Given the result of grep -n, how can I open vim in that specific line? (using only keyboard)
When I run grep "keyword" -n
and get the following list of results:
a/b/c:10: keyword
a/b/c:70: keyword
a/b/d:50: keyword
How can I open one of the files (say the 2nd in list) in the line it found?
I now just copy the the output using my mouse, and copy it after vim
and then add +
with the line number I copy. (meaning I write vim a/b/c +70
using the mouse copy to get the file name, and another mouse copy to get the line number [or I just copy it by hand, when its short enough])
Is there a way to do it with a keyboard shortcut?
command-line vim grep
add a comment |
When I run grep "keyword" -n
and get the following list of results:
a/b/c:10: keyword
a/b/c:70: keyword
a/b/d:50: keyword
How can I open one of the files (say the 2nd in list) in the line it found?
I now just copy the the output using my mouse, and copy it after vim
and then add +
with the line number I copy. (meaning I write vim a/b/c +70
using the mouse copy to get the file name, and another mouse copy to get the line number [or I just copy it by hand, when its short enough])
Is there a way to do it with a keyboard shortcut?
command-line vim grep
You can try something like that:echo a/b/c:70: keyword | awk '{print $1}' | sed 's,:$,,' | sed 's,:, +,' | xargs vim && reset
.
– Arkadiusz Drabczyk
Dec 11 at 12:48
2
Also, if you're interested in using Vim more efficiently, do check out the dedicated Vi and Vim Stack Exchange site.
– muru
Dec 11 at 12:49
add a comment |
When I run grep "keyword" -n
and get the following list of results:
a/b/c:10: keyword
a/b/c:70: keyword
a/b/d:50: keyword
How can I open one of the files (say the 2nd in list) in the line it found?
I now just copy the the output using my mouse, and copy it after vim
and then add +
with the line number I copy. (meaning I write vim a/b/c +70
using the mouse copy to get the file name, and another mouse copy to get the line number [or I just copy it by hand, when its short enough])
Is there a way to do it with a keyboard shortcut?
command-line vim grep
When I run grep "keyword" -n
and get the following list of results:
a/b/c:10: keyword
a/b/c:70: keyword
a/b/d:50: keyword
How can I open one of the files (say the 2nd in list) in the line it found?
I now just copy the the output using my mouse, and copy it after vim
and then add +
with the line number I copy. (meaning I write vim a/b/c +70
using the mouse copy to get the file name, and another mouse copy to get the line number [or I just copy it by hand, when its short enough])
Is there a way to do it with a keyboard shortcut?
command-line vim grep
command-line vim grep
edited Dec 11 at 14:07
muru
1
1
asked Dec 11 at 12:26
CIsForCookies
21318
21318
You can try something like that:echo a/b/c:70: keyword | awk '{print $1}' | sed 's,:$,,' | sed 's,:, +,' | xargs vim && reset
.
– Arkadiusz Drabczyk
Dec 11 at 12:48
2
Also, if you're interested in using Vim more efficiently, do check out the dedicated Vi and Vim Stack Exchange site.
– muru
Dec 11 at 12:49
add a comment |
You can try something like that:echo a/b/c:70: keyword | awk '{print $1}' | sed 's,:$,,' | sed 's,:, +,' | xargs vim && reset
.
– Arkadiusz Drabczyk
Dec 11 at 12:48
2
Also, if you're interested in using Vim more efficiently, do check out the dedicated Vi and Vim Stack Exchange site.
– muru
Dec 11 at 12:49
You can try something like that:
echo a/b/c:70: keyword | awk '{print $1}' | sed 's,:$,,' | sed 's,:, +,' | xargs vim && reset
.– Arkadiusz Drabczyk
Dec 11 at 12:48
You can try something like that:
echo a/b/c:70: keyword | awk '{print $1}' | sed 's,:$,,' | sed 's,:, +,' | xargs vim && reset
.– Arkadiusz Drabczyk
Dec 11 at 12:48
2
2
Also, if you're interested in using Vim more efficiently, do check out the dedicated Vi and Vim Stack Exchange site.
– muru
Dec 11 at 12:49
Also, if you're interested in using Vim more efficiently, do check out the dedicated Vi and Vim Stack Exchange site.
– muru
Dec 11 at 12:49
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
Two things:
Vim has some support for
grep
.
If you open Vim, and do
:grep keyword ...
, Vim populates the quickfix list with the results, and jumps to the first file. You can then jump to the nth quickfix entry with:cc n
(and other commands).
You can populate the aforementioned quickfix list using grep's output:
vim -q <(grep -n keyword ...)
And then use the quickfix navigation commands mentioned above.
Either is simpler than playing around with grep's output manually.
As an alternative to (2), you can save grep's output to a file and use that file instead, if you think you won't necessarily open Vim after:
grep ... | tee log
vim -q log
Trying to use the same method on git status, to no avail :( - vim -q <(git status | grep modified)
– CIsForCookies
Dec 11 at 13:39
3
@CIsForCookies That won't be in the same format asgrep -n
(<filename>:<line>: ...
). I use the fugitive plugin for Git, and then it's a matter of:Gstatus
, move to desired file and press Enter.
– muru
Dec 11 at 13:43
BTW, I edited my ~/.bashrcgrep alias
to use colors always, and that, for some reason, broke the-q >()
option...
– CIsForCookies
Dec 13 at 19:01
add a comment |
You could make is so if there were not support for grep already as @muru answered:
:cexpr system("grep -n keyword")
It can be used with another command, git grep
for example.
Also, you can open the output in a buffer and use "cbuffer" on it.
See quickfix section from the manual about it.
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Two things:
Vim has some support for
grep
.
If you open Vim, and do
:grep keyword ...
, Vim populates the quickfix list with the results, and jumps to the first file. You can then jump to the nth quickfix entry with:cc n
(and other commands).
You can populate the aforementioned quickfix list using grep's output:
vim -q <(grep -n keyword ...)
And then use the quickfix navigation commands mentioned above.
Either is simpler than playing around with grep's output manually.
As an alternative to (2), you can save grep's output to a file and use that file instead, if you think you won't necessarily open Vim after:
grep ... | tee log
vim -q log
Trying to use the same method on git status, to no avail :( - vim -q <(git status | grep modified)
– CIsForCookies
Dec 11 at 13:39
3
@CIsForCookies That won't be in the same format asgrep -n
(<filename>:<line>: ...
). I use the fugitive plugin for Git, and then it's a matter of:Gstatus
, move to desired file and press Enter.
– muru
Dec 11 at 13:43
BTW, I edited my ~/.bashrcgrep alias
to use colors always, and that, for some reason, broke the-q >()
option...
– CIsForCookies
Dec 13 at 19:01
add a comment |
Two things:
Vim has some support for
grep
.
If you open Vim, and do
:grep keyword ...
, Vim populates the quickfix list with the results, and jumps to the first file. You can then jump to the nth quickfix entry with:cc n
(and other commands).
You can populate the aforementioned quickfix list using grep's output:
vim -q <(grep -n keyword ...)
And then use the quickfix navigation commands mentioned above.
Either is simpler than playing around with grep's output manually.
As an alternative to (2), you can save grep's output to a file and use that file instead, if you think you won't necessarily open Vim after:
grep ... | tee log
vim -q log
Trying to use the same method on git status, to no avail :( - vim -q <(git status | grep modified)
– CIsForCookies
Dec 11 at 13:39
3
@CIsForCookies That won't be in the same format asgrep -n
(<filename>:<line>: ...
). I use the fugitive plugin for Git, and then it's a matter of:Gstatus
, move to desired file and press Enter.
– muru
Dec 11 at 13:43
BTW, I edited my ~/.bashrcgrep alias
to use colors always, and that, for some reason, broke the-q >()
option...
– CIsForCookies
Dec 13 at 19:01
add a comment |
Two things:
Vim has some support for
grep
.
If you open Vim, and do
:grep keyword ...
, Vim populates the quickfix list with the results, and jumps to the first file. You can then jump to the nth quickfix entry with:cc n
(and other commands).
You can populate the aforementioned quickfix list using grep's output:
vim -q <(grep -n keyword ...)
And then use the quickfix navigation commands mentioned above.
Either is simpler than playing around with grep's output manually.
As an alternative to (2), you can save grep's output to a file and use that file instead, if you think you won't necessarily open Vim after:
grep ... | tee log
vim -q log
Two things:
Vim has some support for
grep
.
If you open Vim, and do
:grep keyword ...
, Vim populates the quickfix list with the results, and jumps to the first file. You can then jump to the nth quickfix entry with:cc n
(and other commands).
You can populate the aforementioned quickfix list using grep's output:
vim -q <(grep -n keyword ...)
And then use the quickfix navigation commands mentioned above.
Either is simpler than playing around with grep's output manually.
As an alternative to (2), you can save grep's output to a file and use that file instead, if you think you won't necessarily open Vim after:
grep ... | tee log
vim -q log
answered Dec 11 at 12:42
muru
1
1
Trying to use the same method on git status, to no avail :( - vim -q <(git status | grep modified)
– CIsForCookies
Dec 11 at 13:39
3
@CIsForCookies That won't be in the same format asgrep -n
(<filename>:<line>: ...
). I use the fugitive plugin for Git, and then it's a matter of:Gstatus
, move to desired file and press Enter.
– muru
Dec 11 at 13:43
BTW, I edited my ~/.bashrcgrep alias
to use colors always, and that, for some reason, broke the-q >()
option...
– CIsForCookies
Dec 13 at 19:01
add a comment |
Trying to use the same method on git status, to no avail :( - vim -q <(git status | grep modified)
– CIsForCookies
Dec 11 at 13:39
3
@CIsForCookies That won't be in the same format asgrep -n
(<filename>:<line>: ...
). I use the fugitive plugin for Git, and then it's a matter of:Gstatus
, move to desired file and press Enter.
– muru
Dec 11 at 13:43
BTW, I edited my ~/.bashrcgrep alias
to use colors always, and that, for some reason, broke the-q >()
option...
– CIsForCookies
Dec 13 at 19:01
Trying to use the same method on git status, to no avail :( - vim -q <(git status | grep modified)
– CIsForCookies
Dec 11 at 13:39
Trying to use the same method on git status, to no avail :( - vim -q <(git status | grep modified)
– CIsForCookies
Dec 11 at 13:39
3
3
@CIsForCookies That won't be in the same format as
grep -n
(<filename>:<line>: ...
). I use the fugitive plugin for Git, and then it's a matter of :Gstatus
, move to desired file and press Enter.– muru
Dec 11 at 13:43
@CIsForCookies That won't be in the same format as
grep -n
(<filename>:<line>: ...
). I use the fugitive plugin for Git, and then it's a matter of :Gstatus
, move to desired file and press Enter.– muru
Dec 11 at 13:43
BTW, I edited my ~/.bashrc
grep alias
to use colors always, and that, for some reason, broke the -q >()
option...– CIsForCookies
Dec 13 at 19:01
BTW, I edited my ~/.bashrc
grep alias
to use colors always, and that, for some reason, broke the -q >()
option...– CIsForCookies
Dec 13 at 19:01
add a comment |
You could make is so if there were not support for grep already as @muru answered:
:cexpr system("grep -n keyword")
It can be used with another command, git grep
for example.
Also, you can open the output in a buffer and use "cbuffer" on it.
See quickfix section from the manual about it.
add a comment |
You could make is so if there were not support for grep already as @muru answered:
:cexpr system("grep -n keyword")
It can be used with another command, git grep
for example.
Also, you can open the output in a buffer and use "cbuffer" on it.
See quickfix section from the manual about it.
add a comment |
You could make is so if there were not support for grep already as @muru answered:
:cexpr system("grep -n keyword")
It can be used with another command, git grep
for example.
Also, you can open the output in a buffer and use "cbuffer" on it.
See quickfix section from the manual about it.
You could make is so if there were not support for grep already as @muru answered:
:cexpr system("grep -n keyword")
It can be used with another command, git grep
for example.
Also, you can open the output in a buffer and use "cbuffer" on it.
See quickfix section from the manual about it.
answered Dec 11 at 21:35
max630
1212
1212
add a comment |
add a comment |
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You can try something like that:
echo a/b/c:70: keyword | awk '{print $1}' | sed 's,:$,,' | sed 's,:, +,' | xargs vim && reset
.– Arkadiusz Drabczyk
Dec 11 at 12:48
2
Also, if you're interested in using Vim more efficiently, do check out the dedicated Vi and Vim Stack Exchange site.
– muru
Dec 11 at 12:49