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Home/ Questions/Q 72613
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T20:04:19+00:00 2026-05-10T20:04:19+00:00

:vimgrep looks like a really useful thing. Here’s how to use it: :vim[grep][!] /{pattern}/[g][j]

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:vimgrep looks like a really useful thing.

Here’s how to use it:

:vim[grep][!] /{pattern}/[g][j] {file} ...  

:help says that you can essentially glob {file} to name, say, *.c for the current directory. I may have started Vim with a list of files that is complicated enough that I don’t want to manually type it in for {file}, and besides Vim already knows what those files are.

What I would like to do is vimgrep over any of:

  • :args
  • :files
  • :buffers

What variable(s) would I use in place of {file} to name, respectively, any of those lists in a vimgrep command?

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  1. 2026-05-10T20:04:20+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 8:04 pm

    Can’t you catch the result in these commands into a register (:h :redir), and insert it back into :vimgrep call (with a :exe).

    Something like:

    :exe 'vimgrep/pattern/ ' . lh#askvim#Exe(':args') 

    Notes:

    • lh#askvim#Exe is just a wrapper around :redir ; nothing really complex
    • some of these results may need some processing (see :args that adds square brackets)
    • Sometimes there is a function that returns exactly what you are looking for, see join(argv(), ' ') in :args case
    • Regarding :buffers, may be something like:

    .

    function BuffersList()   let all = range(0, bufnr('$'))   let res = []   for b in all     if buflisted(b)       call add(res, bufname(b))     endif   endfor   return res endfunction :exe 'vimgrep/pattern/ '.join(BuffersList(),' ') 
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