Before you begin
The human brain's processing of words is flat, so we browse articles, find materials, or refactor code, either horizontally or vertically, or use search to make text as a whole. While editing text, writing code is not horizontal or vertical. Regular text editors are horizontal edits, and portrait editing is often used as a feature. For example, Vim, EditPlus, UltraEdit These editors have portrait editing mode, or column mode. Like everyday word processing tools MicroSoft Word, OpenOffice Writer can also select text vertically by pressing the function key ALT, and then manipulate the text. Vertical editing is not only a function of the editor, but also a way of thinking about the problem, bullets, paragraph numbering, are the embodiment of vertical editing.
Vim's vertical editing mode is easy to start, flexible to use, and can be used in conjunction with the plug-in to achieve very useful advanced features.
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Start method
In Vim command mode, the move cursor is positioned in a location, and the ctrl-v
word "VISUAL BLOCK" appears on the status bar after typing, which is entered in portrait editing mode. Move the cursor to select the area you want to edit on demand. Note: In the Windows version of VIM, key combinations ctrl-v
are usually mapped to text pasting, so the Window version of Vim's portrait editing mode is initiated by the ctrl-q
. Of course, flexible Vim can also be defined by the user's own key combination.
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Example 1: Portrait editing application demo in bulk code modification
The number of columns:
10.1.5.214 10.1.5.212 10.1.5.210
Edit into sequence:
Ping-c 4 10.5.5.214 >> result0 ping-c 4 10.5.5.212 >> result0 ping-c 4 10.5.5.210 >> result0
This is a process of modifying the IP sequence to an executable ping command sequence.
First step: Modify
Change the second paragraph in the IP sequence to "5" for all the Numbers "1":
Position the cursor "1" in the second paragraph of the first line IP address
ctrl-v
Go to Portrait editing mode
G
Move the cursor to the last row, and the visible block overrides the column you want to modify
r
Enter Modify mode
5
Enter the number "5"
ESC
Exit portrait editing mode, and all selected numbers are changed to "5" and back to command mode
The results are as follows:
10.5.5.214 10.5.5.212 10.5.5.210
Step two: Before adding
Add "Ping–c 4" before all lines:
Position the cursor to the first column in the first row
ctrl-v
Go to Portrait editing mode
G
Moves the cursor to the first column in the last row, and the visible block overrides the first column
I
Enter the beginning of the insertion mode
ping -c 4
Enter the required character "Ping–c 4"
ESC
Exit portrait editing mode with "Ping–c 4" added before all selected characters, back to command mode
The results are as follows:
Ping-c 4 10.5.5.214 ping-c 4 10.5.5.212 ping-c 4 10.5.5.210
Step three: Add after
Add ">> result0" after all lines:
Position the cursor to the last column in the first row
ctrl-v
Go to Portrait editing mode
G
Move the cursor to the last column in the last row, VISUAL BLOCK overwrites the last column
A
Enter end of line insert mode
>> result
Enter the required characters ">> result0"
ESC
Exit portrait editing mode with all selected characters added ">> result0" back to command mode
The results are as follows:
Ping-c 4 10.5.5.214 >> result0 ping-c 4 10.5.5.212 >> result0 ping-c 4 10.5.5.210 >> result 0
The above three steps have a common feature, that is, both portrait orientation for editing. The above example of three lines of code can also be applied to more rows.
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VISINCR Installation and operation
The vertical editing of the code shown in the example above can also be achieved through a general code refactoring function or a lookup substitution combined with regular expressions. However, the vertical editing mode of Vim can also be extended by the plugin visincr to achieve richer functions, such as the vertical generation sequence.
Search for the installation file of the VISINCR plugin from Vim's official website and download it to the VIM working directory. You can install the plugin by executing the following command:
Vim visincr.vba.gz : So% : Q
Example of how to act in Example 1:
Use ctrl-v
and move the cursor to select a column that ends with the number "0"
:
Type a colon to trigger Vim into command line mode
:I
Starting with the first digit, the increment sequence is generated vertically, with a magnitude of 1
ENTER
Type the drive key to execute the command
The results are as follows:
Ping-c 4 10.5.5.214 >> result0 ping-c 4 10.5.5.212 >> result1 ping-c 4 10.5.5.210 >> result2
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Example 2:VISINCR application demo for generating test data
It is often necessary to generate a simple and regular test data during application development. For example, to a table:
TestTable ("ipaddr", "filename", "owner")
Generate the following SQL statement:
INSERT into Test values ("10.5.5.214", "result0", "Testa"); INSERT into Test values ("10.5.5.212", "Result1", "Testb"); INSERT into Test values ("10.5.5.210", "result2", "TESTC");
This vertical, regular sequence of statements can be constructed using the VININCR application of the portrait editing function.
First step: Prepare
Open a new Vim editing page, enter a "3" in command mode, and type "I" into edit mode. The number "3" means that the input will be repeated 3 times.
In VIM, enter the first line first:
INSERT into Test values ("10.5.5.214", "result0", "Testa");
End the line entry with a carriage return and open a new line, pressing ESC to exit edit mode.
If this is the case:
INSERT into Test values ("10.5.5.214", "result0", "Testa"); INSERT into Test values ("10.5.5.214", "result0", "Testa"); INSERT into Test values ("10.5.5.214", "result0", "Testa");
Step two: Construct the descending sequence
For ipaddr columns, use ctrl-v
and move the cursor to select the last segment of the IP address that is decreasing in magnitude 2:
:
Type a colon to trigger Vim into command line mode
:I -
2
Starting with the first digit, the descending sequence is generated vertically, with a magnitude of 2
ENTER
Type the drive key to execute the command
The results are as follows:
INSERT into Test values ("10.5.5.214", "result0", "Testa"); INSERT into Test values ("10.5.5.212", "result0", "Testa"); INSERT into Test values ("10.5.5.210", "result0", "Testa");
Step three: Construct an increment sequence
For the filename column, using the method described in the previous section, the results are as follows:
INSERT into Test values ("10.5.5.214", "result0", "Testa"); INSERT into Test values ("10.5.5.212", "Result1", "Testa"); INSERT into Test values ("10.5.5.210", "result2", "Testa");
Fourth step: Construct the letter increment sequence
For the owner column, use ctrl-v
and move the cursor to select the portion of the English letter that will increment.
:
Type a colon to trigger Vim into command line mode
:IA
Create a sequence of alphabetically sorted by the first letter as a starting point
ENTER
Type enter key to execute the command
The results are as follows:
INSERT into Test values ("10.5.5.214", "result0", "Testa"); INSERT into Test values ("10.5.5.212", "Result1", "Testb"); INSERT into Test values ("10.5.5.210", "result2", "TESTC");
The above steps demonstrate the use of the Vim plugin visincr to edit the code vertically, generating a sequence of logical rules in the vertical.
Vim Column Editor