Book Image

Mastering Vim

By : Ruslan Osipov
Book Image

Mastering Vim

By: Ruslan Osipov

Overview of this book

Vim is a ubiquitous text editor that can be used for all programming languages. It has an extensive plugin system and integrates with many tools. Vim offers an extensible and customizable development environment for programmers, making it one of the most popular text editors in the world. Mastering Vim begins with explaining how the Vim editor will help you build applications efficiently. With the fundamentals of Vim, you will be taken through the Vim philosophy. As you make your way through the chapters, you will learn about advanced movement, text operations, and how Vim can be used as a Python (or any other language for that matter) IDE. The book will then cover essential tasks, such as refactoring, debugging, building, testing, and working with a version control system, as well as plugin configuration and management. In the concluding chapters, you will be introduced to additional mindset guidelines, learn to personalize your Vim experience, and go above and beyond with Vimscript. By the end of this book, you will be sufficiently confident to make Vim (or its fork, Neovim) your first choice when writing applications in Python and other programming languages.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)

Copying and pasting with registers

You can copy text by using the y (yank) command, followed by a movement or a text object. You can also hit y from a visual mode when you have selected some text.

In addition to all of the standard movement, you can use yy to yank the contents of the current line.

Let's yank the following piece of code by typing ye (yank until the end of the word):

This will copy animal_kind into our default register. Now, place the cursor where you want the text to appear (the text is inserted after the cursor):

To paste the code, hit p:

The delete and change operators also yanks content so that you can paste it later. Oh, and you can prefix the paste command with a number, in case you ever want to duplicate something multiple times.

Where do the registers...