On Mar 14, 2005 21:09 +0100, Sam Ravnborg wrote:
> I already applied your original patch (end of January) but only this week
> it hit Linus' tree.
> I think ctags users will just upgrade if their ctgs does not support
> --extra=+f.
I have ctags-5.4.2 (24 Jan 2003) and it has the --extra=+f
On Wed, Mar 09, 2005 at 09:01:08PM -0500, John Kacur wrote:
> Exuberant ctags can tag file names too. I find this extremely useful
> when browsing kernel source, and so would like to share it with
> everyone. (You can now type ":tag oprof.c" for example, and jump to the
> file with that name.)
>
On Wed, Mar 09, 2005 at 09:01:08PM -0500, John Kacur wrote:
Exuberant ctags can tag file names too. I find this extremely useful
when browsing kernel source, and so would like to share it with
everyone. (You can now type :tag oprof.c for example, and jump to the
file with that name.)
I
On Mar 14, 2005 21:09 +0100, Sam Ravnborg wrote:
I already applied your original patch (end of January) but only this week
it hit Linus' tree.
I think ctags users will just upgrade if their ctgs does not support
--extra=+f.
I have ctags-5.4.2 (24 Jan 2003) and it has the --extra=+f support,
Exuberant ctags can tag file names too. I find this extremely useful
when browsing kernel source, and so would like to share it with
everyone. (You can now type ":tag oprof.c" for example, and jump to the
file with that name.)
I previously sent a patch which naively just appended an "--extra=+f"
Exuberant ctags can tag file names too. I find this extremely useful
when browsing kernel source, and so would like to share it with
everyone. (You can now type :tag oprof.c for example, and jump to the
file with that name.)
I previously sent a patch which naively just appended an --extra=+f to
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