1*usr_04.txt* For Vim version 8.2. Last change: 2021 Feb 22 2 3 VIM USER MANUAL - by Bram Moolenaar 4 5 Making small changes 6 7 8This chapter shows you several ways of making corrections and moving text 9around. It teaches you the three basic ways to change text: operator-motion, 10Visual mode and text objects. 11 12|04.1| Operators and motions 13|04.2| Changing text 14|04.3| Repeating a change 15|04.4| Visual mode 16|04.5| Moving text 17|04.6| Copying text 18|04.7| Using the clipboard 19|04.8| Text objects 20|04.9| Replace mode 21|04.10| Conclusion 22 23 Next chapter: |usr_05.txt| Set your settings 24 Previous chapter: |usr_03.txt| Moving around 25Table of contents: |usr_toc.txt| 26 27============================================================================== 28*04.1* Operators and motions 29 30In chapter 2 you learned the "x" command to delete a single character. And 31using a count: "4x" deletes four characters. 32 The "dw" command deletes a word. You may recognize the "w" command as the 33move word command. In fact, the "d" command may be followed by any motion 34command, and it deletes from the current location to the place where the 35cursor winds up. 36 The "4w" command, for example, moves the cursor over four words. The "d4w" 37command deletes four words. 38 39 To err is human. To really foul up you need a computer. ~ 40 ------------------> 41 d4w 42 43 To err is human. you need a computer. ~ 44 45Vim only deletes up to the position where the motion takes the cursor. That's 46because Vim knows that you probably don't want to delete the first character 47of a word. If you use the "e" command to move to the end of a word, Vim 48guesses that you do want to include that last character: 49 50 To err is human. you need a computer. ~ 51 --------> 52 d2e 53 54 To err is human. a computer. ~ 55 56Whether the character under the cursor is included depends on the command you 57used to move to that character. The reference manual calls this "exclusive" 58when the character isn't included and "inclusive" when it is. 59 60The "$" command moves to the end of a line. The "d$" command deletes from the 61cursor to the end of the line. This is an inclusive motion, thus the last 62character of the line is included in the delete operation: 63 64 To err is human. a computer. ~ 65 ------------> 66 d$ 67 68 To err is human ~ 69 70There is a pattern here: operator-motion. You first type an operator command. 71For example, "d" is the delete operator. Then you type a motion command like 72"4l" or "w". This way you can operate on any text you can move over. 73 74============================================================================== 75*04.2* Changing text 76 77Another operator is "c", change. It acts just like the "d" operator, except 78it leaves you in Insert mode. For example, "cw" changes a word. Or more 79specifically, it deletes a word and then puts you in Insert mode. 80 81 To err is human ~ 82 -------> 83 c2wbe<Esc> 84 85 To be human ~ 86 87This "c2wbe<Esc>" contains these bits: 88 89 c the change operator 90 2w move two words (they are deleted and Insert mode started) 91 be insert this text 92 <Esc> back to Normal mode 93 94You will have noticed something strange: The space before "human" isn't 95deleted. There is a saying that for every problem there is an answer that is 96simple, clear, and wrong. That is the case with the example used here for the 97"cw" command. The c operator works just like the d operator, with one 98exception: "cw". It actually works like "ce", change to end of word. Thus 99the space after the word isn't included. This is an exception that dates back 100to the old Vi. Since many people are used to it now, the inconsistency has 101remained in Vim. 102 103 104MORE CHANGES 105 106Like "dd" deletes a whole line, "cc" changes a whole line. It keeps the 107existing indent (leading white space) though. 108 109Just like "d$" deletes until the end of the line, "c$" changes until the end 110of the line. It's like doing "d$" to delete the text and then "a" to start 111Insert mode and append new text. 112 113 114SHORTCUTS 115 116Some operator-motion commands are used so often that they have been given a 117single-letter command: 118 119 x stands for dl (delete character under the cursor) 120 X stands for dh (delete character left of the cursor) 121 D stands for d$ (delete to end of the line) 122 C stands for c$ (change to end of the line) 123 s stands for cl (change one character) 124 S stands for cc (change a whole line) 125 126 127WHERE TO PUT THE COUNT 128 129The commands "3dw" and "d3w" delete three words. If you want to get really 130picky about things, the first command, "3dw", deletes one word three times; 131the command "d3w" deletes three words once. This is a difference without a 132distinction. You can actually put in two counts, however. For example, 133"3d2w" deletes two words, repeated three times, for a total of six words. 134 135 136REPLACING WITH ONE CHARACTER 137 138The "r" command is not an operator. It waits for you to type a character, and 139will replace the character under the cursor with it. You could do the same 140with "cl" or with the "s" command, but with "r" you don't have to press <Esc> 141to get back out of insert mode. 142 143 there is somerhing grong here ~ 144 rT rt rw 145 146 There is something wrong here ~ 147 148Using a count with "r" causes that many characters to be replaced with the 149same character. Example: 150 151 There is something wrong here ~ 152 5rx 153 154 There is something xxxxx here ~ 155 156To replace a character with a line break use "r<Enter>". This deletes one 157character and inserts a line break. Using a count here only applies to the 158number of characters deleted: "4r<Enter>" replaces four characters with one 159line break. 160 161============================================================================== 162*04.3* Repeating a change 163 164The "." command is one of the simplest yet powerful commands in Vim. It 165repeats the last change. For instance, suppose you are editing an HTML file 166and want to delete all the <B> tags. You position the cursor on the first < 167and delete the <B> with the command "df>". You then go to the < of the next 168</B> and delete it using the "." command. The "." command executes the last 169change command (in this case, "df>"). To delete another tag, position the 170cursor on the < and use the "." command. 171 172 To <B>generate</B> a table of <B>contents ~ 173 f< find first < ---> 174 df> delete to > --> 175 f< find next < ---------> 176 . repeat df> ---> 177 f< find next < -------------> 178 . repeat df> --> 179 180The "." command works for all changes you make, except for "u" (undo), CTRL-R 181(redo) and commands that start with a colon (:). 182 183Another example: You want to change the word "four" to "five". It appears 184several times in your text. You can do this quickly with this sequence of 185commands: 186 187 /four<Enter> find the first string "four" 188 cwfive<Esc> change the word to "five" 189 n find the next "four" 190 . repeat the change to "five" 191 n find the next "four" 192 . repeat the change 193 etc. 194 195============================================================================== 196*04.4* Visual mode 197 198To delete simple items the operator-motion changes work quite well. But often 199it's not so easy to decide which command will move over the text you want to 200change. Then you can use Visual mode. 201 202You start Visual mode by pressing "v". You move the cursor over the text you 203want to work on. While you do this, the text is highlighted. Finally type 204the operator command. 205 For example, to delete from the middle of one word to the middle of another 206word: 207 208 This is an examination sample of visual mode ~ 209 ----------> 210 velllld 211 212 This is an example of visual mode ~ 213 214When doing this you don't really have to count how many times you have to 215press "l" to end up in the right position. You can immediately see what text 216will be deleted when you press "d". 217 218If at any time you decide you don't want to do anything with the highlighted 219text, just press <Esc> and Visual mode will stop without doing anything. 220 221 222SELECTING LINES 223 224If you want to work on whole lines, use "V" to start Visual mode. You will 225see right away that the whole line is highlighted, without moving around. 226When you move left or right nothing changes. When you move up or down the 227selection is extended whole lines at a time. 228 For example, select three lines with "Vjj": 229 230 +------------------------+ 231 | text more text | 232 >> | more text more text | | 233 selected lines >> | text text text | | Vjj 234 >> | text more | V 235 | more text more | 236 +------------------------+ 237 238 239SELECTING BLOCKS 240 241If you want to work on a rectangular block of characters, use CTRL-V to start 242Visual mode. This is very useful when working on tables. 243 244 name Q1 Q2 Q3 245 pierre 123 455 234 246 john 0 90 39 247 steve 392 63 334 248 249To delete the middle "Q2" column, move the cursor to the "Q" of "Q2". Press 250CTRL-V to start blockwise Visual mode. Now move the cursor three lines down 251with "3j" and to the next word with "w". You can see the first character of 252the last column is included. To exclude it, use "h". Now press "d" and the 253middle column is gone. 254 255 256GOING TO THE OTHER SIDE 257 258If you have selected some text in Visual mode, and discover that you need to 259change the other end of the selection, use the "o" command (Hint: o for other 260end). The cursor will go to the other end, and you can move the cursor to 261change where the selection starts. Pressing "o" again brings you back to the 262other end. 263 264When using blockwise selection, you have four corners. "o" only takes you to 265one of the other corners, diagonally. Use "O" to move to the other corner in 266the same line. 267 268Note that "o" and "O" in Visual mode work very differently from Normal mode, 269where they open a new line below or above the cursor. 270 271============================================================================== 272*04.5* Moving text 273 274When you delete something with "d", "x", or another command, the text is 275saved. You can paste it back by using the "p" command. (The Vim name for 276this is put). 277 Take a look at how this works. First you will delete an entire line, by 278putting the cursor on the line you want to delete and typing "dd". Now you 279move the cursor to where you want to put the line and use the "p" (put) 280command. The line is inserted on the line below the cursor. 281 282 a line a line a line 283 line 2 dd line 3 p line 3 284 line 3 line 2 285 286Because you deleted an entire line, the "p" command placed the text line below 287the cursor. If you delete part of a line (a word, for instance), the "p" 288command puts it just after the cursor. 289 290 Some more boring try text to out commands. ~ 291 ----> 292 dw 293 294 Some more boring text to out commands. ~ 295 -------> 296 welp 297 298 Some more boring text to try out commands. ~ 299 300 301MORE ON PUTTING 302 303The "P" command puts text like "p", but before the cursor. When you deleted a 304whole line with "dd", "P" will put it back above the cursor. When you deleted 305a word with "dw", "P" will put it back just before the cursor. 306 307You can repeat putting as many times as you like. The same text will be used. 308 309You can use a count with "p" and "P". The text will be repeated as many times 310as specified with the count. Thus "dd" and then "3p" puts three copies of the 311same deleted line. 312 313 314SWAPPING TWO CHARACTERS 315 316Frequently when you are typing, your fingers get ahead of your brain (or the 317other way around?). The result is a typo such as "teh" for "the". Vim 318makes it easy to correct such problems. Just put the cursor on the e of "teh" 319and execute the command "xp". This works as follows: "x" deletes the 320character e and places it in a register. "p" puts the text after the cursor, 321which is after the h. 322 323 teh th the ~ 324 x p 325 326============================================================================== 327*04.6* Copying text 328 329To copy text from one place to another, you could delete it, use "u" to undo 330the deletion and then "p" to put it somewhere else. There is an easier way: 331yanking. The "y" operator copies text into a register. Then a "p" command 332can be used to put it. 333 Yanking is just a Vim name for copying. The "c" letter was already used 334for the change operator, and "y" was still available. Calling this 335operator "yank" made it easier to remember to use the "y" key. 336 337Since "y" is an operator, you use "yw" to yank a word. A count is possible as 338usual. To yank two words use "y2w". Example: 339 340 let sqr = LongVariable * ~ 341 --------------> 342 y2w 343 344 let sqr = LongVariable * ~ 345 p 346 347 let sqr = LongVariable * LongVariable ~ 348 349Notice that "yw" includes the white space after a word. If you don't want 350this, use "ye". 351 352The "yy" command yanks a whole line, just like "dd" deletes a whole line. 353Unexpectedly, while "D" deletes from the cursor to the end of the line, "Y" 354works like "yy", it yanks the whole line. Watch out for this inconsistency! 355Use "y$" to yank to the end of the line. 356 357 a text line yy a text line a text line 358 line 2 line 2 p line 2 359 last line last line a text line 360 last line 361 362============================================================================== 363*04.7* Using the clipboard 364 365If you are using the GUI version of Vim (gvim), you can find the "Copy" item 366in the "Edit" menu. First select some text with Visual mode, then use the 367Edit/Copy menu item. The selected text is now copied to the clipboard. You 368can paste the text in other programs. In Vim itself too. 369 370If you have copied text to the clipboard in another application, you can paste 371it in Vim with the Edit/Paste menu item. This works in Normal mode and Insert 372mode. In Visual mode the selected text is replaced with the pasted text. 373 374The "Cut" menu item deletes the text before it's put on the clipboard. The 375"Copy", "Cut" and "Paste" items are also available in the popup menu (only 376when there is a popup menu, of course). If your Vim has a toolbar, you can 377also find these items there. 378 379If you are not using the GUI, or if you don't like using a menu, you have to 380use another way. You use the normal "y" (yank) and "p" (put) commands, but 381prepend "* (double-quote star) before it. To copy a line to the clipboard: > 382 383 "*yy 384 385To put text from the clipboard back into the text: > 386 387 "*p 388 389This only works on versions of Vim that include clipboard support. More about 390the clipboard can be found in section |09.3| and here: |clipboard|. 391 392============================================================================== 393*04.8* Text objects 394 395If the cursor is in the middle of a word and you want to delete that word, you 396need to move back to its start before you can do "dw". There is a simpler way 397to do this: "daw". 398 399 this is some example text. ~ 400 daw 401 402 this is some text. ~ 403 404The "d" of "daw" is the delete operator. "aw" is a text object. Hint: "aw" 405stands for "A Word". Thus "daw" is "Delete A Word". To be precise, the white 406space after the word is also deleted (or the white space before the word if at 407the end of the line). 408 409Using text objects is the third way to make changes in Vim. We already had 410operator-motion and Visual mode. Now we add operator-text object. 411 It is very similar to operator-motion, but instead of operating on the text 412between the cursor position before and after a movement command, the text 413object is used as a whole. It doesn't matter where in the object the cursor 414was. 415 416To change a whole sentence use "cis". Take this text: 417 418 Hello there. This ~ 419 is an example. Just ~ 420 some text. ~ 421 422Move to the start of the second line, on "is an". Now use "cis": 423 424 Hello there. Just ~ 425 some text. ~ 426 427The cursor is in between the blanks in the first line. Now you type the new 428sentence "Another line.": 429 430 Hello there. Another line. Just ~ 431 some text. ~ 432 433"cis" consists of the "c" (change) operator and the "is" text object. This 434stands for "Inner Sentence". There is also the "as" ("A Sentence") object. 435The difference is that "as" includes the white space after the sentence and 436"is" doesn't. If you would delete a sentence, you want to delete the white 437space at the same time, thus use "das". If you want to type new text the 438white space can remain, thus you use "cis". 439 440You can also use text objects in Visual mode. It will include the text object 441in the Visual selection. Visual mode continues, thus you can do this several 442times. For example, start Visual mode with "v" and select a sentence with 443"as". Now you can repeat "as" to include more sentences. Finally you use an 444operator to do something with the selected sentences. 445 446You can find a long list of text objects here: |text-objects|. 447 448============================================================================== 449*04.9* Replace mode 450 451The "R" command causes Vim to enter replace mode. In this mode, each 452character you type replaces the one under the cursor. This continues until 453you type <Esc>. 454 In this example you start Replace mode on the first "t" of "text": 455 456 This is text. ~ 457 Rinteresting.<Esc> 458 459 This is interesting. ~ 460 461You may have noticed that this command replaced 5 characters in the line with 462twelve others. The "R" command automatically extends the line if it runs out 463of characters to replace. It will not continue on the next line. 464 465You can switch between Insert mode and Replace mode with the <Insert> key. 466 467When you use <BS> (backspace) to make a correction, you will notice that the 468old text is put back. Thus it works like an undo command for the previously 469typed character. 470 471============================================================================== 472*04.10* Conclusion 473 474The operators, movement commands and text objects give you the possibility to 475make lots of combinations. Now that you know how they work, you can use N 476operators with M movement commands to make N * M commands! 477 478You can find a list of operators here: |operator|. 479 480For example, there are many other ways to delete pieces of text. Here are a 481few common ones: 482 483x delete character under the cursor (short for "dl") 484X delete character before the cursor (short for "dh") 485D delete from cursor to end of line (short for "d$") 486dw delete from cursor to next start of word 487db delete from cursor to previous start of word 488diw delete word under the cursor (excluding white space) 489daw delete word under the cursor (including white space) 490dG delete until the end of the file 491dgg delete until the start of the file 492 493If you use "c" instead of "d" they become change commands. And with "y" you 494yank the text. And so forth. 495 496 497There are a few common commands to make changes that didn't fit somewhere 498else: 499 500 ~ Change case of the character under the cursor, and move the 501 cursor to the next character. This is not an operator (unless 502 'tildeop' is set), thus you can't use it with a motion 503 command. It does work in Visual mode, where it changes case 504 for all the selected text. 505 506 I Start Insert mode after moving the cursor to the first 507 non-blank in the line. 508 509 A Start Insert mode after moving the cursor to the end of the 510 line. 511 512============================================================================== 513 514Next chapter: |usr_05.txt| Set your settings 515 516Copyright: see |manual-copyright| vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl: 517