Au contraire. I'm running Debian with the vim and vim-gtk packages installed. The command "gvim" is softlinked to "vim." I'm used to the vim command only running in shell and not involving the GTK version, where gvim does. I think that recent versions have changed this functionality so that "vim" searches for the DISPLAY environment variable, and if present, fires up the GUI code.
Does anyone know if there is a variable which can shut this off? On Tue, 12 Nov 2002, Peter Jay Salzman wrote: > damn, matt. you're good! :) > > i thought rusty used debian though. this doesn't seem like something > debian would do... > > pete > > begin Matt Roper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > I think some distributions build the vim executable in such a way that the > > GTK interface is always used by default (i.e. without the -g option and > > without running 'gvim'). When Rustry tries to edit files as root, the > > GTK interface fails to connect to the X server so it falls back to the > > console interface after displaying the warning messages he describes. > > > > > > Matt > _______________________________________________ > vox-tech mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://lists.lugod.org/mailman/listinfo/vox-tech > -- R. Douglas Barbieri [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.dooglio.net "That government is best which governs the least, because its people discipline themselves." -- Thomas Jefferson GPG Fingerprint: FE6A 6A57 2B95 7594 E534 BFEE 45F1 9E5E F30A 8A27 GPG Public key : http://www.dooglio.net/dooglio.gpg _______________________________________________ vox-tech mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.lugod.org/mailman/listinfo/vox-tech
