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Signed-off-by: Antonio Giovanni Colombo <azc100@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
197 lines
6.4 KiB
Text
197 lines
6.4 KiB
Text
===============================================================================
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= W e l c o m e t o t h e V I M T u t o r - Version 1.7 =
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===============================================================================
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= C H A P T E R TWO =
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===============================================================================
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Hic Sunt Dracones: if this is your first exposure to vim and you
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intended to avail yourself of the introductory chapter, kindly type
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:q<enter> and try again.
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The approximate time required to complete this chapter is 8-10 minutes,
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depending upon how much time is spent with experimentation.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Lesson 2.1.1: THE NAMED REGISTERS
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** Store two yanked words concurrently and then paste them **
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1. Move the cursor to the line below marked --->
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2. Navigate to any point on the word 'Edward' and type "ayiw
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MNEMONIC: into register(") named (a) (y)ank (i)nner (w)ord
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3. Navigate forward to the word 'cookie' (fk or 2fc or $2b or /co<enter>)
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and type "byiw
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4. Navigate to any point on the word 'Vince' and type ciw<C-r>a<ESC>
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MNEMONIC: (c)hange (i)nner (w)ord with <contents of (r)egister> named (a)
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5. Navigate to any point on the word 'cake' and type ciw<C-r>b<ESC>
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---> a) Edward will henceforth be in charge of the cookie rations
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b) In this capacity, Vince will have sole cake discretionary powers
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NOTE: Delete also works into registers, i.e. "sdiw will delete the word under
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the cursor into register s.
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REFERENCE: Registers :h registers
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Named Registers :h quotea
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Motion :h motion.txt<enter> /inner<enter>
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CTRL-R :h insert<enter> /CTRL-R<enter>
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Lesson 2.1.2: THE EXPRESSION REGISTER
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** Insert the results of calculations on the fly **
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1. Move the cursor to the line below marked --->
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2. Navigate to any point on the supplied number
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3. Type ciw<C-r>=60*60*24<enter>
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4. On the next line, enter insert mode and add today's date with
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<C-r>=system('date')<enter>
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NOTE: All calls to system are OS dependent, e.g. on Windows use
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system('date /t') or :r!date /t
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---> I have forgotten the exact number of seconds in a day, is it 84600?
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Today's date is:
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NOTE: the same can be achieved with :pu=system('date')
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or, with fewer keystrokes :r!date
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REFERENCE: Expression Register :h quote=
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Lesson 2.1.3: THE NUMBERED REGISTERS
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** Press yy and dd to witness their effect on the registers **
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1. Move the cursor to the line below marked --->
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2. yank the zeroth line, then inspect registers with :reg<enter>
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3. delete line 0. with "cdd, then inspect registers
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(Where do you expect line 0 to be?)
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4. continue deleting each successive line, inspecting :reg as you go
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NOTE: You should notice that old full-line deletions move down the list
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as new full-line deletions are added
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5. Now (p)aste the following registers in order; c, 7, 4, 8, 2. i.e. "7p
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---> 0. This
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9. wobble
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8. secret
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7. is
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6. on
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5. axis
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4. a
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3. war
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2. message
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1. tribute
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NOTE: Whole line deletions (dd) are much longer lived in the numbered registers
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than whole line yanks, or deletions involving smaller movements
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REFERENCE: Numbered Registers :h quote0
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Lesson 2.1.4: THE BEAUTY OF MARKS
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** Code monkey arithmetic avoidance **
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NOTE: a common conundrum when coding is moving around large chunks of code.
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The following technique helps avoid number line calculations associated
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with operations like "a147d or :945,1091d a or even worse using
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i<C-r>=1091-945<enter> first
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1. Move the cursor to the line below marked --->
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2. Go to the first line of the function and mark it with ma
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NOTE: exact position on line is NOT important!
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3. Navigate to the end of the line and then the end of the code block
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with $%
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4. Delete the block into register a with "ad'a
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MNEMONIC: into register(") named (a) put the (d)eletion from the cursor to the
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LINE containing mark(') (a)
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5. Paste the block between BBB and CCC "ap
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NOTE: practice this operation multiple times to become fluent ma$%"ad'a
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---> AAA
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function itGotRealBigRealFast() {
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if ( somethingIsTrue ) {
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doIt()
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}
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// the taxonomy of our function has changed and it
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// no longer makes alphabetical sense in its current position
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// imagine hundreds of lines of code
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// naively you could navigate to the start and end and record or
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// remember each line number
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}
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BBB
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CCC
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NOTE: marks and registers do not share a namespace, therefore register a is
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completely independent of mark a. This is not true of registers and
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macros.
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REFERENCE: Marks :h marks
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Mark Motions :h mark-motions (difference between ' and `)
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Lesson 2.1 SUMMARY
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1. To store (yank, delete) text into, and retrieve (paste) from, a total of
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26 registers (a-z)
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2. Yank a whole word from anywhere within a word: yiw
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3. Change a whole word from anywhere within a word: ciw
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4. Insert text directly from registers in insert mode: (C-r)a
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5. Insert the results of simple arithmetic operations: (C-r)=60*60<enter>
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in insert mode
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6. Insert the results of system calls: (C-r)=system('ls -1')
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in insert mode
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7. Inspect registers with :reg
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8. Learn the final destination of whole line deletions: dd in the numbered
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registers, i.e. descending from register 1 - 9. Appreciate that whole
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line deletions are preserved in the numbered registers longer than any
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other operation
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9. Learn the final destination of all yanks in the numbered registers and
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how ephemeral they are
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10. Place marks from command mode m[a-zA-Z0-9]
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11. Move line-wise to a mark with '
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This concludes chapter two of the Vim Tutor. It is a work in progress.
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This chapter was written by Paul D. Parker.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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