Re: OT (sort of): VIM/ex/tr question

2000-11-26 Thread John P. Verel
Per Steve Kirkendall in comp.editors, this works: :g/\s/j One must admire the beauty and simplicity of this. On 11/25/00, 03:13:48PM -0500, John P. Verel wrote: > Greetings. > > I have a vim file which, in general, resembles this: > Hello > world > Hello > world > > I

Re: OT (sort of): VIM/ex/tr question

2000-11-26 Thread davidturetsky
:g/$/j worked for me David - Original Message - From: "John P. Verel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "Mutt User List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Sunday, November 26, 2000 8:36 PM Subject: Re: OT (sort of): VIM/ex/tr question > Per Steve Kirkendall in comp.e

Re: OT (sort of): VIM/ex/tr question

2000-11-26 Thread davidturetsky
MAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Sunday, November 26, 2000 10:17 PM Subject: Re: OT (sort of): VIM/ex/tr question > :g/$/j > > worked for me > > David > > - Original Message - > From: "John P. Verel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > To: "Mutt User List" <

Re: OT (sort of): VIM/ex/tr question

2000-11-26 Thread John P. Verel
On 11/26/00, 10:17:08PM -0500, davidturetsky wrote: > :g/$/j Yes, it does. But I can't figure out why it should. $ indicates last line in stdin, right? So, how does this work?

Re: OT (sort of): VIM/ex/tr question

2000-11-26 Thread davidturetsky
t;[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "davidturetsky" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Cc: "Mutt User List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Sunday, November 26, 2000 11:03 PM Subject: Re: OT (sort of): VIM/ex/tr question > On 11/26/00, 10:17:08PM -0500, davidturetsky wrote: > > :g/$/j >