I sometimes leave loads and loads of tabs open on my browser, with the noble intention of going back and reading them, but more often than not, the list of tabs simply increases and I don't want to confine them to the bookmark black hole, so I have decided to reproduce them here. Click on the title for the original link. Hope this is ok copyright wise, if it isn't please let me know and I will take it down, preferably via a comment.
Your problem with Vim is that you don't grok vi
You mention cutting withyy and complain that you almost  never want to cut whole lines.  In fact programmers, editing source  code, very often want to work on whole lines, ranges of lines and blocks  of code.  However, yy is only one of many way to yank text  into the anonymous copy buffer (or "register" as it's called in vi).The "Zen" of vi is that you're speaking a language. The initial
y is a verb.  The statement yy is  a simple statement which is, essentially, an abbreviation for 0  y$:- 0go to the beginning of this line.
- yyank from here (up to where?)
- $up to the end of this line.
dd P (delete  the current line and paste a copy back into place; leaving a copy in the  anonymous register as a side effect).  The y and d  "verbs" take any movement as their "subject."  Thus yW is  "yank from here (the cursor) to the end of the current/next (big) word"  and y'a is "yank from here to the line containing the mark  named 'a'."If you only understand basic up, down, left, and right cursor movements then vi will be no more productive than a copy of "notepad" for you. (Okay, you'll still have syntax highlighting and the ability to handle files larger than a piddling ~45KB or so; but work with me here).
vi has 26 "marks" and 26 "registers." A mark is set to any cursor location using the
m command.  Each mark is  designated by a single lower case letter.  Thus ma sets the  'a' mark to the current location, and mz sets the  'z' mark.  You can move to the line containing a mark using  the ' (single quote) command.  Thus 'a moves  to the beginning of the line containing the 'a' mark.  You can  move to the precise location of any mark using the `  (backquote) command.  Thus `z will move directly to the  exact location of the 'z' mark.Because these are "movements" they can also be used as subjects for other "statements."
So, one way to cut an arbitrary selection of text would be to drop a mark (I usually use 'a' as my "first" mark, 'z' as my next mark, 'b' as another, and 'e' as yet another (I don't recall ever having interactively used more than four marks in 15 years of using vi; one creates one's own conventions regarding how marks and registers are used by macros that don't disturb one's interactive context). Then we go to the other end of our desired text; we can start at either end, it doesn't matter. Then we can simply use
d`a to cut or y`a to copy.  Thus the  whole process has a 5 keystrokes overhead (six if we started in "insert"  mode and needed to Esc out command mode).  Once we've cut or  copied then pasting in a copy is a single keystroke: p.I say that this is one way to cut or copy text. However, it is only one of many. Frequently we can more succinctly describe the range of text without moving our cursor around and dropping a mark. For example if I'm in a paragraph of text I can use
{ and }  movements to the beginning or end of the paragraph respectively.  So,  to move a paragraph of text I cut it using { d}  (3 keystrokes).  (If I happen to already be on the first or last line  of the paragraph I can then simply use d} or d{  respectively.  The notion of "paragraph" defaults to something which is usually intuitively reasonable. Thus it often works for code as well as prose.
Frequently we know some pattern (regular expression) that marks one end or the other of the text in which we're interested. Searching forwards or backwards are movements in vi. Thus they can also be used as "subjects" in our "statements." So I can use
d/foo  to cut from the current line to the next line containing the string  "foo" and y?bar to copy from the current line to the most  recent (previous) line containing "bar."  If I don't want whole lines I  can still use the search movements (as statements of their own), drop my  mark(s) and use the `x commands as described previously.In addition to "verbs" and "subjects" vi also has "objects" (in the grammatical sense of the term). So far I've only described the use of the anonymous register. However, I can use any of the 26 "named" registers by prefixing the "object" reference with
" (the double quote modifier).  Thus if I use "add  I'm cutting the current line into the 'a' register and if I  use "by/foo then I'm yanking a copy of the text from here  to the next line containing "foo" into the 'b' register.  To  paste from a register I simply prefix the paste with the same modifier  sequence: "ap pastes a copy of the 'a' register's  contents into the text after the cursor and "bP pastes a  copy from 'b' to before the current line.This notion of "prefixes" also adds the analogs of grammatical "adjectives" and "adverbs' to our text manipulation "language." Most commands (verbs) and movement (verbs or objects, depending on context) can also take numeric prefixes. Thus
3J means "join the  next three lines" and d5} means "delete from the current  line through the end of the fifth paragraph down from here."This is all intermediate level vi. None of it is Vim specific and there are far more advanced tricks in vi if you're ready to learn them. If you were to master just these intermediate concepts then you'd probably find that you rarely need to write any macros because the text manipulation language is sufficiently concise and expressive to do most things easily enough using the editor's "native" language.
A sampling of more advanced tricks:
There are a number of: commands, most notably the :%  s/foo/bar/g global substitution technique.  (That's not advanced  but other : commands can be).  The whole :  set of commands was historically inherited by vi's  previous incarnations as the ed (line editor) and later  the ex (extended line editor) utilities.  In fact vi  is so named because it's the visual interface to ex.: commands normally operate over lines of text.  ed  and ex were written in an era when terminal screens  were uncommon and many terminals were "teletype" (TTY) devices.  So it  was common to work from printed copies of the text, using commands  through an extremely terse interface (common connection speeds were 110  baud, or, roughly, 11 characters per second -- which is slower than a  fast typist; lags were common on multi-user interactive sessions;  additionally there was often some motivation to conserve paper).So the syntax of most
: commands includes an address or  range of addresses (line number) followed by a command.  Naturally one  could use literal line numbers: :127,215 s/foo/bar to  change the first occurrence of "foo" into "bar" on each line between 127  and 215.  One could also use some abbreviations such as .  or $ for current and last lines respectively.  One could  also use relative prefixes + and - to refer to  offsets after or before the curent line, respectively.  Thus: :.,$j  meaning "from the current line to the last line, join them all into one  line".  :% is synonymous with :1,$ (all the  lines).The
:... g and :... v commands bear some  explanation as they are incredibly powerful.  :... g is a  prefix for "globally" applying a subsequent command to all lines which  match a pattern (regular expression) while :... v applies  such a command to all lines which do NOT match the given pattern ("v"  from "conVerse").  As with other ex commands these can  be prefixed by addressing/range references.  Thus :.,+21g/foo/d  means "delete any lines containing the string "foo" from the current  one through the next 21 lines" while :.,$v/bar/d means  "from here to the end of the file, delete any lines which DON'T contain  the string "bar."It's interesting that the common Unix command grep was actually inspired by this ex command (and is named after the way in which it was documented). The ex command
:g/re/p (grep) was the way they documented how to  "globally" "print" lines containing a "regular expression" (re).  When ed  and ex were used, the :p command was one  of the first that anyone learned and often the first one used when  editing any file.  It was how you printed the current contents (usually  just one page full at a time using :.,+25p or some such).Note that
:% g/.../d or (its reVerse/conVerse  counterpart: :% v/.../d are the most common usage patterns.   However there are  couple of other ex commands which are  worth remembering:We can use
m to move lines around, and j to  join lines.  For example if you have a list and you want to separate  all the stuff matching (or conversely NOT matching some pattern) without  deleting them, then you can use something like: :% g/foo/m$  ... and all the "foo" lines will have been moved to the end of the  file.  (Note the other tip about using the end of your file as a scratch  space).  This will have preserved the relative order of all the "foo"  lines while having extracted them from the rest of the list.  (This  would be equivalent to doing something like: 1G!GGmap!Ggrep  foo<ENTER>1G:1,'a g/foo'/d (copy the file to it's own tail,  filter the tail through group, and delete all the stuff from the head).To join lines usually I can find a pattern for all the lines which need to be joined to their predecessor (all the lines which start with "^ " rather than "^ * " in some bullet list, for example). For that case I'd use:
:% g/^   /-1j (for every matching line, go up  one line and join them). (BTW: for bullet lists trying to search for  the bullet lines and join to the next doesn't work for a couple reasons  ... it can join one bullet line to another, and it won't join any bullet  line to all of its continuations; it'll only work pairwise on  the matches).Almost needless to mention you can use our old friend
s  (substitute) with the g and v  (global/converse-global) commands.  Usually you don't need to do so.   However, consider some case where you want to perform a substitution  only on lines matching some other pattern.  Often you can use a  complicated pattern with captures and use back references to preserve  the portions of the lines that you DON'T want to change.  However, it  will often be easier to separate the match from the substitution: :%  g/foo/s/bar/zzz/g -- for every line containing "foo" substitute  all "bar" with "zzz."  (Something like :%  s/\(.*foo.*\)bar\(.*\)/\1zzz\2/g would only work for the cases  those instances of "bar" which were PRECEDED by "foo" on the same line;  it's ungainly enough already, and would have to be mangled further to  catch all the cases where "bar" preceded "foo")The point is that there are more than just
p, s,  and d lines in the ex command set. The
: addresses can also refer to marks.  Thus you can  use: :'a,'bg/foo/j to join any line containing the string  foo to its subsequent line, if it lies between the lines between the 'a'  and 'b' marks.  (Yes, all of the preceding ex  command examples can be limited to subsets of the file's lines by  prefixing with these sorts of addressing expressions).That's pretty obscure (I've only used something like that a few times in the last 15 years). However, I'll freely admit that I've often done things iteratively and interactively that could probably have been done more efficiently if I'd taken the time to think out the correct incantation.
Another very useful vi or ex command is
:r to read in the contents of another file.   Thus: :r foo inserts the contents of the file named "foo"  at the current line.  More powerful is the
:r! command.  This reads the  results of a command.  It's the same as suspending the vi  session, running a command, redirecting its output to a temporary file,  resuming your vi session, and reading in the contents  from the temp. file.Even more powerful are the
! (bang) and :... !  (ex bang) commands.  These also execute external  commands and read the results into the current text. However, they also  filter selections of our text through the command!  This we can sort all  the lines in our file using 1G!Gsort (G is  the vi "goto" command; it defaults to going to the last  line of the file, but can be prefixed by a line number, such as 1, the  first line).  This is equivalent to the ex variant :1,$!sort.   Writers often use ! with the Unix fmt or  fold utilities for reformating or "word wrapping"  selections of text.  A very common macro is {!}fmt  (reformat the current paragraph).  Programmers sometimes use it to run  their code, or just portions of it, through indent or  other code reformatting tools.Using the
:r! and ! commands means that any  external utility or filter can be treated as an extension of our  editor.  I have occasionally used these with scripts that pulled data  from a database, or with wget or lynx  commands that pulled data off a website, or ssh  commands that pulled data from remote systems.Another useful ex command is
:so (short  for :source).  This reads the contents of a file as a  series of commands.  When you start vi it normally,  implicitly, performs a :source on ~/.exinitrc  file (and Vim usually does this on ~/.vimrc,  naturally enough).  The use of this is that you can change your editor  profile on the fly by simply sourcing in a new set of macros,  abbreviations, and editor settings.  If you're sneaky you can even use  this as a trick for storing sequences of ex editing  commands to apply to files on demand.For example I have a seven line file (36 characters) which runs a file through wc, and inserts a C-style comment at the top of the file containing that word count data. I can apply that "macro" to a file by using a command like:
vim +'so mymacro.ex'  ./mytarget(The
+ command line option to vi and Vim  is normally used to start the editing session at a given line number.   However it's a little known fact that one can follow the +  by any valid ex command/expression, such as a "source"  command as I've done here; for a simple example I have scripts which  invoke: vi +'/foo/d|wq!' ~/.ssh/known_hosts to remove an  entry from my SSH known hosts file non-interactively while I'm  re-imaging a set of servers).Usually it's far easier to write such "macros" using Perl, AWK, sed (which is, in fact, like grep a utility inspired by the ed command).
The
@ command is probably the most obscure vi  command.  In occasionally teaching advanced systems administration  courses for close to a decade I've met very few people who've ever used  it.  @ executes the contents of a register as if it were a vi  or ex command.Example: I often use:
:r!locate ... to find some file on my  system and read its name into my document.  From there I delete any  extraneous hits, leaving only the full path to the file I'm interested  in.  Rather than laboriously Tab-ing through each component  of the path (or worse, if I happen to be stuck on a machine without Tab  completion support in its copy of vi) I just use:- 0i:r(to turn the current line into a valid :r command),
- "cdd(to delete the line into the "c" register) and
- @cexecute that command.
"cdd @c  is effectively a finger macro for me, so I can type it almost as  quickly as any common six letter word).
 
No comments:
Post a Comment