On Sat, Jun 13, 2009 at 7:57 PM, Wayne<sri...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Sat, Jun 13, 2009 at 7:40 PM, Mike Hoy <hoy...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> Try out Vim. It may take you a week to get used to it. Best thing I ever >> did was finally get started on Vim. Once I got used to it I was very happy. >> Google around for Vim tutorials. There is a #VIM channel on freenode I >> believe. There is also a VIM mailing list that is very helpful. You won't >> need these for long. Once you get used to it and think you've learned all >> you can you find out there's even more stuff you can do with it. >> <snip> >> >> So it's something that you use for life once you get that feeling of >> enlightenment that comes from never having to remove your hands from the >> keyboard. > > I'm another viim fanatic; > > I use two terminals - one with vim and one with ipython (I write most of my > code on linux). When I'm on windows I have a cmd window open with Ipython > and I have a gVim window open. I'm sure I barely scratch the surface of > things I can do and I know I've stopped using some things that I'm sure I'll > start using the more I code. > > I really like using F5 to run my code, so you can put in your .vimrc so you > don't have to type it, or just type it every time: > > map <F5> :!python %<Enter> > > and every time you hit <F5> it will run your current script. > > Of course I also write code in c++ for school, so I have a few different > keys that will change the F5 bindings.
You can map it directly to the filename extension so it uses the correct bindings automatically au BufNewFile,BufRead *.py map <F5> :!python %<Enter> Cheers -- Linux Registered User # 386081 A menudo unas pocas horas de "Prueba y error" podrán ahorrarte minutos de leer manuales. _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor