WareLogging. TextBased. A feature-rich, post-minimalist implementation of ViEditor. [Brennen]'s favorite text editor. * [http://www.vim.org/ vim.org] * VimExtensions * A cheat sheet: http://p1k3.com/2004/11/8/vimcheat.txt * An HTML-based improvement: http://p1k3.com/2004/11/11/vimcheat * The current version: VimCheatSheet. * Someone else's [http://www.viemu.com/vi-vim-cheat-sheet.gif cheatsheet]. * BramMoolenaar: [http://www.moolenaar.net/habits.html Seven habits of effective text editing]. There's a video of him giving a presentation on this somewhere. * VimAsShell * VimAndPerl = ideas = Can you mix syntax highlighting in a single file? Maybe. Here's a thought: How about something that recognizes filetypes in PerlLanguage (or others) HereDocuments and applies the right syntax? Like print <Here is some HTML.

And stuff.

HTML ...turns out this works for PHP heredocs by default, I assume it'd be do-able for Perl. = keys, commands, settings = VimCheatSheet * Use tags. ctrl-] to follow a tag, ctrl-t moves backwards through the stack. * gU''motion'' - uppercase. gUw, for example. * :colorscheme - use tab completion to cycle various schemes. * :%sort * grepping: ** :grep -ri pattern ./* ** :copen * ctrl-v enters a visual mode that allows for selection of a rectangular block. * q: gives a command line history. * :%!''command'' feeds all text to an external command and returns the output. ** frex, :%!sort will sort all lines. * :set showcmd displays commands on the status line as you enter them. * :set showmatch & :set matchtime=1 will briefly bounce to the matching bracket whenever a new bracket is typed in. * vim has a file browser plugin now, which does sort of what you would expect - it lists the files in a directory, and when the cursor is over one, you hit enter to open it. What's cool is that if you hit ?, you get a set of extra commands - o will open a file in a new window, O in a window that's already open. i turns on size/date info, s toggles sorting, etc. Try doing :help file-explorer. = record macros = <[Brennen]> Tonight I was doing something stupid-repetitive to a text file - enclosing certain blocks but not others in HTML paragraph tags. It came to me that I ought to try vim's recording feature, rather than screwing around with writing a search and replace that would actually work. Turns out it's really simple to use. Just hit 'q', followed by the name of a register (0-9a-zA-Z), and then go about your business. Once you've finished with the string of commands you wanted to record, just hit q again. Then to execute them, do '@' followed by the name of the register you used. Think of this as writing a miniature program on the fly. Since vi-style commands are built around a simple verb-object-number syntax, it's surprisingly elegant.