6

I know that by typing @@ I execute the last @ command. But can anyone explain what @@ is in the code below (found in the vim help files)?:

function! CountSpaces(type, ...)
  let sel_save = &selection
  let reg_save = @@

  if a:0
    silent exe "normal! `<" . a:type . "`>y"
  elseif a:type == 'line'
    silent exe "normal! '[V']y"
  elseif a:type == 'block'
    silent exe "normal! `[\<C-V>`]y"
  else
    silent exe "normal! `[v`]y"
  endif

  echomsg strlen(substitute(@@, '[^ ]', '', 'g'))

  let &selection = sel_save
  let @@ = reg_save
endfunction

It appears to be a register, but it isn't in the list at :help registers. From reading the code I'd guess it is the default register for yanking/deleting? Is this documented anywhere? All my searches just yield the @@ idiom that executes the last @ command.

2
  • @@ stores an AT-AT walker from Star Wars. :P Dec 15, 2010 at 21:35
  • Interesting. It does seem to be the default register used by yank and friends, but I can't find any documentation about this. Stranger still, it does not appear to be connected to the @@ command at all. Normally you can yank something into a register (eg: "zy[motion] yanks into z) and then "replay" it as keystrokes (@z) but @@ does not replay the contents of the @ register. It's a special case! I suppose it's good that replaying a register doesn't overwrite the default register used by yank and put, but it's kind of disconcerting that there's such an irregularity in vim's behavior. Dec 15, 2010 at 21:44

1 Answer 1

15

:help @r gives me

register                        *expr-register* *@r*
--------
@r          contents of register 'r'

The result is the contents of the named register, as a single string.
Newlines are inserted where required.  To get the contents of the unnamed
register use @" or @@.  See |registers| for an explanation of the available
registers.

So, @@ will have the value of the text deleted with a d, c, s or x command, or the the text yanked with a y command.

2
  • 1
    +1 so it looks like its "real" name is @", which kind of makes sense. You can actually yank something without specifying a register, and then "replay" it by typing the command @". I wonder why the @@ alias exists? And is there any way to programmatically determine what the @@ command will do? Dec 15, 2010 at 22:06
  • Ah ha! So, as L.G. said, it is really an alias for @". I guess that's why it doesn't show up in the list of registers. Dec 15, 2010 at 23:36

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