I'm looking for a command to delete from the cursor to the first non-whitespace character on the same line. I've googled for a while and tried several possibilities. No joy. Does someone out there know how to do this?
6 Answers
The sequence dw will delete all characters from the cursor until the next word. This means that if you execute the command while standing in the middle of a word, it will delete the remainder of that word and subsequent whitespaces. May or may not be what you're looking for.
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2This does it. It's a bit counterintuitive - I expected dw to mean "delete the current word, starting at the cursor". But it works, it works. Thanks. Aug 7, 2011 at 20:23
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23+1. To be precise,
w
means "move to the beginning of the next word", andd<movement>
deletes from the current position to where the movement takes you.– oripAug 7, 2011 at 21:22 -
12to delete a word regardless on which letter the cursor is on, use
daw
(mnemonic "delete a word") works with other commands as well, e.g.caw
"change a word" Aug 7, 2011 at 21:25 -
3
daw
appears to also remove a space before the word if one exists. A better combo to use isdiw
which is delete in word. It also works regardless of cursor position in the word.– mbdevMay 13, 2016 at 22:45 -
1What about more than one line? I know this is not the question, but something to go over multiple lines would be more useful. Nov 21, 2016 at 20:19
You may want to try dW. This will move by "WORD" (see help for WORD and word), which looks more appropriate for your question.
The dw
won't meet your needs in, for example:
array[1] = 5
Hitting dw
while positioned in the a
will leave you with:
[1] = 5
But using dW
will result in:
= 5
Many of the answers here don't really address the question directly. The asker wants to know how to delete up to the first non-whitespace character. Some of the answers will technically work, but let's take a look at how to do this explicitly.
The following examples demonstrate how to do this in normal mode with variations that account for the starting position of the cursor. The u̲nderlined c̲haracters indicate the cursor position:
dw: foo_ bar → foob̲ar
The delete word command, described in other answers, works just fine to delete up to the next non-whitespace character when our cursor is positioned before the target.
db: foo b̲ar → b̲ar
Naturally, we'd want to try the inverse of dw to delete backwards to the first non-whitespace character before the cursor. However, as shown above, the delete back-word command deletes more than we expect—it erases the previous word as well. For this case, we should use:
dT<?>: foo b̲ar → foob̲ar
...where <?> is the first non-whitespace character before the cursor. The delete back-unTil command erases everything up to but not including the character <?>, which, in this case, is the character o at the end of "foo".
dt<?>: foo_ bar → foob̲ar
Similar to the previous command, we can use delete until (with a lowercase "t") to delete characters forward until the next <?> character (the b in "bar", for this example). This achieves the same result as dw for the purpose of this question.
diw: foo _ bar → foob̲ar
If our cursor is positioned in the middle of the whitespace, we can use the delete inner word command to remove the whitespace from both sides.
d/<?>↵:
foo_ \n
bar
→
foob̲ar
If the whitespace we want to remove includes line-breaks, we can use the command shown above to delete until matched pattern of <?>, where the pattern in this case is just the first non-whitespace character. As shown, press Enter to complete this command.
When the first non-whitespace character occurs at the beginning of the line after the break, Vim will remove the whitespace, but leave the target on the next line. We need to add J to the above command to Join the lines (an uppercase "j").
d/<?>↵J:
foo_ \n
bar
→
foob̲ar
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Thank you for addressing the line-breaks! Your answer seems to say
<?>
is the pattern for matching the first non-whitespace character. However, I had to use\S
for the pattern. My whole command was therefored/\S↵
. This may be what you meant in your answer, but it was not immediately clear to me. Apr 22, 2020 at 13:42 -
1@Micah Sorry for being unclear. I used
<?>
in this answer as a placeholder that represents some character. I intended for a reader to substitute<?>
with a particular character in the edited text rather than to enter those keystrokes literally. For that last example, your choice to enter\S
in place of pattern<?>
does indeed produce the best generic command to remove white space across line breaks. I prefer to type the actual character (b
in the example) because it's usually easier to reach for. Apr 22, 2020 at 21:53 -
To delete a word regardless on which letter the cursor is on, use daw (mnemonic "delete a word") works with other commands as well, e.g. caw "change a word". f and t are other excellent command that can be used together with d. E.g. to delete from cursor to and including first occurrence of e.g. the letter "t", use dft. To leave the "t" intact, use dtt instead.
d
W
will delete word include the last space. If the word you want to delete is at the end of a line, you can prefer use d
e
. because if you use d
W
, it can shift your next line up.
I always use d
i
W
.