On 01/28/2011 07:27 PM, David Fishburn wrote:
SRSearch optionally takes parameters.
Oh.
I'v already done without srhg.
May be it will be usefull for someone. This function finds DNS zone
serial and
increments it.
function AdjustSerial()
let l:pos = getpos( '.' )
call cursor
It's not about remapping. I'm writing a vimscript in lua. In a function I need
the position of the opening and closing bracket. So in vim I would execute »%«
twice. Than I have both positions. If there would be functions for the basic
comands I just would execute the corresponding function. But ap
Reply to message «Re: Typing numbers»,
sent 01:55:03 31 January 2011, Monday
by adroid28:
> Thanks for the advice but I have a macbook so I wouldn't want to do that
> to it.. :) If I was using an external keyboard I would definitely do the
> painting part. I think that would help!
Instead of pain
Wow! A lot of info!
Dotan Cohen wrote:
>
>
> I took a file to the F, J, 4, 8, F4, and F8 keys on the keyboard to
> help find them faster. Then I painted the whole keyboard black!
> Although painting may be a bit extreme, I do recommend filing a notch
> into the aforementioned keys. Years late
Ben Schmidt wrote:
> >> On 27/01/11 3:38 AM, oCameLo wrote:
> >>> There's so many questions and feature requests about use mouse to
> >>> scroll screen lines, but until now, it's still impossible.
> >>
> >> Bram, you're not opposed to this kind of feature, are you? So if I did
> >> some work on i
On 01/30/11 14:26, Adam wrote:
What you want is to enter the ^A literally which can be done
by prefixing it with control+V:
Oh sorry yeah that's what I did do (^V^A) I guess I left it
out. When you do that it appears that it's only incrementing
by 1 though instead of the prefix that you give i
>
> Then you may have some plugin remapping ? Try doing
>execute "normal! 16\"
> and see whether it helps. There is a known (and fixed in vim-7.3.100) bug
> that
> count is not passed to plugins in normal commands.
>
Yup I must have some plugin that is doing that (the execute worked just
fine)
Reply to message «Re: Delete, add 16, and insert»,
sent 23:26:19 30 January 2011, Sunday
by Adam:
Then you may have some plugin remapping ? Try doing
execute "normal! 16\"
and see whether it helps. There is a known (and fixed in vim-7.3.100) bug that
count is not passed to plugins in normal
>
> What you want is to enter the ^A literally which can be done by prefixing
> it with control+V:
>
Oh sorry yeah that's what I did do (^V^A) I guess I left it out. When you
do that it appears that it's only incrementing by 1 though instead of the
prefix that you give it (16 in this case)
~Adam
On 01/30/11 12:46, Adam wrote:
:g/^\d/norm 16(press control-a) I tried just going :norm 16^A but that also
doesn't work (they both just increment the number by 1). I know that
pressing 16^a in normal mode works correctly so that isn't the problem.
If you only pressed ^A then it wasn't part of
I'm curious why this doesn't work:
:g/^\d/norm 16(press control-a) I tried just going :norm 16^A but that also
doesn't work (they both just increment the number by 1). I know that
pressing 16^a in normal mode works correctly so that isn't the problem.
~Adam~
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On 2011-01-30 Tim Chase wrote:
> If you want a catalog of the functionality, you can look at
> things like
>
> [...]
>
> or more generically:
>
>:h index.txt
Nice list I didn't know before.
> They're available "natively" from within a "noremap" version of a
> mapping. So if you want t
On Fri, Jan 28, 2011 at 16:18, adroid28 wrote:
>
> Hi all :)
>
> I am fairly new in vim and also my touch typing is not that great.
> Although I can deal very well with all the vim commands I found my self
> always looking down when I need to write a number argument. I was
> wondering wether there
On 01/30/11 04:52, John Little wrote:
There's only so much can fit under my skull..
I don't believe that limit is relevant; there's only a few
hundred vim commands, if you use them you'll remember them.
Now settable *options* ... ;-)
-tim
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On 01/30/11 03:25, Marco wrote:
there are just the definded mappings listed, not the basic
built-in commands like »%«, »e« or »w«.
The natively functionality for these is defined in C functions
and mapped in Vim's source-code.
If you want a catalog of the functionality, you can look at
thin
On 01/29/11 19:07, Ed Bradford wrote:
I use DropBox. I edit a file on computer "A" and FORGET to
exit vim. Now on computer "B", the .swp file prevents me from
editing. I know I can ignore and just to go computer. However,
VIM and DropBox could solve my problem by having an option to
update on 1,4
In the spirit of this thread, I'll bite...
Chris said:
> There's only so much can fit under my skull..
I don't believe that limit is relevant; there's only a few hundred vim
commands, if you use them you'll remember them.
> ... and I prefer to stick with a limited subset of keyboard actions
> th
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Christian Brabandt [11-01-30 10:40]:
> Hi meino.cramer!
>
> On So, 30 Jan 2011, meino.cra...@gmx.de wrote:
>
> > this is a very basic question ... I am currently learning vim
> > scripting.
> >
> > With getline(.) I can get the contents of a line of a buffer.
> >
> > But: i
> > How can I repla
Hi meino.cramer!
On So, 30 Jan 2011, meino.cra...@gmx.de wrote:
> this is a very basic question ... I am currently learning vim
> scripting.
>
> With getline(.) I can get the contents of a line of a buffer.
>
> But: i
> How can I replace a line in the buffer with another contents?
Use setline(
On 2011-01-30 meino.cra...@gmx.de wrote:
> for those keys, for which is true, that they are mapped to a function
> call try using
>
> :map
Thanks. I was aware of this command. But there are just the definded mappings
listed, not the basic built-in commands like »%«, »e« or »w«.
Marco
--
I use DropBox. I edit a file on computer "A" and FORGET to exit vim. Now on
computer "B",
the .swp file prevents me from editing. I know I can ignore and just to go
computer. However, VIM
and DropBox could solve my problem by having an option to update on
1,4,16,64,256 second intervals
and abandoni
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