On 03/09/12 13:11, Cesar Romani wrote:
On 09/03/2012 12:43 p.m., Tim Chase wrote:
%s/.*/\='['.toupper(submatch(0)).'](#'.substitute(tolower(submatch(0)),
' ', '-', 'g').')'
  >
  >  -tim

Thanks a lot, it works fine, but if I use it under :execute and try to
convert:

Véase Vaya con Dios

to:

[VAYA CON DIOS](#vaya-con-dios)

there are some problems with quotes, as in:

execute '%s/Véase
\(.*\)/\='['.toupper(submatch(1)).'](#'.substitute(tolower(submatch(1)),
' ', '-', 'g').')'."'"

Is there any reason you're trying to do it with an :exec rather than just calling it directly? If you must use :exec then you need to use different quotes around the whole thing. Since my example uses single-quotes ('), you can wrap the whole thing in double-quotes for the :exec with the caveat that the "\" needs to be escaped:

exec "%s/Véase.*/\\='['.toupper(submatch(0)).']#'.substitute(tolower(submatch(0)), ' ', '-', 'g')"

because the single-quotes close your opening quote that you use in your exec. Alternatively, you can switch the internal quotes to double-quotes and then wrap the whole thing in single-quotes which obviates the need to escape the backslash:

exec '%s/.*/\="[".toupper(submatch(0))."]#".substitute(tolower(submatch(0)), " ", "-", "g")'


-tim




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