> Hey Nick, > > If you are relatively new to vim, I suggest that you start using the > inbuilt help (:help) as much as possible. > > There a couple of plugins that might make writing code a lot easier: > 1. Nerd Tree > 2. Nerd Commenter > 3. Matchit > 4. Surround.vim > 5. Syntastic > 6. Pyclewn > > (google for them, or search on vim's site) > > I have not used pyclewn myself; I am mostly into Ruby. It might be > advantageous for you considering you are doing C++. > > P.S. : Have a look at Bram's article called "Seven Habbits of > Effective Text Editing" [1] if you have some time. > > [1] http://www.moolenaar.net/habits.html
I don't use all of the following, but mentioning some more good ones, so that it kind of documents itself (one could search the archive): 1. FuzzyFinder (must have :)) 2. Fugitive 3. Command-T 4. pastie 5. camelcasemotion -- Anurag Priyam http://about.me/yeban/ -- 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
