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Home/ Questions/Q 3217976
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T15:28:26+00:00 2026-05-17T15:28:26+00:00

Vim is my preferred text editor when I program, and thus I always run

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Vim is my preferred text editor when I program, and thus I always run into a particularly annoying issue.

Frequently, when I quickly need to save the buffer and continue on to some other miscellaneous task, I do the typical

:w

However, I always — what seems to be like more than 50% of the time — manage to capitalize that :w. Naturally, Vim yells at me because W is an invalid command:

E492: Not an editor command: W

My question is how can one alias colon-commands in Vim. Particularly, could you exemplify how to alias W to w.

I am aware of the process to map keys to certain commands, but that is not what I’m looking for.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T15:28:27+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 3:28 pm

    To leave completion untouched, try using

    cnoreabbrev W w
    

    It will replace W in command line with w, but only if it is neither followed nor preceded by word character, so :W<CR> will be replaced with :w<CR>, but :Write won’t. (Note that this affects any commands that match, including ones that you might not expect. For example, the command :saveas W Z will be replaced by :saveas w Z, so be careful with this.)

    Update

    Here is how I would write it now:

    cnoreabbrev <expr> W ((getcmdtype() is# ':' && getcmdline() is# 'W')?('w'):('W'))
    

    As a function:

    fun! SetupCommandAlias(from, to)
      exec 'cnoreabbrev <expr> '.a:from
            \ .' ((getcmdtype() is# ":" && getcmdline() is# "'.a:from.'")'
            \ .'? ("'.a:to.'") : ("'.a:from.'"))'
    endfun
    call SetupCommandAlias("W","w")
    

    This checks that the command type is : and the command is W, so it’s safer than just cnoreabbrev W w.

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