This is my string:
"this is my sentence"
I would like to have this output:
"sentence my is this"
I would like to select a few words on a line (in a buffer) and reverse it word by word.
Can anyone help me?
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It's not totally clear what the context is here: you could be talking about text in a line in a buffer or about a string stored in a VimScript variable. note: Different interpretations of the question led to various approaches and solutions. full line replacementSo to store the text from the current line in the current buffer in a vimscript variable, you do
And then to reverse their order, you just do
If you want to replace the current line with the reversed words, you do
You can do it in one somewhat inscrutable line with
or even define a command that does that with
partial-line (character-wise) selectionsAs explained down in the "old updates" section, running general commands on a character- or block-wise visual selection — the former being what the OP wants to do here — can be pretty complicated. Ex commands like I realized after the OP commented below that reversing the words in a partial-line character-wise selection can be accomplished fairly easily with
wherein
So if you want to do a substitution on a single-line selection, this will work quite well. You can even pipe the selection through a system command using multiple-line character-wise selectionsThis seems to also work on a multiple-line character-wise selection, but you have to be careful to delete the range (the block-wise selectionsFor block-wise selections, I don't think there's a reasonably convenient way to manipulate them. I have written a plugin that can be used to make these sorts of edits less painful, by providing a way to run arbitrary Ex commands on any visual selection as though it were the entire buffer contents. It is available at https://github.com/intuited/visdo. Currently there's no packaging, and it is not yet available on vim.org, but you can just If you use vim-addon-manager, just clone visdo in your vim-addons directory and you'll subsequently be able to The plugin adds a So to complete the OP's goal with VisDo, you would do (with the words to be reversed selected, and with the above-defined ReverseLine command available):
old updates...previous updates follow ... warning: verbose, somewhat obselete, and mostly unnecessary... The OP's edit makes it more clear that the goal here is to be able to reverse the words contained in a visual selection, and specifically a character-wise visual selection. This is decidedly not a simple task. The fact that vim does not make this sort of thing easy really confused me when I first started using it. I guess this is because its roots are still very much in the line-oriented editing functionality of Vimscript does make it possible to find the column number of any 'mark', including the beginning of the visual selection ( So basically you have to go to sort of extreme lengths to do with parts of lines what can easily done with entire lines. I suspect that the best way to do this is to write a command that copies the visual selection into a new buffer, runs some other command on it, and then replaces the original buffer's visual selection with the results, deleting the temp buffer. This approach should theoretically work for both character-wise and block-wise selections, as well as for the already-supported linewise selections. However, I haven't done that yet. This 40-line code chunk declares a command
update 2It turns out that doing things with This function replaces
So then you can just add a second command declaration
tangentially related gory detailNote that the utility of a higher-level function like the ones used here is somewhat limited by the fact that there is no (easy or established) way to declare an inline function or block of code in vimscript. This wouldn't be such a limitation if the language weren't meant to be used interactively. You could write a function which substitutes its string argument into a dictionary function declaration and returns the function. However, dictionary functions cannot be called using the normal invocation syntax and have to be passed to note: A more recent update, given above, obsoletes the above code. See the various sections preceding old updates for a cleaner way to do this. |
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Maybe:
Of course you probably need to be more specific in the first part to find that particular sentence. Generally you can refer to match groups as \number with \0 being the whole match. |
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Here's a way to do by calling out to Ruby. After selecting the line you want to reverse, you can do this in command mode to replace it:
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I found the solution myself thank to your answers and a lot of trying :) This works:
Didn't thought that I was enable to write such a function :) |
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