1
0
mirror of https://github.com/jbranchaud/til synced 2026-01-05 08:08:02 +00:00

Add Replace A Character as a vim til.

This commit is contained in:
jbranchaud
2015-07-18 17:14:05 -05:00
parent 85cbad645d
commit ada380dd7f
2 changed files with 14 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@@ -154,6 +154,7 @@ smart people at [Hashrocket](http://hashrocket.com/).
- [Re-indenting Your Code](vim/reindenting-your-code.md)
- [Rename Current File](vim/rename-current-file.md)
- [Repeat The Previous Change](vim/repeat-the-previous-change.md)
- [Replace A Character](vim/replace-a-character.md)
- [Scrolling Relative to the Window](vim/scrolling-relative-to-the-window.md)
- [Set Your Color Scheme](vim/set-your-color-scheme.md)
- [Split Different](vim/split-different.md)

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
# Replace A Character
Throughout the day I'll often find myself deleting a single character and
putting a different one in its place. I usually navigate over the target
character and hit `s` which removes the character under the cursor and puts
me in insert mode. From there I type the new character and hit escape to
return to normal node. This isn't the best way to perform such an edit
though. Vim has a command specifically for replacing a character. The `r`
command. It does essentially the same thing as my current approach but
instead of putting me in insert mode, it simply replaces the character and
leaves me in normal node.
See `:h r` for more details.