I want to pipe the selected text to a shell command and receive the one-line output from this shell command on the vim info/command line?
What I'm really trying to do: Pipe the selected text to a pastebin-type shell command and I want to receive the output of the shell cmd (which is the http link to the pastebin). Is this possible?
Maybe you should use something like
Starting from some vim-7.4 version it is better to use
. This is basically the only way to keep NUL bytes untouched should they be present in the file. Passing
@"
in one or the other way will transform NUL bytes into NL (newline).Simply highlight the lines using visual line select shift-v, the hit :! and type the command you wish to send the commands to. The resulting output will then replace your selected text.
When you type your command it will appear at the bottom as:
the '<,'> is indicating that the range you have visually selected will be passed to the command specified after the !
@matias 's solution is not work well for me, because it seems
shellescape
will append\
to each line.So I use
sed
to accomplish this, and it works just fine!Another answer:
Requires python support. Use it just like matias' function.
I would do it like this:
Place this function in your vimrc:
This will allow you to call this function by doing:
Then you can also map that like this (just under the function declaration in your vimrc):
So you can call the function doing this:
Note:
:<','>
are range selectors, in order to produce them just select the pertinent lines in visual mode and then go to command mode (pressing the colon key)For multi line version you can do this after selecting the text:
You can map it to simple visual mode shortcut like this:
Hit leader key + c in visual mode to send the selected text to a stdin of the command. stdout of the command will be printed below vim's statusbar.
Real world example with CoffeeScript:
https://github.com/epeli/vimconfig/commit/4047839c4e1c294ec7e15682f68563a0dbf0ee6d