On Wednesday, October 23, 2013 4:23:29 AM UTC+2, Ben Fritz wrote:
> Did you include a literal carriage return at the end, by typing CTRL-V and
> then CTRL-M or Enter to get Vim to display ^M?
That's was the problem, thanks.
> I'm seeing a weird pattern for the :g command again in your simplified
> example, I'm not going to test whether it works anyway.
No weird pattern here, it is the same as before:
:g/START/;/END/normal :exe 'echo '.line('.')^M
which you can also write as
:g#START#;/END/normal :exe 'echo '.line('.')^M
This executes the following command on all lines matching /START/. On those
lines, the command is 'further restricted' to the range
;/END/
which stands for 'all lines between the line containing the cursor and the
next match of /END/'
This kind of range (omitting the first component) is not explicitly
documented in the vim help, but it works just fine.
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Thursday, October 24, 2013
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