Question

In Vim, I did too much undo. How do I undo this (that is, redo)?

Was it helpful?

Solution

Ctrl+r

OTHER TIPS

Also check out :undolist, which offers multiple paths through the undo history. This is useful if you accidentally type something after undoing too much.

Strange nobody mentioned :earlier/:later. To redo everything you just need to do

later 9999999d

(assuming that you first edited the file at most 9999999 days ago), or, if you remember the difference between current undo state and needed one, use Nh, Nm or Ns for hours, minutes and seconds respectively. + :later N<CR> <=> Ng+ and :later Nf for file writes.

Vim documentation

<Undo>      or                  *undo* *<Undo>* *u*
u           Undo [count] changes.  {Vi: only one level}

                            *:u* *:un* *:undo*
:u[ndo]         Undo one change.  {Vi: only one level}

                            *CTRL-R*
CTRL-R          Redo [count] changes which were undone.  {Vi: redraw screen}

                            *:red* *:redo* *redo*
:red[o]         Redo one change which was undone.  {Vi: no redo}

                            *U*
U           Undo all latest changes on one line.  {Vi: while not
            moved off of it}

In command mode, use the U key to undo and Ctrl + r to redo. Have a look at http://www.vim.org/htmldoc/undo.html.

First Press ESC key to exit from edit mode.

Then,

For Undo use u key as many times you want to undo.

For Redo use CTRL +r key

Refer to the "undo" and "redo" part of vim document.

:red[o] (Redo one change which was undone) and {count} Ctrl+r (Redo {count} changes which were undone) are both ok.

Also the :earlier {count} (Go to older text state {count} times.) could always be a substitute for undo and redo.

CTRL+r

The "r" is lower-case.

Using VsVim for Visual Studio?

I came across this when experimenting with VsVim, which provides bindings for vim-commands in Visual Studio.

I know about ctrlr in vim itself, but this particular binding does not work in VsVim (at least not in my setup?).

What does work however, is the command :red. This is a little bit more of a hassle than the above, but still fine when you really need it.

Practically speaking, the :undolist is hard to use and vim’s :earlier and :later time tracking of changes is only useable for course-grain fixes. Given that, I resort to a plug-in that combines these features to provide a visual tree of browsable undos, called “gundo.” Obviously this is something to use only when you need a fine grain fix, or you are uncertain of the exact state of the document you wish to return to. See: https://sjl.bitbucket.io/gundo.vim/

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