I have noticed when I open a Vim session, my formatoptions and
textwidth variables are reset to the default even though I have the
following lines in my .vimrc file:
set linebreak
set textwidth=80
set formatoptions=ncroqt
Does opening a session prevent Vim from looking at ~/.vimrc?
A secondary
On 2/24/07, A.J.Mechelynck [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Jeremy Conlin wrote:
I have noticed when I open a Vim session, my formatoptions and
textwidth variables are reset to the default even though I have the
following lines in my .vimrc file:
set linebreak
set textwidth=80
set formatoptions
On 2/24/07, A.J.Mechelynck [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Jeremy Conlin wrote:
On 2/24/07, A.J.Mechelynck [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Jeremy Conlin wrote:
I have noticed when I open a Vim session, my formatoptions and
textwidth variables are reset to the default even though I have the
following
I have set textwidth=80 and would like Vim to automatically break a
line (between words) when the line gets too big. However, this isn't
working, Vim doesn't seem to be doing anything different. Is there
some other option I need to set?
Thanks,
Jeremy
On 9/29/06, Georg Dahn [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi!
--- Jeremy Conlin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
No, linebreak just *displays* a broken line, I want a *real* broken
line. I want Vim to insert EOLs for me. I thought that is what
textwidth would do.
Of course, you still have to set 'textwidth
On 9/27/06, A.J.Mechelynck [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
A.J.Mechelynck wrote:
Jeremy Conlin wrote:
I have the following as my printoptions
paper:letter
However, I periodically would like it to include
number:y
(or some other option(s)). I was wondering how I could just append
this option
I have the following as my printoptions
paper:letter
However, I periodically would like it to include
number:y
(or some other option(s)). I was wondering how I could just append
this option to the existing printoptions instead of typing the entire
thing out again. Any ideas?
Thanks,
Jeremy
On 7/11/06, Tim Chase [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello all. I have several files where I want to make the same
substitution. I can make the substitute command work on a single
file, but I want to make it work on all the files. I have the files
loaded in buffers in vim. Any suggestions?
I am trying to make a mapping to more easily switch tabs. I wanted to
use CTRL-RightArrow to move to the next tab and CTRL-LeftArrow to
move to the previous tab. However, I can't find in the help files
how to map the arrow keys. Can someone help me?
Thanks,
Jeremy
I have been working on many files in gvim spread over many tabs and
windows. I like this setup and would like to return to it after I
close gvim. Is there any way to keep the gvim state for the next
time? I thought this was called persistence, but couldn't find
anything about it.
Thanks,
the expertise required to test all the tips. I can
screen them to make sure they are appropriate. Would that agree with
anyone?
Jeremy Conlin
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