You're still failing. You're still making it hard for others to help.
Let me show you why.

Excerpts from Steve liu's message of Tue Nov 08 12:51:11 +0100 2011:
> 1) yeah, I've really used help. But result is printed to status line not on
> the text.
Tell people about what you've tried in your email. So your problem is
not printf, but "How to get text into the buffer" (which is something I
had to guess in the last mail)

>     what i want to do is to use vim internal function to print sth. on the
> text, editing.
What. Think about Vim being human and imagine Vim understanding the
English language. Then explain to vim what it should do.
Copy paste this text into your reply to this mail. Then you'll be
offered many nice ways to get your job done.

What do you mean by "print" ? printf outputs to stdout. Vim can't do
that. So its not clear to me what you mean by "print" in the context of
editing text with a text editor.

You usually 
"insert text into a text file at particular position/line/..."
"replace text"
"insert templates you prepared so that you can reuse those lines many
times without retyping"
" .. "

But you don't "printf" - you printf, then insert somewhere.
It looks like you know how to printf. So the remaining issue is how can
I insert a string into a buffer? Now how to determine at which location
the text should be inserted? Why does append() not suffice?
.. Lot's of lots of questions.

> 2) though your word is kind of ...
That's a very bad habit: You should *always* make clear to what you're
referring to. The most common way is "bottom posting" which means:
1) delete everything you don't reply to.
2) put your text below the text you're referring to.

So if you say 'your word' I don't know what you're referring to.
There have been many "words" in my mail. And if you want to talk about
the way I express myself (I'm not a native speaker) "wording" would have
been a better word to say this.


>     sorry for the second time. and thanks very much.
You're welcome. Never feel sorry. Try to improve your communication.
Each additional round trip just means that you've forgotten to add some
important information others need to know before they can help you.

Marc Weber

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