Eli the Bearded wrote:
> http://www.faqs.org/faqs/editor-faq/vi/part2/
> ------ start quote 8< ------
> 6.1 - Silly vi tricks
>   Note: Also check out the Silly macros down below. Many macros and
> tricks are interchangeable.
> 
>   xp     This will delete the character under the cursor, and put it
> afterwards.  In other words, it swaps the location of two characters.
>  
>   ddp    Similar to xp, but swapping lines.
>  
>   yyp    duplicate a line
> 
>   uu     Undo and redo last change.  (This will take you to the last
> modification to the file without changing anything.)  You can also use
> this to compare the changes to a line.  Make the changes to the line,
> press U to undo the changes to the current line, and then press u to
> toggle between the two versions.
> 
>   :g/.*/m0
>          This will reverse the order of the lines in the current file.
> m0 is the ex command to move the line to line 0.
> 
>   :v/./d or :g/^$/d 
>          Removes all blank lines.
> 
>   :g/^[ <ctrl-v><tab>]*$/d
>          Removes all lines that only have whitespace.
> 
>   :v/./$s/$/<ctrl-v><enter>./|'';/./-1j|$d
>          Replaces multiple blank lines with just one blank line.
> ------ >8 end quote  ------
> 
> All of that works in vim (save "uu" with modern undo settings), except
> for the last one. I happen to have true vi handy ("Version 4.0 (gritter)
> 3/25/05"), as well as nvi ("Version (1.81.6-2013-11-20nb3)"), elvis
> ("2.2.0"), vim 7.4, and vim 8.1.
> 
> The replace multiple blank lines works in true vi and nvi, but not in
> elvis or either vim. The trick works by the :v/./ selecting a group of
> lines, $s editing the last line in that group to be a blank line and a
> line with a dot, then |'' returning to the first line in the group, /./-1j
> joining all but the last line of the group (so as not to join the new
> dot line), and finally |$d deleting that last dot line. It's a
> seriously complicated "trick", with lots of subtle compatibility tests
> built right in.
> 
> Is this a known incompatiblity in vim? I don't recall seeing it
> documented. And I sought out that FAQ precisely for that trick since I
> recalled it existed, but not what it was.
AFAIK this builds upon a bug in Vi.  In Nvi Keith Bostic decided to keep
it like that (perhaps because of this example).  I decided that it's
really an unintentional bug and did not replicate it.
Using "$" after :v does not refer to "the last in a a group", since :v
works on a per-line base, it marks every line not matching the pattern.
So in Vim the "$" refers to the last line, and changes that.
There are much simpler ways to collapse multiple blank lines.
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Sunday, September 30, 2018
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