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I am looking for a VIM key combo for changing something like

blahblah["hello"]

to

blahblah("hello")

My best effort so far is

0f[yi[%c%()^["0P^[

but anything better would be much appreciated.

BTW, my combo works by doing:

  1. find the first instance of [ (you get my point),
  2. yank the insides (which of course means to register 0 by default, and it leaves the cursor on the first "),
  3. move the cursor back onto the first instance of [ with %,
  4. delete the whole [...] bit and go into insert mode,
  5. write () and <Esc> out of insert mode,
  6. paste the contents of register 0 in between the ().
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    I think this may do what you want (never used it myself): vim.org/scripts/script.php?script%5Fid=1697 Nov 6, 2014 at 17:40
  • Would a simple search/replace not work? i.e. substitute all [ for (?
    – Mr. Llama
    Nov 6, 2014 at 17:41
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    Why not search/replace: :s/[/(/g & :s/]/)/g ?
    – Zulu
    Nov 6, 2014 at 17:42
  • Yes I could of course do a search and replace, but this is the sort of thing that I was hoping I could have a combo that I throw at it sort-of 'inline', if you get my drift. You know, something that just feels right.
    – Robert
    Nov 6, 2014 at 17:47
  • @Carpetsmoker. Yes that script you suggest looks the business, but surely this is the sort of thing that would be good to have in the muscle memory for a vanilla VIM?
    – Robert
    Nov 6, 2014 at 17:49

1 Answer 1

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I was hoping to have a muscle-memorable key combination that I could use for things like this where you want to 'keep the contents but change the surroundings'.

My proposal, if you reduce it to the minimum (and use ca[ rather than %c% -- credit to this SO for the a motion that I had not really known about) is not too bad because it is the sort of thing you can invent again once you know it is possible:

yi[ca[()<Esc>"0P

However, it occurred to me that a search-and-replace is going to be just the right kind of solution when you need to do a few of these in a file. Here is my best effort:

  1. select the area in visual mode (I tend to use VISUAL LINE mode as a default),
  2. then :s/\[\(.\{-}\)\]/(\1)/g<Enter> and you're done.

That itself looks a bit mad, but it is just a simple example of so-called backreferencing so I was quite happy to have had to get that clear in my mind too.

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