Le 18-09-2016, à 12:36:24 -0700, Ben Fritz a écrit :
By default Vim does NOT load plugins from the ~/.vim/bundle directory.
Do you have a plugin such as Pathogen installed and configured to do
that for you?
No.
If you're using a recent version of vim (8.0 or one of the earlier
patches leadi
Syntax off did it, Ben. Thanks!
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On Sunday, September 18, 2016 at 2:34:28 PM UTC-5, jle...@nc.rr.com wrote:
> What am I doing wrong? I thought I knew how to do this. When it didn't
> work, I studied the help manual, but I guess I'm still doing something wrong.
> I'm using Vim 8.0.2. I put set syntax=off in the _vimrc file, a
On Sunday, September 18, 2016 at 2:39:33 AM UTC-5, roy rosen wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I am using cscope with vim and have the following mapping in my .vimrc:
>
> nmap s :tab cs find s =expand("")
>
> this works fine except for the fact that it is opening a new tab every
> time I use it.
> I want
On Sunday, September 18, 2016 at 6:42:55 AM UTC-5, Steve wrote:
> Hi there !
>
> I installed gundo with:
>
> git clone http://github.com/sjl/gundo.vim.git ~/.vim/bundle/gundo
>
> Then insereted
>
> nnoremap u :gUndoToggle
>
> saved, closed the file and edited a new one. After a while, I tried
What am I doing wrong? I thought I knew how to do this. When it didn't work,
I studied the help manual, but I guess I'm still doing something wrong. I'm
using Vim 8.0.2. I put set syntax=off in the _vimrc file, and it didn't work.
Nothing else I tried worked. I want to turn all highlightin
The syntax documentation suggests that the 'keepend' argument applies
only to syntax regions, not syntax matches. But if I highlight a
buffer containing only the following line...
ABCDE
...with the following syntax definitions...
syn match A /A/
syn match Inside /[A-Z]\+/ transparent contained c
On Sunday, September 18, 2016 at 1:21:53 PM UTC+2, Tim Chase wrote:
> On 2016-09-18 02:55, Ni Va wrote:
> > > And stepping back, if you're writing *either* "norm 1G" or "norm!
> > > 1G" just write
> > >
> > > 1
> > >
> > > or whichever line-number you want to go to. Likewise, just use
> > > "$
Hi there !
I installed gundo with:
git clone http://github.com/sjl/gundo.vim.git ~/.vim/bundle/gundo
Then insereted
nnoremap u :gUndoToggle
saved, closed the file and edited a new one. After a while, I tried to
use gundo by issuing ,u, but nothing happened.
I'm working on a Debian Jessie box
On 2016-09-18 02:55, Ni Va wrote:
> > And stepping back, if you're writing *either* "norm 1G" or "norm!
> > 1G" just write
> >
> > 1
> >
> > or whichever line-number you want to go to. Likewise, just use
> > "$" rather than "norm G" or "norm! g"
> >
> > :help range
> >
> > -tim
>
> Than
On Sunday, September 18, 2016 at 3:54:10 AM UTC+2, Tim Chase wrote:
> On 2016-09-18 03:57, Nikolay Aleksandrovich Pavlov wrote:
> > And if you are writing `norm 1G` somewhere (e.g. in a plugin), then
> > just write it as `normal! 1G` (with bang).
>
> And stepping back, if you're writing *either* "
Hi all,
I am using cscope with vim and have the following mapping in my .vimrc:
nmap s :tab cs find s =expand("")
this works fine except for the fact that it is opening a new tab every
time I use it.
I want to open a new tab only if the file does not exist in one of the
already opened tabs.
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