For example, in the following:
Testing "deleting" within quotes
With the cursor inside of deleting, how can I delete the text within the quotes and include the quotes, leaving:
Testing within quotes
For example, in the following:
Testing "deleting" within quotes
With the cursor inside of deleting, how can I delete the text within the quotes and include the quotes, leaving:
Testing within quotes
You can use the following sequence to delete everything including the quotes:
da"
Keep in mind this only works on a single line, and will remove any trailing spaces after the last quote.
As pointed out by @James in the comments below, you can also use the delete inside sequence to delete the characters within the quotes without deleting the quotes:
di"
You can also use the change inside sequence to remove the characters and switch to insert mode, allowing you to easily replace text within quotes:
ci"
:help
). Feel free to edit the answer with your suggestions if you think that would be helpful.
Apr 25, 2016 at 14:37
:help
is only helpful if you already know what you are looking for. It is useful to have these operations documented somewhere where it is easy to find them.
Apr 25, 2016 at 14:46
di"
. Very useful, especially with ci"
Apr 25, 2016 at 18:55
da"
to work across multiple lines?
Nov 24, 2019 at 9:34
We can use
da"
for your case
or di"
to delete ONLY the contents inside of ".
It is better to start with text-objects. Writing as an answer for completeness.
Excerpt from :h text-objects
, given below, suggest two forms i
and a
This is a series of commands that can only be used while in Visual mode or after an operator. The commands that start with "a" select "a"n object including white space, the commands starting with "i" select an "inner" object without white space, or just the white space. Thus the "inner" commands always select less text than the "a" commands.
text-objects are useful to other character pair like (), {}, etc
. For example, it is useful while changing
if ( i == true ) {
}
to
if (_) {
}
by using ci(
or ci)
.
Keep your cursor in first quotes and press d, then type /"/e It should delete the content between both double quotes as well as quotes. This is applicable for muliple lines as well.
Another way: Keep the cursor in first quotes and type df" It will also delete the text inside quotes and quotes too! Not applicable for multiple lines.
In both the ways, you execute commands in normal mode.