copy and paste in vi

You have

 :set paste

Put Vim in Paste mode. This is useful if you want to cut or copy some text from one window and paste it in Vim. This will avoid unexpected effects. Setting this option is useful when using Vim in a terminal, where Vim cannot distinguish between typed text and pasted text.


  1. Move the cursor to the line from where you want to copy and paste contents at another place.
  2. Hold the key v in press mode and press upper or lower arrow key according to requirements or up to lines that will be copied. you can press key V to select whole lines.
  3. Press d to cut or y to copy.
  4. Move the cursor to the place where you want to paste.
  5. Press p to paste contents after the cursor or P to paste before the cursor.

Assuming your vi is actually vim, before pasting, do:

:set paste

That disables word wrapping and auto-indent and all similar things that modify typed text. After pasting, turn it off again with

:set nopaste

The reason is that while gvim can tell pasting from typing (so you don't need this when using gvim), the terminal version can't, because it's the terminal doing copy and paste and vim simply sees the text as typed. And therefore applies the transformation like it does for any other text.


Someone showed me a neat trick. In the vi editor, set to insert mode ("i"). Then middle-button click at the location where you would like to insert.

Tags:

Vi