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How do I move to end of line in Vim?

I know how to generally move around in command mode, specifically, jumping to lines, etc. But what is the command to jump to the end of the line that I am currently on?

Basic vim commands covered in less than 10 minutes youtube.com/watch?v=71YTkxUNwmg

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vgoff

Just the $ (dollar sign) key. You can use A to move to the end of the line and switch to editing mode (Append). To jump the last non-blank character, you can press g then _ keys.

The opposite of A is I (Insert mode at beginning of line), as an aside. Pressing just the ^ will place your cursor at the first non-white-space character of the line.


Jump to last non blank g_
The _g variant is really useful when working in visual mode, as it allows you to use the line without any newline at the end.
While Home and End keys work on a regular keyboard, $ and ^ are needed when you're using a laptop :)
You should add ^to the list.
If your line wraps, you can use g$ to reach the end of the current wrap.
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SimTae

As lots of people have said:

$ gets you to the end of the line

but also:

^ or _ gets you to the first non-whitespace character in the line, and

0 (zero) gets you to the beginning of the line incl. whitespace


I knew | gets us to the beginning of the line but I was not aware of 0. So both 0 and | do exactly the same thing, yeah?
@kami: whilst the descriptions are different they do appear to behave identically. However the pipe | command can take a count, e.g. 3| to jump to the third column.
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Paul Ruane

$ moves to the last character on the line.

g _ goes to the last non-whitespace character.

g $ goes to the end of the screen line (when a buffer line is wrapped across multiple screen lines)


I feel like g_ is the same thing as $b
@DaveAaronSmith: b goes to the beginning of the previous word which is not the same thing at all. It's roughly equivalent to $ge.
I use _ and g_ for visual/yanking, as $ will also copy/delete the new line (LN) character.
For me, $ goes to the end of the current screen line (when wrapped). I haven't managed to figure out why. g_ is the only way I found to get to the actual end of the line.
@ezuk $ goes to the end of the line even when wrapped for me. I know of no setting to adjust its behaviour. Perhaps it's been remapped by your .vimrc to g$?
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ap-osd

The main question - end of line

$ goes to the end of line, remains in command mode

A goes to the end of line, switches to insert mode

Conversely - start of line (technically the first non-whitespace character)

^ goes to the start of line, remains in command mode

I (uppercase i) goes to the start of line, switches to insert mode

Further - start of line (technically the first column irrespective of whitespace)

0 (zero) goes to the start of line, remains in command mode

0i (zero followed by lowercase i) goes the start of line, switches to insert mode

For those starting to learn vi, here is a good introduction to vi by listing side by side vi commands to typical Windows GUI Editor cursor movement and shortcut keys.

vi editor for Windows users


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Commodore Jaeger

If your current line wraps around the visible screen onto the next line, you can use g$ to get to the end of the screen line.


I just discovered pre-pending the up and down commands with g make vim move the cursor screen-based, rather than line-based. I.e. gj and gk allow you to move up and down on a long line. Really useful.
Also discovered that typing gw and something seems to change j and k permanently to behave like this. Not sure how or why. Can anyone explain this?
@Druckles: A bit of a late reply, but if you're still wondering, (or if anyone else reading this is) gw and gq are commands that reformat text. (see :h gw and :h gq) What probably happened was you did gw{motion} and changed some text so that the screen lines corresponded to the actual lines.
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Alexander Yushko

I can't see hotkey for macbook for use vim in standard terminal. Hope it will help someone. For macOS users (tested on macbook pro 2018):

fn + ← - move to beginning line fn + → - move to end line fn + ↑ - move page up fn + ↓ - move page down fn + g - move the cursor to the beginning of the document fn + shift + g - move the cursor to the end of the document

For the last two commands sometime needs to tap twice.


D
David Singer

The dollar sign: $


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Vidura Mudalige

Press A to enter edit mode starting at the end of the line.


D
Diastrophism

The advantage of the 'End' key is it works in both normal and insert modes.

'$' works in normal/command mode only but it also works in the classic vi editor (good to know when vim is not available).


What's you hanging around insert mode for ?! No ordinary decent citizen goes there after daylight. You know what happens in there, don't you ? Code disappears there, y'know ? It disappears, and is never heard from again.
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kenorb

In many cases, when we are inside a string we are enclosed by a double quote, or while writing a statement we don't want to press escape and go to end of that line with arrow key and press the semicolon(;) just to end the line. Write the following line inside your vimrc file:

imap <C-l> <Esc>$a

What does the line say? It maps Ctrl+l to a series of commands. It is equivalent to you pressing Esc (command mode), $ (end of line), a (append) at once.


thank you for that one. I have been wanting to add Ctrl-e back to my vim as go to end of line like on my first machine and didnt know how
As the accepted answer says, you can press A to do the same thing.
@trysis you misunderstood, this doesn't move away from editing mode which is quite nice.
You're right. vim certainly allows you to do much more in much less time with things like this. @razorxpress, a minor adjustment would be imap <C-l> <Esc>A, which makes Ctrl+l the equivalent of pressing Esc (exit insert mode), then A (append to end of line).
I think the more idiomatic way to map this would be inoremap <C-l> <C-o>A
s
sudo bangbang

Also note the distinction between line (or perhaps physical line) and screen line. A line is terminated by the End Of Line character ("\n"). A screen line is whatever happens to be shown as one row of characters in your terminal or in your screen. The two come apart if you have physical lines longer than the screen width, which is very common when writing emails and such.

The distinction shows up in the end-of-line commands as well.

$ and 0 move to the end or beginning of the physical line or paragraph, respectively:

g$ and g0 move to the end or beginning of the screen line or paragraph, respectively.

If you always prefer the latter behavior, you can remap the keys like this:

:noremap 0 g0
:noremap $ g$

How to get to the last non-whitespace of the line? (whether it's a screen line or physical line)
g_ is last non-whitespace of the physical line. How about screen line?
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Vidura Mudalige

Or there's the obvious answer: use the End key to go to the end of the line.


Yeah, mac terminal is one I've noticed that hijacks keys and doesn't pass them along to the stuff running inside terminal. One of the things that annoy me whenever I use a mac for a bit.
The whole point of using vim is not having to use keys like 'End'. Never leave home row.
On Mac there is no End key.
@kenorb There was when I posted the comment...but Apple likes to remove features over the years. netdna.webdesignerdepot.com/uploads/2009/01/… this is actually one of my favorite keyboards of all time
@JonThoroddsen it was much easier to not leave home row when Esc on terminals was not placed so far away.
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graywh

Possibly unrelated, but if you want to start a new line after the current line, you can use o anywhere in the line.


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sudo bangbang

The easiest option would be to key in $. If you are working with blocks of text, you might appreciate the command { and } in order to move a paragraph back and forward, respectively.


M
Marcus

I was used to Home/End getting me to the start and end of lines in Insert mode (from use in Windows and I think Linux), which Mac doesn't support. This is particularly annoying because when I'm using vim on a remote system, I also can't easily do it. After some painful trial and error, I came up with these .vimrc lines which do the same thing, but bound to Ctrl-A for the start of the line and Ctrl-D for the end of the line. (For some reason, Ctrl-E I guess is reserved or at least I couldn't figure a way to bind it.) Enjoy.

:imap <Char-1> <Char-15>:normal 0<Char-13>
:imap <Char-4> <Char-15>:normal $<Char-13>

There's a good chart here for the ASCII control character codes here for others as well:

http://www.physics.udel.edu/~watson/scen103/ascii.html

You can also do Ctrl-V + Ctrl- as well, but that doesn't paste as well to places like this.