On Jan 24, 11:46 pm, Tim Chase <[email protected]> wrote: > > I m using vim to write literature texts. Not code (ok I > > use vim for editing my linux config too ) but dense texts. > > Lines are longs, I use warp, so it make me large blocs of > > texts. Hard to read. For me the solution would be to be able > > to set the line spacing (and maybe non-propotional fonts, it s > > an other subject) to something like 1,5 or 2. > > In gvim (not sure you can do it in (non-g)vim, though your > terminal may offer some similar setting), you can set the > 'linespace' option to something other than 0 for wider leading. > > :help 'linespace' > :set lsp=10 "or whatever feels comfortable to you > > The units are pixels.
Great ! Exactly what I was looking for. How can I miss this simple option after searches on google ??? Anyway Thank’s a lot. > There's a parallel thread on the ML regarding monospaced vs. > proportional fonts -- I believe in one of the environments > (GTK2?) you can specify that vim *displays* a proportional font, > but it does it in a monospaced fashion which just looks *REALLY* > ugly, IMHO :) More than ugly :) Chance is that there’s more and more great mono- spaced fonts (inconsolata, Droid-sans-mono, monaco, envy-code-R…) Idealy, i’d like vim to be able to use pango or something like that, cause I like some proportional fonts too, but line spacing was much more important for me. I’ve set it to 8. > Hope this helps, Realy, thank’s a lot. Olivier. -- You received this message from the "vim_use" maillist. For more information, visit http://www.vim.org/maillist.php
