On Fri, 26 Feb 2021, Joseph Wulf <
joseph...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I've a common problem that I've never been able to find a solution for.
...
> With my cursor at "B" how can I delete from the current cursor position
> (col 18) to the first double-quote mark (") efficiently?
Delete up to a quote mark later in the line:
dt"
Delete up to the third quote mark later in the line:
d3t"
Delete up to a quote mark earlier in the line:
dT"
Delete up to and including a quote mark:
df"
Delete up to and including a quote mark earlier in the line:
dF"
Delete up to and including the second quote mark earlier in the line:
d2F"
Delete forward using a repeat of last to or including search:
d,
Delete backward using a repeat of last to or including search:
d;
Delete to column 40 (either forward or backward):
d40|
I'm a frequent user of the f/F/t/T motions. Often one or the other is
the better choice to use due to frequency of characters used and
context.
In shell scripting, say, I may want to change {foo} to {bar} and
sometimes it will be in single quotes and sometimes double quotes, so
I'll use c2fo with the cursor on the {f} and then the . command works
properly.
Other times I'm changing a bunch of variable names all terminated at
the = to new different names, so I'll use ct= first and c; later.
Elijah