On Saturday, January 12, 2013 8:52:50 PM UTC-6, Jack Gates wrote:
> This appears to be the only thing in help that seems to imply you can
> 
> yank part of a line. But I can't figure out how to make that work. Am
> 
> I wrong about this? Is the only way to yank part of a line in visual
> 
> mode only or search and replace if one gets technical?
> 
> 
> 
>                                                       *y* *yank*
> 
> ["x]y{motion}         Yank {motion} text [into register x].  When no
> 
>                       characters are to be yanked (e.g., "y0" in column 1),
> 
>                       this is an error when 'cpoptions' includes the 'E'
> 
>                       flag.

Many of the responses you got have pointed out that you can 'y' followed by any 
number of commands to yank specific text from a line.

This is true for most normal-mode commands.

I saw a description once that said using Vim is about having a conversation 
with your editor.

Commands like 'y' and 'd' are "verbs" and motions are the "nouns". 'y' or 'd' 
or 'c' or '=' or many other commands all tell Vim what to *do*, but you need to 
tell Vim what to *do it on*.

I may be remembering this writing from the author of the excellent Gundo plugin 
(and others), although I can't find a reference to having a conversation with 
the editor here:

  http://stevelosh.com/blog/2010/09/coming-home-to-vim/

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