16

I'm trying without success to join all lines in a paragraph (block of text) using a vimscript.
I want to do this for every paragraph (block of text) and want to keep the empty lines between them.
(I don't want to use macros)

When I use the }w command to go to the first word in the next paragraph I noted that it does not recognize empty lines with spaces or multiple empty lines between paragraphs. That's not what I want.

So I tried this:
do a search:
\(^.*\S\+.*\n\)\{2,}
do:
normal vipgJ
do above search again etc.

It works fine when I do it manually, but I can't put this in a script.

I tried this:

 function! <SID>JoinParagraphs()   
   let i = 1   
   normal gg   
   while i <= 200   
   call search("\\(^.*\\S\\+.*\\n\\)\\{2,})", "")   
   normal vipgJ   
    let i=i+1   
   endwhile   
  endfunction

Doesn't work...
I tried also to change the line call search... for
let @/ = "\\(^.*\\S\\+.*\\n\\)\\{2,})" but that does a Join of all lines together (doesn't keep the empty lines).

What did I do wrong?

2
  • Even if I have found the solution in the answers below, can anyone please tell me whats wrong in above function? :)
    – Reman
    Apr 13, 2011 at 16:38
  • What do you mean by "doesn't work"? What behaviour do you see?
    – Dan Hulme
    Feb 18, 2012 at 8:50

6 Answers 6

32

Just found this answer

:set tw=1000000
gggqG

Which is the absolute winner IMHO.

It executes gq on the motion from gg (start) to G (end of document), using a textwidth of 1000000.

5
  • nice one yes... (I believe you forgot a line: :%s/.\zs\n\ze./ /)
    – Reman
    Apr 13, 2011 at 20:21
  • Nope. That line is irrelevant because it was an alternative approach and won't do you what you need exactly. So, yes gggqG is really all there is to it (with sufficiently high tw)
    – sehe
    Apr 13, 2011 at 21:06
  • 1
    Nice. You can select blocks of text and then use gq on those manually, if you don't want to join all paragraphs.
    – naught101
    Jan 5, 2015 at 2:38
  • 1
    @SethDifley It executes gq on the motion from gg (start) to G (end of document), using a textwidth of 1000000.
    – sehe
    Jul 20, 2016 at 22:50
  • Haha, I love this answer, creative and a little silly but effective and simple. Nov 4, 2017 at 3:34
19

Replace all newlines followed by something other than a newline with the second matched character:

:%s/\(\S\)\n\(\S\)/\1 \2/

Another approach:

:%s/\n\([^\n]\)/\1/
7
  • @JSBangs, your code removes one empty line between the blocks of text. I would like to keep all empty line.
    – Reman
    Apr 13, 2011 at 15:27
  • and it doesn't consider empty lines with one or more spaces.
    – Reman
    Apr 13, 2011 at 15:39
  • @JSBangs, pattern not found (there are end of line spaces in my text).. but even if I change it to \(.*\S.*\)\n\(.*\S.*\) it will remove one \n every two lines. What I want to obtain is to remove only \n when next line contains text.
    – Reman
    Apr 13, 2011 at 16:09
  • @Remonn there are end of line spaces in my text -- that's why my regex didn't work for you... but what kind of crazy file are you working on? Apr 13, 2011 at 16:19
  • @JSBangs, a text with EOL spaces, but even when I remove them, your regex can't work (see my comment above).
    – Reman
    Apr 13, 2011 at 16:22
6

Another approach that has been around since Berkeley UNIX, before vim existed... If you're on a linux/unix system, you can invoke the fmt command like so:

:%!fmt -w 9999

That will do it on the whole file, which might screw up stuff like numbered lists. You can do it by paragraph with:

!}fmt -w 9999

or do it from the command line outside of vi:

$ fmt -w 9999 file.txt

I like this approach because I don't have to remember to reset textwidth=80

6

as was touched on in the function the easiest way is to use

vipJ

Visual select inner paragraph join

5

Click: Pragmatic approach added

much underrated command mode and :global

Update Fixed after a correct comment. It happened with whitespace-only lines containing Tab-character(s)... sry bout that.

:g#\v[^\s\t]#normal vipJ

How does that work for you? (perhaps replacing vipJ -> vipgJ if you like)

Update Here is one that not uses normal mode (inspired by Peter's comment)

The big benefit is that it reuses the same pattern in negative and positive sense; That way it can be genericized to

:let @/='\v^\s*$'
:v//.,//-1 join

Now the second line shows the simplicity of the this approach (for every nonmatching line, join up until the next matching line). The best thing is that you can use any odd search pattern instead

Of course you could write this particular task as one line, but it wouldn't quite be as elegant:

:v#\v^\s*$#.,//-1 join
7
  • @sehe, it does a join of all lines in 1 line
    – Reman
    Apr 13, 2011 at 16:01
  • @sehe, found the error. it almost works when I remove first all "end of line spaces". Only thing what still does work after it is that it removes the empty line between a single line of text and a block of text (I have 2 blocks with only 1 line of text (with an empty line above and below)).
    – Reman
    Apr 13, 2011 at 16:18
  • @sehe: does work after it --> doesnt work after it (sorry I can't edit my comment anymore)
    – Reman
    Apr 13, 2011 at 16:24
  • Here is an alterative that does not use normal mode: :g/./,/\_.\_^\s*$/j Apr 14, 2011 at 1:49
  • 1
    yes, :v#\v^\s*$#.,//-1 join works very well. Have you tested JSBangs solution? (%s/\(\s*\S\s*\)\n\(\s*\S\s*\)/\1 \2). It works also very well.
    – Reman
    Apr 14, 2011 at 10:05
1

Caveats:

The following method may remove some blank/empty lines as J expects a minimum of two lines.

:g#\v[^\s\t]#normal vipJ

The following method reports error if the last line is not empty as the range .,//-1 is not valid.

:v#\v^\s*$#.,//-1 join

The best would be use vip to select a paragraph and use join to join lines. Not sure how it can be done though.

Edit: Probably the following will do:

:v#\v^\s*$#exec "normal! vip:" | '<,'> join

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