68

Is there a fast command to change

Cnotrol

to

Control

4 Answers 4

114

While in normal mode, with your cursor on top of the first character to swap, you can type xp to delete one character and put it after the cursor, effectively swapping the two characters.

One possibly useful command (taken straight from the Vim page on swapping) would be

:nnoremap <silent> gc xph

to map gc (or another command of your choice) to swapping two characters. Note that the h simply moves the cursor back to its original position, on top of the first of the two characters to be swapped.

3
  • 2
    x: equivalent to "cut to clipboard" p: equivalent to "paste from clipboard"
    – Wadih M.
    Oct 7, 2009 at 12:45
  • @WadihM. to be precise the result of x is stored in a "" register (which is responsible for the last yank/cut operation). It can be observed by checking out all registers at :reg
    – krzemian
    Jan 16, 2017 at 10:51
  • xp is a way, but not the best. A question. Can you repeat the action with the dot command? I remember reading about a way 20 years back, but as a beginner I didn't memorize it as it didn't seem important. I am sure we could use the dot and repeat it, if we used THAT way. Still looking.
    – gk_2000
    Jul 22, 2021 at 22:47
94

xp

This swaps the current character with the next.

0
24

You can also just use Xp with the cursor being on the second character. That way you stay on the same position without defining a new mapping.

5

If you have some common missspellings you can also use the abbreviation feature to correct these as you type. For example, I often mistype 'String' as 'Stirng', the following command fixes these while typing:

inoreab <buffer> Stirng String
2

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