I am a vim user, and I want to be able to loop over a range of substrings when I am substituting. How can I use some vim magic to go from a set of lines like this:
Afoo
Bfoo
Cfoo
Dfoo
to
Abar
Bbar
Cbaz
Dbaz
?
I want to search my file from the start for the next occurance of foo
, and replace the first two instances with bar
, and the second two with baz
. Is using a for loop the best option? If so, then how do I use the loop variable in th开发者_如何学编程e substitution command?
I would use a function that has a state, and call this function from %s. Something like:
" untested code
function! InitRotateSubst()
let s:rs_idx = 0
endfunction
function! RotateSubst(list)
let res = a:list[s:rs_idx]
let s:rs_idx += 1
if s:rs_idx == len(a:list)
let s:rs_idx = 0
endif
return res
endfunction
And use them with:
:call InitRotateSubst()
:%s/foo/\=RotateSubst(['bar', 'bar', 'baz', 'baz'])/
The call to the two commands could be encapsulated into a single command if you wish.
EDIT: Here is a version integrated as a command that:
- accepts as many replacements as we wish, all the replacements needs to be separated with the separator-character ;
- supports back-references ;
- can replace only the N first occurrences, N == the number of replacements specified if the command call is banged (with a !)
- does not support usual flags like g, i (
:h :s_flags
) -- for that, we would have for instance to impose the command call to always ends up with a / (or whatever separator-character), if not the last text is interpreted as flags.
Here is the command definition:
:command! -bang -nargs=1 -range RotateSubstitute <line1>,<line2>call s:RotateSubstitute("<bang>", <f-args>)
function! s:RotateSubstitute(bang, repl_arg) range
let do_loop = a:bang != "!"
" echom "do_loop=".do_loop." -> ".a:bang
" reset internal state
let s:rs_idx = 0
" obtain the separator character
let sep = a:repl_arg[0]
" obtain all fields in the initial command
let fields = split(a:repl_arg, sep)
" prepare all the backreferences
let replacements = fields[1:]
let max_back_ref = 0
for r in replacements
let s = substitute(r, '.\{-}\(\\\d\+\)', '\1', 'g')
" echo "s->".s
let ls = split(s, '\\')
for d in ls
let br = matchstr(d, '\d\+')
" echo '##'.(br+0).'##'.type(0) ." ~~ " . type(br+0)
if !empty(br) && (0+br) > max_back_ref
let max_back_ref = br
endif
endfor
endfor
" echo "max back-ref=".max_back_ref
let sm = ''
for i in range(0, max_back_ref)
let sm .= ','. 'submatch('.i.')'
" call add(sm,)
endfor
" build the action to execute
let action = '\=s:DoRotateSubst('.do_loop.',' . string(replacements) . sm .')'
" prepare the :substitute command
let args = [fields[0], action ]
let cmd = a:firstline . ',' . a:lastline . 's' . sep . join(args, sep)
" echom cmd
" and run it
exe cmd
endfunction
function! s:DoRotateSubst(do_loop, list, replaced, ...)
" echom string(a:000)
if ! a:do_loop && s:rs_idx == len(a:list)
return a:replaced
else
let res0 = a:list[s:rs_idx]
let s:rs_idx += 1
if a:do_loop && s:rs_idx == len(a:list)
let s:rs_idx = 0
endif
let res = ''
while strlen(res0)
let ml = matchlist(res0, '\(.\{-}\)\(\\\d\+\)\(.*\)')
let res .= ml[1]
let ref = eval(substitute(ml[2], '\\\(\d\+\)', 'a:\1', ''))
let res .= ref
let res0 = ml[3]
endwhile
return res
endif
endfunction
which could be used this way:
:%RotateSubstitute#foo#bar#bar#baz#baz#
or even, considering the initial text:
AfooZ
BfooE
CfooR
DfooT
the command
%RotateSubstitute/\(.\)foo\(.\)/\2bar\1/\1bar\2/
would produce:
ZbarA
BbarE
RbarC
DbarT
This is Not strictly what you want but can be useful for cycles.
I've written a plugin swapit http://www.vim.org/scripts/script.php?script_id=2294 which among other things can help with cycling through lists of strings. Eg.
:Swaplist foobar foo bar baz
then type
This line is a foo
create a simple yank/paste line, go to last word and ctrl-a swap.
qqyyp$^A
then execute the swap pattern
100@q
to get
This line is foo
This line is bar
This line is baz
This line is foo
This line is bar
This line is baz
This line is foo
This line is bar
This line is baz
This line is foo
This line is bar
This line is baz
...
It could probably be applied to your problem although its {cword} sensitive.
Why not:
:%s/\(.\{-}\)foo\(\_.\{-}\)foo\(\_.\{-}\)foo\(\_.\{-}\)foo/\1bar\2bar\3baz\4baz/
I'm not sure that it covers the breadth of the problem but does have the virtue of being a simple substitute. A more complex one may cover the solution if this one doesn't.
This is how I'd attempt that macro.
qa Records macro in buffer a
/foo<CR> Search for the next instance of 'foo'
3s Change the next three characters
bar To the word bar
<Esc> Back to command mode.
n Get the next instance of foo
. Repeat last command
n Get the next instance of foo
3s Change next three letters
baz To the word bar
<Esc> Back to command mode.
. Repeat last command
q Stop recording.
1000@a Do a many times.
Any advice on how to do it better is welcome.
thanks, Martin.
It's probably going to be much easier to record a macro that can replace the first two, and then use :s for the rest.
The macro might look like /foo^Mcwbar^[
. If you're not familiar with macro mode, just hit q
, a
(the register to store it in) and then the keystrokes /foo <Enter> cwbar <Escape>
.
Now once you've got that macro, do 2@a
to replace the first two occurrences in the current buffer and use :s
normally to replace the rest.
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