I wish I'd known basic visual block mode stuff earlier. Even if you don't use Vim for anything else, it can be a big time saver to open up a file in Vim just for some block operations. I'm quite sure I wasted a ton of time doing this kind of thing manually.
Examples I've found particularly useful, when, say, refactoring lists of symbolic constant names consistently:
Enter Visual Block mode (Ctrl + Q for me on Windows instead of Ctrl + V)
Move the cursor to highlight the desired block.
Then, I whatever text
and press Esc to have the text inserted in front of the block on every line.
Use A
instead of I
to have the text inserted after the block on every line.
Also - simply toggling the case of a visual selection with ~
can be a big time saver.
And simply deleting columns, too, with d
of course.