You are right. It seems that gentoo is distributing the source code
without the runtime/spell dir. It took me your e-mail to prompt me to
grab the tarball from the ftp site, because usually the tarballs
gentoo distribute are the same as the original.
I'll play with it and write back when I get
On 2/17/07, A.J.Mechelynck [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Once you find a colorscheme which pleases you (or if you write your own), you
can place the appropriate line in your vimrc.
Thanks.
I tried torte, slate, shine, ron, peachpuff, pablo, murphy, morning,
koehler, evening, elflord, desert,
Hi,
Is there any way to find two specific items of an ascii table of the
same column but of two adjacent rows ?
I am looking for some vimish solution - there is of course a way to
specify an highly complex and longish regexp which is very table
specific...
Is there a way to say item
Is there any way to find two specific items of an ascii table of the
same column but of two adjacent rows ?
I'm not quite sure what you're trying to do on the data you
described in your 2nd posting, so I'm divining intent as well as
a solution. Perhaps with your intent as well, a better
From: A.J.Mechelynck [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Vertical regexp
Date: Sat, 17 Feb 2007 16:10:50 +0100
Meino Christian Cramer wrote:
From: A.J.Mechelynck [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Vertical regexp
Date: Sat, 17 Feb 2007 15:46:19 +0100
Meino Christian Cramer wrote:
Hi,
Is
On 2/17/07, Kim Schulz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Fri, 16 Feb 2007 02:37:28 +0100
Bram Moolenaar [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi all,
Google code has now added support for a wiki. This means open source
projects can have a wiki that's free, fast and reliable
(hopefully :-).
From: Tim Chase [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Vertical regexp
Date: Sat, 17 Feb 2007 09:11:36 -0600
Is there any way to find two specific items of an ascii table of the
same column but of two adjacent rows ?
I'm not quite sure what you're trying to do on the data you
described in your
I know every ex command starts with a colon.
Is the reverse true in every case?
Is _every_ command that starts with a colon an ex command?
Examples
:help Is this an ex command?
:versionIs this?
:blahblah This?
Larry
--
Larry Alkoff N2LA - Austin TX
Using Thunderbird on
Short explanation, what I intent to do:
I have two directory trees. One is on my hd, the other one on a
DVD-RAM, both containing lots of files. The directory structure
is very similiar.
To proof, that the DVD-RAM has no file, which does not exist on the
hd I generate a checksum,
On 2/17/07, Larry Alkoff [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I know every ex command starts with a colon.
Is the reverse true in every case?
Is _every_ command that starts with a colon an ex command?
Examples
:help Is this an ex command?
:versionIs this?
:blahblah This?
If you
I know every ex command starts with a colon.
Is the reverse true in every case?
Is _every_ command that starts with a colon an ex command?
Examples
:help Is this an ex command?
:version Is this?
:blahblah This?
My understanding is that _yes_, typing the colon
On 2/17/07, Larry Alkoff [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'll see about installing the bigger brothers.
Be careful. They will be watching you.
Yakov
Hi Bram,
I just heard about your recent talk at google, entitled
The Seven Habits Of Effective Text Editing 2.
(
http://google-code-updates.blogspot.com/2007/02/open-source-developers-google-speaker.html
)
The original seven habits of effective text editing was fascinating and
useful. I am
Tim Chase wrote:
I know every ex command starts with a colon.
Is the reverse true in every case?
Is _every_ command that starts with a colon an ex command?
Examples
:help Is this an ex command?
:versionIs this?
:blahblah This?
My understanding is that _yes_, typing
Jimmy Mack skrev:
Hi Bram,
I just heard about your recent talk at google, entitled
The Seven Habits Of Effective Text Editing 2.
(
http://google-code-updates.blogspot.com/2007/02/open-source-developers-google-speaker.html
)
The original seven habits of effective text editing was fascinating
On sobota 17 luty 2007, VIM mail list wrote:
The original seven habits of effective text editing was fascinating
and useful. I am sure that I'm not the only vimmer who would be
interested in hearing more about this updated version. However, I can't
find any links to either a video or a
Thanks, Mikolaj and Jonas. That's exactly what I was looking for.
- Original Message
From: Mikolaj Machowski [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: vim@vim.org
Sent: Saturday, February 17, 2007 12:25:32 PM
Subject: Re: The Seven Habits Of Effective Text Editing 2
On sobota 17 luty 2007, VIM mail list
Any way to indent json correctly on vim?
I recall that on 6.4 version we needed an external syntax file for
javascript. Is it still the case?
it's driving me nuts to have weird tabulation put allover the place...
thanks
ps: json sample
Obj = {
att1: 'val1',
att2: 'val2',
}
--
Gabriel
Hi Yakov,
On Sat, 2007-02-17 at 19:06 +0200, Yakov Lerner wrote:
On 2/17/07, Larry Alkoff [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I know every ex command starts with a colon.
Is the reverse true in every case?
Is _every_ command that starts with a colon an ex command?
Examples
:help Is
Bram Moolenaar wrote:
Using the project name VimTips would be good.
Everyone here is used to the name Vim Tips so VimTips sounds good, but on
a wiki I suggest that the name should be just Vim.
It seems logical to me that a Vim Tips wiki would start with a (brief) page
outlining what Vim
Larry Alkoff wrote:
Tim Chase wrote:
I know every ex command starts with a colon.
Is the reverse true in every case?
Is _every_ command that starts with a colon an ex command?
Examples
:helpIs this an ex command?
:versionIs this?
:blahblahThis?
My understanding is that
* Tim Chase [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2007-02-17 10:58]:
Hmm...this sounds like something I'd do outside of vim, though
I'll try my hand at a vim solution too. On a *nix system, I'd
use your original source files (hd.txt and dvd.txt) and the
join tool.
bash join -a 1 (sort hd.txt) (sort
Hi,
VIM will save the last searched keyword and each time we start a new
edit session, when we just press /, the VIM will search the last
searched keyword.
But currently this feature is user wide, but not file wide. Suppose I
open a file a.txt searchd a-key, b.txt then seach b-key, can I
Hi,
On 2/17/07, A.J.Mechelynck [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Larry Alkoff wrote:
Tim Chase wrote:
I know every ex command starts with a colon.
Is the reverse true in every case?
Is _every_ command that starts with a colon an ex command?
Pretty much any command you can use in ex mode, one can
A.J.Mechelynck wrote:
Thanks Tim, Yakov and Martin.
I'll just ASSume from now on that, if it starts with a colon,
it may as be an ex command.
Very interesting information on the use of ex.
Larry
Vhat Vim calls ex-commands are prefixed by a colon when typed at the
command-line (the colon is
Jimmy -
I just heard about your recent talk at google, entitled
The Seven Habits Of Effective Text Editing 2.
(
http://google-code-updates.blogspot.com/2007/02/open-source-developers-google-speaker.html
)
The original seven habits of effective text editing was fascinating
and useful.
John Beckett wrote:
Bram Moolenaar wrote:
Using the project name VimTips would be good.
Everyone here is used to the name Vim Tips so VimTips sounds good, but on
a wiki I suggest that the name should be just Vim.
I'm sure we will use the wiki for other things than tips some day.
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