This may not be the place to ask about this but: I recently had the misery of trying to work with vim on a Redhat Linux distribution at a university. By default, apparently (version 7.3) is severely crippled with minus signs next to almost every feature one can think of -- command line completion, the ability to format comments -- etc. They call it a ``minimal'' version.

Redhat's ``enhanced'' version is not - It adds one or two trivial features.

I tried building a decent vim from src.rpm, but had the usual nightmare: libraries were the wrong version, files were in the wrong directory, one had to be root, etc. etc. I tried to build vim from regular source, and laughed at the vim.org claim that ``building vim is easy''.

I have never found building a complex binary from source ``easy'' unless one did it on one's own OS, and had full knowledge of the locations and requirements that the original author intended -- dispite the claims of gnu's autoconf etc.

Any ideas why Redhat wants to convert vim back to the limitations of the old vi?

any ideas where to find an rpm package of vim for fedora or linux that is not severely crippled?

OK - that is my tirade. Any suggestions?


--
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

Reply via email to