Suppose I have 5 lines of text, if I input some commands to let vim process each line, Vim will process the text one by one, first line, second line, ... the last line. what I want is to let Vim process my text in reverse order. that is the last line first, then the 4th line, and at last the first line.
Why I need this? I have the following text
1234567890
abc
123
def
1234567890
123456789
I want to remove the newline symbol(\n) from lines which contains 3 characters. so after processing,I will get the following text
1234567890
abc123def1234567890
123456789
It seems a piece of cake, I use the following command
:%s/\v(^\w{3})\n/\1/
But what i got is
1234567890
abc123
def1234567890
1234567890
Why? I guess vim first remove \n from the second line, then this line has text abc123, now vim will not remove \n after 123, since it's not 3 characters now, so vim process the next line def, and remove \n from it, that's the result i got.
If vim can process from back to front, this will not happen and I can got the result I want.
BTW, I can get the expected result in other ways, I just want to know whether this is possible.