110

Is there a command to delete a line (or several lines) that is immediately below current line? Currently I'm doing it as: jdd and then . to repeat as needed. Is there a command that would combine all these?

UPDATE: The reason I would like to have such command is that I don't like to move away from current position, yet be able to delete lines below.

2
  • I think @Peter Rincker's answer should be marked as the answer
    – gixxer
    Jan 13, 2017 at 1:44
  • done @gixxer, thanks for the heads up
    – Valentin V
    Jan 13, 2017 at 16:42

9 Answers 9

191

The delete ex command will work nicely.

:+,$d

This will delete all the lines from current +1 till the end ($)

To delete the next 2 lines the follow range would work, +1,+2 or shorthand +,+2

:+,+2d

As @ib mentioned the :delete or :d command will move the cursor to the start of the line next to the deleted text. (Even with nostartofline set). To overcome this we can issue the `` normal mode command. `` will jump back to the exact position before the last jump, in this case the :d command. Our command is now

:+,+2denter``

Or as one ex command

:+,+2d|norm! ``

To make this easier we wrap this all up in a command:

command! -count=1 -register D :+,+<count>d <reg><bar>norm! ``

Now to delete the next following 3 lines:

:3D

This command can also take a {reg} like :delete and :yank do. So deleting the next 4 lines into register a would be:

:4D a

For more information

:h :d
:h :command
:h :command-register
:h :command-count
:h ``
6
  • 3
    Note that this is a fairly easy solution that works "out of the box" and is generalizable to other commands (for example, :+1,+5s!a!b!g will replace a's with b's on the 4 lines after the cursor). See :help command-ranges for some more examples. Sep 3, 2010 at 1:06
  • This straightforward solution would be great, if only it does not move the cursor. At least, the command should look like :+,$d|norm!``. By the way, as stated in the question, author of the question would like to delete several lines below the current one, not necessarily all way down to the end of file.
    – ib.
    Oct 22, 2011 at 1:39
  • @ib: Would the answer be improved by a more detailed explanation of ranges? Maybe set sol? How to use the ` mark? Oct 22, 2011 at 2:09
  • @Peter: Probably, it would be. By the way, turning sol off alone does not solve the issue: when one deletes, say, three lines using :+,+3d, the cursor is moved to the line next the deleted ones.
    – ib.
    Oct 22, 2011 at 2:47
  • @ib: I have incorporated your suggestions into the my answer. Thank you for your feedback. Oct 22, 2011 at 3:49
131

dG should work.
This means delete all rows until end of file from current cursor.

3
  • THIS is the best one!
    – countach
    Nov 17, 2022 at 12:29
  • simple & the best
    – TalESid
    Dec 17, 2023 at 13:02
  • This worked. Very simple and efficient solution. Same way the dg also works opposite direction.
    – Muneer
    Feb 22 at 3:13
33

This will delete ALL lines below the current one:

jdG

Unfortunately that will move the cursor to the beginning of current line after the deletion is made.

2
  • 2
    And will delete every line till the end of the buffer, too.
    – ib.
    Sep 2, 2010 at 10:42
  • 1
    I misread the original question, sorry. Thought the OP wants to delete ALL lines below the current one. Changed my post.
    – ClosedID
    Sep 2, 2010 at 11:13
8

well, to do it simply you could use the xxdd command. Most of the time I know (at least have an idea) the size of the script I am editing. So, the command as below is usually more than enough :

  • 99dd
  • 999dd to remove 999lines starting at the cursor position.
  • 9999dd
  • 99999dd for very long script ;)
4

The other solutions are informative, but I feel it'd be simpler to use a macro for this:

qq (begins recording)

jddk (go down, delete the line, and go back up - i.e. the thing you want to do)

q (end recording)

Now you can do @q to perform this action, maintaining the cursor at the current position. You could also do something like 5@q to delete 5 lines below the cursor.

And finally, if you're repeating the action more than once, you could just type @@ after the first time you run @q (this repeats the last used macro - in this case q)

2

This is a job for marks!

Try maj20dd`a

ma sets the file-specific mark 'a', j20dd does the deletion you want (20 lines in this case), and `a restores you to the mark's position (line and column).

Obviously this pattern can be extended to do anything you want before returning to the mark. If you use mA (or any other capital letter) the mark will actually be unique across files, so you can even edit elsewhere before returning. If you have a very frequent usage you could make it a macro as suggested above.

1

You could enter the number of lines to delete: j 20 dd k.

6
  • Final k moves the cursor above the initial line. Also, cursor column position will be lost because of dd.
    – ib.
    Sep 2, 2010 at 9:08
  • @ib: Not in my tests it doesn't. Have you actually tried it? Note the initial j.
    – Paul Ruane
    Sep 2, 2010 at 9:24
  • I'm sorry, my first point was wrong (when I've tried the command out, I have not noticed that the count I specified ('20', in your example) was greater than the number of lines till the end of the buffer). But the second one remains: column position of the cursor changes after dd (to the first non-blank character of the line next to the deleted lines, I believe).
    – ib.
    Sep 2, 2010 at 9:34
  • @ib: Yes, I agree the column position changes.
    – Paul Ruane
    Sep 2, 2010 at 9:44
  • Please make an insignificant edit of your answer, so I can upvote it. I think your answer does not deserve a negative rank after all.
    – ib.
    Sep 2, 2010 at 9:47
0

You can also use: Shift + V, Shift + G and Shift + X

-2

Just for the fun of it, you can define a little function that does exactly what you described: deletes the next n lines below the current line and restores the initial cursor position.

function! DeleteNextLines(n, reg)
    let l = line('.')
    let m = min([a:n, line('$')-l])
    if m > 0
        let c = col('.')
        exe '+,+'.m 'd' a:reg
        call cursor(l, c)
    endif
endfunction

Also, you can define a command that accepts the number of lines to delete (one, if omitted) and the register name to use as an optional argument (just like the :delete command).

:command! -range=1 -register -bar D call DeleteNextLines(<count>, <q-reg>)

Additionally, you can define a mapping for triggering the above :D command, if it is necessary.

1
  • for example, to map to comma,d (press ',' followed by d) insert the following lines (after entering the above answer by @ib. ) 1: let mapleader = "," 2: nmap <leader>d :D<CR>
    – Kevin Lee
    Dec 7, 2012 at 4:11

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