Wonderful! Thank yo so much!
On 8月14日, 上午12时12分, Gary Johnson <[email protected]> wrote: > On 2010-08-13, eliweiq001 wrote: > > suppose I have such sentences in vimrc: > > > source .\mydir\aaa.vim > > set xxxdir=.\mydir > > > and if now I add a new a variable > > > let yyy = ".\mydir" > > > Now can I use the variable yyy instead of .\mydir in the sentences > > above ? How ? > > The command to help you do this is :execute, which can be > abbreviated to :exe. See > > :help :execute > > For example, your two commands above could be written as > > exe "source " . yyy . "\aaa.vim" > exe "set xxxdir=" . yyy > > Since the backslash (\) is also used to escape or quote the > character following, you may have to use \\ instead of just \ or > enclose the string containing \ in single-quotes (') instead of > double-quotes ("). (I didn't test the first command to see.) It is > often safest to use forward slashes (/) instead of backslashes to > separate directories in a path, even when using Vim on Windows. Vim > knows how to translate them to backslashes before giving the string > to a Windows command and you avoid the quoting issues. > > An alternative way to set Vim options is to use :let instead of > :set, as described here: > > :help :let-& > > Your second command could then be written as > > let &xxxdir = yyy > > Regards, > Gary -- You received this message from the "vim_use" maillist. Do not top-post! Type your reply below the text you are replying to. For more information, visit http://www.vim.org/maillist.php
