511

In Vim, how do I insert characters at the beginning of each line in a selection?

For instance, I want to comment out a block of code by prepending // at the beginning of each line assuming my language's comment system doesn't allow block commenting like /* */. How would I do this?

14 Answers 14

919
  1. Press Esc to enter 'command mode'
  2. Use Ctrl+V to enter visual block mode
  3. Move Up/Down to select the columns of text in the lines you want to comment.
  4. Then hit Shift+i and type the text you want to insert.
  5. Then hit Esc, wait 1 second and the inserted text will appear on every line.

For further information and reading, check out "Inserting text in multiple lines" in the Vim Tips Wiki.

28
  • 7
    The only bummer with this is that it appears Ctrl+V is overridden in GVIM. Oct 31, 2008 at 13:04
  • 18
    Not for me (on linux) it's not
    – pixelbeat
    Oct 31, 2008 at 13:07
  • 25
    You can use Ctrl-Q as a replacement in gVim (as :help Ctrl-V explains) but you need to use hjkl to navigate in this mode rather than the arrow keys
    – Gareth
    Oct 31, 2008 at 13:07
  • 10
    If your ctrl-v is overridden in windows gvim, you should edit the global vimrc to stop including mswin.vim.
    – graywh
    Jan 4, 2009 at 21:20
  • 22
    Any idea why this wouldn't do anything after pushing esc? I waited like 10 seconds for something to happen on less than a hundred lines -- Never mind, I was pushing Shift + v not CTRL + v. @vkaul11 Probably the same thing what you did lol
    – Tek
    Jan 16, 2015 at 22:31
221

This replaces the beginning of each line with "//":

:%s!^!//!

This replaces the beginning of each selected line (use visual mode to select) with "//":

:'<,'>s!^!//!

Note that gv (in normal mode) restores the last visual selection, this comes in handy from time to time.

7
  • 4
    Thanks! Makes total sense. And removing the text goes as follows: '<,'>s!^//!! Oct 31, 2008 at 13:08
  • 4
    What is the meaning of the exclamation marks in the above answer? (:%s!^!//!)
    – Henrik K
    May 31, 2011 at 8:57
  • 21
    @HKK, normally one uses the forward slash character / as a delimeter for the search and replace command. In this case we are inserting a forward slash as part of the search and replace so we use an alternative delimeter, namely the exclamation character !
    – cyber-monk
    Jun 7, 2011 at 20:46
  • +1 This works in VsVim where (Ctrl+V) (Shiift+I) Esc doesn't.
    – Seth Reno
    Jan 24, 2012 at 15:03
  • 4
    +1, had no idea you could use something else as the regex delimiter (here I was using / and having to escape the // in :s/^/\/\/ instead of writing :s!^!//)
    – Hashbrown
    Dec 18, 2013 at 6:19
103

The general pattern for search and replace is:

:s/search/replace/

Replaces the first occurrence of 'search' with 'replace' for current line

:s/search/replace/g

Replaces all occurrences of 'search' with 'replace' for the current line, 'g' is short for 'global'

This command will replace each occurrence of 'search' with 'replace' for the current line only. The % is used to search over the whole file. To confirm each replacement interactively, append a 'c' for confirm:

:%s/search/replace/c

Interactive confirm replacing 'search' with 'replace' for the entire file

Instead of the % character you can use a line number range (note that the '^' character is a special search character for the start of line):

:14,20s/^/#/

Inserts a '#' character at the start of lines 14-20

If you want to use another comment character (like //), then change your command delimiter:

:14,20s!^!//!

Inserts a '//' character sequence at the start of lines 14-20

Or you can always escape the // characters like:

:14,20s/^/\/\//

Inserts a '//' character sequence at the start of lines 14-20

If you are not seeing line numbers in your editor, simply type the following:

:set nu
3
  • to remove the beginning #: instead of :14,20s/#/^/, you should use :14,20s/#//
    – cn1h
    Jun 16, 2012 at 9:21
  • 1
    @cn1h I think this will replace other # in the line as well. You should use ^# instead.
    – ankush981
    Aug 23, 2015 at 4:01
  • 1
    Thanks for explaining the basics. It's good to know why something happens.
    – didierCH
    Jun 15, 2019 at 8:18
49

Another way that might be easier for newcomers:

 some█
 code
 here

Place the cursor on the first line, e.g. by

gg

and type the following to get into insert mode and add your text:

I / / Space

 // █some
 code
 here

Press Esc to get back to command mode and use the digraph:

j . j .

 // some
 // code
 //█here

j is a motion command to go down one line and . repeats the last editing command you made.

3
  • 4
    Thats really simple :). If you are having trouble with it may be because you are typing a bar (the other symbol with your \ ) | instead of a capital I. I thought it was a | at first.
    – cokedude
    Feb 28, 2014 at 17:30
  • 1
    If I do "5." it deletes 5 character from same line. How do I make it delete 5 character at once from each line ? Jun 24, 2015 at 6:58
  • 1
    @RahulPrasad Let's say you have 25 lines, then beginning at the front of the first line just record 5xj into a register and play that register 24 times, for example: qa5xjq25@a But it would be better if you posted this as an actual question if it doesnt exist already...
    – ninegrid
    Mar 1, 2016 at 7:03
29

And yet another way:

  • Move to the beginning of a line
  • enter Visual Block mode (CTRL-v)
  • select the lines you want (moving up/down with j/k, or jumping to a line with [line]G)
  • press I (that's capital i)
  • type the comment character(s)
  • press ESC
1
  • thanks, this help a lot with modifying file in servers without additional plugin of VI
    – Duy Tran
    Mar 2, 2021 at 8:11
27

This adds # at the beginning of every line:

:%s/^/#/

And people will stop complaining about your lack of properly commenting scripts.

1
  • 2
    What if you want to add # on only selected (or few) lines Jun 24, 2015 at 6:55
16

If you want to get super fancy about it, put this in your .vimrc:

vmap \c :s!^!//!<CR>
vmap \u :s!^//!!<CR>

Then, whenever in visual mode, you can hit \c to comment the block and \u to uncomment it. Of course, you can change those shortcut keystrokes to whatever.

1
  • Upvoted because it introduced something new - vmap!
    – ankush981
    Aug 23, 2015 at 4:02
14

Yet another way:

:'<,'>g/^/norm I//

/^/ is just a dummy pattern to match every line. norm lets you run the normal-mode commands that follow. I// says to enter insert-mode while jumping the cursor to the beginning of the line, then insert the following text (two slashes).

:g is often handy for doing something complex on multiple lines, where you may want to jump between multiple modes, delete or add lines, move the cursor around, run a bunch of macros, etc. And you can tell it to operate only on lines that match a pattern.

3
  • 3
    actually the :g command isn't necessary. This will do: :'<,'>norm I// Dec 18, 2008 at 19:56
  • 1
    And :s is better to use in this case, too.
    – graywh
    Jan 4, 2009 at 21:21
  • This is the most useful answer.
    – Peaceful
    Dec 21, 2016 at 5:39
7

To insert "ABC" at the begining of each line:

  1. Go to command mode

  2. % norm I ABC

1
  • This adds the text to the left of the first non-space character in the line.
    – Kingsley
    Dec 11, 2018 at 3:36
3

For commenting blocks of code, I like the NERD Commenter plugin.

Select some text:

Shift-V
...select the lines of text you want to comment....

Comment:

,cc

Uncomment:

,cu

Or just toggle the comment state of a line or block:

,c<space>
2

I can recommend the EnhCommentify plugin.

eg. put this to your vimrc:

let maplocalleader=','
vmap <silent> <LocalLeader>c <Plug>VisualTraditional
nmap <silent> <LocalLeader>c <Plug>Traditional
let g:EnhCommentifyBindInInsert = 'No'
let g:EnhCommentifyMultiPartBlocks = 'Yes'
let g:EnhCommentifyPretty = 'Yes'
let g:EnhCommentifyRespectIndent = 'Yes'
let g:EnhCommentifyUseBlockIndent = 'Yes'

you can then comment/uncomment the (selected) lines with ',c'

1
1

Mark the area to be comment as a visual block (<C-V)

and do c#<ESC>p

  1. change it to "#"
  2. put it back

If you do it often, define a short cut (example \q) in your .vimrc

:vmap \q c#<ESC>p
1

In case someone's multi-line-selection is actually a paragraph, there is no need to manually select the lines. vim can do that for you:

  1. vip: select and mark the whole paragraph
  2. shift-i: insert text at line beginning
  3. escape: leave insert mode/enter normal mode [line beginnings still selected]
  4. escape: unselect line beginnings
0

Mapping of most voted answer:

1st visual select the desired lines, then execute <leader>zzz, which values:

vnoremap <leader>zzz <C-V>^I-<Space><Esc>
  • <C-V> to enter visual mode
  • ^ goes to start of line ( or use '0' to 1st non blank)
  • I to insert in block mode
  • -<Space> to insert '- ' (for example, edit as you need)
  • <Esc> to apply same insert to all visual block lines

Or of last visual selection from normal mode:

nnoremap <leader>zzz gv<C-V>^I-<Space><Esc>

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