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Pasting Text Into Vim (stackoverflow.com)
81 points by whereiswaldo on July 26, 2012 | hide | past | favorite | 34 comments



"I'd like to paste yanked text into Vim command line."

While the top voted answer is very complete, I prefer editing the command history.

In normal mode, type:

  q:
This will give you a list of recent commands, editable and searchable with normal vim commands. You'll start on a blank command line at the bottom.

For the exact thing that the article asks, pasting a yanked line (or yanked anything) into a command line, yank your text and then:

  q:p
(get into command history edit mode, and then (p)ut your yanked text into a new command line. Edit at will, enter to execute.

To get out of command history mode, it's the opposite. In normal mode in command history, type:

  :q<enter>


Oh this is what that is! I accidentally reach this mode now and then and wonder how I got there and what it does. I must be accidentally pressing q: instead of :q ! This is great and useful. Thanks!


Same here. You can also do q/ which gives you the history of your searches.


You can get to search history mode this way too. E.g.:

  q/ - Search string history
  q: - Ex cmdline history
  q? - Search string history
Also note that if you normally use Ctrl-C to exit Insert mode, that fails here as Ctrl-C will close the history buffer. You need to use Escape or Ctrl-[.


That's exactly how I found it, by accident. I think a lot of people do.


another way to get into this mode is to start doing a complex command.. so

:%s/

and when you realise it's not as simple as you first thought.. doing ^f will take you "command line" buffer where you can do all the normal vim commands..

as for copy/paste .. if your vim is compiled with the option "+clipboard" then you can use the "+" register to interact with all your system copy/pasting..

however, what I most frequently end up doing is entering paste mode (:set paste) and just using my terminal emulator's paste buffer.. you can also sync these using tmux's buffers etc if you want, but it's a little less elegant imo..

once you have set/unset paste mode aliased to something sensible it makes the whole process as simple as it gets imo

for your vimrc

nmap <silent> <leader>p :set invpaste<CR>:set paste?<CR>


You, sir, are a genius and a scholar.

Do you have any idea how many tutorials there are out there that involve some kind of obscure plugin or xclip incantation for something as simple as pasting text over ssh with formatting?

To think all I needed to do was :set paste... Extraordinary.


> To get out of command history mode, it's the opposite.

You can leave command history just by typing <enter>, not :q<enter>.


... That only applies if you haven't moved your cursor to a line in the command history which doesn't have commands. Otherwise just hitting <enter> will run that command line. So it's safer to tell people to enter :q<enter>


Holy mother of god, this is one amazing tip. I never knew about this mode. Thank you for sharing!


The title "pasting text into vim" is kind of wrong. This isn't really about pasting text into vim, that is a very easy thing you learn in your first hour of vim (press p or at worst "+p).

It is about the more meta activity of pasting text (e.g. representing a vim command or an argument to a vim command) into the vim command line.


When I read "pasting text into vim", I thought of still another thing: ":set paste".


I thought the same. That one stumped me for a while when I was starting out in vim.


My .vimrc contains: set pastetoggle=<F2>

Life is suddenly easier :)


My .vimrc contains :

set pastetoggle=<Esc>[201~

noremap <Esc>[200~ :set paste<cr>0i

inoremap <Esc>[200~ <c-o>:set paste<cr>

cnoremap <special> <Esc>[200~ <nop>

cnoremap <special> <Esc>[201~ <nop>

let &t_ti="\<esc>[?2004h"

let &t_te="\<esc>[?2004l"

the ti/te sequences are passed from Vim to the client which tells Putty (and others) to bracket all pasting with \e[200~ and \e[201~. The other commands handle these sequences to make pasting happen transparently without having to hit F2 ;o)


Not to start an editor war or anything. But a comparable feature set can be found in Emacs[1].

[1]: http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/emacs/Reg...


You can also put window configurations into registers. C-x r w r puts your current window configuration (what windows you have open, their sizes and the positions in their buffers) into register r and C-x r j r jumps to that configuration.

I personally find this extremely useful--I use it far more than any other register-based feature. Of course I effectively use Emacs as my window manager for everything except web browsing, ergo I am certifiably insane.

And if ezbl or a similar project ever matures, I might start browsing from Emacs too :P.


You can also yank from Vim to the system clipboard with

    "+y
Took me a year or so to learn that one


Or, you can add this to your vimrc to always yank to system clipboard:

    set clipboard+=unnamed


A very helpful setting. Thanks!

I've been using the "+ register intensively. Your tip will save me from quite a lot of keystrokes in the future.


FWIW, The + and * registers appear to behave the same on gvim for windows. I think * is actually expected to represent the system clipboard.

  :help clipboard
Also another AWESOME tip , if you set an "a" among your guioptions, your visual selects and mouse selects automatically get copied to the * register.

  : help quotestar
I realize that X environments mainly do this already, but not the visual select. Most of my editing is through SSH so I don't get to use the gui features much. The only time I use gvim is in windows, so it was pretty revolutionary for me.


Of course it only works for non-terminal vim. Someone may make it work on Mac though by leveraging pb{copy,paste} in some clever way (can't remember the X11 equivalent ATM)


It can work in terminal vim, too.

I believe the special + register for the system clipboard is enabled by a compile option, but that may not be entirely accurate. I have Vim 7.3 installed via Macports and it works for me.


Yes, it's the "+clipboard" option (as shown by :version). If you weren't doing macports (or brew) already, the downloadable MacVIM version does include a "Vim" binary that's usable on the commandline. Somewhere in /Applications/MacVIM.app/... (can't check at work). Just symlinking or simply setting `alias vim='<path_to_binary>` works perfectly.

[MacVim]: http://code.google.com/p/macvim/


I use OSX default vim. That might explain things. I'll try

    brew install macvim --override-system-vim
to see if things improve.

EDIT: it works.


The X11 equivalents are:

    pbcopy = xsel -bi
    pbpaste = xsel -b


Here is how you can paste the word under cursor to the command line:

  C-r-w
Handy for renaming variables with :%s/oldname/newname/g, for example.


Between the clipboard register ("+y "+p) and tmux's copy mode, I can move text from pretty much anywhere to/from the command line.


Sorry I am a massive vim junkie, but why is this getting so much love ?


Maybe many HN readers are also VIMphiles.


That's correct, and there doesn't seem to be that many emacs people here. What gives?


tmux buffers

Will solve your copy and paste problems across all UNIX applications.

Thank you Mr. Marriott. Great software.


And copy mode in screen CTRL-{


doesn't really help with content in vim's registers...

(but you are right, tmux is great)




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