Have a look at WinWalker.vim. It does this sort of thing.
On 5/16/06, Marc Weber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Mon, May 15, 2006 at 03:43:40PM -0700, Gerald Lai wrote:
> On Tue, 16 May 2006, Marc Weber wrote:
>
> >I like the way you can move windows in wmii.
> >
> >1 | 2
> >--+--
> >3 | 4
> >
I'm not sure I fully get what's going on, but I think is has to do
with the window that is automatically cloned to start the tab, which
is then converted to an empty buffer window.
On 5/15/06, Hari Krishna Dara <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Just wanted to send the script that I used, in case any
Search your registry (with regedit or something better) for any
conflicting entries for Vim6 and Vim7.
On 5/16/06, James Eibisch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
In Windows 2000 I'm having problems associating file extensions with Vim
7.
I've been using Vim 6.2 (GUI version) for a while, and had asso
Did you try putting these at the bottom of your vimrc? If so, then it
might be a plugin or script you are using which is causing them to
reset. Try --noplugin.
On 5/15/06, Antun Karlovac <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I just upgraded from GVIM 6.3 to GVIM 7, and my highlight colors no
longer work.
On 5/15/06, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I haven't seen much discussion of the intermediate solution: have a
> command shell that *isn't* a terminal emulator.
>
> There have been several attempts at this, with varying degrees of
> success. A command shell window which does goo
I'm just trying out vim 7.0 but I must be misunderstanding vimspell.
The commmand :SpellCheck gives "Not an editor command" and \ss does
nothing. I do have ispell in place.
I'm sure I'm missing something important in the help file but if someone
can point me to the right place I'd be grateful.
A
Benji Fisher wrote:
> On Fri, May 12, 2006 at 07:21:06PM +0200, Alexander Skwar wrote:
>>
>> So, if the documentation is correct, then I wonder, why
>> $HOME/_vimrc isn't used. On MS-DOS and Win32, it should
>> be used before $VIM/_vimrc is used.
>
> I would like to see the results of these
Hi!
--- Anthony Campbell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The commmand :SpellCheck gives "Not an editor command" and \ss does
> nothing. I do have ispell in place.
Obviously, there is no editor command "SpellCheck" and you don't
need ispell, since Vim has an internal spell checker. Just do
:h spell
Hi, all
I encounter a strange problem when use vim7, the following steps
will reproduce the problem:
1. run vim with command: vim -u NONE -U NONE
2. set the follwoing options:
:set nocompatible
:set completeopt+=longest
3. input some text into the buffer like this:
On 16 May 2006, Georg Dahn wrote:
> Hi!
>
> --- Anthony Campbell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > The commmand :SpellCheck gives "Not an editor command" and \ss does
> > nothing. I do have ispell in place.
>
> Obviously, there is no editor command "SpellCheck" and you don't need
> ispell, since Vim
On Tue, 2006-05-16 at 09:52:29 +0100, Anthony Campbell sent:
>Thanks for the clarification. These commands work fine, which is
>what I was looking for. But ":h spell" produces information only
>about vimspell and vimspell commands. It does not give the
>information you supplied. I still don't see h
I wrote:
> In Windows 2000 I'm having problems associating file extensions
> with Vim 7.
-
Eric replied:
> Search your registry (with regedit or something better) for any
> conflicting entries for Vim6 and Vim7.
--
On 16 May 2006, Pete Johns wrote:
> On Tue, 2006-05-16 at 09:52:29 +0100, Anthony Campbell sent:
> >Thanks for the clarification. These commands work fine, which is
> >what I was looking for. But ":h spell" produces information only
> >about vimspell and vimspell commands. It does not give the
> >i
First make a backup copy of your registry with File/Export.
I'm not an expert with the registry, but it usually works to delete
entries for obsolete packages. If you change the entries from one
string to another, you can still end up with duplicates.
Re-install Vim7 afterwards if it isn't alrea
Hi alltogether,
I'm new to this list, but not new to vim, so let me say "hello" to
everybody.
I'm not that poweruser, but I hate unnecesary repeating things and vim
allways gave me, what I needed :o))
Im working on ubuntu-linux 5.10 with the boxed vim Version 6.3.78
I subscribed this list to get
Hi,
I would like to map the right-clic-key (to make myself clear it's the
one between Win flag and Ctrl key)
so I can have the suggestion when I'm spellchecking a file.
How is it named under vim ?
Thank you for your help
Eddine.
If you mean the right-shift key, I don't think shift/control/alt/meta
are delivered by themselves to Vim. You'll have to pick
shift-somekey.
On 5/16/06, Baha-Eddine MOKADEM <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi,
I would like to map the right-clic-key (to make myself clear it's the
one between Win fl
Baha-Eddine MOKADEM wrote:
Hi,
I would like to map the right-clic-key (to make myself clear it's the
one between Win flag and Ctrl key)
so I can have the suggestion when I'm spellchecking a file.
How is it named under vim ?
Thank you for your help
Eddine.
Not sure Vim sees that key. In In
On Tue, May 16, 2006 at 04:06:27PM +0800, Linsong wrote:
> Hi, all
>I encounter a strange problem when use vim7, the following steps
> will reproduce the problem:
>1. run vim with command: vim -u NONE -U NONE
>2. set the follwoing options:
> :set nocompatible
> :set com
I don't know what file to edit to get ISO-8859-1 automatically.
When editing a file, I would do :set fenc=latin1 or :set enc=latin1.
Sometimes it does work, sometimes it doesn't. I want something that
set my encoding at start, or better according to what characters I'm
entering.
Help me please.
I reported this same issue to the mailing list a week or two ago.
Bram wrote:
I know about this: When you type the "." and there no complete
match was inserted (showing the longest common text in this example),
Vim assumes you are extending the text to reduce the list of matches.
Thus the comple
Hi,
I'm pretty new to Vim, but went through several tutorials, quick
references, a number of help pages, and briefly through the Vim book. I
also hear announcements about Vim7's enhanced built-in support for HTML
editing. I even tried to play a bit with the auto-completion (got some
'completion
At 10:30 PM 5/15/2006, you wrote:
On Mon, May 15, 2006 at 12:01:35PM -0500, Donal wrote:
>
> Here is my vim\myfiletypes.vim
>
> " myfiletypes.vim
> augroup filetype
> " FoxPro
> au! BufRead,BufNewFile *.prg,*.mpr,*.sprset filetype=foxpro
> " Cold Fusion
> au BufNewFile,BufRead *.cfm,*.cfi
Ivan Vecerina wrote:
[...]
For example, here are a few simple things I need to do all the time:
[...]
- get vim to automatically close/complete the innermost previously opened
tag.
[...]
see the closeag.vim plugin,
http://vim.sourceforge.net/scripts/script.php?script_id=13
Bst regards,
Donal wrote:
And I have confirmed that clipper.vim IS the script being used. Here
is a question... is myfiletypes.vim still being used, or has it been
deprecated? I started using vim way back in 3.x... all I can find in
the help files refers to filetypedetect and the ftdetect directory...
Hi,
for what keyword I have to look in the online-help to find a hint
how to copy any text from a buffer as any part of a command currently
being edited in the commandline ?
kind regards,
mcc
On Tue, 2006-05-16 at 18:45:52 +0200, Meino Christian Cramer sent:
>Hi,
>
> for what keyword I have to look in the online-help to find a hint
> how to copy any text from a buffer as any part of a command currently
> being edited in the commandline ?
>
:help c_CTRL-R
Hope this helps;
--paj
--
Pe
Meino Christian Cramer wrote:
Hi,
for what keyword I have to look in the online-help to find a hint
how to copy any text from a buffer as any part of a command currently
being edited in the commandline ?
kind regards,
mcc
If by "buffer" you mean what the Vim docs call a "register", se
Is there any *easy* way to tell the Vim 7 spell-checker not to flag
single letters as spelling errors?
For example, lists such as
a. Report(s) to be delivered blah blah
b. asdfasdf asdf sadf fd
c. sdfg dfg sdgf dfg
will have "(s)", "b." and "c." flagged as misspellings.
--
_
Hello,
On 5/16/06, Friedrich Strohmaier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi alltogether,
I'm new to this list, but not new to vim, so let me say "hello" to
everybody.
I'm not that poweruser, but I hate unnecesary repeating things and vim
allways gave me, what I needed :o))
Im working on ubuntu-linux
On Tue, May 16, 2006 at 11:22:00AM -0500, Donal wrote:
> At 10:30 PM 5/15/2006, you wrote:
> >On Mon, May 15, 2006 at 12:01:35PM -0500, Donal wrote:
> >>
> >> Here is my vim\myfiletypes.vim
> >>
> >> " myfiletypes.vim
> >> augroup filetype
> >> " FoxPro
> >> au! BufRead,BufNewFile *.prg,*.mpr,*.spr
I am dying to use the new v of vim but, while using the exe installer,
I get repeated errors while trying to install to the default
directory: C:/Program Files/Vim/vim70. I am alerted repeatedly that
the "path must end in Vim". Installing to the directory C:/Program
Files/Vim has caused a lot of
Adam, I've created an windows-based installer for Vim for my own uses, but
you're welcome to try it and see if it works for you. If you're interested,
you can grab a copy from here:
http://www.legroom.net/~jbreland/transfer/vim70.exe
I'd recommend uninstalling any existing copies. I created thi
Recently I installed the vim 7. One of the new features is the omni
complete. I wanted to try this and saw there is a tutorial for the sql omni
complete. I do not have the dbext installed. So I expect only the static
completion to function.
I start a new file t.sql. I check that the omnicomplete f
Hi all,
I'm re-writing my cvscommand.vim plugin to handle both CVS and
Subversion version control systems. I'm currently implementing some
of the functionality through function references that define common
operations for each source control system in a dictionary specfic to
that system. I hav
Hello Yegappan, *,
Yegappan Lakshmanan schrieb am Dienstag, 16. Mai 2006 20:56:
>Hello,
>
>On 5/16/06, Friedrich Strohmaier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[..]
>> Try the following (in normal mode):
>> 1. Take text from anywhere with the mouse
>> 2. clear the target area and enter insert mode typin
On 5/16/06, Bob Hiestand <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I'm re-writing my cvscommand.vim plugin to handle both CVS and
Subversion version control systems. I'm currently implementing some
of the functionality through function references that define common
operations for each source control system in
A.J.Mechelynck wrote:
Meino Christian Cramer wrote:
Hi,
for what keyword I have to look in the online-help to find a hint
how to copy any text from a buffer as any part of a command currently
being edited in the commandline ?
kind regards,
mcc
If by "buffer" you mean what the Vim
> to insert mode and type s,
> where the is the ctrl-space.
No, means while holding down the CTRL key press the letter "C", not
Space. That would be .
What OS are you running on?
How are you connected to the box (Windows, SSH, Telnet,...).
Try that and let us know what happens.
You can downl
On Tue, May 16, 2006 at 07:12:01PM +0200, A.J.Mechelynck wrote:
> Meino Christian Cramer wrote:
> > for what keyword I have to look in the online-help to find a hint
> > how to copy any text from a buffer as any part of a command currently
> > being edited in the commandline ?
> >
> If by "buffer"
Have you thought about making it a dict function, and passing in and
out via the self dict?
On 5/16/06, Yakov Lerner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 5/16/06, Bob Hiestand <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm re-writing my cvscommand.vim plugin to handle both CVS and
> Subversion version control syste
On 5/16/06, Yakov Lerner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 5/16/06, Bob Hiestand <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm re-writing my cvscommand.vim plugin to handle both CVS and
> Subversion version control systems. I'm currently implementing some
> of the functionality through function references that
On 5/16/06, Eric Arnold <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Have you thought about making it a dict function, and passing in and
out via the self dict?
function Mylen() dict
let self['newkey'] = 'newvalue'
return len(self.data)
endfunction
let mydict = {'data': [0, 1, 2, 3], 'len': func
Does anybody understand why trailing spaces in an "echon" string don't
actually show up?
echon "\ngimme "
let inp = getchar()
echon nr2char(inp)
Hello,
I have a problem with an old hack that works fine in latin1, but starts
to cause problems in UTF-8.
The hack helps to replace activation key-sequences from i-mappings with
their mapped value, which are actually calls to script-local functions.
What is quite odd is that I have a workaround
On Tue, 16 May 2006, Ivan Vecerina wrote:
Hi,
I'm pretty new to Vim, but went through several tutorials, quick
references, a number of help pages, and briefly through the Vim book. I
also hear announcements about Vim7's enhanced built-in support for HTML
editing. I even tried to play a bit with
On Tue, 16 May 2006 at 2:43pm, Bob Hiestand wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I'm re-writing my cvscommand.vim plugin to handle both CVS and
> Subversion version control systems. I'm currently implementing some
> of the functionality through function references that define common
> operations for each sour
On Tue, 16 May 2006, Eric Arnold wrote:
Does anybody understand why trailing spaces in an "echon" string don't
actually show up?
echon "\ngimme "
let inp = getchar()
echon nr2char(inp)
I think echo/echon is doing fine. It's getchar() that's eating up
trailing spaces. Compare @a's for:
:red
Adam Young wrote:
I am dying to use the new v of vim but, while using the exe installer,
I get repeated errors while trying to install to the default
directory: C:/Program Files/Vim/vim70. I am alerted repeatedly that
the "path must end in Vim". Installing to the directory C:/Program
Files/Vim ha
Friedrich Strohmaier wrote:
[...]
So simple and so far away! I was searching, but had no luck to hit.
[...]
You might have tried ":helpgrep clipboard" after all else had failed.
Best regards,
Tony.
Thank you for your response, it you will save me much time looking a
mapping that doesn't not exist as I expected.
Thank you.
Not sure Vim sees that key. In Insert mode, try hitting Ctrl-V (or
Ctrl-Q if you use Ctrl-V to paste) followed by the key in question. If
something is inserted in your bu
On 5/16/06, Gerald Lai <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tue, 16 May 2006, Eric Arnold wrote:
> Does anybody understand why trailing spaces in an "echon" string don't
> actually show up?
>
> echon "\ngimme "
> let inp = getchar()
> echon nr2char(inp)
I think echo/echon is doing fine. It's getchar()
Eric Arnold wrote:
On 5/16/06, Gerald Lai <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tue, 16 May 2006, Eric Arnold wrote:
> Does anybody understand why trailing spaces in an "echon" string don't
> actually show up?
>
> echon "\ngimme "
> let inp = getchar()
> echon nr2char(inp)
I think echo/echon is doing
On Tue, May 16, 2006 at 08:57:57AM -0400, Benji Fisher wrote:
> On Tue, May 16, 2006 at 04:06:27PM +0800, Linsong wrote:
> > Hi, all
> >I encounter a strange problem when use vim7, the following steps
> > will reproduce the problem:
> >1. run vim with command: vim -u NONE -U NONE
> >2.
Very often, I record changes that involves i_^P, and see an issue
replaying them in Vim7. Say, you have text such as:
aaa bbb ccc
ddd eee fff
so on
Now, if I want to change all the 3rd columns to same as the first
column, I usually do this by recording the cw^P^P^[ while on the 3rd
column and re
To add to this, I am surprised that ^C in macro recording is ignored.
Since the first ^P was taking a long time scanning all buffers, I
inserted a ^C after the first ^P to stop scanning (so the macro becomes,
cw^P^C^P^[), and insert the word that comes before the space, but this
got ignored while
On 5/14/2006 8:41 PM, Gerald Lai wrote:
> Encase your function like this:
>
> if !exists("*Source_vimrc")
> function Source_vimrc()
> ...
> endfunction
> endif
Thanks, Gerald. This worked perfectly.
Also, thanks to everyone else for their suggestions. I appreciate the
feedback and read u
From: Thor Andreassen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Text -> commandline
Date: Tue, 16 May 2006 22:45:30 +0200
Hi,
The yank-trick (first yank the stuff, then CTRL-R" in the commandline
fits currently my needs best.
Thanks a lot!
mcc
> On Tue, May 16, 2006 at 07:12:01PM +0200, A.J.Mechel
On 5/17/06, Luc Hermitte <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hello,
I have a problem with an old hack that works fine in latin1, but starts
to cause problems in UTF-8.
The hack helps to replace activation key-sequences from i-mappings with
their mapped value, which are actually calls to script-local fun
when i exit my wm (e16), since it doesn't (and shouldn't) close any
other programs, gvim is stuck without an x server, and doesn't handle
this loss gracefully. effectively, it's as if it was kill -9'ed ... and
thus leaves temporary files behind, which i later have to labouriously
clean up.
can it
Ok, I have a really weird questions this time. I use the
selection=exclusive option, because I don't like Vim to select the hidden
"newline" character at the end of lines when I'm copying or deleting an
entire line. However, this has one side effect that I have not been able to
figure out. If I
On Wed, 17 May 2006, Dennis Nezic wrote:
when i exit my wm (e16), since it doesn't (and shouldn't) close any
other programs, gvim is stuck without an x server, and doesn't handle
this loss gracefully. effectively, it's as if it was kill -9'ed ... and
thus leaves temporary files behind, which i l
On Tue, 16 May 2006, Jared wrote:
[snip]
So, my question: is it somehow possible to be able to select the last
character of a line when selecting from right-to-left while using
selection=exclusive?
[snip]
The simplest work around is to hit "ol" (that's oh-el) to select that
last character.
Y
63 matches
Mail list logo