over my head. I am using Vim 7.3 on Windows 7. This is what it says
in my :h runtimepath:
					PC, OS/2: "$HOME/vimfiles,
						$VIM/vimfiles,
						$VIMRUNTIME,
						$VIM/vimfiles/after,
						$HOME/vimfiles/after"
	This is a list of directories which will be searched for runtime
	files:
	  filetype.vim	filetypes by file name |new-filetype|
	  scripts.vim	filetypes by file contents |new-filetype-scripts|
	  autoload/	automatically loaded scripts |autoload-functions|
	  colors/	color scheme files |:colorscheme|
	  compiler/	compiler files |:compiler|
	  doc/		documentation |write-local-help|
	  ftplugin/	filetype plugins |write-filetype-plugin|
	  indent/	indent scripts |indent-expression|
	  keymap/	key mapping files |mbyte-keymap|
	  lang/		menu translations |:menutrans|
	  menu.vim	GUI menus |menu.vim|
	  plugin/	plugin scripts |write-plugin|
	  print/	files for printing |postscript-print-encoding|
	  spell/	spell checking files |spell|
	  syntax/	syntax files |mysyntaxfile|
	  tutor/	files for vimtutor |tutor|
So what code do I put in what file?
Regards,
wolfv
On Dec 26, 8:27 pm, Tony Mechelynck <antoine.mechely...@gmail.com>
wrote:
> On 27/12/11 03:49, wolfv wrote:
>
> > Thanks Thilo and Tony.
>
> > I Changed my filetype.vim code so when there is a # at the beginning
> > of the first 3 lines, Vim sets generic configuration. i.e. I deleted
> > this line:
>
> > \  || getline(4) =~ '^#' || getline(5) =~ '^#'
>
> > My txt files won't have a # in the first 3 lines, so that's good
> > enough.
>
> ...except that making changes in anything in the $VIMRUNTIME tree is one
> quite common way of, as Tim put it, "shooting yourself in the foot". Any
> upgrade may (and one of them surely will, next week or next year)
> replace $VIMRUNTIME/filetype.vim by a new version without telling you,
> and any changes you made there will be gone. This is part of the
> "normal" Vim way of doing things. Local changes should go in the _other_
> directory trees listed in 'runtimepath' (installation-specific in $VIM
> or user-specific in $HOME), $VIMRUNTIME is _only_ for _unchanged_
> versions of runtime files distributed _together_ with Vim.
>
> Best regards,
> Tony.
> --
> There's no point in being grown up if you can't be childish sometimes.
>                 -- Dr. Who
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