I am trying to make the change from long-time gedit user to vim, er gvim and 
having some teething problems I hope are just that.

two of the great things about gedit I find indispensable is the snippets and 
ext tools plugins. Discovered UltiSnips plugin for vim and it is ok, far from 
ideal. I can't seem to enter snippets without preceding them with a space 
first, even though the previous character is generally a <> bracket. Are there 
any snippet managers available that work more like gedit's, that allow a 
snippet to tab forward immediately after a > bracket?

gedit's ext tools is great for entering little bash scripts, but I cannot seem 
to figure out how to do similar with vim. Do I need to port all of my gedit ext 
tool scripts into individual bash scripts and run them from my ~/bin dir? 
Because I have too many to remember and the menu in gedit listing all of the 
scripts has always seemed rather convenient. Plus, running scripts from within 
gedits ext tool menu, the script acts on the current file without any need to 
bother specifying paths.

Like I said I hope most of my issues are simply teething probs. But I generally 
edit a lot of text using sed from the terminal and somehow the :%s option in 
vim seems less than adequate. I can't seem to figure how to invoke the -r 
option for regex. Is that possible. I would be just as comfortable, actually 
perhaps more so if I could just open a terminal in the current dir of a file I 
am editing and run sed/perl scripts that way. In gedit I have always remapped 
C-t (ctrl+t) to open a terminal in the current directory of the current file. 
Is there any way to do that using gvim?

Those seem to be my biggest caveats atm. I am enjoying the noticeable 
performance efficiency of gvim over gedit, however my own editting efficiency 
is taking a serious nose dive atm; but if I could get a few of these issues 
resolved I think I might get back on track using gvim.

Oh yeah, one other thing. I got tabs sort of working in gvim...but, for some 
reason, if I open a new nautilus/thunar session to open a new file then it 
opens in a new gvim window and does not open in a new tab of the already 
existing gvim window. Any ideas on that would be great also. I love tabs!

I also forgot to ask about vim's clipboard. I seem to be getting it confused 
with buffers. Does vim have a clipboard that stores multiple copy/yanks and 
cuts? I use parcellite precisely because I like to keep a long buffer of 
copy/cut stuff that I tend to need later on. Everytime I try to find info on 
any functionality like this in vim I seem to get pointed to buffers, which seem 
to be alternate simultaneously being managed by vim.

any help/suggs appreciated.

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