Steve Hall wrote:
On Sat, 2007-03-17 at 00:03 +0100, A.J.Mechelynck wrote:
Sure. But you don't _have_ to source it. Since 15 June 2006, you can
use instead
:UseVimball /temp
Tony, you convinced me to try again. But I feel vindicated, again I
experienced the same kind of issues I alway
On Sat, 2007-03-17 at 00:03 +0100, A.J.Mechelynck wrote:
>
> Sure. But you don't _have_ to source it. Since 15 June 2006, you can
> use instead
>
> :UseVimball /temp
Tony, you convinced me to try again. But I feel vindicated, again I
experienced the same kind of issues I always seem to hav
On 16-Mar-2007 23:13, John Wiersba wrote:
Thanks for your reply. You're right -- disabling the CASE_INSENSITIVE_FILENAME
compile-time option changes this behavior. However, I disagree that case
insensitivity is the correct behavior. Cygwin is perfectly capable of
supporting case-sensitive g
Tim Chase wrote:
Found this amusing: a while back, for some open web survey of
"cast your vote for your favorite software", I submitted Vim.
There was a mandatory field for the "company" that produced it,
so I put in Bram's name.
Well, a year or so later, somehow that combination of my name and
Steve Hall wrote:
On Fri, 2007-03-16 at 13:26 -0500, fREW wrote:
Isn't a vimball just another archive? It seems, according to the
vimball help file that it's just a bunch of inert files. It doesn't
really run anything... Maybe I am wrong, though.
When you use :source filename, Vim executes
Steve Hall wrote:
On Fri, 2007-03-16 at 21:33 +0100, A.J.Mechelynck wrote:
Steve Hall wrote:
Unfortunately these appear distributed in vimball format only.
The vimball format is actually a text format.
No, vimball is an amalgamation of text files, but it is NOT intended
to be edited in situ
On Fri, 2007-03-16 at 13:26 -0500, fREW wrote:
> Isn't a vimball just another archive? It seems, according to the
> vimball help file that it's just a bunch of inert files. It doesn't
> really run anything... Maybe I am wrong, though.
When you use :source filename, Vim executes the code in file
Gary Johnson wrote:
On 2007-03-16, "A.J.Mechelynck" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Here is how to avoid "modifying system files": Since there is a test at the
start of the netrw scripts to avoid double sourcing, you can test them by
unvimballing them under $VIM/vimfiles, $HOME/vimfiles or $HOME/.v
On Fri, 2007-03-16 at 21:33 +0100, A.J.Mechelynck wrote:
> Steve Hall wrote:
> >
> > Unfortunately these appear distributed in vimball format only.
>
> The vimball format is actually a text format.
No, vimball is an amalgamation of text files, but it is NOT intended
to be edited in situ like a
Michael,
Thanks for your reply. You're right -- disabling the CASE_INSENSITIVE_FILENAME
compile-time option changes this behavior. However, I disagree that case
insensitivity is the correct behavior. Cygwin is perfectly capable of
supporting case-sensitive globbing behavior and unix tools, b
Peng Yu wrote:
Hi,
Can somebody let me know how to show the current value of "path"?
Thanks,
Peng
Which "path"? There are two of them, and they have nothing in common beside
the name.
There is a PATH environment variable, used by the shell to search for
executables, which can be shown as
On 2007-03-16, Richard England <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Peng Yu wrote the following on 03/16/2007 01:16 PM:
> > Hi,
> >
> > Can somebody let me know how to show the current value of "path"?
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Peng
> >
> Inside or outside of vim? Unix/Linux or Windows? Programatically in
On 2007-03-16, "A.J.Mechelynck" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Here is how to avoid "modifying system files": Since there is a test at the
> start of the netrw scripts to avoid double sourcing, you can test them by
> unvimballing them under $VIM/vimfiles, $HOME/vimfiles or $HOME/.vim,
> without r
Found this amusing: a while back, for some open web survey of
"cast your vote for your favorite software", I submitted Vim.
There was a mandatory field for the "company" that produced it,
so I put in Bram's name.
Well, a year or so later, somehow that combination of my name and
Bram as a business
Raphael Bauduin wrote:
Hi,
When opening a file, is there a way to tell vim which name to use for
the swapfile?
I'm writing a little vim config file to edit a CMS' content in a DB.
Each page has a parts named 'body', which the script makes available
through
:Radiant edit pages/Home Page/body
Peng Yu wrote the following on 03/16/2007 01:16 PM:
Hi,
Can somebody let me know how to show the current value of "path"?
Thanks,
Peng
Inside or outside of vim? Unix/Linux or Windows? Programatically in
vim or just as a command?
Try:
:!echo $PATH
inside vim on the command line on
* Peng Yu [2007.03.16 16:30]:
> Can somebody let me know how to show the current
> value of "path"?
:set path?
--
JR
Steve Hall wrote:
From: Charles E Campbell Jr, Fri, March 16, 2007 12:17 pm
Please try netrw v108l which I just put on my website:
http://mysite.verizon.net/astronaut/vim/index.html#NETRW
Unfortunately these appear distributed in vimball format only.
It is unrealistic to expect users to fire
On 16-Mar-2007 20:59, A.J.Mechelynck wrote:
As far as I can tell everything is set up to give case-sensitive
globbing. Bash does case-sensitive globbing at the command line and
in a simple script
#!/bin/bash
echo file*
Do you believe vim is shelling out to do globbing under cygwin,
rathe
Hi,
Can somebody let me know how to show the current value of "path"?
Thanks,
Peng
John Wiersba wrote:
Thanks, Tony, for your reply.
My pleasure. I did see this present post of yours on the list; the reason I
didn't answer is I had nothing significant to contribute.
As far as I can tell everything is set up to give case-sensitive
globbing. Bash does case-sensitive glob
Thomas wrote:
> Let me rephrase my question:
>
> Is it possible to display the omni-completion menu in normal mode, eg
> from a function called in normal mode?
>
> I don't want to set omnifunc or completefunc for this.
No, the omni-completion menu only works in Insert mode.
Using the popup m
On 3/16/07, John north <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
RE: Java syntax folding question
I didn't find the syntax scripts worked well for me with java, so I use this
instead.
zz collapses to function definitions
za completely unfolds a function
" Set folding stuff
:set fmr={,}
:set fdm=marker
:map
Isn't a vimball just another archive? It seems, according to the
vimball help file that it's just a bunch of inert files. It doesn't
really run anything... Maybe I am wrong, though.
-fREW
On 3/16/07, Steve Hall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
From: Charles E Campbell Jr, Fri, March 16, 2007 12:17
From: Charles E Campbell Jr, Fri, March 16, 2007 12:17 pm
>
> Please try netrw v108l which I just put on my website:
> http://mysite.verizon.net/astronaut/vim/index.html#NETRW
Unfortunately these appear distributed in vimball format only.
It is unrealistic to expect users to fire off a home-brew
Brian Neal wrote:
I just downloaded the non-Cream pre-built Vim for Windows (version
7.0.215). The "go up" command (-) in the Netrw plugin no longer seems
to work. Neither the - command or putting the cursor over the ../ and
hitting return does anything anymore. Any ideas? Thanks.
Please try ne
Hello,
I wrote a plugin that displays some information in the commandline using
the echon command when entering a buffer. This works fine, unless a
buffer is entered for the second time and the 'set hidden' option is
enabled - in this case vim overwrites the command line with info like:
"/tmp/fil
Hi,
When opening a file, is there a way to tell vim which name to use for
the swapfile?
I'm writing a little vim config file to edit a CMS' content in a DB.
Each page has a parts named 'body', which the script makes available
through
:Radiant edit pages/Home Page/body
or, for another page:
What is the latest version of netrw? I am have version v108k. I am getting an
error of undefined tfile variable. Can someone help me with this?
TIA
Michael D. Phillips - A computer science enthusiast
I do not hate Windows, I just like the alternatives better.
Linux is my primary choice.
__
From: Mark Woodward , Fri, March 16, 2007 5:50 am
> On Thu, 2007-03-15 at 09:41 -0500, Brian Neal wrote:
> >
> > I just downloaded the non-Cream pre-built Vim for Windows (version
> > 7.0.215). The "go up" command (-) in the Netrw plugin no longer
> > seems to work. Neither the - command or puttin
RE: Java syntax folding question
I didn't find the syntax scripts worked well for me with java, so I use this
instead.
zz collapses to function definitions
za completely unfolds a function
" Set folding stuff
:set fmr={,}
:set fdm=marker
:map zz :set foldlevel=1^M1G
:map za :set foldlevel=10
Let me rephrase my question:
Is it possible to display the omni-completion menu in normal mode, eg
from a function called in normal mode?
I don't want to set omnifunc or completefunc for this.
Regards,
Thomas.
Hi,
I'm using vim7.0 on CentOS 4.3.
In my .vimrc, I add a colorscheme command:
colorscheme desert
When I source my session file, I found all the highlight groups defined in
plugins are cleared. Then I turn on verbose and sourced the session file
again, and found that vim firstly find desert col
Hi all,
On Thu, 2007-03-15 at 09:41 -0500, Brian Neal wrote:
> Hi -
>
> I just downloaded the non-Cream pre-built Vim for Windows (version
> 7.0.215). The "go up" command (-) in the Netrw plugin no longer seems
> to work. Neither the - command or putting the cursor over the ../ and
> hitting retu
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