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Member since:
2008-02-26
It's likely you weren't using vim at all but nvi. nvi is a part of the base BSD system and behaves exactly like the original UNIX vi.
vi!=vim. You are doing it wrong if you are typing vi to bring it up. Most Linux distributions symlink vi to vim, in non compatible mode which is the behavior you are expecting. If you want vim, you will have to install it if it isn't, or type v-i-m.