80

The title is very descriptive. Just in case, I will give an example:

START BLOCK1
something
END BLOCK1

START BLOCK2
something
somenthing...
END BLOCK2
  1. I select the BLOCK1 in visual mode
  2. I yank it by pressing y
  3. How can I save the yanked BLOCK1 to some other file?

8 Answers 8

147

Select the text you wish to save, in either line visual or block visual mode, and

:w new.txt

That's what you type, but you won't actually see exactly what's above. When you press :, you'll go to the command line which will automatically get filled in with selection information. It'll look something like this:

:'<,'>

Just carry on typing the rest (w new.txt) to get

:'<,'>w new.txt

...and press enter.

4
  • 19
    That doesn't provide the expected result as it only writes full lines, disregarding the selection start and end position inside the line. Any solution for that? Otherwise I like to file the main question again.
    – dronus
    Nov 8, 2012 at 14:41
  • 2
    @dronus - I don't quite understand what you're asking. This does what the OP asked, to the best of my understanding the question.
    – Rook
    Nov 10, 2012 at 20:21
  • 7
    If you select in any non-line visual mode, :w still writes out full lines touched by the selected range, but not the exact range beginning or ending inside of lines. For example, if you select a narrow column in block select mode, or a part of one line in visual select mode, the full line will be written by :w, even if ywould copy the correct parts of the line.
    – dronus
    Nov 11, 2012 at 22:12
  • 1
    @dronus - Ah, okey. Yes, that's correct. But still, while I can't talk for others, what it does is expected behaviour for me.
    – Rook
    Nov 12, 2012 at 15:11
18

With the block is selected, you can :'<,'>w other-file, which will write only the selected block to other-file. Hitting : in visual mode should place '<,'> into the command line for you already, so you really only have to type :w other-file.

2
  • 3
    Vim always selects whole lines for piping to external command, so you can use the unix/cygwin 'cut' command to select rectangle of column N to M, of each line in the selection: :'<,'>w !cut -cN-M > new.txt. Surprised that highest voted answer and readers don't seem to understand the question.
    – mosh
    Nov 22, 2016 at 14:20
  • @mosh but when the selected text is not aligned to a column, this would not work either.
    – Sajuuk
    Aug 21, 2021 at 12:50
7

There's probably a simpler way to do this, but what I would do is create a new buffer (or tab) and then paste it in with p. You can create a new buffer with :new or a new tab with :tabnew. You can write the buffer/tab to a file as normal with :w filename.

1
  • 2
    Be sure to delete the extra line at the top!! (Pasting into an empty buffer creates an extra line at the top, or if using P, at the bottom.) Oct 29, 2012 at 13:56
3

Like @dronus mentioned in the comments, the :w !pbcopy suggestions does not copy correctly because it copies the entire line. If I want to copy only the url in a line, I will not be able to. Here's a line that you can add to your .vimrc file so that everytime you hit CTRL-C, the selected line in your vim will be copied to clipboard:

map <C-c> y:e ~/clipsongzboard<CR>P:w !pbcopy<CR><CR>:bdelete!<CR>

If you'd like to read details about what this does, you can read about this on my blog

Its the same implementation as what @rmeador suggested.

3

Similar to @songz's solution, I prefer do it like this using ":new"

vmap <C-c> y:new ~/.vimbuf<CR>VGp:x<CR>:!pbcopy < ~/.vimbuf<CR><CR>
2
  • pbcopy is, to my knowledge, only present on OSX. There are similar programs on Linux and other systems but they go by different names and work differently. Jul 27, 2015 at 20:13
  • Yep, it works only if pbcopy executable :) So no harm at all
    – chenkaie
    Jul 29, 2015 at 16:36
2

Vim get the visual selection and save to a file:

    function! Get_visual_selection()
        "get the position of left start visual selection
        let [line_start, column_start] = getpos("'<")[1:2]
        "get the position of right end visual selection
        let [line_end, column_end] = getpos("'>")[1:2]
        "gotta catch them all.
        let lines = getline(line_start, line_end)
        if len(lines) == 0
            return ''
        endif
        "edge cases and cleanup.
        let lines[-1] = lines[-1][: column_end - 2]
        let lines[0] = lines[0][column_start - 1:]
        return join(lines, "\n")
    endfunction

    function Save_visually_selected_text_to_file()
        let selected_text = Get_visual_selection()
        call writefile(split(selected_text, "\n"), "/tmp/something.txt")
    endfunction

    "the c-u does a union of all lines in visual selection.
    "this goes in the vimrc
    vnoremap <F10> :<c-u>call Save_visually_selected_text_to_file()<cr>
0

Basing on @chenkaie's variant, works well for me:

let mapleader = "," let g:mapleader = "," vmap <leader>y y:new ~/.vbuf<CR>VGp:x<CR> nmap <leader>p :r ~/.vbuf<CR>

0

In addition to selected answer above,

  • when using the mouse to select (1),

  • and the problem of only copying whole lines mentioned by the comment of @dronus to it, when just wanted to partly copy lines (2):

(1) At my Debian based DietPi (Raspberry PI)system, vim acts a little different like in the preferred solution above when using the mouse to enter and select 'VISUAL MODE' on my Ubuntu 16.04 work station. Then

  • y to yank it

but if I type ':' for command, it will not show up with the

'<,'>

where I can just simply add my

w new.txt

after it. So I just typed it by myself and it did work:

'<,'>w new.txt

and it copies the whole line(s) yanked content to my file 'new.txt', whereas '<,' seem to mean 'copy selected lines and '>' redirect it to the write command's referenced file.

(2) And to the problem of not pasting part of the line(s), like in @dronus comment mentioned, this solution (the selected one, first alternative) worked for me:

Edit the first file, yanking the text you want. Then open your second file from within vi (:e /path/to/other/file) and paste it (by typing p). Save it (like above ':w new.txt'.

It will then just copy the part of the lines marked up by mouse or 'y' with the cursors.

[EDIT] On my Ubuntu system: Sometimes selecting by mouse does NOT enter 'VISUAL MODE' in vim. Then the normal copy/paste can be selected using the context menu... I have not found the reason why Ubuntu changed it behaviour from a 'client acting behaviour' to a 'host' one (withUbuntu hosting the ssh bash window to my 'Client')...

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.