What is the best way replace multiple lines with the contents of the clipboard?
The problem I\'m having is when I yank a line and paste it over another line the \"yank\
"0
should have the contents of your yank. It's a bit more tedious to type, but "0p
should do what you want.
Alternatively, don't select-and-replace the old lines up front. If you find those lines with a search, just hit n.
over and over (after an initial p
), then when they're all pasted, do ndd
followed by as many n.
s as necessary.
The biggest mental switch I've needed to make when moving to Vim is to figure out how to apply group edits sequentially. I.e. rather than doing a bunch of edits on a line and then doing a bunch of the same edits on another line, I'll do the first edit on a bunch of lines (using .
to great effect), then the second edit on a bunch of lines, etc. Alternatively, the use of macros may help as they are fantastic, but sometimes a little more tedious to get working correctly with "complex" changes.
I often use another registry, copy the line you need to some named registry "ay
and then paste from there "ap
I have this in my .vimrc:
xnoremap p pgvy
(note: this will work only with the default register, but this mapping is easy to remember). Writing a more elaborate version would be possible. Also, you still can use P to get the old behaviour.
Instead of using copy/paste, it is often better to use a text object command such as ciw
to change the inner word. This method has the advantage of being easily repeatable using the .
repeat command.
yiw
Yank inner word (copy word under cursor, say "first").ciw<C-r>0
Change "second", replacing it with "first" ( is Ctrl-R)..
Change "third", replacing it with "first".use np
where n
is the number of how much time you want to paste the lines eg 3p
will paste 3 lines.
When you paste over a selection in Vim it will replace the default register with the contents of the selection. If pasting over a selection is wiping out the contents of the clipboard register then very likely you have the following line in your .vimrc
set clipboard=unnamed
One option is to remove that and use the explicit clipboard register "+
Another option is to use any of the other explicitly named registers (a-z). After the first paste yank the line back into "c
for example and then use "cp
to paste from there on out.