Oh, yes, I am using :behave mswin. Now it is all right when using :behave xterm. ----- Original Message ----- From: BillMcCarthy<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: A.J.Mechelynck<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: 2006-11-28 12:04:54 Subject: Re: Why vta doesn't work when a is one character away?
On Mon 27-Nov-06 9:39pm -0600, A.J.Mechelynck wrote: > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: >> For example, the word >> >> Cat >> >> When the cursor is on C, and I press vta, the cursor doesn't move. >> However, if I press >> vtt, it moves two characters to the right. Is this an intentional design >> decision or a bug? >> >> I've tried this in both vim 6.4 and the latest version of vim 7.0 on the >> download page. > Works for me with gvim 7.0.168 with Gnome2 GUI on SuSE Linux 9.3, both in GUI > mode and in console mode > > With the cursor on the C of Cat in Normal mode > > after vta the cursor is on the C (i.e., one character left of the a), one > character is visually highlighted as shown at bottom right of the screen. (In > console mode the highlight color is not noticeable because the only character > of the Visual selection is at the cursor position.) > > after (Esc to clear Visual mode, then) vtt the cursor is on the a (i.e., one > character left of the t), two characters (Ca) are visually highlighted. With typical windows settings, select=exclusive (from :behave mswin). With that, vta leaves the cursor to the left of C and zero is shown in the lower right (vfC produces identical results). However vtt highlights Ca and two is shown in the lower right (vta produces identical results). -- Best regards, Bill