zed/crates/vim
Lionel Henry b5242ab5f2
vim: Fix subword motion near end of line (#45908)
Fixes subword motion incorrectly jumping to next line when near end of
line. Updates boundary detection to use exclusive boundaries with
need_next_char parameter, matching regular word motion behavior.
Refactors word and subword motion to share boundary detection logic.

Closes #17780

Release Notes:

- Fixed subword motion incorrectly jumping to the next line when near
the end of a line

---------

Co-authored-by: dino <dinojoaocosta@gmail.com>
2026-01-14 10:55:15 +00:00
..
src vim: Fix subword motion near end of line (#45908) 2026-01-14 10:55:15 +00:00
test_data vim: Allow trailing whitespace for :norm command (#46403) 2026-01-13 14:13:15 +00:00
Cargo.toml Enable test-support features for some dev dependencies (#46370) 2026-01-08 15:22:03 +00:00
LICENSE-GPL chore: Change AGPL-licensed crates to GPL (except for collab) (#4231) 2024-01-24 00:26:58 +01:00
README.md Correct other end visual block functionality (#27678) 2025-03-28 20:52:38 +00:00

This contains the code for Zed's Vim emulation mode.

Vim mode in Zed is supposed to primarily "do what you expect": it mostly tries to copy vim exactly, but will use Zed-specific functionality when available to make things smoother. This means Zed will never be 100% vim compatible, but should be 100% vim familiar!

The backlog is maintained in the #vim channel notes.

Testing against Neovim

If you are making a change to make Zed's behavior more closely match vim/nvim, you can create a test using the NeovimBackedTestContext.

For example, the following test checks that Zed and Neovim have the same behavior when running * in visual mode:

#[gpui::test]
async fn test_visual_star_hash(cx: &mut gpui::TestAppContext) {
    let mut cx = NeovimBackedTestContext::new(cx).await;

    cx.set_shared_state("ˇa.c. abcd a.c. abcd").await;
    cx.simulate_shared_keystrokes(["v", "3", "l", "*"]).await;
    cx.assert_shared_state("a.c. abcd ˇa.c. abcd").await;
}

To keep CI runs fast, by default the neovim tests use a cached JSON file that records what neovim did (see crates/vim/test_data), but while developing this test you'll need to run it with the neovim flag enabled:

cargo test -p vim --features neovim test_visual_star_hash

This will run your keystrokes against a headless neovim and cache the results in the test_data directory. Note that neovim must be installed and reachable on your $PATH in order to run the feature.

Testing zed-only behavior

Zed does more than vim/neovim in their default modes. The VimTestContext can be used instead. This lets you test integration with the language server and other parts of zed's UI that don't have a NeoVim equivalent.