14

Let's say this is my text:

this is my text this
is my text this is my text
my text is this

I would like to highlight all text except pattern and delete the highlighted text.
p.e. text: this must be the result.

text
texttext
text

I've found the code how to select all text except pattern:
\%(\%(.{-}\)\@!text\zs\)*

however I don't know how to delete all highlighted text.
This doesn't work:
:%s/\%(\%(.{-}\)\@!bell\zs\)*//

Can anyone help me?

1

3 Answers 3

13

Try this:

:%s/\(^\|\(text\)\@<=\).\{-}\($\|text\)\@=//g

Explanation:

\(^\|\(text\)\@<=\)     # means start of line, or some point preceded by “text”
.\{-}                   # as few characters as possible
\($\|text\)\@=          # without globbing characters, checking that we reached either end of line or occurrence of “text”.

Another way to do it:

  • Create a function that count matches of a pattern in a string (see :help match() to help you design that)
  • Use: :%s/.*/\=repeat('text', matchcount('text', submatch(0)))
8
  • I tried to put your code :%s/\(^\|\(text\)\@<=\).\{-}\($\|text\)\@=//g in menu.vim, do you know why this does work on the commandline but not in menu.vim (or vimrc). Do I have to use double backslashes or something like that?
    – Reman
    Jun 6, 2011 at 8:39
  • @Remonn: Those files are read before your file is loaded. Try to setup an autocmd or to make a command.
    – Benoit
    Jun 6, 2011 at 8:43
  • I created this command in menu.vim: nnoremenu <silent> 96.061.11 &Matches.Delete\ all\ but\ Matches\ :%s/\(^\|\(<C-r>/\)\@<=\).\{-}\($\|<C-r>/\)\@=//g<CR> this gives the error nothing found, same error when I change <C-r>/ in "text"
    – Reman
    Jun 6, 2011 at 8:53
  • 1
    You must escape the pipes (\| => \\|).
    – Benoit
    Jun 6, 2011 at 8:58
  • 1
    Using very magic and breaking the command into search and substitution, makes easier to understand - Search /\v(^|(text)@<=).{-}($|text)@= Substituition :%s,,\1,g Aug 20, 2017 at 18:19
10

Forgive me, because I'm not a vim expert, but wouldn't prepending the search with v find the inverse so that you could do something like this?

:v/pattern/d
2
  • 3
    this deletes the whole line without the highlighting and keeps the whole line with highlighting not just the highlighted text.
    – Reman
    Jun 6, 2011 at 18:29
  • That's true. So while this answer doesn't really solve the original question, I've found the :v command to be very, very useful. Oct 1, 2014 at 14:25
5

I've implemented Benoit's clever regular expression as a custom :DeleteExcept command in my PatternsOnText plugin. It offers other related commands like :SubstituteExcept or :SubstituteInSearch, too.

OP's example would be

:%DeleteExcept /text/

Comparing that with @Benoit's explicit command (:%s/\(^\|\(text\)\@<=\).\{-}\($\|text\)\@=//g), it's a lot simpler.

3
  • 1
    To the downvoter: If you have constructive feedback, please post it here, or contact me directly. Jul 6, 2013 at 11:08
  • Please add an example of usage of this command. Currently, there is no way to understand how it works. May 5, 2019 at 5:47
  • @RohanGhige Thanks for the feedback; I've added an example. For me, the syntax appears to be straightforward, but you're right, one cannot expect that from the reader, and not everybody will click through to the plugin's page. May 5, 2019 at 8:32

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