Tim,
On 2015-06-27 23:37, Tim Chase wrote:
> On 2015-06-27 05:53, Philip Rhoades wrote:
>>>>>>   nnoremap <F8> :Execute<CR>
>>>>> 
>>>>> Could you provide the content of your Execute() function?  It
>>>>> would help to replicate the behavior you want on an extract of
>>>>> the line.
> [snip stuff that isn't the definition of Execute]
>>> I think Tim wanted the definition of the Execute command.
>> 
>> ? I don't know what you mean - as far as I know using
>> ":Execute . ." as I showed above in my .vimrc file is a built-in
>> Vim thing?
> 
> As you write it, it's a function/command brought in by some external
> plugin as demonstrated by starting vim without any startup files:
> 
>   vim -u NONE
>   :Execute
>   E492: Not an editor command: Execute
> 
> With your regular (started up without the "-u NONE") vim, you can
> execute
> 
>   :verbose function
>   :verbose command
> 
> to see where various items were defined.  You want to see where the
> "Execute" function/command was created.  Based on your invocation
> description, it *sounds* like it's a custom command rather than a
> function, so you can minimize the noise by issuing
> 
>   :verbose command Execute
Right - all is clear now . . that gives:
:verbose command Execute
  Name     Args Address  Complete Definition
  Execute  0    .        silent   <line1>,<line2>yank z | let @z = 
substitute(@z, '\n\s*\\', '', 'g') | @z
  Last set from ~/.vimrc
> which should give you just the info needed to track down where
> "Execute" is defined.
Which now I realise has been put into .vimrc - which I don't remember 
doing (it must have been a long time ago) but I should have found it 
before . . sorry . .:
   command! -bar -range Execute silent <line1>,<line2>yank z | let @z = 
substitute(@z, '\n\s*\\', '', 'g') | @z
>>> Anyway, you can get the content of a line from the cursor to its
>>> end with:
>>> 
>>>     getline(".")[col(".")-1:]
>>> 
>>> You can pass that to whatever does you execution in you original
>>> command.
>> 
>> I still don't get what you are saying - how can I use the F8 key
>> (that executes the command on the line in the text file - like I
>> described above) with that getline command?
> 
> Without the definition of the Execute function it's hard to tell how
> to integrate Paul's "remainder of the line" snippet with the Execute
> function.
So I am guessing I can replace "<line1>,<line2>yank" with 
"getline(".")[col(".")-1:] z" ?
Thanks,
Phil.
-- 
Philip Rhoades
PO Box 896
Cowra  NSW  2794
Australia
E-mail:  phil@pricom.com.au
-- 
-- 
You received this message from the "vim_use" maillist.
Do not top-post! Type your reply below the text you are replying to.
For more information, visit http://www.vim.org/maillist.php
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "vim_use" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to vim_use+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
No comments:
Post a Comment