In this short article, we cover how you can not only select all text in Vim, but I also cover some more tips regarding selecting text. Happy Vim-img!
In most text editors, I can select text by clicking and dragging with my mouse, and then using Ctrl-C to copy that text, or Backspace to delete it. However, since vim runs in the console, if I highlight some text with the mouse, my vim commands don't affect what I have selected....
Note that at this point you will have a list of strings in text: one reason why I wrote this function is ability to keep NULLs in file. If you stick with any solution that yanks text in a register all NULLs will be replaced with newlines and all newlines will be represented as newline...
If you are familiar withVim modes, you canswitch to the visual modeand use the arrow keys to select all the text and then delete it. However, this option is also not very convenient. There are other ways to deal withmultiple line deletion in Vimbut the focus is on deleting all the li...
If it's given that only one single-quoted text will appear in a line, then the regex is simple: %s:\v.{-}('.{-}').*:\1: %s: run :h :substitute over the whole buffer :: delimiter \v: use :h /magic mode pattern to be replaced .{-}: select least-possible...
But I can't do it inside vim, below code should change cursor shape in insert mode, but it has no effect: let &t_SI="\e[?0;c" let &t_EI="\e[?6;c" How to make it work? The text console is not x terminal emulator, it's opened with ctrl-alt-f[3-6], I know how ...
在锈迹中重新实施vim。 调用项目rim。 Runrim. 使用借用的命令退出rim,即:q!。 使用shell方式的懒惰rubist Credit: @rynaro $ ruby -e'system("killall -9 vim")' rubist方法 Credit: @rynaro $ ruby -e'pid = `pidof vim`; Process.kill(9, pid.to_i)' ...
you probably don't want to immediately break it; but if you're writing a text document or an email message, that is specifically the behavior you want. By default, vim does no automatic line wrapping for you; turning it on is a question of being able to toggle it on and off when yo...
Then select Show Raw Text. Copy the source of the wiki page you are editing, and paste it into vim. If you are using the console version of vim, it might be a good idea to turn off autoindenting, as vim autoformats the text as you paste it. This is not a issue in the gui ...
I have compiled some scripts and voodoo to ease my work but rather often I'm still facing the task of manually converting a list given to me as plain text into LaTeX, for example: 1. Foo 2. Bar When doing so, I select the plain text list in visual mode and replace the prefix ...