Ben Farquhar wrote:
Hi,

Im doing vimtutor. In particular, this:

1. Start editing the "vimrc" file.  This depends on your system:
         :e ~/.vimrc             for Unix
         :e $VIM/_vimrc          for MS-Windows

   2. Now read the example "vimrc" file contents:
         :r $VIMRUNTIME/vimrc_example.vim

   3. Write the file with:
         :w

   The next time you start Vim it will use syntax highlighting.
   You can add all your preferred settings to this "vimrc" file.
   For more information type  :help vimrc-intro


And the first time i did :e~/.vimrc it was allowing me to edit. then i
got off the page as i didntk know what to type. Now i cant even open
the file to edit as when i type the command :e ~/.vimrc it says: E37:
No write since last change (add ! to override). And so i just open the
example  :r $VIMRUNTIME/vimrc_example.vim and use "v" to select it and
use :w vimrc to write it to my vimrc file and it says the same thing.

I'm going to make a few guesses, but this is what I think has happened:

* you edited ~/.vimrc
* you changed ~/.vimrc, but did not exit vim
* you told vim to edit ~/.vimrc again -- thus the changes you made to ~/.vimrc would be lost.

Vim is telling you that you have a Vim window open with the ~/.vimrc file; by using :e again, you're telling vim to (re-)read ~/.vimrc, wiping out what's currently in that window. Are you sure that that's what you want? Vim has told you that to proceed to wipe out your changes, use :e! ~/.vimrc (that "add ! to override" message). Now for a guess: you've opened a second instance of Vim and you're trying to edit the same file again. I suggest looking for the first instance of Vim that you've got running and to save (or not save) that window. Plus, I suggest using vimtutor.

Regards,
Chip Campbell

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