Paul wrote:
Ben Fritz wrote:
On Wednesday, May 16, 2012 10:26:37 AM UTC-5, Paul wrote:
One thing I found not to be remembered is "setl ts=14" (or whatever
number you use to get the file timestamp column closer to the
filename column). Is there a way to have this setting stick?
I don't have input for your main problem, sorry about that.
But this one I can handle.
netrw sets the 'netrw' filetype on its buffers.
So simply use a FileType autocmd, or a filetype plugin file (in the
after directory).
I.e., either create this autocmd:
au FileType netrw setl ts=14
or create file ~/.vim/after/ftplugin/netrw.vim with contents:
setl ts=14
Ben, thanks for that. Unfortunately, the specific local value for
tabstop depends on the longest filename of interest (not necessarily
the longest filename in the directory. This is set on a per-directory
basis (and may change if the directory contents change). I just need
the local tabstop value to stick to the buffer for a particular
directory. So I need (or rather, want) vim to treat a netrw window in
the same manner as it does other buffers. That way, even if I close
the window, then open it again (for example, using :e Directory/Path),
the ts value stays the same as it was set to last time.
I get the feeling that I'm asking for the impossible, but there have
been occassions in the past in which I have been pleasantly surprised.
Try putting
let g:netrw_list_hide =
'\(^\|\s\s\)\zs\.\S\+,\(^\|\s\s\)ntuser\.\S\+'
in your .vimrc and see if that does what you want. (see :help
g:netrw_list_hide )
Regards,
Chip Campbell
--
You received this message from the "vim_use" maillist.
Do not top-post! Type your reply below the text you are replying to.
For more information, visit http://www.vim.org/maillist.php