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In VIM I can show all the hidden characters in a file via the command ":set invlist". However, end of line sequences are always displayed as $ whether it is a carriage return/line feed or just a line feed. How do I distinguish between the two types of line endings?

2 Answers 2

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refer to VIM change end-of-line format.

If you set the file to unix mode then the carriage return shows up as ^M and the linefeed displays as the end-of-line character.

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  • I always fix to the unixmode and usually run dos2unix on text files from Windows.
    – nik
    Aug 7, 2009 at 16:45
  • I did this, and it converts the file format in silently. However, I can test the line ending of the file effectively but awkwardly by setting one format and quitting then setting to the other format and quitting. Whichever sequence leads to a "you have unsaved changes" message is the format the line endings are not in. Aug 7, 2009 at 19:19
  • Best answer at the moment, but I'll change the accepted answer if anyone comes up with a better one. Aug 11, 2009 at 19:56
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I know this is an older question, but I needed a similar answer and was able to find something a little better.

:set ff?

This will tell you what type of file vim thought it was when it loaded. Of course you have to have vim configured to recognize the line endings of the particular file.

More details about VIM File Formats Blog Post.

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