On Mon, Jun 20, 2022 at 09:02:13AM -0400, Greg Reagle wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 20, 2022, at 3:00 AM, m...@datameer.com wrote:
> > "Greg Reagle" wrote:
> >> ls | awk '/er.*/ {match($0, /er.*/); print $0; print
> >> NR":"RSTART"-"RSTART+RLENGTH}'
> > [0] https://geoff.greer.fm/ag/
you don't need match
On Sat, Jul 02, 2022 at 11:07:48PM +0600, NRK wrote:
> Hi,
>
> The suckless coding style follows "tabs for indent, spaces for
> alignment" philosophy. But afaik, vim doesn't support it natively.
It does. Just press Tab to indent and press Space to align. You don't
need a plugin. ;)
On Sat, Jul 02, 2022 at 07:29:03PM +0200, Rene Kita wrote:
> It does. Just press Tab to indent and press Space to align. You don't
> need a plugin. ;)
One of the main reason I use vim is because it makes it VERY easy to
edit/refactor code. A lot of things which are very cumbersome on other
point-a
On 22/07/02 11:07, NRK wrote:
> If someone's using vim and follows this style, what plugin and/or
> setting do you use?
set tabstop=8
set softtabstop=0
set shiftwidth=0
set noexpandtab
Not being lazy to type text, and indenting each line manually.
Side note: vim i