> Hi everybody,
>
> I have some problems with mkview and loadview. The following is my
> setting in .vimrc file
>
> " when close the window, auto save the view
> au BufWinLeave *.* mkview
> " when open the window, auto load the view
> au BufWinEnter *.* silent loadview
>
> But when you use gvim then save the view, next time you open the file
> with vim in terminal, it outputs some error complain about unknown
> options.
It would have been more helpful if you had said exactly what those
errors were. Reporting only "some error" leaves us guessing what
the unknown options were.
Nevertheless, I think the problem is probably that your gvim was
compiled with more features than your vim was. A lot of GNU/Linux
distributions seem to do that. You can execute ":version" to see
which features each was compiled with.
If that is the problem, then I think the best solution is to use the
gvim binary for both the gvim and vim commands. One way to do that
is to execute "gvim -v" instead of "vim" when you want to run Vim in
a terminal. To make that more convenient, you can put this line in
your ~/.bashrc (assuming your shell is bash):
alias vim='gvim -v'
Another way to do that is to create your own ~/bin directory if you
don't already have one, then execute this command in your shell:
ln -s $(which gvim) ~/bin/vim
For that to work, you'll also need to make sure that ~/bin is in
your PATH. If it isn't already, then also add this to your
~/.bash_profile or ~/.profile, depending on which you use:
PATH=~/bin:$PATH
See
:help -v
:help ex
For the latter, scroll back a few lines to "The startup mode..." and
read from there to the "startup-options" tag.
Regards,
Gary
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