Last tip: as you already have been told "D" in command mode deletes from the cursor position to the end of line. To effectively put the cursor to the correct position you can use the "w" command, which moves you to the start character of the next word or "W" to put you to the start character of the next word separated by blanks. The difference is that some characters (i.e. ":", "-", etc.) are also recognized as word boundaries and in a line like this:
if you are at the first character, entering "w" consecutively will put you over the "+", the "d", the ":", the "g" etc.. Entering "W" instead will put you on the "j" first and the "p" next.
You can also use multipliers for these commands, so "4w" on the first character of the line will put you on the "g" immediately.
Hi,
How do you delete from where ever you are to the bottom of the page. I'm pretty sure it was a simple command but can't pull it out of memory.
Thanks,
mgb (4 Replies)
Hi,
I knw its a silly question, but am a newbie to 'vi' editor. I'm forced to use this, hence kindly help me with this question.
How can i paste a chunk 'copied from' a different editor(gedit) in 'vi editor'?
As i see, p & P options does work only within 'vi'. (10 Replies)
Hi All,
I am running a script , working very fine on cmd prompt. The problem is that when I open do crontab -e even after setting editor to vi by
set EDITOR=vi it does not open a vi editor , rather it do as below.....
/////////////////////////////////////////////////////
$ set... (6 Replies)
Folks;
I know this may sound stupid, but when i use vi to edit in SUSE, i see the file has a lot of underlines, how can i get rid of underline permanently so when i open any file to edit, i don't see any underlines?
Thanks in advance (2 Replies)
Hello there,
Over the past few days I have installed FreeBSD 7.1 (which i'm new at)
to an external Hard Drive.
When installing, I chose to partition the disk Automatically and now I'm trying to use the label editor (post-installation configuration) to name the mount points:
/
/usr... (2 Replies)
I have created a dummy file -demo.txt
On my machine-A (oslevel-5300-08) I can display the file content in HEX format through VI editor using :%!xxd but on other machine-B (oslevel - 5300-06) , I get error as "sh: xxd: not found."
machine-A:
$ cat demo.txt
Hello World !
I can display... (7 Replies)
This is an vi editor question. I do not know is this a right place to ask this question or not?
I have a file with the following contents,
10 11
20 21
30 31
I want to copy first column that is 10,20,30 after second column, so that output will look like the following,
10 11 10
20 21... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: MeetP
1 Replies
10. Post Here to Contact Site Administrators and Moderators
Hia,
this is a very low priority request, but I am slightly annoyed by the behaviour of the tags in the message editor. They behave assymetric in the sense that the opening tag is introducing an empty line, and the closing tag is not, and can't be convinced to do otherwise. I know I am... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Andre_Merzky
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
pdl::char
Char(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Char(3)NAME
PDL::Char -- PDL subclass which allows reading and writing of fixed-length character strings as byte PDLs
SYNOPSIS
use PDL;
use PDL::Char;
my $pchar = PDL::Char->new( [['abc', 'def', 'ghi'],['jkl', 'mno', 'pqr']] );
$pchar->setstr(1,0,'foo');
print $pchar; # 'string' bound to "", perl stringify function
# Prints:
# [
# ['abc' 'foo' 'ghi']
# ['jkl' 'mno' 'pqr']
# ]
print $pchar->atstr(2,0);
# Prints:
# ghi
DESCRIPTION
This subclass of PDL allows one to manipulate PDLs of 'byte' type as if they were made of fixed length strings, not just numbers.
This type of behavior is useful when you want to work with charactar grids. The indexing is done on a string level and not a character
level for the 'setstr' and 'atstr' commands.
This module is in particular useful for writing NetCDF files that include character data using the PDL::NetCDF module.
FUNCTIONS
new
Function to create a byte PDL from a string, list of strings, list of list of strings, etc.
# create a new PDL::Char from a perl array of strings
$strpdl = PDL::Char->new( ['abc', 'def', 'ghij'] );
# Convert a PDL of type 'byte' to a PDL::Char
$strpdl1 = PDL::Char->new (sequence (byte, 4, 5)+99);
$pdlchar3d = PDL::Char->new([['abc','def','ghi'],['jkl', 'mno', 'pqr']]);
string
Function to print a character PDL (created by 'char') in a pretty format.
$char = PDL::Char->new( [['abc', 'def', 'ghi'], ['jkl', 'mno', 'pqr']] );
print $char; # 'string' bound to "", perl stringify function
# Prints:
# [
# ['abc' 'def' 'ghi']
# ['jkl' 'mno' 'pqr']
# ]
# 'string' is overloaded to the "" operator, so:
# print $char;
# should have the same effect.
setstr
Function to set one string value in a character PDL. The input position is the position of the string, not a character in the string. The
first dimension is assumed to be the length of the string.
The input string will be null-padded if the string is shorter than the first dimension of the PDL. It will be truncated if it is longer.
$char = PDL::Char->new( [['abc', 'def', 'ghi'], ['jkl', 'mno', 'pqr']] );
$char->setstr(0,1, 'foobar');
print $char; # 'string' bound to "", perl stringify function
# Prints:
# [
# ['abc' 'def' 'ghi']
# ['foo' 'mno' 'pqr']
# ]
$char->setstr(2,1, 'f');
print $char; # 'string' bound to "", perl stringify function
# Prints:
# [
# ['abc' 'def' 'ghi']
# ['foo' 'mno' 'f'] -> note that this 'f' is stored "f "
# ]
atstr
Function to fetch one string value from a PDL::Char type PDL, given a position within the PDL. The input position of the string, not a
character in the string. The length of the input string is the implied first dimension.
$char = PDL::Char->new( [['abc', 'def', 'ghi'], ['jkl', 'mno', 'pqr']] );
print $char->atstr(0,1);
# Prints:
# jkl
perl v5.8.0 2001-05-27 Char(3)