Suppose you have this text:
name1 = "John"; age1 = 41;
name2 = "Jane"; age2 = 32;
name3 = "Mike"; age3 = 36;
...
and you want to split each line into two lines to give a result like this:
name1 = "John";
age1 = 41;
name2 = "Jane";
age2 = 32;
name3 = "Mike";
age3 = 36;
...
How would you automate this operation?
Some notes:
- I already tried the following method:
(1) Select the text in virtual-vode,
(2) Execute:'<,'>:norm ^3f r^M
***,
but it doesn't work correctly; it splits only half of the lines, because after every line is broken, the next repetition of the command applies to the rest of the broken line instead on the next line! - This can be achieved using a macro but I'm looking for more elegant solution.
*** explanation of the sequence:
-norm
for executing the following commands in normal-mode
-^
for moving the cursor to the beginning of the line
-3f<space>
for moving the cursor to the 3rd space in the line
-r^M
for replacing that space with a new-line
To operate on the entire file, use this:
To operate only on the selected text, use this:
English translation:
"Replace every occurrence of semi-colon followed by a space with semi-colon followed by a newline."
Explanation:
That's about as basic as it gets for substitution in Vi.
For more geekiness:
I actually have the following mapped in my
.vimrc
file for situations like this:This command splits each line of a file at the first occurrence of the last search pattern.
So, for your use-case you would do this:
;
(you may or may not want to include a space... up to you)SS
Each line of your file will get split at the first
;
symbol.To clarify, you would use the following 5 keystrokes:
/ ; ENTER S S
This is very handy for quickly formatting XML, HTML, etc...