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I would like to wrap a word in Vim with enclosing tags, such as from word to 'word' or from word to (word).

5 Answers 5

22

Use Tim Pope's vim-surround, you can use: ysw' to enclose a word with "`", ysw( to surround the word with "(". If you want to surround the word with an actual tag such as the HTML tag <code>, you can use yswt, then type in your tag in the prompt. If you want to change existing surround elements, use csw, type in the surround element you want to replace and hit <CR> (enter), and type the new surrounding element.

Note that for the commands above to work, you have to put the cursor in the beginning of the word you want to surround.

From its official page:

Press cs"' (that's c, s, double quote, single quote) inside

"Hello world!"

to change it to

'Hello world!'

Now press cs'<q> to change it to

Hello world!

To go full circle, press cat" to get

"Hello world!"

To remove the delimiters entirely, press ds" .

Hello world!

Now with the cursor on "Hello", press ysiw] (iw is a text object).

[Hello] world!

Let's make that braces and add some space (use "}" instead of "{" for no space): cs]{

{ Hello } world!

Now wrap the entire line in parentheses with yssb or yes) .

({ Hello } world!)

Revert to the original text: ds{ds)

Hello world!

Emphasize hello: ysiw<em>

Hello world!

Finally, let's try out visual mode. Press a capital V (for linewise visual mode) followed by S<p class="important">.

Hello world!

For more detailed usage info, install vim-surround, and then use :help surround to invoke the docs.

2
  • As a side-note, non-capital V will let you select any number of characters (useful for figures like 1.10 where "iw" would either select 1 or 10).
    – htatche
    Dec 14, 2016 at 0:19
  • Nice answer. I write about this with Linux in an Issue on the vim-surround GitHub repo, updated with an example of HTML tagging, including animated GIF demo: github.com/tpope/vim-surround/issues/117#issuecomment-272007689 May 22, 2020 at 16:57
4

Take a look at Tim Pope's surround.vim.

4

<c-r> is very handy for these, letting you insert the contents of a register, the clipboard, the word under the cursor (<c-r><c-a>), etc. For instance:

nmap <space>' ciw'<c-r>"'<esc>
vmap <space>' c'<c-r>"'<esc>
nmap <space>( ciw(<c-r>")<esc>
vmap <space>( c(<c-r>")<esc>

Which maps space+' to wrap the current word or visual selection in single quotes, or space+( to wrap the current word or visual selection in double quotes.

The content of the mapping means "change inner word|selected text, insert quote, insert the word, insert quote, exit insert mode".

3

I use this snippet to record a macro into the letter M for the first time: qmcw'<c-r>" '<esc>q Then redo it with @m

Explanation, at first 10 strikes are necessary:

  • qm begins to record the macro in the letter m
  • cw change only a word and put you into the insert mode
  • ' writes the first quote
  • <c-r>" paste the word that we erased at stade 2 while staying into the insert mode
  • ' is the other surrounding quote
  • <esc> go back to the edit word
  • q end the macro.

Recall it with @m : now we only use two strikes to surround...

0

In NVIM you can use this function and map <leader>sw or <leader>sW to use :lua Surround("w") and :lua Surround("W") respectively, where Surround is a custom function.

You can find more information and the function definition here.

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