Sunday, May 2, 2010

Re: How to :new a window below the current window?

On May 2, 12:52 pm, Tony Mechelynck <antoine.mechely...@gmail.com>
wrote:
> On 02/05/10 01:49, Peng Yu wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > On May 1, 6:13 pm, Tim Chase<v...@tim.thechases.com>  wrote:
> >> On 05/01/2010 05:59 PM, Peng Yu wrote:
>
> >>> :new by default open a window above the current window. Is there a
> >>> command to open a new window below the current one?
>
> >> You can use
>
> >>     :below new
>
> >> which you can read about at
>
> >>     :help :below
>
> >> If you want it to always split below, you can investigate the
> >> 'splitbelow' option
>
> >>     :help 'splitbelow'
>
> >> which you can set in your vimrc so that new/split windows are
> >> created below the current one instead of above it.  However, it's
> >> easy enough to override with the ":bel" command.
>
> > "open file under cursor
> > map<C-O>  :exe "below new ".expand("<cfile>")<CR>
> > map<C-S-O>  :exe "new ".expand("<cfile>")<CR>
>
> > I put the above comand in ~/.vimrc. I expect that ctrl+shift+o open a
> > new window above the current one and ctrl+o open a new window below
> > the current one. However, both of them open a new window above the
> > current one. Would you please let me know how to fix the first command?
>
> Ctrl-O and Ctrl-Shift-O are both 0x0F; if you map them to different
> {rhs}es, the last one wins. Also, this hides the standard meaning of
> Ctrl-O, namely, "go to older place in jumplist". Try mapping them to,
> let's say, F8 and Shift-F8 instead.

Why Ctrl-O and Ctrl-Shift-O can not be distinguished?

I can not use F8 as my vncviewer use it for a special meaning. What
about F7? Does it have any designated usage?

In general, how to figure out if a combination of keys are used or not
and whether they are combinations that can be understand by vim?

Regards,
Tony.

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