>
>
> > I tried deleting that other file from the Vim.exe directory...makes no
> > difference...
>
> Okay. So you're sure you're using CWSDPMI r7?
>
I don't know? How do I tell?
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Yeah, the reason I settled on Vim is because I wanted something quick and
easy like EDIT but that could reflow text (e.g. wordwrap without carriage
return symbols) like Notepad or Microsoft Word 5.5.
On Sun, Nov 3, 2013 at 4:50 PM, Rugxulo wrote:
> Hi again,
>
> On Sun, Nov 3, 2013
Thanks to you both!
On Sun, Nov 3, 2013 at 10:07 AM, Matej Horvat
wrote:
> On Sun, 03 Nov 2013 16:57:50 +0100, Bernd Blaauw wrote:
> > An alternative solution would be to write an individual
> > batchfile for each program you'd like to run, and place these batchfiles
> > somewhere in C:\DOS or
I've got my programs in subdirectories of C:\APPS, and whenever I add a new
program, I have to add its path to autoexec.bat like so:
set PATH=.;c:\;\LOCALE;\APPS;[all the other paths to the other programs in
the APPS folder];\APPS\NEWPROG
But now FDOS is telling me my PATH is too long and PATH
I'm playing with vim in FDOS. It's nice, but a bit slow in some respects,
particulary when using its internal file-browser. I am running FDOS from a
thumbdrive on a modern (well, only a few years old) computer. I added
"DEVICE=...himemx.exe" to my config.sys file to fix a separate issue, which
work
Well, thank you for the helpful information re: the config.sys file,
viewing PNG files, etc. My original thought is that I would use the
fast-booting DOS OS to narrow my focus to just a few activities, and I
haven't really done that. Too used to internet, email, etc etc!
But I still think it's rea
I tried about 3 of the mentioned viewers and 2 of the 3 worked well.
display was pretty good and lxpic was great! Thanks!
I'm interested in viewing the common file formats (jpeg, png, etc) and
I was intrigued by Pictview's claim of being able to view Photoshop
files (psd). But if I can view common
Hi,
I recently discovered Rufus, the DOS boot disk installer, and
installed FreeDOS on my thumbdrive. I think it's pretty neat.
Other than occasional command-line use in Windows, the last time I
probably messed with DOS was probably about 20 years ago. And I was
certainly no programmer then.
Any