Contents:
Problems Opening Files
Problems Saving Files
Problems Getting to Visual Mode
Problems with vi Commands
Problems with Deletions
This appendix consolidates the problem checklists that are provided throughout the text. Here they are presented in one place for ease of reference.
When you invoke vi, the message [open mode]
appears.
Your terminal type is probably incorrectly identified.
Quit the editing session immediately by typing :q
and ask your
system administrator to provide an adequate terminal type setting.
You see one of the following messages:
Visual needs addressable cursor or upline capability Bad termcap entry Termcap entry too long terminal: Unknown terminal type Block device required Not a typewriter
Your terminal type is either undefined, or there's probably something
wrong with your termcap or terminfo entry.
Enter :q
to quit. Then ask your system administrator to select
a terminal type for your environment.
A [new file]
message appears when you think a file already
exists.
You are probably in the wrong directory.
Enter :q
to quit. Then check to see that you are in the
correct directory for that file (enter pwd
at the UNIX prompt).
If you are in the right directory, check the list of files in the directory (with ls
)
to see whether the file exists under a slightly different name.
You invoke vi, but you get a colon prompt (indicating that you're in ex line-editing mode).
You probably typed an interrupt before vi could draw the screen.
Enter vi by typing vi
at the ex prompt (:
).
One of the following messages appears:
[Read only] File is read only Permission denied
"Read only" means that you can only look at the file; you cannot
save any changes you make.
You may have invoked vi in view mode (with view
or
vi -R
), or you do not have write permission for the file.
See the section "Problems Saving Files" below.
One of the following messages appears:
Bad file number Block special file Character special file Directory Executable Non-ascii file file non-ASCII
The file you've called up to edit is not a regular text file.
When you type :q
because of one of the above difficulties,
the message appears:
No write since last change (:quit! overrides).
You have modified the file without realizing it.
Type :q!
to leave vi.
Your changes from this session will not be saved in the file.