12

I've written a function for removing the excess white space in a file:

let g:trim_whitespace = 1

function! TrimWhitespace()
    if g:trim_whitespace
        normal :%s/\s\+$//e
    endif
endfunction

The issue is that the cursor position is set to [1, 1] after the substitution command. I don't want the cursor to move at all, so I tried to save the cursor position and reset it after the substitute command:

let a:cursor_pos = getpos(".")
normal :%s/\s\+$//e
exec cursor(a:cursor_pos[1], a:cursor_pos[2])

But still the exact same thing happens, as if the call to cursor had no effect. Any ideas?

3 Answers 3

14
  1. :execute is for evaluation of Ex commands, but cursor() is a built-in function. You need to invoke it with :call cursor(a:cursor_pos[1], a:cursor_pos[2]). Also, you don't need :normal in your function to execute the :substitute command; just write %s/\s\+$//e.
  2. There's a corresponding setpos() function which is simpler to invoke: :call setpos('.', a:cursor_pos)
  3. The jumps in the buffer may still change the view, i.e. what part of the buffer is visible. To avoid that, you need to use winsaveview() / winrestview() (which include the cursor position).
  4. Your function still clobbers the search history, and has other shortcomings like failing on no-modifiable buffers. Especially for this particular, very common functionality, there exist several solutions, for example my DeleteTrailingWhitespace plugin. (The plugin page has links to alternative plugins.) Don't (poorly) reinvent the wheel when you don't have to!
2
  • 3
    Isn't reinventing the wheel good for learning? :) Thanks for a great explanation.
    – Hubro
    Nov 4, 2013 at 8:10
  • It's fine then (but you could / should? have mentioned that you're aware of those other solutions). Note how I didn't just post a plugin recommendation, but explicitly addressed your code to help you learn. Have fun! Nov 4, 2013 at 8:19
8

Try placing a mark:

mark `
%s/\s\+$//e
normal ``
1
  • Thanks, @romainl. I am using this for a macro to re-indent a paragraph - let @p='mt{jgq}t'` - where t is my temporary register.
    – Nishant
    Jun 25, 2019 at 13:01
0

Combine substitute with setline

function! SubstiTute()
    let l = 1
    for line in getline(1, '$')
        call setline(l, substitute(line, "\\v +$", "", "g"))
        let l = l + 1
    endfor
endfun
"call SubstiTute()

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