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 --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message from the "vim_mac" maillist. For more information, visit http://www.vim.org/maillist.php -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---
