Multi-cursor editing in Xcode 10
To edit multiple instances of text within different sections of a document, you can use multi-cursor editing. This allows multiple cursors to be placed in different spots so text can be added, modified, or deleted.
its the name of Source Editor, for reference purpose I taken the answer from whats-new-in-xcode10 and Sample link 1 and Sample link 2
The Xcode 10 Source Editor now supports multi-cursor editing allowing you to quickly edit multiple ranges of code at once.
- shift + control + click
- shift + control + ↑
- shift + control + ↓
- option + drag
With a source control-enabled project the source editor displays changes made by a developer in the gutter and shows changes made by other developers that haven’t yet been pulled into the project
The best way to use it is by using the Select Next Occurrence
command from the Find
menu.
Its default keyboard shortcut is alt + cmd + e, but you could set it to cmd + d to mimic Sublime Text's behavior.
This way, you can edit code lines that are different, whereas the solutions in the other answers only allow you to edit similar lines.
For example, if you have this code:
NSString *myStringg = @"stringg";
// print the stringg
NSLog(@"Here is my stringg: %@", myStringg);
you simply:
- manually select the first
Stringg
occurrence from the first line using the cursor - hit the
Select Next Occurrence
's keyboard shortcut 4 times - hit the right arrow key
- hit backspace
and you'll have:
NSString *myString = @"string";
// print the string
NSLog(@"Here is my string: %@", myString);
Shift + Ctrl + click when you wish to edit same text in file for multiple times e.g
option_A.isEnabled = false
option_B.isEnabled = false
option_C.isEnabled = false
option_D.isEnabled = false
in this i have to put true on all four lines then it should be better for to put true at once by using shift + control + click rather than edit each line