On Do, 20 Jul 2023, Lasse Hillerøe Petersen wrote:
> Oh, and shame on me for using the .h example instead of copying one I
> actually had tried verbatim. ".h" works fine. Add an "e" :iab he hello -
> and it gives E474.
There are only certain kinds of Abbreviations allowed. Please read the
Oh, and shame on me for using the .h example instead of copying one I
actually had tried verbatim. ".h" works fine. Add an "e" :iab he hello -
and it gives E474.
torsdag den 20. juli 2023 kl. 09.20.59 UTC+2 skrev Lasse Hillerøe Petersen:
> It turns out I was *completely* wrong in my assumption
It turns out I was *completely* wrong in my assumption about the cause of
this error. Sorry.
(Probably better error messages could be helpful here, like: stating
*which* argument is invalid, *why* it is invalid, and *what* would be
valid.)
It is not the Unicode at all, I am very happy to say.
On Mi, 19 Jul 2023, Lasse Hillerøe Petersen wrote:
> I am trying to add am iabbrev ".h" for 퐡퐞퐥퐥퐨.
> I type
> :iabbrev .h 퐡퐞퐥퐥퐨
> (Yes, I have a Linux xkb layout so I can type this.)
> I get E474 Invalid argument.
> Other Unicode characters, like æøå or ¬ also don't seem to work.
>
> I have
I am trying to add am iabbrev ".h" for 퐡퐞퐥퐥퐨.
I type
:iabbrev .h 퐡퐞퐥퐥퐨
(Yes, I have a Linux xkb layout so I can type this.)
I get E474 Invalid argument.
Other Unicode characters, like æøå or ¬ also don't seem to work.
I have tried setting encoding to utf-8
:set enc=utf-8
:set tenc=utf-8
I apologize for being ornery. I have had to deal with Windows and ATT
lately. I will do better.
Heh, either Windows or ATT alone is enough to boil one's blood,
so I can sympathize and appreciate the occasional bad day. :)
I'm aware of most of the options in vim. I'm not aware of any
option
I've occasionally wished for a --wtf option to vim that would
effectively open both the unrecovered and recovered versions in a
diffsplit allowing me to compare them. Currently I have to
1) open the file with -r to recover
2) write the file to a temp file
3) quit vim
4) delete the swapfile
On Tue, February 1, 2011 12:41 pm, Tim Chase wrote:
I've occasionally wished for a --wtf option to vim that would
effectively open both the unrecovered and recovered versions in a
diffsplit allowing me to compare them. Currently I have to
1) open the file with -r to recover
2) write the
On 1/02/11 11:17 PM, Ben Schmidt wrote:
I've occasionally wished for a --wtf option to vim that would
effectively open both the unrecovered and recovered versions in a
diffsplit allowing me to compare them. Currently I have to
1) open the file with -r to recover
2) write the file to a temp file
On Tue, 1 Feb 2011, Tim Chase wrote:
I apologize for being ornery. I have had to deal with Windows and
ATT lately. I will do better.
Heh, either Windows or ATT alone is enough to boil one's blood, so I
can sympathize and appreciate the occasional bad day. :)
I'm aware of most of the
On Sat, 29 Jan 2011, 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
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 abandoning
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