On Mon, Nov 30, 2009 at 2:56 AM, Andy Wokula <anwoku@yahoo.de> wrote:
Christian Brabandt schrieb:
> Hi Nathan!You were just guessing?
>
> On Mo, 30 Nov 2009, Nathan Neff wrote:
>
>> I see that there's a "-register" option that I can use when defining
>> a custom command, but I'm having trouble understanding how to use it.
>>
>> For example, I just want to create a command that prints out the contents of
>> a register that is specified by the user.
>>
>> I tried something like this, but can't print out the <reg> part:
>>
>> :command! -register Foo :echo You picked this register: <reg>
>>
>> What am I doing wrong?
>
> You need to expand <reg>, e.g. com! -register Foo :echo expand("<reg>")
:Foo a
executes
:echo expand("a")
Nathan, try these examples:
:com! -register Foo echo 'Register:' <q-reg>
:com! -register Foo display <reg>
:h <q-args>
Thanks for the replies, but none of these examples do what I'm looking for.
I'm looking to create a custom command / mapping where I can use the contents of a register that is specified by the user.
Similar to how ["x]p works. The user can press "ap and the contents of the "a" register will be pasted. The user can just press p and the contents of the unnamed register are pasted by default.
I want to define a custom command where the user can put the optional ["x] in front of the mapping, and my command will work with the register that the user specified.
If the user doesn't specify a register, then I'm going to use the unnamed register by default.
Is there a way to create a mapping that accepts the optional ["x] in front of it?
Thanks,
--Nate
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