Perhaps --remote-expr somthing could do it?
See :h remote.txt
I can neither test/explore nor read the manual sensibly ATM as I'm
writing/browsing on my iphone while waiting for the bus.
måndag 16 juni 2014 skrev Linda A. Walsh v...@tlinx.org
javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','v...@tlinx.org');:
be used to from one's run-of-the-mill GUI
editor, but then almost nothing in Vim is!
/bpj
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was added by me after spending hours on finding a
solution a few years ago.)
/bpj
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others have done,
or even better by making things user-customizable. Which
functionality you use often or seldom also varies by individual,
and in time for each individual, I daresay.
/bpj
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2014-05-21 10:09, Gautier DI FOLCO skrev:
Yes, I thought to mainstream programming languages.
The definition of which depends on which generation you belong to...
/bpj
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2014-05-21 23:27, Elijah Griffin skrev:
BPJ wrote:
My 'problem' is that I can't by any stretch of imagination think
of what's sjumped over by W as a 'word' -- it's usually at least
one word and then some punctuation. I'm probably a dinosaur for
havings so restrictive a view of what a 'word
2014-05-21 15:44, Dan Lowe skrev:
On Tue, May 20, 2014, at 01:13 AM, BPJ wrote:
I also used to have problems with those, until I realized that
they have or can be thought to have mnemonic names, which may not
be obvious if English isn't your native language:
Key Mnemonic
|b
. Google
knows how to make the most out of it. I actually find things in
the online vimdoc with google more easily than I find them
with :help...
/bpj
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of the time I simply yank and put any 'fancy' strings I need on the
command line or use * and n but sometimes it is desirable to type on the
commandline with a keymap enabled, so I really would like to know how to
control this.
TIA,
/bpj
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What happens if the cursor is between two different quotes on the same line
'like' in| this example with a far away quote
Will it always jump to the double quote to the right or is there a cutoff
point where the quote to the right is considered too far away?
Den 12 apr 2014 03:12 skrev Anton
Ben Fritz wrote:
I think simple and easy runtime path management like Pathogen offers would
be a great addition to Vim and would not be very controversial. I
understand that all the other plugin managers build on top of something
like this to allow easier
. It may be possible to install
by just dropping stuff into the ~/.vim folder and letting the
OS file manager 'combine' everything into the right places,
but *un*installing becomes *very* hard.
/bpj
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lördagen den 22:e mars 2014 skrev Arup Rakshit
tuka...@gmail.comjavascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','tuka...@gmail.com');
:
On Saturday, March 22, 2014 4:56:34 PM UTC+5:30, Erik Christiansen wrote:
On 22.03.14 02:29, Arup Rakshit wrote:
I am not using *tab* for indentation, rather 2 space
the file yourself it can be marked up as
*both* Markdown and Vim halp without looking *too* strange when
rendered as either. You can see an example here:
https://github.com/bpj/vim-ToggleKeymap/blob/master/doc/ToggleKeymap.txt
It's a bit on the extreme side, and I'm afraid it looks just a
little
:norm iblah
does *not* work...
/bpj
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the now
misplaced comment/quote marker. I would be very grateful for a
way to get that JJ to jump to the 'join point'!
(I'm aware that a * which simply searches for the WORD under the
cursor would do the trick, so anything in that direction would be
helpful too.)
TIA,
/bpj
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objects using a
command/function syntax similar to :syn region.
I hope this idea isn't totally naive. I'm just a user having done
some limited forays into scripting Vim, lacking deeper
knowledge/understanding.
/bpj
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to the right bracket.
Ideally also a way to jump to the beginning of the link/note text
from outside, jumping to the next note even if a link intervenes
or vice versa.
/bpj
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I've seen this sometimes when resuming after having suspended while in
insert mode.
anything linked to the Constant highlight group becomes underlined. Happens
with any filetype it seems. Forcing a redraw fixes it. I'm on Ubuntu 12.04
(with GNOME Classic to be sure! :-)
tisdagen den 4:e februari
before cr? Will cr without it be replaced
by ^M in a doublequoted string? Where in the :help is that?
And if so why not a singlequoted string here anyway?
Just trying to learn.
/bpj
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out of readability.
I guess I should have written
```
noremap unique script PlugTypecorrAdd
\ :call SIDAdd(expand(cword), 1)CR
```
)
/bpj
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Is there any way when using :g to copy the matched substring only?
I want to find all lines with CamelCase words and copy those
words to the bottom of the buffer.
:g/\a*\l\U\a*/t$
copies the whole line, but I want to get the part of the line
matching the pattern.
TIA,
/bpj
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2014-01-15 15:29, Paul Isambert skrev:
BPJ b...@melroch.se:
Is there any way when using :g to copy the matched substring only?
I want to find all lines with CamelCase words and copy those
words to the bottom of the buffer.
:g/\a*\l\U\a*/t$
copies the whole line, but I want to get
the whole file...
Thanks anyway!
/bpj
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on camelCase'ness:
HTMLobject
MyObject
_myProperty
_MyObject
InnerHTML
THIS_IS_HTML
Yes, and it turned out some of my cC words were really plain old
Titlecase, hence the second branch in the pattern of my perl
filter solution.
/bpj
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I'm trying to write my own syntax file for a language where there are a lot
of groups of the form
:syn match langSomeGrp /^\s*KeyWord.*/
The problem is that there are also end-of-line comments
:syn match langComment /--.*/
which can either stand on a line of its own OR be contained in a group
way to build Vim with PCRE
with Unicode support instead of or in addition to Vim's native
regex engine?
/bpj
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this,
and I wan't to open two other files in a and c, so I guess
I'll also need to know how to identify those windows, with a
on the left as well as the mirror image with a on the right:
+--+--+
| |b |
|a +--+
| |c |
+--+--+
/bpj
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2013-11-25 16:49, Ben Fritz skrev:
On Monday, November 25, 2013 5:40:15 AM UTC-6, BPJ wrote:
I need help with the following. I've googled for half an hour
but don't seem to be able to formulate the questions
correctly.
As usual it's probably in the help but I don't know where
to look
'' |+search
'' +yank selected into unnamed register
I don't get the idea with the substitute(); would someone please
enlighten me? I speak only pidgin vimscript! :-)
/bpj
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2013-11-15 22:54, Gary Johnson skrev:
On 2013-11-15, BPJ wrote:
2013-11-15 17:45, Bee skrev:
nnoremap * g*
multi line search -- selection literal :help c_C-R
substitute({expr}, {pat}, {sub}, {flags})
vnoremap * y/\c\VC-RC-R=substitute(escape(@@,'/\'),'\n','\\n','g')crcr
2013-10-22 12:14, Tony Mechelynck skrev:
BTW, what I'm typing now is on the Belgian version of the AZERTY
keyboard layout, similar but not identical to what they use in
France. See
http://users.skynet.be/antoine.mechelynck/other/keybbe.htm for
details, and for how I have access to an almost
modifying IMAP to be keymap-aware.
I personally just disabled all these macros for them being too intrusive
(do not remember which of them exactly though).
The best advice I have is to imap some function key or the like to
'toggle' iminsert and use it before and after other imaps.
/bpj
2013-10-15 16:12, BPJ skrev:
2013-10-13 23:43, Nikolay Pavlov skrev:
On Oct 13, 2013 9:23 PM, Vandra _ van...@rambler.ru wrote:
I work on a book in Russian using vim-latex. While in insert
mode in Russian (with keymap command c-^) latex-suite
macros like FEM don't work.
Thats indeed very
2013-07-22 04:01, Steve Litt skrev:
Hi all,
Is there something I can use to make Vim fold correctly on YAML files?
You might look at how Python folding is done.
Fold markers in YAML comments would *work*, I suppose, however
inelegant. I find myself wanting to insert navigational
comments
...
/bpj
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2013-07-19 17:40, Nikolay Pavlov skrev:
You missed the point of locales. It is not about encoding, it is about
language and affects ranges (what characters match a-z range depends on
language you set in your locale) and a big bunch of other things I do not
care about.
I know, but I usually
ecceedingly uncommon that you
actually write a word ending in a hyphen and then hit tab.
So I'd have one file 'h#-.snippet' containing
h${1:2} id=${2:id-text}${3:heading text}h$1
${4}
and so on. (I don't know about you but 60% of all h? I ever
write are h2...)
/bpj
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Is there any easy/automatized way to remove junk (as in not
associated with any file currently open in (g)vim) .swp files
in the current directory and its subdirectories?
A plugin perhaps?
/bpj
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know all that. But you may get junk swap files hanging around
if you inadvertently compress a directory containing files which
are currently open in Vim at compression time. Stupid, but there
you have it!
/bpj
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/mysql.sock' (2)
/bpj
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wrong, nor
is it right for me only because of my disability. I'm
doing what works best for me. Period.
I think I'll do this though, even though I mostly hardwrap:
map C-Down gj
map C-Up gk
/bpj
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Dang! Seems I sent this directly to Tim!
Please accept my apologies!
/bpj
On 2013-03-26 16:58, Tim Chase wrote:
On 2013-03-26 16:43, BPJ wrote:
Is it somehow possible with :g// to copy only the
matched parts of lines as with the -o option of grep?
Not elegantly, but it can be done:
:let
Is it somehow possible with :g// to copy only the
matched parts of lines as with the -o option of grep?
/bpj
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the paragraph?
/bpj
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. It appears I am trying
to cross between normal, visual and command line at the same time.
:h c_CTRL-R
/bpj
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and colorful syntax highlighting is a great
help for me to read from screen.
/bpj
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I regularly get files encoded in UTF16LE sent to me and want them
to be automatically converted to UTF8 when opening them.
I'm not sure what command to use/put in .vimrc for that though, so
I wonder if anybody is already doing this, and how?
/bpj
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expression as well.
/bpj
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The subject says it all: how can I get a literal '$digit' or
'${digit' into a SnipMate snippet text?
/bpj -- semper perlitans! ;-)
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On 2012-07-20 11:23, Tony Mechelynck wrote:
You shouldn't have used Google; use the help (Vim is the only
program I know which has a help worth using): see
Agreed, but you still often need Google to find out where to
look in the help system! :(
/bpj
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/bpj
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my plugins.]
I use pathogen and had no trouble installing anything so far.
The good thing with pandoc is that its markdown is a superset
of vanilla markdown, and it has a strict option to disable
extended syntax.
/bpj
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headers, with slim success so far, mostly due to
my inability to take in :h syntax effectively...
/bpj
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but not least it has an option to prepend line
numbers to the input, which paps can't do by itself.
It's attached. You can set your own defaults near the top,
and read help for the options with perl printme.pl --help
/bpj
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On 2011-12-15 17:06, Ben Fritz wrote:
On Dec 14, 8:55 pm, John Littlejohn.b.lit...@gmail.com wrote:
BPJ asked:
How do I do to get back to (roughly) the same line in
the file as I was on after executing a filter command
on the whole file?
Paul answered:
ctrl-i and ctrl-o will take you
===
However when I source the file, and then do F12kx in
insert mode I get the literal string
^B:setlocal keymap=whatever inserted instead of
the keymap being set. What am I doing wrong?
/bpj
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On 2011-12-13 22:31, Andy Wokula wrote:
Am 12.12.2011 20:35, schrieb Tim Chase:
On 12/12/11 13:30, BPJ wrote:
I need to make underscore a non-word character in the current
buffer, preferably without having to list all characters which
should be word characters after the change. How?
Sounds
How do I do to get back to (roughly) the same line in
the file as I was on after executing a filter command
on the whole file? The function below *works*, but I
have a nagging feeling that I used to know how to do it
in a simpler (and hopefully less rough!) way with
builtins.
Is there any way to
I need to make underscore a non-word character in the current
buffer, preferably without having to list all characters which
should be word characters after the change. How?
/bpj
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display:
1a1c
The obvious workaround is
:.!sed 's/b*/1/g'
Not very elegant but it works!
perl returns '1a11c1', BTW!
/bpj
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2011-03-28 19:48, Gary Johnson skrev:
On 2011-03-28, Tim Chase wrote:
On 03/28/2011 08:11 AM, BPJ wrote:
How can I make
:!perl ...
use the perl symlinked at ~/bin/perl
rather than /usr/bin/perl without actually
having to type :!~/bin/perl every time?
What's your $PATH set to?
You can find
How can I make
:!perl ...
use the perl symlinked at ~/bin/perl
rather than /usr/bin/perl without actually
having to type :!~/bin/perl every time?
/bpj
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For more
Is it possible in vimscript to save and reuse a
(complex) (sub)pattern similar te Perl's qr// ?
As usual I seem unable to find the right help
section because of not knowing the right search
term...
/bpj
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Is it possible to have a pipe in formatprg?
:setl formatprg=filer1|filter2
(I know I can't do *that*, but that's the idea...)
/bpj
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