Thanks Ben,
That is what I needed
On Oct 26, 8:42 am, Ben Schmidt [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
a beginner question, can I reformat entire file code from:
if (...)
{
// some action
}
to:
if (...) {
// some action
}
Thanx.
The '=' command will reformat code.
Hi,
a beginner question, can I reformat entire file code from:
if (...)
{
// some action
}
to:
if (...) {
// some action
}
Thanx.
The '=' command will reformat code.
gg=G
will do from top to bottom (whole file).
But you have to set the indent options to what you want
i think the indent utility may help
2007/10/26, Gary Johnson [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
On 2007-10-26, Ben Schmidt [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
a beginner question, can I reformat entire file code from:
if (...)
{
// some action
}
to:
if (...) {
// some action
On 2007-10-26, Ben Schmidt [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
a beginner question, can I reformat entire file code from:
if (...)
{
// some action
}
to:
if (...) {
// some action
}
Thanx.
The '=' command will reformat code.
The '=' command does not reformat
The FTP repository ftp://ftp.vim.org/pub/vim/patches/7.1/ is now back to
7.1.135, both in individual patches and in the README file. What happened to
the ten latest patchlevels?
Best regards,
Tony.
--
I have come up with a sure-fire concept for a hit television show,
which would be called
The '=' command does not reformat code--it indents code. In
particular, the '=' command will not move the opening brace from one
line to another.
O yeah. Duh. What was I thinking?!
Maybe I was thinking of gq and some set of formatoptions that might possibly
make
it work...dunno...never
Hi:
vim-7.1
I had to make the following change to explicitly bring in
sys/types.h for the test for mode_t to work. I tried
under NetBSD for comparison and on that platform
sys/types.h happens to be brought in by either stdlib.h
or unistd.h but that's not standard.
Regards,
-seanb