Say, I have the following lines:
thing();
getStuff();
I want to take getStuff()
using the yy
command, go forward to thing()
, placing the cursor on (
, and paste via the p
command, but since I yanked the whole line, p
will paste getStuff()
right back where it was.
I know you can first move the cursor to the beginning of that getStuff()
line and cut the characters from there until its end via the ^D
commands—then p will do what I want. However, I find typing ^D
to be much more tedious than yy
.
Is there a way to yy
, but paste the line inline instead?
The problem is that y y is copying the entire line, including the newline. An alternative would be to copy from the beginning to the end of the line, and then paste.
^ y $
// Credit to: tester and Idan Arye for the Vim golf improvements.
Use y i w ("yank inner word") instead of y y to yank just what you want:
y y is line-wise yank and will grab the whole line including the carriage return, which you can see if you look at the unnamed register ( ""
) in :registers
which is used as the source for pastes. See :help ""
:
Vim uses the contents of the unnamed register for any put command (
p
orP
) which does not specify a register. Additionally you can access it with the name"
. This means you have to type two double quotes. Writing to the "" register writes to register"0
.
An additional benefit to y i w is that you don't have to be at the front of the "word" you are yanking!
One way to simplify the routine of operating on the same text patterns is to define mappings that mimic text-object selection commands.
The two pairs of mappings below—one for Visual mode and another for Operator-pending mode—provide a way to select everything on the current line except for the new line character ( al
), and everything from the first non-blank character of the current line through the last non-blank character, inclusively ( il
).
:vnoremap <silent> al :<c-u>norm!0v$h<cr>
:vnoremap <silent> il :<c-u>norm!^vg_<cr>
:onoremap <silent> al :norm val<cr>
:onoremap <silent> il :norm vil<cr>
Thus, instead of using yy
to copy the contents of a line that is to be pasted character-wise (and not line-wise), one can then use the yal
or yil
commands to yank, followed by the p
command to paste, as usual.
A less efficient, but simple method:
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