<Lars_G> stupid question, I am trying to eliminate blank lines on a file.... tried :%s/^$// and it marks all blank lines but they are not eliminated <Lars_G> any ideas please? <p0g> :g/^$/d <Lars_G> thanks... what is g? never used it before. <p0g> global --> zeedo (zeedo@www.bsrf.org.uk) has joined #vim <-- strull_at_w has quit ("leaving") <Lars_G> I see, it matches lines based on the regexp and applies command d to them <Lars_G> interesting... <MetaCosm> uws: also, changing the tw doesn't excuse the depth :) <MetaCosm> it just makes it seem less fugly <Lars_G> thanks, pretty powerfull, a new day, a new command in vim learnt <p0g> yes, it's where g/re/p comes from :) <Lars_G> p0g, can regexps be conbined with ranges that way too? lampus Lars_G <Lars_G> something like :5,12/^$/d for example? <p0g> that would be :5,12g/^$/d <Lars_G> thanks <Lars_G> vim rules <Lars_G> it's so powerfull it's scary <MetaCosm> Lars_G: yep <Lars_G> so lets say, ident all non-empty lines from 5 to 12 would be :5,12g/^.+$/< <Lars_G> ident left <Lars_G> de-ident actually <MetaCosm> Lars_G: one thing to be aware of <Lars_G> yes? <MetaCosm> after the final / <MetaCosm> that is Ex commands <MetaCosm> not "normal" commands <MetaCosm> but you can fix that by doing <Lars_G> Not Vi, only Ex? thanks <MetaCosm> :g/this/normal < <MetaCosm> that will be normal commands for sure <MetaCosm> just as you are used to them <Lars_G> normal changes to Vi(m) mode then.... <Lars_G> thanks <-- Esaj has quit ("Client exiting") <p0g> < is an ex command too <Lars_G> Yes I know what Ex is ;) <MetaCosm> p0g: well, my example was more for general <MetaCosm> not the specific command he was using <Lars_G> yes I understood, thanks for the remark. <p0g> Lars_G: and :v means "does not match", so you could use :5,12v/^$/< <p0g> but shifting empty lines doesn't work anyway <Lars_G> p0g: they're the left sided version of RegExps normal flags then, g, v, does caseless matching apply too? (s i think it was? no... U???) <Lars_G> p0g, Yes it was a bad example :) <p0g> huh, left sided version of regexps normal flags? <p0g> what's that supposed to mean <Lars_G> g is regexp's flag for global <Lars_G> :s/soemthing/else/g <---- <tazz> p0g, hmm.. is that about grep true? :) <p0g> oh, no it's not like that <Lars_G> ok <Lars_G> thanks <p0g> tazz: yes, but it's from ed, not vim <tazz> Cool.. but why 're'? <tazz> Could be anything <p0g> regular expression <tazz> I see <Lars_G> Yes I try not to say "grep" not to mention an implementation of regular expressions but the concept of regular expressions themselves... <Lars_G> :) that's why I walways say RegExps instead of Grep or regs and eregs <Lars_G> :) <Lars_G> Or Perl, the world famous bloated RegExp engine ;) (Joke, I respect perl a lot.)
Have you seem this article describing vim for Mac users?: "What Is Vim (It's Easier than You Think)" by Matthew Russell 07/11/2006 http://www.macdevcenter.com/pub/a/mac/2006/07/11/vim-is-easier-than-you-think.html