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I know the regex for doing a global replace,

%s/old/new/g

How do you go about doing an interactive search-replace in Vim?

7 Answers 7

542

Add the flag c (in the vim command prompt):

:%s/old/new/gc

will give you a yes/no prompt at each occurrence of 'old'.

"old" is highlighted in the text; at the bottom of the window it says "replace with new (y/n/a/q/l/^E/^y)?)"

Vim's built-in help offers useful info on the options available once substitution with confirmation has been selected. Use:

:h :s

Then scroll to section on confirm options. Screenshot below:

Text that says "[C] Confirm each substitution. [...] CTRL-Y to scroll the screen down"

For instance, to substitute this and all remaining matches, use a.

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  • 35
    +1, I learned something new today! vim has so many hidden secrets.. :) Feb 3, 2009 at 2:45
  • 10
    Learning vim commands is a little bit like playing Nethack. You never know what wonders a single character is going to hold.
    – Mark Biek
    Feb 3, 2009 at 3:06
  • 28
    I imagine the "c" is for "confirm"
    – matpie
    Feb 3, 2009 at 3:31
  • 8
    I'm honestly not trying to come across as snarky, but all of this could have been found by doing ":help :s" which would have led you straight to ":help :s_flags". Feb 5, 2009 at 16:09
  • 16
    @jeremy: that requires knowing that help command exists, and knowing that one needs to type "colon s" switch to get you to the relevant help file. How or where would one learn that?
    – Dennis
    Apr 15, 2014 at 15:04
88

Mark Biek pointed out using:

%s/old/new/gc

for a global search replace with confirmation for each substitution. But, I also enjoy interactively verifying that the old text will match correctly. I first do a search with a regex, then I reuse that pattern:

/old.pattern.to.match
%s//replacement/gc

The s// will use the last search pattern.

4
  • 9
    One of the greatest things about using/learning vim is just how deep the rabbit hole goes!
    – ken
    Feb 21, 2013 at 17:25
  • 2
    Nice, I was always doing the search, then using <C-r>/ to paste the last search into the substitute command. Jul 4, 2014 at 8:23
  • Exactly what I miss from Sublime Text!
    – Xenofex
    Aug 30, 2016 at 2:50
  • This answer is particularly useful, as I imagine a lot of times you decide to replace instances of a word, it's the word you just searched for.
    – M_M
    Feb 11, 2020 at 10:33
20

I think you're looking for c, eg s/abc/123/gc, this will cause VIM to confirm the replacements. See :help :substitute for more information.

9

I usually use the find/substitute/next/repeat command :-)

/old<CR>3snew<ESC>n.n.n.n.n.n.n.

That's find "old", substitute 3 characters for "new", find next, repeat substitute, and so on.

It's a pain for massive substitutions but it lets you selectively ignore some occurrences of old (by just pressing n again to find the next one instead of . to repeat a substitution).

4
  • I use this as well, even for similar texts. (3cW<texthere><ESC><move to new location>.<move>.<move>.)
    – strager
    Feb 3, 2009 at 3:00
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    It's not an antipattern! It's sweet. And you can search in the opposite direction using N. Really good if you see a word and want to change it. *cwNewText<ESC>N.n.n. (This will jump away from the word under the cursor, but then jump back soon as you have changed the next occurrence.
    – PEZ
    Feb 3, 2009 at 7:57
  • what is <CR> ?
    – makansij
    Jun 10, 2017 at 4:59
  • 1
    @makansij: better late than never! <CR> is a carriage return, which would perform the search action. So actually the suggestion is to: (1) search for the pattern first; (2) enter a command to change/edit the first match found; (3) repeat the last search; (4) repeat the last editing command; (5) continue ad nauseam. When I first saw it described this way, it also confused me
    – Luis
    Jun 16, 2022 at 20:52
9

If you just want to count the number of occurrences of 'abc' then you can do %s/abc//gn. This doesn't replace anything but just reports the number of occurrences of 'abc'.

3

If your replacement text needs to change for each matched occurrence (i.e. not simply choosing Yes/No to apply a singular replacement) you can use a Vim plugin I made called interactive-replace.

2

Neovim now has a feature inccommand which allows you to preview the substitution:

inccommand has two options:

  • set inccommand=split previews substitutions in a split pane
  • set inccommand=nosplit previews substitution in the active buffer

enter image description here

Image taken from: https://medium.com/@eric.burel/stop-using-open-source-5cb19baca44d Documentation of the feature: https://neovim.io/doc/user/options.html#'inccommand'

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  • This is so cool as a nvim built-in feature, good to know! Thanks for sharing! Oct 23, 2019 at 14:34

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