Movement by Text Blocks
Another way that you can think of moving through a
vi file is by text blocks—words,
sentences, paragraphs, or sections.
You have already learned to move forward and backward by word
(w, W, b or
B). In addition, you can use these
commands:
eMove to end of word.
EMove to end of word (ignore punctuation).
(Move to beginning of current sentence.
)Move to beginning of next sentence.
{Move to beginning of current paragraph.
}Move to beginning of next paragraph.
[[Move to beginning of current section.
]]Move to beginning of next section.
To find the end of a sentence, vi looks for one of these punctuation marks:
?, ., or !.
vi locates the end of a sentence
when the punctuation is followed by at least two spaces or when it
appears as the last nonblank character on a line. If you have left
only a single space following a period, or if the sentence ends with a
quotation mark, vi won’t recognize
the sentence.
A paragraph is defined as text up to the next blank
line, or up to one of the default paragraph macros (.IP, .PP,
.LP, or .QP) from the troff MS macro package. Similarly, a section
is defined as text up to the next default section macro (.NH, .SH,
.H 1, or .HU). The macros that are recognized as
paragraph or section separators can be customized with the :set command, as described in Chapter 7.
Remember that you can combine numbers with movement. For example, ...