On 04/28/2011 09:49 PM, Jean-Rene David wrote:
* Tim Chase [2011.04.28 14:40]:
Because each of your files have the same number of lines, it doesn't
register a change. For a full example:
bash$ cd ~/tmp; mkdir moreless; cd moreless
bash$ for i in 10 20 30 40 50; do seq $i> ${i}.txt ; done
bash$ sed -i '5s/$/@/' 30.txt
bash$ sed -i '10s/$/@/' 50.txt
bash$ vim -o *.txt
:windo g/@/q
Got it now.
The problem is that the :g command just subtracts the number of lines in
the buffer where it starts from the number of lines in the buffer where
it ends to produce that message.
Of course it assumes those two buffers are the same but it doesn't
*check* that it is so.
That's sorta what I figured, as I mentioned in my original post:
TKC> lines before the ":g" and comparing it to number of lines after
TKC> the ":g", and reporting the difference, but not noticing
that the
TKC> file/buffer/window had changed in the process.
Thanks for throwing together a patch.
-tim
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