On 26/12/11 10:09, Konstantin Zertsekel wrote:
Oh, thanks a bunch for the answer.
But I rather look for VIM with some GUI.
I am looking for the best recipe to browse and learn Linux Kernel.
Currently I am using VIM with cscope and trinity, which is _very_
efficient combination,
but the lack of GUI is certainly a big downside.
As for now, I think KDevelop is the best in all aspects except the memory...
Still keep testing them.

Thanks,
--- Kosta

Well, why not use a GTK2/Gnome2 Vim GUI? I use that on openSUSE Linux, and it compiles like a breeze. I'm sure the needed development packages exist on your Ubuntu distro just like they exist on my openSUSE. I've seen Ubuntu/Debian users post a oneline apt-get build-dep command meant to install all packages needed to compile gvim with GTK2/Gnome2 on their systems, only I haven't remembered it since SuSE uses a different package management system (the YaST GUI/cursesUI or the zypper CLI).

Or if you don't mind lacking behind some (i.e. use a gvim which isn't Bram's latest and greatest bleeding-edge version) just install the precompiled gvim or vim-x11 (or something) package from Ubuntu. Usually there are several possible packages (typically four or five not including optional plugins), you need at least two and may install them all. By how much it would lack behind varies of course from distro to distro: the current Vim available from openSUSE is a 7.3.322 (compared to 7.3.386 in source form from Bram), I don't know about Ubuntu.


Best regards,
Tony.
--
Software, n.:
        Formal evening attire for female computer analysts.

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