I want to
- Select a word with VISUAL mode
- Press a key to search for the selected word
This has been explained in Search for selection in vim.
v
y
/
<C-r>0
(Ctrlr+0):h i_ctrl-r
(thanks to romainl in the comments)Another example is using the command line:
v
y
q/
p
, and search by pressing Enter
In short: yq/p<Enter>
Ctrl-r 0
really means, except that it pastes the last yanked text. :h Ctrl-r
tells me that it's related to redo
, but is that right? Could anyone explain how this works or possibly point me to the right help section if it's not redo?
<C-r>0
is used to insert the content of register 0. You can also insert the result of an expression: <C-r>=2+57<CR>
, <C-r>=expand('%')
, etc. Read :h i_ctrl-r
. Note the i_
for insert mode commands.
Oh, mate, actually you can use the mighty Visual Search originated by the author of the book Practical Vim. It's very lightweight!
Simply add following stuff into your vimrc,
xnoremap * :<C-u>call <SID>VSetSearch()<CR>/<C-R>=@/<CR><CR>
xnoremap # :<C-u>call <SID>VSetSearch()<CR>?<C-R>=@/<CR><CR>
function! s:VSetSearch()
let temp = @s
norm! gv"sy
let @/ = '\V' . substitute(escape(@s, '/\'), '\n', '\\n','g')
let @s = temp
endfunction
Visual select the content you want to do search, then press the star key *
, Voila !
Bairui/Dahu's SearchParty has a couple of nifty mappings that build on the "yank and insert" method but deal cleanly with newlines and such:
* Searches for the next occurrence of the currently selected visual text.
# Searches for the prior occurrence of the currently selected visual text.
& Starts a :substitute using the currently selected visual text.
If you feel a plugin is overkill, it's easy to pull the relevant line from the script and put it in your ~/.vimrc
.
To search for more than one word at a time, the vim search supports or '\|'. So to search for dog cat and bird you can:
/dog\|cat\|bird
or better (exact word match):
/\<dog\>\|\<cat\>\|\<bird\>
Not sure why @romainl reply is not upvoted more. It is faster, automatically escapes characters that will mess up search, and vanilla vim. Combined with cgn
followed by .
, it is a perfect substitute for those that miss Ctrl-d
in vscode.
the foo was named bar
and search using it, would only find the same sentence, not sentences containingthe/foo/was/named/bar
?