Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Re: how to transfer output of ':.w !sh' back to current buffer

воскресенье, 28 февраля 2016 г., 12:55:06 UTC+6 пользователь Erik Christiansen написал:
> On 26.02.16 08:29, Roman wrote:
> > I use ':.w !sh' to run some lines with shell commands
> > Is any way to transfer output of this commands back to buffer or maybe
> > to split buffer window or do something like ':r !sh $current_line'
>
> The easiest way to return the result is not to use ":.w", but the !
> command instead. To quickly confirm that the pipe output returns,
> perhaps type:
>
> !!echo "No-one expects the Spanish Inquisition"
>
> To confirm the return trip on e.g. a whole paragraph, place the cursor
> on its start, and type:
>
> !}gawk '{gsub(/\<the\>/,"FROG"); print}'
>
> If there are any "the" words, the transformation is not hard to spot.
>
> And if the outcome is not what's desired, there's undo.
>
> Now your commands/scripts can be unleashed with confidence.
>
> Erik

Thank you, it's work!

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