type CTRL-v first to temporarily cancel the map. For example, to type the command :w
, type [:] [CTRL-v] [w]
You can also go into the ex command mode by typing the vi command Q
. That takes you to the ex colon (:
) prompt - where the map! macros won't affect what you type. To return to vi mode from ex command mode, type :vi
. -JP ]
- BB in net.unix on Usenet, 9 October 1986