On 10/11/2014 04:29 PM, glts wrote:
> On Saturday, October 11, 2014 4:32:18 AM UTC+2, jiaxing_wang wrote:
>> At 2014-10-10 19:06:21, "glts" <676c...@gmail.com> wrote:>On Friday, October 10, 2014 12:55:08 PM UTC+2, glts wrote:
>>>> Hi,
>>>>
>>>> On Friday, October 10, 2014 12:04:17 PM UTC+2, jiaxing_wang wrote:
>>>>> This wiki page:
>>>>>
>>>>> http://vim.wikia.com/wiki/Mapping_keys_in_Vim_-_Tutorial_(Part_3)
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> says with the following maps in a script file:
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> nnoremap \x /Topic
>>>>> nmap <script> ,f \x<CR>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> "In the second map command, ',f' is mapped to invoke \x which is replaced with '/Topic'.
>>>>>
>>>>> If the user or some other plugin has defined a mapping for '\x', then it is not used by ',f'."
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> But I tried and find '\x' is not remapped to '/Topic' as the wiki says, so what does <script>
>>>>>
>>>>> really mean and how to use it?
>>>> Unfortunately the wiki example is wrong.
>>>>
>>>> Here's a short script that uses a mapping with <script>.
>>>>
>>>> function! s:SayHelloToUser() abort
>>>> echo printf("Hello %s!", $USER)
>>>> endfunction
>>>>
>>>> nmap <script> <Plug>SayHello :<C-U>call <SID>SayHelloToUser()<CR>
>>>>
>>>> The <Plug> mapping is the hook that a user can map to, eg by defining
>>>>
>>>> nmap <Leader>h <Plug>SayHello
>>>>
>>>> In the <Plug> mapping, <script> ensures that the right-hand side of the
>>>> mapping will never be affected by user-defined mappings.
>>>>
>>>> For example, if <script> were missing and somebody had defined a
>>>> command-line mode mapping for the character sequence 'cal', then the
>>>> mapping will likely fail because 'cal' is mapped to whatever the user
>>>> mapped it to. <script> protects from such disruptions.
>>> My example is a bit poor though, since in this case you might as well
>>> just use :nnoremap to be safe from side-effects. But I hope I got the
>>> point across.
>>>
>> Still don't understand the difference from :nnoremap, :-(
>> what's more, the :h :map-<script> seems to mean the same as the wiki:
>>
>> *:map-<script>* *:map-script*
>> If the first argument to one of these commands is "<script>" and it is used to
>> define a new mapping or abbreviation, the mapping will only remap characters
>> in the {rhs} using mappings that were defined local to a script, starting with
>> "<SID>". This can be used to avoid that mappings from outside a script
>> interfere (e.g., when CTRL-V is remapped in mswin.vim), but do use other
>> mappings defined in the script.
>> Note: ":map <script>" and ":noremap <script>" do the same thing. The
>> "<script>" overrules the command name. Using ":noremap <script>" is
>> preferred, because it's clearer that remapping is (mostly) disabled.
>>
>> thanks.
> Ok, let's reuse my example and add an intermediate mapping.
>
> nnoremap <SID>SayHelloRedirect :<C-U>call <SID>SayHelloToUser()<CR>
> nmap <script> <Plug>SayHello <SID>SayHelloRedirect
>
> In this case :nmap <script> (or :nnoremap <script>) allow the <Plug>
> mapping to be remapped to the intermediate mapping. This would not work
> with plain :nnoremap because it prevents all remapping.
But with <SID> used before SayHelloRedirect,
nmap <Plug>SayHello <SID>SayHelloRedirect
does the same thing, it will not be interfered by somebody mapping 'SayHelloRedirect',
so what interference is <script> used to prevent?
forgive my paranoia ;-)
>
> Personally I never use <script> and I agree with ZyX that it is quite
> useless.
>
> You can find some discussion in the user manual, try this command:
>
> :h usr_41|/PIECES
>
>
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