On 4/27/06, Eric Arnold <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 4/27/06, Meino Christian Cramer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > From: James Vega <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > Subject: Re: vim prison ?
> > Date: Thu, 27 Apr 2006 23:08:51 -0400
> >
> > > On Fri, Apr 28, 2006 at 04:52:25AM +0200, Meino Christian Cramer wrote:
> > > > Now I recognize, that file1 does not need any changes and want vim to
> > > > simply "forget" that file. I have "set hidden" in my .vimrc since I
> > > > normally have to edit more than one file. And the files are long and
> > > > loading takes some time ( : ...[converting]... .).
> > > >
> ...
> > > GPG Key: 1024D/61326D40 2003-09-02 James Vega <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >
> > Hi James,
> >
> > thank you for your super fast reply :O) !
> >
> > I searched through the help files before. Ad a newbie to vim it
> > is not simple for me sometimes to find out for what to search...
> >
> > And a simple "grep" ist not /that/ helpful....
>
> First of all, you need to understand all the modes the buffers can be
> in. There are several commands which handle them.
>
> As for grep, are you using :helpgrep ? If you do, then you can use
> :copen to see all the results in a window that will jump to the
> instances. Don't forget ^D with :help
>
P.s. I meant to say, "start by reading all of windows.txt"