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I saw this same question for VIM and it has been something that I myself wanted to know how to do for Emacs. In ReSharper I use CTRL-D for this action. What is the least number of commands to perform this in Emacs?

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15 Answers

vote up 9 vote down check

I use

C-a C-SPACE C-n M-w C-y

which breaks down to

  • C-a: move cursor to start of line
  • C-SPACE: begin a selection ("set mark")
  • C-n: move cursor to next line
  • M-w: copy region
  • C-y: paste ("yank")

The aforementioned

C-a C-k C-k C-y C-y

amounts to the same thing (TMTOWTDI)

  • C-a: move cursor to start of line
  • C-k: cut ("kill") the line
  • C-k: cut the newline
  • C-y: paste ("yank") (we're back at square one)
  • C-y: paste again (now we've got two copies of the line)

These are both embarrassingly verbose compared to C-d in your editor, but in Emacs there's always a customization. C-d is bound to delete-char by default, so how about C-c C-d? Just add the following to your .emacs:

(global-set-key "\C-c\C-d" "\C-a\C- \C-n\M-w\C-y")

(@Nathan's elisp version is probably preferable, because it won't break if any of the key bindings are changed.)

Beware: some Emacs modes may reclaim C-c C-d to do something else.

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Hi! Be aware that if you have '(setq kill-whole-line t)' you will only need one 'C-k' (solution 2) as it already kills the newline together with the contents of the line. My prefered use of 'C-k'. Cheers, Daniel – danielpoe Feb 16 at 6:30
vote up 9 vote down

In addition to the previous answers you can also define your own function to duplicate a line. For example, putting the following in your .emacs file will make C-d duplicate the current line.

(defun duplicate-line()
  (interactive)
  (move-beginning-of-line 1)
  (kill-line)
  (yank)
  (open-line 1)
  (next-line 1)
  (yank)
)
(global-set-key (kbd "C-d") 'duplicate-line)
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vote up 6 vote down

Place cursor on line, if not at beginning do a CTRL-A, then:

CTRL-K

CTRL-K

CTRL-Y

CTRL-Y

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I don't think the second C-Y is needed. – Bastien LĂ©onard Jun 15 at 21:35
it won't be a duplicate without – epatel Jun 15 at 22:23
Use C-S-Backspace (kill-whole-line) instead of C-k. You don't have to screw with cursor position or killing the newline. – sgm Jun 16 at 5:15
vote up 2 vote down

@[Kevin Conner]: Pretty close, so far as I know. The only other thing to consider is turning on kill-whole-line to include the newline in the C-k.

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@Allen: remove [ and ] in @[Kevin Conner] – J.F. Sebastian Sep 18 '08 at 1:32
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C-a C-k C-k C-y C-y
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vote up 1 vote down

Nathan's addition to your .emacs file is the way to go but it could be simplified slightly by replacing

  (open-line 1)
  (next-line 1)

with

  (newline)

yielding

(defun duplicate-line()
  (interactive)
  (move-beginning-of-line 1)
  (kill-line)
  (yank)
  (newline)
  (yank)
)
(global-set-key (kbd "C-d") 'duplicate-line)
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vote up 1 vote down

My version of a function to duplicate a line that works nice with undo and doesn't mess with the cursor position. It was the result of a discussion in gnu.emacs.sources from November 1997.

(defun duplicate-line (arg)
  "Duplicate current line, leaving point in lower line."
  (interactive "*p")

  ;; save the point for undo
  (setq buffer-undo-list (cons (point) buffer-undo-list))

  ;; local variables for start and end of line
  (let ((bol (save-excursion (beginning-of-line) (point)))
        eol)
    (save-excursion

      ;; don't use forward-line for this, because you would have
      ;; to check whether you are at the end of the buffer
      (end-of-line)
      (setq eol (point))

      ;; store the line and disable the recording of undo information
      (let ((line (buffer-substring bol eol))
            (buffer-undo-list t)
            (count arg))
        ;; insert the line arg times
        (while (> count 0)
          (newline)         ;; because there is no newline in 'line'
          (insert line)
          (setq count (1- count)))
        )

      ;; create the undo information
      (setq buffer-undo-list (cons (cons eol (point)) buffer-undo-list)))
    ) ; end-of-let

  ;; put the point in the lowest line and return
  (next-line arg))

Then you can define CTRL-D to call this function:

(global-set-key (kbd "C-d") 'duplicate-line)
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vote up 0 vote down

well ive usually used:

Ctl-Space (set the mark)
move to end of line
Ctl-K kill line
Ctl-Y * 2 (yank the line back)

there may be a much better way though :P

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Do you mean: C-a C-SPC C-e M-w RET C-y? – J.F. Sebastian Sep 18 '08 at 1:37
yeah :) that's the precise way hehe. – Arthur Thomas Sep 19 '08 at 17:03
vote up 0 vote down

because i don't know, i'll start this round of golf with a slowball:

ctrl-k, y, y

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vote up 0 vote down

ctrl-k, ctrl-k, (position to new location) ctrl-y

Add a ctrl-a if you're not starting at the beginning of the line. And the 2nd ctrl-k is to grab the newline character. It can be removed if you just want the text.

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vote up 0 vote down

I have copy-from-above-command bound to a key and use that. It's provided with XEmacs, but I don't know about GNU Emacs.

`copy-from-above-command' is an interactive compiled Lisp function -- loaded from "/usr/share/xemacs/21.4.15/lisp/misc.elc" (copy-from-above-command &optional ARG)

Documentation: Copy characters from previous nonblank line, starting just above point. Copy ARG characters, but not past the end of that line. If no argument given, copy the entire rest of the line. The characters copied are inserted in the buffer before point.

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vote up 0 vote down

something you might want to have in your .emacs is

(setq kill-whole-line t)

Which basically kills the entire line plus the newline whenever you invoke kill-line (i.e. via C-k). Then without extra code, you can just do C-a C-k C-y C-y to duplicate the line. It breaks down to

C-a go to beginning of line
C-k kill-line (i.e. cut the line into clipboard)
C-y yank (i.e. paste); the first time you get the killed line back; 
    second time gives the duplicated line.

But if you use this often then maybe a dedicated key binding might be a better idea, but the advantage of just using C-a C-k C-y C-y is you can duplicate the line elsewhere, instead of just below the current line.

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vote up 0 vote down

The defaults are horrible for this. However, you can extend Emacs to work like SlickEdit and TextMate, that is, copy/cut the current line when no text is selected:

(transient-mark-mode t)
(defadvice kill-ring-save (before slick-copy activate compile)
  "When called interactively with no active region, copy a single line instead."
  (interactive
   (if mark-active (list (region-beginning) (region-end))
     (message "Copied line")
     (list (line-beginning-position)
           (line-beginning-position 2)))))
(defadvice kill-region (before slick-cut activate compile)
  "When called interactively with no active region, kill a single line instead."
  (interactive
   (if mark-active (list (region-beginning) (region-end))
     (list (line-beginning-position)
           (line-beginning-position 2)))))

Place the above in .emacs. Then, to copy a line, M-w. To delete a line, C-w. To duplicate a line, C-a M-w C-y C-y C-y ....

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vote up 0 vote down

I don't quite remember how line duplication works anywhere else, but as a former SciTE user I liked one thing about SciTE-way: it doesn't touch the cursor position! So all the recipies above weren't good enough for me, here's my hippie-version:

(defun duplicate-line ()
    "Clone line at cursor, leaving the latter intact."
    (interactive)
    (save-excursion
    	(let ((kill-read-only-ok t) deactivate-mark)
    		(toggle-read-only 1)
    		(kill-whole-line)
    		(toggle-read-only 0)
    		(yank))))

Note that nothing gets actually killed in process, leaving marks and current selection intact.

BTW, why you guys so fond of jerking cursor around when there's this nice'n'clean kill-whole-line thingy (C-S-backspace)?

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vote up 0 vote down

' I wrote my own version of duplicate-line, cause I don't want to screw up the killing ring.

  (defun jr-duplicate-line ()
    "EASY"
    (interactive)
    (save-excursion
      (let ((line-text (buffer-substring-no-properties
                        (line-beginning-position)
                        (line-end-position))))
        (move-end-of-line 1)
        (newline)
        (insert line-text))))
  (global-set-key "\C-cd" 'jr-duplicate-line)
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