Put a cursor to a beginning of each line - sublimetext

Is there any way to put a cursor to a beginning of each line in Sublime Text, given that the beginning of each line is different so it's impossible to do a search by a pattern and then select all the occurrences? I want to do that without any plugin.

An alternative to MattDMo's answer could be to select all (ctrlA), then split selection into lines (ctrlshiftL), then move to the beginning of the line (home) to get the cursors in the proper position and cancel out the selection.
This would avoid the regex search.

Do a regex search for \n, then hit Find All (AltEnter) to select all the newline characters (the very end of each line). Next, hit ← to remove the selections, which places the cursors at the end of each line. Finally, hit Home twice to move the cursors to the beginning of each line.

Related

Remove duplicates lines but not blank lines in Sublime Text

I know that you can remove duplicate lines by doing Edit>Permute Lines>Unique. But that will remove blank(empty) lines. I would like not to remove them, so blank lines will stay(essentially empty space).
You can do this using Permute Selections. First, open the Find menu (CtrlF or Find → Find…) and make sure the Regex, Wrap, and Highlight matches buttons are selected. In the search field, enter ^.+\n. This matches the beginning of the line ^, 1 or more characters of any type .+, and the newline character(s). Therefore, it will select any line that is NOT just a newline. Note that this will select lines that contain only whitespace, for example a tab character followed by a newline.
Next, hit the Find All button to select each line individually.
Finally, select Edit → Permute Selections → Unique and all duplicate lines will be erased, leaving all blank lines behind.

How do I get my cursor to jump to the last character on a line?

This problem has not always been around, and I can find no option in VS or ReSharper to correct it, but when I use the mouse to place the cursor on a shortish line of code, and I place the cursor near the end of the line, in whitespace, it stays there, instead of jumping back to the last character on the line.
You can uncheck the option Texteditor -> All Languages -> General -> Enable virtual space in Visual Studio. This way your cursor will always be placed at the last character of a line when you click anywhere in the whitespace area at the end of a line.
Note however if your line ends with whitespaces you actually typed in, it will place the cursor after the last actual whitespace of that line. Use Ctrl + Left Arrow to jump to the last actual character of that line.
You can use Alt + Backspace to quickly delete all whitespaces at the end of a line.

Deleting Line of Text Using Xcode Find and Replace

I'm wondering if it's possible to search for a certain line of a text using Xcode's Find & Replace feature, and fully delete the line so not even blank space is left over. Is this possible and if so how?
Copy the line you want to delete, including the newline character at the end of the line by triple-clicking on it (the selection should go all the way to the far right side of the editor pane). Perform a find and replace; paste the line into the the top field, and leave the replace field blank. Click Replace All.
On the latest Xcode you can just insert line break in the search field. Click on magnifying glass icon -> insert pattern -> Line Break

How to delete line break in textmate

How to find and delete all the line breaks? I tried \n and it doesn't work! Regular expression? what kinda of expression?
I found the answer in the TextMate IRC channel.
Press Option Return to search for literal line breaks in the Find and Replace panel.
Searching for \n works if you select the "Regular Expression" option, but won't work in the literal search mode.
Without regex (regular search):
Alt + ⏎
Select the empty space in between the lines and Copy. Then Select the block of text you want to remove line breaks from. Go to Find & Replace. Paste the copied empty space in the Find field. Type a space in the Replace field. Hold Option, which toggles Replace All to In Selection, then click In Selection. This should do the trick.

Deleting lines of code in a text editor

Edit: This question had been tagged "Tolstoy" in appreciation of the quality and length of my writing:) Just reading the first and the last paragraph should be enough:) If you tend to select and move code with the mouse, the stuff in middle could be interesting to you.
This question is about how you use text editors in general. I’m looking for the best way to delete a plurality of lines of code (no intent to patent it:) This extends to transposing lines, i.e. deleting and adding them somewhere else. Most importantly, I don’t want to be creating any blank lines that I have to delete separately. Sort of like Visual Studio's SHIFT+DELETE feature, but working for multiple lines at once.
Say you want to delete line 3 from following code (tabs and newlines visualized as well). The naïve way would be to select the text between angle brackets:
if (true) {\n
\t int i = 1;\n
\t <i *= 2;>\n
\t i += 3;\n
}\n
Then hit backspace. This creates a blank line. Hit backspace twice more to delete \t and \n.
You end up with:
if (true) {\n
\t int i = 1;\n
\t i += 3;\n
}\n
When you try to select a whole line, Visual Studio doesn't let you select the trailing newline character. For example, placing the cursor on a line and hitting SHIFT+END will not select the newline at the end. Neither will you select the newline if you use your mouse, i.e. clicking in the middle of a line and dragging the cursor all the way to the right. You only select the trailing newline characters if you make a selection that spans at least two lines. Most editors I use do it this way; Microsoft WordPad and Word are counter-examples (and I frequently get newlines wrong when deleting text there; at least Word has a way to display end-of-line and end-of-paragraph characters explicitly).
When using Visual Studio and other editors in general, here’s the solution that currently works best for me:
Using the mouse, I select the characters that I put between angle brackets:
if (true) {\n
\t int i = 1;<\n
\t i *= 2;>\n
\t i += 3;\n
}\n
Hitting backspace now, you delete the line in one go without having to delete any other characters. This works for several contiguous lines at once. Additionally, it can be used for transposing lines. You could drag the selection between the angle brackets to the point marked with a caret:
if (true) {\n
\t int i = 1;<\n
\t i *= 2;>\n
\t i += 3;^\n
}\n
This leaves you with:
if (true) {\n
\t int i = 1;\n
\t i += 3;<\n
\t i *= 2;>\n
}\n
where lines 3 and 4 have switched place.
There are variations on this theme. When you want to delete line 3, you could also select the following characters:
if (true) {\n
\t int i = 1;\n
<\t i *= 2;\n
>\t i += 3;\n
}\n
In fact, this is what Visual Studio does if you tell it to select a complete line. You do this by clicking in the margin between your code and the column where the red circles go which indicate breakpoints. The mouse pointer is mirrored in that area to distinguish it a little better, but I think it's too narrow and physically too far removed from the code I want to select.
Maybe this method is useful to other people as well, even if it only serves to make them aware of how newlines are handled when selecting/deleting text:) It works nicely for most non-specialized text editors. However, given the vast amount of features and plugins for Visual Studio (which I use most), I'm sure there is better way to use it to delete and move lines of code. Getting the indentation right automatically when moving code between different blocks would be nice (i.e. without hitting "Format Document/Selection"). I'm looking forward to suggestions; no rants on micro-optimization, please:)
Summary of Answers
With respect to Visual Studio: Navigating well with the cursor keys.
The solution that would best suit my style of going over and editing code is the Eclipse way:
You can select several consecutive lines of code, where the first and the last selected line may be selected only partially. Pressing ALT+{up,down} moves the complete lines (not just the selection) up and down, fixing indentation as you go. Hitting CTRL+D deletes the lines completely (not just the selection) without leaving any unwanted blank lines. I would love to see this in Visual Studio!
In Emacs:
kill-line C-k
transpose-lines C-x C-t
C-a C-k C-k -- kill whole line including newline (or kill-whole-line by C-S-backspace).
C-u <number> C-k -- kill <number> of lines (including newlines).
C-y -- yank back the most recently killed text (aka paste)
In VIM:
Delete the whole line including the newline: dd
Transpose lines: dd p
You can always prefix any command with a number to repeat it, so to delete 10 lines do:
10 dd
You can also specify a range of lines to delete. For instance, to delete lines 10-15:
:10,15d
Or you can move the lines, for instance move lines 10-15 below line 20:
:10,15m20
Or you can copy the lines:
:10,15t20
What I do is, starting with the cursor at the start of the line (in some editors you have to press home twice to do this), hold shift and press down until all lines that I want to delete are selected. Then I press delete.
In Eclipse you can ALT-↓ or ALT-↑ to move a line. I find this incredibly useful, as well as ALT-SHIFT-{↓, ↑} to copy a line. In addition, it doesn't wreck your clipboard. It even corrects indentation as the line is moving!
Adding to the existing vim answer, you can use d along with any cursor movement command to delete from the cursor's current position to the new position. For example, to delete...
...to end-of-paragraph (usually meaning "to the next blank line"): d}
...the line containing the cursor and the next 5 lines: d5j
...a set of parentheses, braces, etc. and its contents: d% (with the cursor on the opening or closing paren/brace/etc.)
...to the third appearance of the word "foo": d3/foo
It's quite flexible.
Learn to use your cursor keys.
For moving lines I do the following:
Use ↑/↓to move to the line you want to copy.
Hit Home if not there already, and again if it places the cursor after whitespace.
Then press Shift+↓ to select the line (or lines) you want to move
Ctrl+X to cut the line.
Move Up/Down to the line you want to insert
Ctrl+V
This should work in pretty much any text editor on Windows.
When deleting lines I still tend to use Ctrl+X (although I guess I also use backspace) as the above is so ingrained in how I edit, and it's also more forgiving.
(Although I find them disorienting on the occasions I use Macs, I think Apple might have been on to something with the way they've set up the Home/End, skip word shortcuts on Macs)
Ctrl+Shift+L removes line without copying it to the buffer.
in Eclipse i use CTRL+ D to delete a single line (or a couple)
for many lines i'll select them with the mouse or with SHIFT + ARROW then press the DEL key.
In addition to the above, use Resharper for Visual Studio to do what you want. Best VS plugin you will find ever. It provides a bunch of different commands that help with moving/deleting/copying code here there and everywhere. Not to mention refactor/generate/etc code.
Ctrl-Shift-Alt ↑or ↓ will move a method up or down, line up or down, etc.
Shift-Del - deletes the current line, but puts it in the clipboard (unless you modify your settings to not do this - I'm trying to recall if this is a VS standard shortcut, not just Resharper - been too long).
Ctrl-C, Ctrl-X without selecting copies/cuts the current line.
And on and on...
See http://www.jetbrains.com/resharper/docs/ReSharper40DefaultKeymap2.pdf for a full list.
Using the Brief keyboard mapping this is done using the Alt+L to mark the line and the - key on the numeric keypad (or Alt+D) to cut the line to clipboard. The cut will remove the line entirely, including the newline character.
Hitting the Ins key on the numeric keypad would put the line back into the document including the newline character.
IMHO Brief is a really well designed keyboard mapping.
PS: I think MSVC has an option to emulate the Brief keyboard mapping.
In Emacs, in addition to C-k (and C-k with a numeric prefix arg, to kill N lines), you can just use the mouse:
To kill one line: triple-click it, then right-click twice
To kill multiple lines: triple-click the first line, then right-click on the last line ("first" line can be after the "last" line -- "first" here means first one you click)

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