On Wed, Sep 18, 2019 at 06:23:43PM +0100, 'Ottavio Caruso' via vim_use wrote:
> I have a heavily formatted resume in pdf that I want to make as
> machine-readable as possible yet decently readable by a human.
My strategy on this is to get all of your CV in vim, get rid of all the
external makeup
On 18/09/2019 19:23, 'Ottavio Caruso' via vim_use wrote:
> First of all, I know vim is a text editor and not a word processor, but...
>
> I have a heavily formatted resume in pdf that I want to make as
> machine-readable as possible yet decently readable by a human.
You might want something a
>-Original Message-
>From: 'Ottavio Caruso' via vim_use
>Sent: Wednesday, September 18, 2019 2:07 PM
>To: Gary Johnson
>Cc: vim_use@googlegroups.com
>Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: Formatting inconsistencies between vim and other text
>editors
>
>>On Wed, 18 S
On Wed, 18 Sep 2019 at 19:43, Gary Johnson wrote:
>
> On 2019-09-18, 'Ottavio Caruso' via vim_use wrote:
> > First of all, I know vim is a text editor and not a word processor, but...
> >
> > I have a heavily formatted resume in pdf that I want to make as
> > machine-readable as possible yet
On 2019-09-18, 'Ottavio Caruso' via vim_use wrote:
> First of all, I know vim is a text editor and not a word processor, but...
>
> I have a heavily formatted resume in pdf that I want to make as
> machine-readable as possible yet decently readable by a human.
>
> I have converted it into plain
First of all, I know vim is a text editor and not a word processor, but...
I have a heavily formatted resume in pdf that I want to make as
machine-readable as possible yet decently readable by a human.
I have converted it into plain text first, then, in vim:
:set textwidth=80
I selected the