On Mon, Oct 13, 2008 at 4:12 PM, björn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>
> 2008/10/13 Jeremy Conlin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> >
> > I must have mistyped something, but now it seems to work on my *Intel* :P
> > MacBook Pro.
>
> Good! :-)
>
> > I'm not exactly sure if it did what I expected.  As I explained in a
> > previous email, my intention for this was to use some of the built-in
> maps
> > provided with latex-suite.  I haven't yet gotten these to work, but it's
> not
> > necessarily the fault of MacVim.  I have attached a screen shot of the
> new
> > MacVim.  When macmeta is on and I press option-b I get the "a" with a
> hat;
> > with macmeta off (default) I get the little integral symbol which is what
> I
> > got before.  I'm not familiar enough with Unicode and everything else
> that
> > is involved here to know if an a with a hat is what should show up.  Does
> > anyone else know?
>
> It seems to me that you don't have <M-a> bound to anything.  Pressing
> Alt-key will still insert text unless you bind the key to something.
> All the patch does is that it allows you to bind to e.g. <M-a>.  Try
>
> :imap <M-a> M-a
>
> Then enter insert mode and hit alt-a, exit insert mode and toggle
> 'macmeta' (:set invmmta), enter insert mode and hit alt-a again and
> you'll see what I am talking about.
>
> In your screenshot you are editing a file without the ".tex" extension
> so the latex suite maps won't have been loaded.  Open a .tex file and
> try the alt-keys that you want and see how that goes.
>

You're right, the file I was editing was not a tex file.  It was a poor
example.  Now that I try it again (on a tex file) it is working as expected.
  Thanks a lot Björn for the quick patch and for walking me through all my
mistakes.

Jeremy

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