On Sat, May 26, 2001 at 03:41:38AM -0600, John Galt wrote:
> In vi, :1267 works...

Also, for vim, start your editing session right at the exact line
you're interested in via

        vi +1267 filename.here

Or, if already editing the file, hop to that line with

        1267G


You can also

        :set ruler
or
        ^G (control G)

to see where you are in the file.


You can also try

        :set number

to see line numbers.


Try :opt and search for /jumping to errors/ for ideas.  and :help
for more vim tips.

or, use emacs instead. choices, choices.

-- 
DEBIAN NEWBIE TIP #18 from Will Trillich <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
:
How do you DISABLE A NETWORK SERVICE? There are several ways
network services are made available: for inetd items, modify
/etc/inetd.conf and then "/etc/init.d/inetd restart". For
independently-running daemons, try "/etc/init.d/<daemon> stop"
(or to permanently zap them, "apt-get --purge remove <daemon>").

Also see http://newbieDoc.sourceForge.net/ ...

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