On Jun 14, 2012, at 7:13 AM, Tim Chase wrote: > This points to the 'tw'/'wm' issue I mentioned in my follow-up > email. If you want to clean them up, it's usually pretty easy with > > :g/^\</,'}-j > > (you can insert a leading range before the "g" if you only want to > touch a subset of your file; and you can use some other > "first-line-of-paragraph" regex instead of "^\<" which is roughly "a > word at the beginning of the line")
Now that I've diagnosed the problem, and am no longer generating newlines in the middle of paragraphs, I'd like to use this when I encounter the places that do have them. What do I do? When I am in a file in which I want to run it just enter the script into the vim command line and run it? ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Eric Weir Decatur, GA USA [email protected] "Imagining the other is a powerful antidote to fanaticism and hatred." - Amos Oz -- 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
