Chances are they are in the file. When you start vim with the file, look at the status line (at the bottom). If there's something like this
it means that the file is in DOS format with carriage return/line feed line endings. vim can correctly interpret them, and if you yank a line the line endings go with it. But for the buffer vim doesn't know it's in DOS format, and shows the carriage return as the corresponding control character: ^M (one character, not 2).
By the way, if you want to apply a substitution to a small part of the file, select it (using v or V), and, without pressing ESC/y/x/d/... enter
The command line should then look like this:
which means that the command will only be applied to the selected text.
When I execute :set list, each line is terminated by a red dollar sign ($). No ^M's in sight.
The file was created in the following way. It is text from an article in a medical journal that I highlighted and copied from Firefox. I then pasted it into an empty Vim buffer and saved it.
I am sure there is something very simple I am missing/screwing up. Please forgive my newbie-ness.
Do you use vim/gvim on windows as editor when doing this or via a terminal session, let's say putty? I guess it is either a setting in gvim or putty if you are sure the file is clear of ^M.
What does the "od" command return, when run on this file ? If you really have DOS end-of-line character sequences, then you'd see "\r\n" in the output, as seen below:
If your file has the Unix end-of-line character, then the output will show "\n" :
If your file is huge, you may want to run that command on only a couple of lines at the beginning:
I have a parts file that looks like this:
EE36264|0NH46||Y|A|EA|0|0|0|N|LUNETTE 3" ADJ. EYE|0|0|*|0|PEOZZU|N|12|N|N|VPS|N|N|N|N|LUNETTE 3" ADJ. EYE|0|||Receive into Inventory|81755|EE36264|*|*|*|0|0||EE36264|A|*|*
F1.5|53932||Y|A|EA|0|0|0|N|FLAT ZERO CAL... (4 Replies)
Hello All,
I have one query is "How to set the password for file using vi utility in linux.
Please reply to my queries. I am waiting for reply.
Thanks in advance.
Thanks.
Kuddus Shaikh (4 Replies)
There are some ksh files named as "*.lib" in my system. When I open them in VIM, vim syntax can't parse it correctly.
Is there a way that I can relate the *.lib with KSH syntax in VIM?
Due to access limitation, i can only update the files under my home directory and can't modify the VIM... (6 Replies)
Hey everyone,
I'm new to Linux and am attempting to run a TF2 server on a CentOS VPS (terminal only). I followed this guide (link below) and have arrived on step 4, creating a configuration file.
When I try to save the new file however, I get the E212: Can't open file for writing error.... (0 Replies)
Hello! Graduate student thrown to the sharks of unix and fortran77 here.
My basic question is this: what exactly is the difference between yank (ie "*yG for the whole file and "*p in a new file) and control-insert / shift-insert with respect to text formatting? One is vi and one is Windows,... (2 Replies)
I downloaded vim.7.2 and compiled the vim source .
Added the vim binary path to PATH (Because iam not the root of the box)
when i load the file using vim it throws me an error
Error detected while processing /home2/e3003091/.vimrc:
line 2:
E185: Cannot find color scheme darkblue
line... (0 Replies)
Hi All,
In vim, when we press ^G, the file name is displayed at the bottom of the screen and as soon as we enter into some other mode (say e.g. Insert), the file name is replaced by the words "Insert". I was just wondering whether it is possible to continuously show the file name no matter which... (3 Replies)
I have a file which has data in columns.
Is there a way to yank columns in vi?
I tried searching in this forum. I did not find it.
Please help me out. (2 Replies)
Hello
when i try to yank word only that looks like this "$$foo$"
when i stand with my curser marker on the first char ($) and do in vi : "yw" (yank word)
its yanks me only the "$" char when i stand white my curser on "f" its yank's me only "foo"
how can i yank all word no matter what... (4 Replies)
This is supposed to be simple to do but I am having a hard time trying to yank 1 line (yy) but creating from it 100 lines. I can do yy then keep hitting . to repeat but it doesn't make sense. I may want to create 1000 lines from the one liner.
yy then 99 p doesn't work....
Thanks.
I was... (5 Replies)