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vim limited line memory

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-01-15 17:20 出处:网络
im trying to copy 300 lines from one file to anoth开发者_运维技巧er, in source file i type \"300yy\", it says it has yanked 300 lines.

im trying to copy 300 lines from one file to anoth开发者_运维技巧er, in source file i type "300yy", it says it has yanked 300 lines.

go to destination file and press p, it pastes, but only the first 50 lines.

any idea why it isn't pasting the 300?


To see the current settings during a vim session, run:

:set viminfo?

As suggested in Vim Tips Wiki, you can adjust the viminfo setting (again, during a vim session) by running the ex-command:

:set viminfo='100,<1000,s100,h

or you can remove the : and set it as default in your .vimrc as:

set viminfo='100,<1000,s100,h

What the individual parts mean:

  • '100 Marks will be remembered for the last 100 edited files.
  • <1000 Limits the number of lines saved for each register to 1000 lines; if a register contains more than 1000 lines, only the first 1000 lines are saved.
  • s100 Registers with more than 100 KB of text are skipped.
  • h Disables search highlighting when Vim starts.


As Eugene and Zyx said adjusting your viminfo would be the easiest solution

:set viminfo-=<50,s10

An alternate solution would be use :read and/or :write

To read in from file-name.txt into the current buffer

:read file-name.txt

To append the range of line 1 to line 300 from the current buffer to file-to-append.txt

:1,300write >> file-to-append.txt

You can also use marks instead of line numbers such as the visual marks

:'<,'>write >> file-to-append.txt

Of course appending may not be able to fulfill your use case in which the viminfo changes will probably work best.

:help :write
:help :read
:help 'viminfo'
:help :set-=


Stay in the same session (open the new file doing :e path) and you won't have any limitation.


try vim -p file1 file2. It opens each file into a new tab (which is awesome), and it solves the copy/paste limit


Something that worked for me is, when in visual mode, copying with a command like :1,300y that copies from line 1 to 300. You can switch this to any range of lines that you would like as :37,456y to copy from line 37 to 456.

If your vim is not showing the lines, you can set the lines with the command :set numbers

If you want to use that yanked/copied lines in another file, i recommend opening multiples tabs and copying and pasting the info between them. To do this you can open them in the terminal with the command vim -p file1 file2. To navigete between them you can use the commands gt and gT to move to the next and previous tab respectively.

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