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I often have text in columns and need to replace some things without clobbering similar stuff on the same line... a simple example follows:

vim visual block-mode screenshot

Suppose I have highlighted the text in grey with vim visual block mode, and want to replace 80 with 81; however, I only want replacements within the highlighted visual block.

I have already tried Cntlv : s/80/81/g; however, that replaces text inside and outside the visual block. (based on Randy's feedback, it's because : s is a line-wise command).

I know I could use a line-wise visual block replace in this particular instance ( Shiftv : s/80\.1/81.1/g ); however, I'm trying to find a general solution for the problem of having no easy means to replace within a non line-wise visual block (isn't this the kind problem that visual block mode is supposed to help solve?). Answers requiring confirmation like : s/80/81/gc, are not what I am looking for.

I will restate the question for clarity: How can I replace 80 with 81 by using vim's visual block mode highlight?

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  • FYI... for those who use gvim under MS Windows, visual block mode is <cntl-q>, because <cntl-v> pastes the copy buffer Jan 22, 2013 at 15:36

3 Answers 3

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You need to add \%V to your pattern. From :help \%V:

Match inside the Visual area.  When Visual mode has already been
stopped match in the area that gv would reselect.
This is a /zero-width match.  To make sure the whole pattern is
inside the Visual area put it at the start and end of the pattern.

OP EDIT: the explicit solution is to to use : s/\%V8\%V0/81/g

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  • Exactly what I was looking for; it's interesting that I don't need \%V in line-wise block mode. Jun 3, 2011 at 18:58
  • 2
    Because ':s' is a linewise operation. The advantage of adding this is that even if you left visual mode you can still operate on the last visual selection with '\%V' in your pattern. Jun 3, 2011 at 19:12
  • For me to understand this I treat \% like a regex escape character, ` and V` like b in \b for a word boundary where \%V is the boundary of the selection. Jul 31, 2014 at 23:30
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    @YzmirRamirez This way of understanding \%V is completely incorrect. \%V is a zero-width atom that matches inside the visual selection. If you select one character (e.g. 1) and use \%V1\%V you will see that there is no match because second character is not inside the selection. Also if it was boundary using \%V2 on selection 123 would not match 2.
    – ZyX
    Oct 30, 2014 at 22:55
  • @MikePennington For the reason explained above your edit is not correct. Correct regex is \%V8\%V0, not \%V80\%V.
    – ZyX
    Oct 30, 2014 at 22:57
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The visual selection block should be identifiable with %V

:'<,'>s/\%V80/81/g
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The solution is obviously the \%V regex atom, but note, that this it still a little bit buggy.

Update: It's no bug. This thread explains the behaviour.

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  • 1
    Thank you for your response. What kind of buggy behavior have you seen with \%V? Jun 8, 2011 at 13:52
  • @ChristianBrabandt It would be more helpful if you a) said that \%V matches inside the regex (see my comment to the accepted answer) and b) deleted or unproved the above comment which states that \%V is not zero-width. // I think it is your edit that made this question appear in the RSS.
    – ZyX
    Oct 30, 2014 at 23:02

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