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linux vim

Vim Showcase #2 - Text Motion

� Welcome to the second installment of the "Vim Showcase" series.

Today, I've prepared some interesting vim default capabilities as well as plugins to enhance those capabilities to he maximum for even better experience. We will take a look at sorting, interacting with system clipboard and finally interacting with vim registers.

Vim sort motion

Vim allows its user to leverage the power of the shell utilities by typing :!util-name. This allows for a numerous possibilities for text editing as you can write special shell scripts to be used when needed.

Sorting in a file is extremely useful when you need to order some collection of data after it has been gathered by some some script or simply to sorting a header file includes or function declarations for better readability.

A easy way to sort some lines of text is to enter line-visual mode with Shift+v, select the lines you want to sort, then typing :!sort.

This plugin builds on top of this setup, by providing a sort motion for easy access, without a need for visual mode, and more. It can be installed with:

    Plugin 'christoomey/vim-sort-motion'

The primary interface to this plugin is via the gs mapping, which stands for go sort, for sorting based on a text object or motion. For example to sort 10 lines down, type: gs10j.

Where this plugin surpasses the shell variant is that it also provides a capability of sorting comma separated lists of items. For example by typing gsi( you can sort (b, c, a) to become (a, b, c).

One other neat feature of this plugin is that, because it uses sort shell function under the hood, it's possible to pass user specified flags for different sort behavior. For example by adding the following line to vimrc sort will become case insensitive and it will also remove duplicates:

    let g:sort_motion_flags = 'ui'

Note: This feature only works for linewise sorting

By passing an n flag it's possible to sort numbers by their value regardless of the length.

System copy

Another great plugin by christoomey which defines cp to be copy motion and cv as paste motion, allows you to easily copy and paste to and from system clipboard without much hassle. Install it by adding:

Plugin 'christoomey/vim-system-copy'

You will also need to have xsel installed from your terminal, as the plugin needs a way to interact with the system clipboard, with apt-get install xsel if you use Debian based distro, or pacman -S xsel if you use Arch based distro. It's possible to change the program used, in case you prefer the other one, with:

    let g:system_copy#copy_command='xclip -sel clipboard'
    let g:system_copy#paste_command='xclip -sel clipboard -o'

Also make sure to add the following line in order to get rid of the message every time you use the plugin:

    let g:system_copy_silent = 1

Some examples:

Replace with Register

In the last section you saw how to interact with system clipboard. Now I am going to talk about vim's built in registers.

Out of the box, vim provides place to store yanked text called register. To yank the text use y, and to later put it use p. Vim provides multiple registers whose content can be inspected with :register. To specify the register to be used, prefix any yank or put command with "name, where name is a character representing a specific register.

This plugin provides a motion to replace content of a text object with selected register. The default biding is gr, which stands for go replace.

Some examples:

This can also work with visual selections.

Conclusion

Today, we had a look at some simple but powerful plugins. Because these plugins are just new text motions they can be utilized with any text object showcased in the previous article, so their use is truly limitless.