Alexei Alexandrov wrote:
Hi Bram Moolenaar, you wrote:
I think the best method is to obtain all the files from subversion and
then get the latest runtime files with rsync. Get spell files manually
(this can be done automatically if you use a language for the first
time).
I tried to use the
After I updated the nibbles game, a user reported that his gvim crashes
while starting the game. He is using gvim on mandriva linux with
patchlevel upto 178. Strangely it doesn't crash on his console vim. I
couldn't reproduce the crash on XP and tried with gvim with patchlevels
148 as well as
Frodak Baksik wrote:
I realized that I forgot to update the dependency data for winclip.c
in makefile. The following is a patch after vim_patch.diff is
applied.
Index: Makefile
Thanks.
Also, is there anything I can do to help get the original patch accepted?
Ask a few people to try it
Bill McCarthy wrote:
I'm alpha testing software for Windows that archives files
whenever they are opened for writing. Testing with Gvim, I
noticed that the program's log showed multiple open for
write entries by simply opening a file with Gvim and doing
a :wq command.
The author of the
Karsten Hopp wrote:
Caolan McNamara wrote a patch for vim-7 to use hunspell dictionaries directly.
This allows us to use one single set of dictionaries for OpenOffice, maybe
firefox/thunderbird
and vim.
Please have a look at his comments at
Michael Wookey wrote:
One bug that I didn't fix. Build gvim.exe with OLE=no, run 'gvim -
register',
and watch it crash while trying to display an error message.
This seems to fix the bug...
Index: src/message.c
===
Hi,
When I copy a line use yy, then I need to paste it to a line. But before
the paste, I delete a char using 'x', the paste buffer will be
overwriten to the deleted word. How can i avoid this?
Thanks.
ABAI
On Tue, 13 Feb 2007 18:22:34 -0500, Theerasak Photha
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 2/13/07, Gene Kwiecinski [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I imagine there is a rationale for 'ZZ', but it's not readily
apparent. (Something to do with C-z in DOS, or the end of the
alphabet?)
'z' is already used,
Ulrich Lauther wrote:
A problem with German Umlauts
Under Linux I have modified my key map in a way that for instance ALT a
generates Umlaut a (a in Tex notation).
Now when I start vi like this:
/usr/bin/X11 rxvt -meta8 -e vim
I can type in Umlauts using the ALT key.
Hello there,
I use gVim on a Linux computer (KUbuntu), and I am trying to launch a
program from inside gvim with the !start command, so for instance:
:!start kdvi
or
:!start /usr/bin/kdvi
But I get the following error:
start: need to be root
shell returned 1
So obviously I need to be root to
Hi,
Régis B. wrote:
I use gVim on a Linux computer (KUbuntu), and I am trying to launch a
program from inside gvim with the !start command, so for instance:
:!start kdvi
or
:!start /usr/bin/kdvi
But I get the following error:
start: need to be root
shell returned 1
So obviously
Régis B. wrote:
Hello there,
I use gVim on a Linux computer (KUbuntu), and I am trying to launch a
program from inside gvim with the !start command, so for instance:
:!start kdvi
or
:!start /usr/bin/kdvi
But I get the following error:
start: need to be root
shell returned 1
So obviously I
Albi, Jürgen, thank you,
you are both right: I just realised start is a root only specific command
in my Linux, and it is sufficient to execute :!kdvi in order to make it
work.
The reason why I asked this question is because I am trying to use
latex-suite and to view dvi compiled documents
Régis B. wrote:
Albi, Jürgen, thank you,
you are both right: I just realised start is a root only specific command
in my Linux, and it is sufficient to execute :!kdvi in order to make it
work.
The reason why I asked this question is because I am trying to use
latex-suite and to view dvi
@Régis
Now, I don't understand at all what this option does ...
The man page says: This option should be used when Vim is executed by a
program that will wait for the edit session to finish (e.g. mail).
This means: if vim usually forks, i.e. creates a new process, another process,
which
Hello, I'm almost positive that this is OT, but if someone point me
in the right direction, that would be great - I'm finding (through
the help of vim actually), that text highlighted and copied from
Terminal (or even X11 xterm) on OS X ends up with an extra space at
the end of a line
Hi,
I have a lot of text files created in PC. When I open them in Linux
using gvim, I get a lot of ^M and no line breaking. It is messy. How
can I read the file correctly in Linux?
Thanks
Frank
Hi Yeggapan,
[...]
You can try using the workspace manager plugin:
http://vim.sourceforge.net/scripts/script.php?script_id=1410
[...]
I got it so far working.
One question.
When I give the command af(AddFile) in the filebuffer, the plugin comes
with
the message give file name (or something
On 2/14/07, Matthew Winn [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, 13 Feb 2007 18:22:34 -0500, Theerasak Photha
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 2/13/07, Gene Kwiecinski [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I imagine there is a rationale for 'ZZ', but it's not readily
apparent. (Something to do with C-z in DOS, or
@frank wang
Which version of vim you are using?
I thought, vim can handle different linefeeds automatically.
Greetz, Doc
Hi,
I have a lot of text files created in PC. When I open them in Linux
using gvim, I get a lot of ^M and no line breaking. It is messy. How
can I read the file correctly
You can use a third-party tool called dos2unix to convert the files.
Also, vim has functionality that can do this, but I don't remember it
right now.
HTH!
Tom Purl
Hi,
I have a lot of text files created in PC. When I open them in Linux
using gvim, I get a lot of ^M and no line breaking. It
I have a lot of text files created in PC. When I open them in Linux
using gvim, I get a lot of ^M and no line breaking. It is messy. How
can I read the file correctly in Linux?
There is a good discussion of this topic here:
http://www.vim.org/tips/tip.php?tip_id=26
cheers
frank wang wrote:
Hi,
I have a lot of text files created in PC. When I open them in Linux
using gvim, I get a lot of ^M and no line breaking. It is messy. How
can I read the file correctly in Linux?
Thanks
Frank
:set fileformats=dos,unix
or
:set fileformats=dos,unix,mac
If
Thanks for the help.
My gvim version is 7.0. The files are edited by Matlab editor. gvim
cannot automatically handle the ^M. No matter what file format I set.
The only thing to do is repleace them with
%s/\r/\r/g.
Frank
On 2/14/07, A.J.Mechelynck [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
frank wang wrote:
Hi!
I have vim version 7.0 installed, but unfortunately no vim.hlp is delivered
with the package. Where I can get vim.hlp?
Any idea?
I would appreciate to get a hint on where I can download the help file or to
simply receive it per email attachment.
Thanx in advance!
Regards, Doc
Dr. Uwe Schneider wrote:
Hi!
I have vim version 7.0 installed, but unfortunately no vim.hlp is delivered
with the package. Where I can get vim.hlp?
Any idea?
I would appreciate to get a hint on where I can download the help file or to
simply receive it per email attachment.
Thanx in
Hi!
Thanx a lot for your fast response!
At my PC at home, :help works (that's why I can't tell you more about the
missing help feature in the moment), but at my office PC (there I ran vim per
X-Term under Unix, SunSolaris), there comes an error message, like no help
file found in
Pete Johns wrote:
On Tue, 2007-02-13 at 16:07:32 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] sent:
(Sorry guys, my web-based editor, which I must use at work
becauseof IT paranoia about SMTP, simply will not let me reply
at the end rather than beginning of the thread.)=20
Web-based editor? Why not use Vim
On Thu, 2007-02-15 at 03:31:21 +0100, Bram Moolenaar sent:
Web-based editor? Why not use Vim as your editor from within
Firefox? Works a treat for me! ViewSourceWith
http://dafizilla.sourceforge.net/viewsourcewith/
Don't see something about Vim here...
Sorry, Bram, I should have mentioned that
On 15Feb2007 13:39, Pete Johns [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
| [...] It provides a menu item for you to launch
| your favourite text editor (Vim) from a textarea. [...]
I'sAT puts a little edit button on the bottom right corner of the text
area. An ergonomic win.
--
Cameron Simpson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Thu, 2007-02-15 at 14:21:46 +1100, Cameron Simpson sent:
I'sAT puts a little edit button on the bottom right corner of
the text area. An ergonomic win.
I shall be trying it next time I get ten minutes :-)
Best;
--paj
--
Pete Johns http://johnsy.com/
when i start to write a php function with gvim..
function dostuff()
{
..as soon as i hit return it inserts a tab with an aditional 2 spaces
how do i get rid of those extra spaces?
and for that matter is there a way to close off the function
automatically?..
function dostuff()
{
}
Tony Mechelynck wrote:
If you delete a message _unopened_ it cannot harm you.
If your email application shows the subject, it means it must open the
email to find it. Usually it only reads the header, but it may do more.
E.g., if it displays an icon to indicate there is an attachment it reads
Dr. Uwe Schneider wrote:
Hi!
Thanx a lot for your fast response!
At my PC at home, :help works (that's why I can't tell you more about the missing help
feature in the moment), but at my office PC (there I ran vim per X-Term under Unix, SunSolaris),
there comes an error message, like no help
On Mon, 12 Feb 2007 at 8:07pm, Max Dyckhoff wrote:
This is a bug which I have actually informed Hari of a while ago, but
perhaps my bug email got lost :)
The email is not lost, just extremely busy with work and personal life
:)
Also, lately I have been using eclipse more and more at my new
Hi all,
I am seeing a problem using the expand() function and the netrw
plugin.
I have the following autocmd:
autocmd BufEnter * echomsg Entering buffer . expand(afile:p)
I edit the current directory using the e . command and select a file
for editing and then go back to editing the
--- Bram Moolenaar [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Pete Johns wrote:
On Tue, 2007-02-13 at 16:07:32 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] sent:
(Sorry guys, my web-based editor, which I must use at work
becauseof IT paranoia about SMTP, simply will not let me reply
at the end rather than beginning of
On 15Feb2007 17:32, Peter Hodge [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
| Mozex (http://mozex.mozdev.org/) is working quite well for me on Windows and
| Mac.
It's good, but buries the edit function in a submenu of the context
menu. It's also not live - you need to quit the editor then click in
the text area to
Dr. Uwe Schneider wrote:
Dear Tony!
Thanx for your detailed answer.
:echo $VIMRUNTIME results in: /usr/local/share/vim/vim70 as expected.
But, :verbose set helpfile? produces:
helpfile=/usr/local/share/vim/vim70/vim.hlp
[...]
What does it print below that (Last set from...)? That vim.hlp
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