Thank you Bjorn (as usual) for the prompt reply!

Best.

Daniele

On Aug 3, 3:59 pm, björn <[email protected]> wrote:
> 2009/8/3 Daniele Avitabile:
>
>
>
>
>
> > Hi all,
> > sorry for duplicating, but I just realised that the code snippet is not
> > visualised correctly, therefore I re-write my topic with an attachment
> > With Snapshot 47, open the attachment (spaces at the beginning of each line
> > are essential)
>
> > Imagine you want to indent all at once the code in curly brackets.
> > 1) place the cursor on the second line, on the first letter "n", just
> > underneath the "i" of "if"
> > 2) Press "Ctrl-v" and enter Visual Block. Press "j" in sequence to
> > highlight
> > until the last-but-one line
> > 3) press ">"
> > 4) Look at what happens at the 4th line. The indented version of
>
> > nonzeroValues[numNonzeroEntries]  = nu*lambda2X;
>
> > reads
>
> > onzeroValues[numNonzeroEntries]  = nu*lambda2X;
>
> > In other words, the initial "n" of this line has been eaten. Do I do
> > something wrong or is this a bug?
>
> Hi Daniele,
>
> First of all: this is clearly not a MacVim specific bug so you should
> post to vim-dev.  (You can convince yourself of this by reproducing
> the problem in command line Vim [the pre-installed version].)
>
> I don't know if this is a bug or not, but I certainly would not use
> block-select for what you are trying to do.  Instead use line-select
> (Shift-a) to select the lines (and maybe use = to indent instead of >,
> but that's not the problem here).  If I use line-select there are no
> problems, with block-select the "n" disappears as you've noticed.
>
> Björn
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