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vim: delete the first 2 spaces for multiple lines

What's the easiest way to delete the first 2 spaces for each line using VIM? Basically it's repeating "2x" for each line.

Clarification: here the assumption is the first 2 characte开发者_开发问答rs are spaces. So the question is about doing indentation for multiple lines together.


  1. Enter visual block mode with Ctrl-V (or Ctrl-Q if you use Ctrl-V for paste);
  2. Select the area to delete with the arrows;
  3. Then press d to delete the selected area.
  4. Press Esc


Some more options. You can decided which is the "easiest way".

Remove the first 2 characters of every line:

:%normal 2x

Remove first 2 characters of every line, only if they're spaces:

:%s/^  /

Note that the last slash is optional, and is only here so that you can see the two spaces. Without the slash, it's only 7 characters, including the :.

Move indentation to left for every line:

:%normal <<


You could also use a search and replace (in the ex editor, accessed via the : character):

Remove first two characters no matter what:

%s/^.\{2}//

Remove first two white space characters (must be at the beginning and both must be whitespace... any line not matching that criteria will be skipped):

%s/^\s\{2}//


Assuming a shiftwidth=2, then using shift with a range of %

:%<


Two spaces, or two characters? (2x does the latter.)

:[range]s/^  //

deletes two blanks at the beginning of each line; use % (equivalent to 1,$) as [range] do to this for the entire file.

:[range]s/^..//

deletes the first two characters of each line, whatever they are. (Note that it deletes two characters, not necessarily two columns; a tab character counts as one character).

If what you're really doing is changing indentation, you can use the < command to decrease it, or the > command to increase it. Set shiftwidth to control how far it shifts, e.g.

:set shiftwidth=2


I'd try one of two approaches:

  1. Do column editing on the block to delete using Ctrl+V (often mapped to Ctrl+Q).
  2. Record a macro on the first row using q1 (or any other number/letter you want to denote the recording register), then replay that macro multiple times using @1 (to use my previous example. Even better, use a preceding number to tell it how many times to run - 10@1 to run that macro 10 times, for example. It does, however, depends on what you recorded - make sure to rewind the cursor 0 or drop one line j, if that's relevant.


I'd also add: learn how to configure indentation for vim. Then a simple gg=G will do the trick.

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