You can certainly do all this with a single copy/paste (using block-mode selection), but I'm guessing that's not what you want.
If you want to do this with just Ex commands
:5,8del | let l=split(@") | 1,4s/$/\=remove(l,0)/
will transform
work it
make it
do it
makes us
harder
better
faster
stronger
~
into
work it harder
make it better
do it faster
makes us stronger
~
UPDATE: An answer with this many upvotes deserves a more thorough explanation.
In Vim, you can use the pipe character (|
) to chain multiple Ex commands, so the above is equivalent to
:5,8del
:let l=split(@")
:1,4s/$/\=remove(l,0)/
Many Ex commands accept a range of lines as a prefix argument - in the above case the 5,8
before the del
and the 1,4
before the s///
specify which lines the commands operate on.
del
deletes the given lines. It can take a register argument, but when one is not given, it dumps the lines to the unnamed register, @"
, just like deleting in normal mode does. let l=split(@")
then splits the deleted lines into a list, using the default delimiter: whitespace. To work properly on input that had whitespace in the deleted lines, like:
more than
hour
our
never
ever
after
work is
over
~
we'd need to specify a different delimiter, to prevent "work is" from being split into two list elements: let l=split(@","\n")
.
Finally, in the substitution s/$/\=remove(l,0)/
, we replace the end of each line ($
) with the value of the expression remove(l,0)
. remove(l,0)
alters the list l
, deleting and returning its first element. This lets us replace the deleted lines in the order in which we read them. We could instead replace the deleted lines in reverse order by using remove(l,-1)
.
x
with joinx+2
?[a[i] + b[i] for i in min(len(a), len(b))]