Saving vim macros
Use q
followed by a letter to record a macro. This just goes into one of the copy/paste registers so you can paste it as normal with the "xp
or "xP
commands in normal mode, where x is the register to paste.
To save it you open up .vimrc and paste the contents, then the register will be around the next time you start vim.
The format is something like:
let @q = 'macro contents'
Be careful of quotes, though. They would have to be escaped properly.
So to save a macro you can do:
- From normal mode:
qq
- enter whatever commands
- From normal mode:
q
- open .vimrc
"qp
to insert the macro into yourlet @q = '...'
line
Write your macros inside your ~/.vimrc, to define a macro launched by CTRL+O by example, add the following line to your ~/.vimrc :
map <C-O> MACROTEXT
when you record a macro by typing qa
you can retrieve your macro text by typing "ap
For a more robust solution you can checkout Marvim.
It lets you save a macro in a specific namespace (or use the filetype as a default namespace) and you can later search for your saved macros and load them in a register ready for use.
If you reuse a lot of macros, this is pretty helpful.
You can do like this on your ~/.vimrc
:let @a="iHello World!\<CR>bye\<Esc>"
NOTE: You must use double quotes to be able to use special keys like in \<this silly example>
.