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Home/ Questions/Q 38869
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T14:46:32+00:00 2026-05-10T14:46:32+00:00

I want to write a command that specifies the word under the cursor in

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I want to write a command that specifies ‘the word under the cursor’ in VIM. For instance, let’s say I have the cursor on a word and I make it appear twice. For instance, if the word is ‘abc’ and I want ‘abcabc’ then I could type:

:s/\(abc\)/\1\1/ 

But then I’d like to be able to move the cursor to ‘def’ and use the same command to change it to ‘defdef’:

:s/\(def\)/\1\1/ 

How can I write the command in the commandline so that it does this?

:s/\(*whatever is under the commandline*\)/\1\1 
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  1. 2026-05-10T14:46:33+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 2:46 pm

    <cword> is the word under the cursor (:help <cword>).

    You can nmap a command to it, or this series of keystrokes for the lazy will work:

    b #go to beginning of current word yw #yank to register 

    Then, when you are typing in your pattern you can hit <control-r>0<enter> which will paste in your command the contents of the 0-th register.

    You can also make a command for this like:

    :nmap <leader>w :s/\(<c-r>=expand("<cword>")<cr>\)/ 

    Which will map hitting ” and ‘w’ at the same time to replace your command line with

    :s/\(<currentword>\)/ 
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