On Mon, 21 Jan 2019, Ivan Kuznetsov wrote:
I think that is because my lilypond installation
automatically puts the correct files in /usr/share/vim/ and so
lilypond syntax highlighting works immediately for me upon a new
OS installation. But then, I use Fedora. What OS do
you work under?
Mason Hock writes:
>
> I use vim for everything except large Lilypond projects that consist of
> multiple input files. The ability to click on an object in the score and
> jump to that place in the code, even if the file containing that code is
> not open, outweighs for me vim's advantages as a
On 01/21, Ivan Kuznetsov wrote:
> I have looked at Frescobaldi, but once one is fluent
> with a Unix editor (which means vim or emacs)
> Frescobaldi and other third party tools are
> _not_ a time saver.
I use vim for everything except large Lilypond projects that consist of
multiple input files.
I am a lifelong vim user and I cannot imagine any other way
to enter or manipulate text, be it for web pages,
documents (which I create with Latex) or lilypond.
I have looked at Frescobaldi, but once one is fluent
with a Unix editor (which means vim or emacs)
Frescobaldi and other third party
On 1/21/19, Rue wrote:
> I don't actually have this path. What I have is
> "/usr/share/lilypond/2.19.82/", but there's no vim folder though.
If you’ve installed LilyPond through your distribution’s packages,
then the relevant files should have already been put in
/usr/share/vim/, e.g.
I'm somewhat new to Vim and just started learning Lilypond, so I was
wondering if anyone with more experience might be able to share their
experience regarding workflow, plugins you're using, and in general, how
you've set up Vim as a comfortable environment for working with Lilypond.
Whether it's