Fabian Braennstroem wrote:
> On 2005-03-30, Fabian Braennstroem <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> I am trying 'vim' for a while now and actually like the
>> jumping to place holders indicated by '<++>' with 'C-j'. It
>> is very usefull, when you have small macro/abbreviations
>> including these place holders; e.g. in latex there exist a
>> macro:
>>
>> \frac{<++>}{<++>}<++>
>>
>> So you are able to complete quickly the fraction.
>>
>> Furthermore, defining those 'macros' is pretty easy in vim
>> with the 'imap' funtion; so writing in insert-mode some
>> special shortcut, it expands to the wanted output with those
>> place holders.
>
> I just found 'tempo'. I think that should work for this, but
> I can't find anything like placeholders...Isn't that exactly what is meant by the "points of interest"?
;; A template is defined as a list of items to be inserted in the ;; current buffer at point. Some of the items can be simple strings, ;; while other can control formatting or define special points of ;; interest in the inserted text.
;; If a template defines a "point of interest" that point is inserted ;; in a buffer-local list of "points of interest" that the user can ;; jump between with the commands `tempo-backward-mark' and ;; `tempo-forward-mark'. If the template definer provides a prompt for ;; the point, and the variable `tempo-interactive' is non-nil, the ;; user will be prompted for a string to be inserted in the buffer, ;; using the minibuffer.
-- Kevin Rodgers _______________________________________________ Help-gnu-emacs mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/help-gnu-emacs
