On Wed, Oct 1, 2014 at 9:07 AM, Igor Forca <igor2x@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Can you explain why you need columns setting? What is your operating system? I see on Windows whole gVim program gets this size (which is little bit useless) and on vim for Linux it gets text truncated at exactly 80 characters.
>
> Maybe you are looking for a setting like:
> set textwidth 80
>
> The above command with truncate whole words in new rows if passing 80 characters. It also preserves the 80 characters if you add new window with: vsp command.
>
> If using textwidth command you have to delete "set columns=80" from your ~/.gvimrc file and restart Vim.
My setup is Windows 7 -> superPutty (1.4.0.5) -> putty (0.62) -> ssh into Redhat Enterprise 6.5 -> gvim 7.2
Using textwidth instead of columns does not solve my problem. When I open the first file, say the window is X characters wide. If I do a vertical split in this (using :vs <filename>), the size of the window still remains the same with each file getting about X/2 columns. What I want to do is increase the current columns by 80 before doing a vertical split.
Actually, posing the problem this way, I found the solution myself.
:set columns+=80 | vs ~/.vimrc
This way the window size will be incremented by 80 columns before doing a vertical split.
raju
--
Kamaraju S Kusumanchi
http://malayamaarutham.blogspot.com/
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Kamaraju S Kusumanchi
http://malayamaarutham.blogspot.com/
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