In Vim, I would use the following command:
:%s/$/\=repeat(' ',64-virtcol('$'))
The use of the virtcol()
function here, as opposed to the col()
one,
is guided by the necessity to properly handle tab characters as well as
multibyte non-ASCII characters that might occur in the text.)
To compute the length of the longest line in the buffer (plus 1) —
to be used in place of 64 — one can use the following command:
:let m = max(map(range(1, line('$')), 'virtcol([v:val,"$"])'))
The range of lines can be narrowed, if necessary. For example, to
do the same for the visually selected lines, one can provide map()
with the range(line("'<"), line("'>"))
argument, instead (see
:help line()
, :help '<
). (Notice that in the latter case, to
run the command interactively while in Visual mode, one will need
to delete the '<,'>
prefix that Vim will automatically put in the
command line once :
is typed.)
To do both steps in a single command invocation, one can join the two
commands with |
. For instance, to pad visually selected lines
(or the lines that were in the last Visual selection), run:
:let m=max(map(range(line("'<"),line("'>")),'virtcol([v:val,"$"])')) | '<,'>s/$/\=repeat(' ',m-virtcol('$'))
If used frequently, this combined command can can be bound to a key mapping.
Here is an example implementation of a Visual-mode key mapping to be added
to the .vimrc
file:
vnoremap <silent> <leader><bar> :call RightPadLines(' ', +0)<cr>
func! RightPadLines(char, extra) range
let m = max(map(range(a:firstline, a:lastline), 'virtcol([v:val, "$"])'))
let m += a:extra
sil exec $'{a:firstline},{a:lastline}' 's/$/\=repeat(a:char, m-virtcol("$"))'
endfunc
The keyboard shortcut here is the leader key (see :help mapleader
) followed
by the |
key, but, of course, any combination can be used instead.