On 5/25/06, William O'Higgins Witteman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Thu, May 25, 2006 at 03:13:45PM -0400, James Vega wrote:
Aha! You have spotted the problem. I have both vim-perl and vim-python
installed, and even though they have the same priority, the system is
defaulting to vim.python.
On 5/4/06, Eddy Petrişor [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 5/4/06, Eric Leenman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
On my WinXP machine in gvim 6.3.0 my mapping works
On my Linux machine it partly works.
One of the things that doesn't work is the windows behaviour.
Like CTRL-C, CTRL-V , CTRL-X, ect
Hello all,
I have just came across an issue which I don't know hw to solve. I
have tried and read the documentation, but I can't figure out what is
the problem.
I tried to add the c/c++ support plugin to my windows installation of
vim, but I observed nothing happened. The help was not found, nor
On 4/16/06, Eric Arnold [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Search for help: Type :help word, then hit CTRL-D to see matching
help entries for word.
On 4/16/06, Yakov Lerner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 4/16/06, Eddy Petrişor [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
My question is: how hard
On 4/9/06, Stahlman Family [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi!
Oh, at least developers should know about regular expressions.
How about developers who don't know about tags? Most of the developers in my
software lab use CodeWright for development, and
although I'm pretty sure it supports tags,
On 4/10/06, Robert Cussons [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
remove Lock = Caps_Lock
keysym Escape = Caps_Lock
keysym Caps_Lock = Escape
add Lock = Caps_Lock
but this means that each time I have logged out, I have to remember to
run xmodmap ~/.speedswapper (the name of the file) otherwise I start