When you enter text in your file, it is rarely perfect. You find typos or want to improve on a phrase; sometimes your program has a bug. Once you enter text, you have to be able to change it, delete it, move it, or copy it. Figure 2.3 shows the kinds of edits you might want to make to a file. The edits are indicated by proofreading marks.
In
vi
you can perform any of these edits with a few basic keystrokes:
i
for insert (which you've already seen);
a
for append;
c
for change; and
d
for delete. To move or copy text, you use a pair of commands. You move text with a
d
for delete, then a
p
for put; you copy text with a
y
for "yank," then a
p
for put. Each type of edit is described in this section.
Figure 2.4
shows the
vi
commands you use to make the edits marked in
Figure 2.3
.

You have already seen the insert command used to enter text into a new file. You also use the insert command while editing existing text to add missing characters, words, and sentences. In the file practice , suppose you have the sentence:
you can scroll the page, move the cursor, delete l ines, and insert characters. |
| Keystrokes | Results |
|---|---|
2k
|
y ou can scroll the page, move the cursor, delete lines, and insert characters. |
|
Move the cursor up two lines with the |
|
iWith a
|
With a you can scroll the page, move the cursor, delete lines, and insert characters. |
|
Press |
|
screen editor
[ESC]
|
With a screen editor you can scroll the page, move the cursor, delete lines, and insert characters. |
|
Finish inserting text, and press ESC to end the insert and return to command mode. |
On the screen shown in the example above, vi pushes existing text to the right as the new text is inserted. That is because we are assuming that you are using vi on an "intelligent" terminal that can rewrite the screen with each character you type. An insert on a "dumb" terminal (such as an adm3a ) will look different. The terminal itself cannot handle the overhead of updating the screen for each character typed (without a tremendous sacrifice of speed), so the terminal doesn't allow the screen to be rewritten until after you press [ESC] . On a dumb terminal, the same insert would appear:
| Keystrokes | Result |
|---|---|
iWith a
|
With a n scroll the page, move the cursor, delete lines, and insert characters. |
|
Press |
|
screen editor
|
With a screen editor the page, move the cursor, delete lines, and insert characters. |
|
The insertion appears to have overwritten existing text. |
|
| [ESC] |
With a screen editor you can scroll the page, move the cursor, delete lines, and insert characters. |
|
After you have finished inserting text, press ESC to end the insert and return to command mode. The dumb terminal now rewrites the line, so that you see all existing text. |
[a]
You can append text at any place in your file with the append command
a
.
a
works in almost the same way as
i
, except that text is inserted
after
the cursor rather than
before
the cursor. You may have noticed that when you press
i
to enter insert mode, the cursor doesn't move until after you enter some text. On the other hand, when you press
a
to enter insert mode, the cursor moves one space to the right. When you enter text, it appears
after
the original cursor position.
[c]
You can replace any text in your file with the change command,
c
. In order to tell
c
how much text to change, you combine
c
with a movement command. In this way, a movement command serves as a
text object
for the
c
command to affect. For example,
c
can be used to change text from the cursor:
After issuing a change command, you can replace the identified text with any amount of new text, with no characters at all, with one word, or with hundreds of lines.
c
, like
i
and
a
, leaves you in insert mode until you press the
[ESC]
key.
[c]
[w]
To change a word, combine the
c
(change) command with
w
for word. You can replace a word (
cw
) with a longer or shorter word (or any amount of text).
cw
can be thought of as "delete the word marked and insert new text until
[ESC]
is pressed."
Suppose you have the following line in your file practice :
With an editor you can scroll the page,
and want to change an to a screen . You need to change only one word:
cw
also works on a portion of a word. For example, to change
spelling
to
spelled
, you can position the cursor on the
i
, press
cw
, then type
ed
.
[c]
[c]
To replace the entire current line, there is the special change command
cc
.
cc
changes an entire line, replacing that line with any amount of text entered before pressing
[ESC]
. It doesn't matter where the cursor is located on the line;
cc
replaces the entire line of text.
A command like
cw
works differently from a command like
cc
. In using
cw
, the old text remains until you type over it, and any old text that is left over (up to the
$
) goes away when you press
[ESC]
. In using
cc
, though, the old text is wiped out first, leaving you a blank line on which to insert text.
The "type over" approach happens with any change command that affects less than a whole line, whereas the "blank line" approach happens with any change command that affects one or more lines.
[C]
C
replaces characters from the current cursor position to the end of the line. It has the same effect as combining
c
with the special end-of-line indicator
$
(
c$
).
The commands
cc
and
C
are really shortcuts for other commands, so they don't follow the general form of
vi
commands. You'll see other shortcuts when we discuss the delete and yank commands.
[r]
One other replacement edit is given by the
r
command.
r
replaces a single character with another single character. You do
not
have to press
[ESC]
to return to command mode after making the edit.
There is a misspelling in the line below:
P ith a screen editor you can scroll the page, |
Only one letter needs to be corrected. You don't want to use
cw
in this instance because you would have to retype the entire word. Use
r
to replace a single character at the cursor:
| Keystrokes | Results |
|---|---|
rW
|
W ith a screen editor you can scroll the page, |
|
Give the replace command |
[~]
Changing the case of a letter is a special form of replacement. The tilde (
~
) command will change a lowercase letter to uppercase, or an uppercase letter to lowercase. Position the cursor on the letter whose case you want to change, and type a
~
. The case of the letter will change, and the cursor will move to the next character. The
~
is unique among
vi
editing commands because you cannot specify a numeric prefix or text object for it to affect.
If you want to change the case of more than one letter at a time, you must filter the text through a UNIX command like
tr
, as described in
Chapter 7
,
Advanced Editing
.
[d]
You can also delete any text in your file with the delete command
d
. Like the change command, the delete command requires a text object (the amount of text to be operated on). You can delete by word (
dw
), by line (
dd
and
D
), or by other movement commands that you will learn later.
With all deletions, you move to where you want the edit to take place, then give the delete command (
d
) and the text object, such as
w
for word.
[d] [w] Suppose you have the following text in the file practice :
S creen editors are are very popular, since they allowed you to make changes as you read through a file. |
|
|
with the cursor positioned as shown. You want to delete one are in the first line. |
dw
deletes a word beginning where the cursor is positioned. Notice that the space following the word is deleted.
dw
can also be used to delete a portion of a word. In this example:
since they allow e d you to make |
|
|
you want to delete the ed from the end of allowed . |
| Keystrokes | Results |
|---|---|
| dw |
since they allo w you to make |
|
Give the delete word command ( |
dw
always deletes the space before the next word on a line, but we don't want to do that in the previous example. To retain the space between words, use
de
, which will delete only to the end of a word. Typing
dE
will delete to the end of a word, including punctuation.
You can also delete backward (
db
) or to the end or beginning of a line (
d$
or
d0
).
[d]
[d]
The
dd
command deletes the entire line that the cursor is on.
dd
will not delete part of a line. Like its complement
cc
,
dd
is a special command. Using the same text as in the previous example, with the cursor positioned on the first line as shown below:
Screen editors a re very popular, since they allow you to make changes as you read through a file. |
you can delete the first two lines:
| Keystrokes | Results |
|---|---|
2dd
|
c hanges as you read through a file. |
|
Give the command to delete two lines ( |
| Keystrokes | Results |
|---|---|
2dd
|
@ @ c hanges as you read through a file. |
|
Give the command to delete two lines ( |
D
command deletes from the cursor position to the end of the line. (
D
is a shortcut for
d$
.) For example, with the cursor positioned as shown:
Screen editors are very popular, since they allow you to make changes a s you read through a file. |
|
|
you can delete the portion of the line to the right of the cursor. |
| Keystrokes | Results |
|---|---|
D
|
Screen editors are very popular, since they allow you to make changes |
|
Give the command to delete the portion of the line to the right of the cursor ( |
[x]
Often you want to delete only one or two characters. Just as
r
is a special change command to replace a single character,
x
is a special delete command to delete a single character.
x
deletes only the character the cursor is on. In the line below:
z You can move text by deleting text and then
you can delete the letter
z
by pressing
x
. A capital
X
deletes the character before the cursor. Prefix either of these commands with a number to delete that number of characters. For example,
5x
will delete the five characters to the right of the cursor.
You've deleted the wrong text and you want to get it back.
There are several ways to recover deleted text. If you've just deleted something and you realize you want it back, simply type
u
to undo the last command (for example, a
dd
). This works only if you haven't given any further commands, since
u
only undoes the most recent command.
You can still recover a recent deletion, however, by using the
p
command, since
vi
saves the last nine deletions in nine numbered deletion buffers.
If you know, for example, that the third deletion back is the one you want to restore, type:
"3p
to "put" the contents of buffer number 3 on the line below the cursor.
This works only for a deleted
line
. Words, or a portion of a line, are not saved in a buffer. If you want to restore a deleted word or line fragment, and
u
won't work, use the
p
command by itself. This restores whatever you've last deleted. The next few subsections will talk more about the commands
u
and
p
.
In
vi
, you move text by deleting it and then placing that deleted text elsewhere in the file, like a "cut and paste." Each time you delete a text block, that deletion is temporarily saved in a buffer. Move to another position in your file and use the put command (
p
) to place that text in the new position. You can move any block of text, although moving is more useful with lines than with words.
[p]
The put command (
p
)
puts the text that is in the buffer
after
the cursor position. The uppercase version of the command,
P
, puts the text
before
the cursor. If you delete one or more lines,
p
puts the deleted text on a new line(s) below the cursor. If you delete less than an entire line,
p
puts the deleted text on the current line, after the cursor.
Suppose in your file practice you have the text:
You can move text by deleting it and then, l ike a "cut and paste", placing the deleted text elsewhere in the file. each time you delete a text block. |
NOTE: Once you delete text, you must restore it before the next change command or delete command. If you make another edit that affects the buffer, your deleted text will be lost. You can repeat the put over and over, so long as you don't make a new edit. In Chapter 4, Beyond the Basics , you will learn how to save text you delete in a named buffer so you can retrieve it later.
You can use
xp
(delete character and put after cursor) to transpose two letters. For example, in the word
mvoe
, the letters
vo
are transposed (reversed). To correct a transposition, place the cursor on
v
and press
x
, then
p
. By coincidence, the word
transpose
helps you remember the sequence
xp
;
x
stands for
trans
, and
p
stands for
pose
.
There is no command to transpose words. The section "More Examples of Mapping Keys" in Chapter 7 , Advanced Editing , discusses a short sequence of commands that transposes two words.
[y]
Often you can save editing time (and keystrokes) by copying a part of your file to use in other places. With the two commands
y
(for yank) and
p
(for put), you can copy any amount of text and put that copied text in another place in the file. A yank command copies the selected text into a special buffer, where it is held until another yank (or deletion) occurs. You can then place this copy elsewhere in the file with the put command.
As with change and delete, the yank command can be combined with any movement command (
yw
,
y$
,
4yy
). Yank is most frequently used with a line (or more) of text, because to yank and put a word usually takes longer than simply to insert the word.
The shortcut
yy
operates on an entire line, just as
dd
and
cc
do. But the shortcut
Y
, for some reason, does not operate the way
D
and
C
do. Instead of yanking from the current position to the end of the line,
Y
yanks the whole line.
Y
does the same thing as
yy
.
Suppose you have in your file practice the text:
W ith a screen editor you can scroll the page. move the cursor. delete lines. |
Yanking uses the same buffer as deleting. Each new deletion or yank replaces the previous contents of the yank buffer. As we'll see in Chapter 4 , Beyond the Basics , up to nine previous yanks or deletions can be recalled with put commands. You can also yank or delete directly into up to 26 named buffers, which allows you to juggle multiple text blocks at once.
Each edit command that you give is stored in a temporary buffer until you give the next command. If you insert the after a word in your file, the command used to insert the text, along with the text that you entered, is temporarily saved.
[.] Any time you make the same editing command over and over, you can save time by duplicating it with the repeat command, the period (.). Position the cursor where you want to repeat the editing command, and type a period.
Suppose you have the following lines in your file practice :
With a screen editor you can scroll the page. W ith a screen editor you can move the cursor. |
| Keystrokes | Results |
|---|---|
dd
|
With a screen editor you can scroll the page. m ove the cursor. |
|
Delete a line with the command |
|
.
|
With a screen editor you can scroll the page. |
|
Repeats the deletion. |
Occasionally,
vi
has problems repeating a command. For example, it may have difficulty repeating a long insertion when
wrapmargin
is set. This is a bug in
vi
that will probably bite you sooner or later. There's not a lot you can do about it after the fact, but it helps to be forewarned. There are two ways you can guard against a potential problem when repeating long insertions. You can write your file (
:w
) before repeating the insertion (returning to this copy if the insertion doesn't work correctly).
You can also turn off
wrapmargin
like this:
:set wm=0
In Chapter 7, Advanced Editing , we'll show you an easy way to use the wrapmargin solution, in the section "More Examples of Mapping Keys." In some versions of vi , the command [CTRL-@] repeats the most recent insertion. [CTRL-@] is typed in insert mode and returns you to command mode.
[u]
As mentioned earlier, you can undo your last command if you make an error. Simply press
u
. The cursor need not be on the line where the original edit was made.
To continue the example above, showing deletion of lines in the file practice :
| Keystrokes | Results |
|---|---|
u
|
With a screen editor you can scroll the page. m ove the cursor. |
|
|
U
, the uppercase version of
u
, undoes all edits on a single line,
as long as the cursor remains on that line
.
Once you move off a line, you can no longer use
U
.
Note that you can undo your last undo with
u
, toggling between two versions of text.
u
will also undo
U
, and
U
will undo any changes to a line, including those made with
u
. (A tip: the fact that
u
can undo itself leads to a nifty way to get around in a file. If you ever want to get back to the site of your last edit, simply undo it. You will pop back to the appropriate line. When you undo the undo, you'll stay on that line.)