On Thu, 16 Sep 2010, hsitz wrote:
On Sep 16, 12:31 am, "Benjamin R. Haskell" wrote:
That's the gist -- most syntax files are designed to be "main" syntax
files. But, it's not too hard to work around. Most of them set a
'b:current_syntax' variable to prevent other syntax files from being
loaded. So, you can just 'unlet' it.
--
Best,
Ben
Ben -- Beautiful, thank you, the 'unlet' did the trick, and I will
make use of your generalized code.
For me including a Perl source region screws up all the colors in the
document after it. Almost all words become same color for 100 lines
or so, then all switch to a different color for a 100 lines or so,
etc. etc.
It might be worth checking out the latest work from
http://github.com/petdance/vim-perl
Not sure if that's been incorporated back into the Vim hg repo. In my
experience, even though there are still a few warts, it's been much
better than the Perl filetype scripts that ship with 7.2.
As I mentioned, the colors are still wonky, but at least they don't run
over. If they still do, can you send a short example that produces the
problem?
--
Best,
Ben
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