How do you delete all text above a certain line. For deletion below a line I use "d shift g"
6 Answers
dgg
will delete everything from your current line to the top of the file.
d
is the deletion command, and gg
is a movement command that says go to the top of the file, so when used together, it means delete from my current position to the top of the file.
Also
dG
will delete all lines at or below the current one
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32
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1What exactly does the
gg
after delete mean?– user1732480Mar 6, 2013 at 18:39 -
3gg is a Vim shortcut - ":help gg" says: Goto line [count], default first line, on the first non-blank character |linewise|. If startofline' not set, keep the same column. Mar 7, 2013 at 15:29
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36For those looking for it,
dG
will delete all lines at or below the current one.– dimo414Oct 11, 2013 at 19:53 -
1@dan3 I think the meaning of "top of the file" is pretty clear based on the question asked, but you are welcome to edit my answer if you want to, or you can create your own answer using whatever terminology you want. Feb 11, 2014 at 20:48
:1,.d
deletes lines 1 to current.
:1,.-1d
deletes lines 1 to above current.
(Personally I'd use dgg
or kdgg
like the other answers, but TMTOWTDI.)
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31I tried
TMTOWTDI
but it just seems to leave me in insert mode without deleting anything? Nov 12, 2010 at 6:38 -
13
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3tmtowtdi There's more than one way to do it (TMTOWTDI or TIMTOWTDI, pronounced "Tim Toady") is a Perl motto. Oct 25, 2013 at 23:13
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1@toomuchphp The comment was fantastic. But the username... that made it perfect. +1 to you. Jun 23, 2015 at 18:59
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Thanks. Surprisingly,
:1,.d
works in Busybox vi v1.29, butdgg
does not. Jan 26 at 21:32
kdgg
delete all lines above the current one.
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7This is a little confusing; it's actually moving the cursor up a line with
k
, then deleting the current line and up withdgg
.– dimo414Oct 11, 2013 at 19:54 -
2And use 5kdgg to delete all lines 5 lines above the current one ;) Jan 23, 2015 at 8:43
Providing you know these vim commands:
1G -> go to first line in file
G -> go to last line in file
then, the following make more sense, are more unitary and easier to remember IMHO:
d1G -> delete starting from the line you are on, to the first line of file
dG -> delete starting from the line you are on, to the last line of file
Cheers.
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"g isn't a vi command" because g is an extension, G is more compatible– PolluksDec 26, 2021 at 21:22