On 11/29/2009 06:18 AM, satuon wrote:
> On Nov 29, 4:43 am, Christian Brabandt <[email protected]> wrote:
>   
>> That means, vim is expecting a second <Ctrl-> Letter, to choose the
>> completion you want. There are several different ways of completion:
>>
>> 1. Whole lines                                          |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-L|
>> 2. keywords in the current file                         |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-N|
>> 3. keywords in 'dictionary'                             |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-K|
>> 4. keywords in 'thesaurus', thesaurus-style             |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-T|
>> 5. keywords in the current and included files           |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-I|
>> 6. tags                                                 |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-]|
>> 7. file names                                           |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-F|
>> 8. definitions or macros                                |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-D|
>> 9. Vim command-line                                     |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-V|
>> 10. User defined completion                             |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-U|
>> 11. omni completion                                     |i_CTRL-X_CTRL-O|
>> 12. Spelling suggestions                                |i_CTRL-X_s|
>> 13. keywords in 'complete'                              |i_CTRL-N|
>>     
> I've tried some of them (tags seems the most promising), but they don't work
> quite as I extpected.
>   

I generally use the omni-completion functionality, using the
pythoncomplete script from here:
http://www.vim.org/scripts/script.php?script_id=1542

I also update the syntax highlighting support for Vim by
installing this:
http://www.vim.org/scripts/script.php?script_id=790

I found some inspiration here as well:
http://dancingpenguinsoflight.com/2009/02/python-and-vim-make-your-own-ide/

Michael Henry

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