On 07/19/2010 08:35 PM, Andrei Popescu wrote:
On Lu, 19 iul 10, 20:19:56, Panayiotis Karabassis wrote:
I had both vim-full and vim-tiny installed. Removing vim-tiny fixed
this. Rather strange.
I'm guessing you were running vim-tiny. JFTA, you could have changed it
with
update-alterna
On Lu, 19 iul 10, 20:19:56, Panayiotis Karabassis wrote:
> I had both vim-full and vim-tiny installed. Removing vim-tiny fixed
> this. Rather strange.
I'm guessing you were running vim-tiny. JFTA, you could have changed it
with
update-alternatives --config vim
Regards,
Andrei
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Offtopic discu
I had both vim-full and vim-tiny installed. Removing vim-tiny fixed
this. Rather strange.
Thank you.
On 07/19/2010 08:08 PM, Andrei Popescu wrote:
On Lu, 19 iul 10, 19:49:03, Panayiotis Karabassis wrote:
In Ubuntu it was possible to yank some lines of text, exit Vim, open
a new Vim instanc
On Lu, 19 iul 10, 19:49:03, Panayiotis Karabassis wrote:
> In Ubuntu it was possible to yank some lines of text, exit Vim, open
> a new Vim instance and paste the yanked lines. In debian it is
> necessary to use the * register. How can I reproduce the Ubuntu
> behavior?
Works for me with vim-nox (
On 7/19/2010 10:49 AM, Panayiotis Karabassis wrote:
> In Ubuntu it was possible to yank some lines of text, exit Vim, open a
> new Vim instance and paste the yanked lines. In debian it is necessary
> to use the * register. How can I reproduce the Ubuntu behavior?
Not sure what "the * register" is,
In Ubuntu it was possible to yank some lines of text, exit Vim, open a
new Vim instance and paste the yanked lines. In debian it is necessary
to use the * register. How can I reproduce the Ubuntu behavior?
Regards,
Panayiotis
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