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  • Getting started with mvim, how to manage a project?

    - by zengr
    Hi, I have started out with macvim and now fairly comfortable with the navigation (on a single file) and now I need to write a whole project (say rails) using mvim. In textmate, you have mate project_dir which opens the project in a side drawer, so my question is: Is there a similar feature in mvim? How can a complete project managed in traditionally in macvim? Links to some write-ups are welcomed.

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  • Mapping a Piped Shell Command in Vim

    - by michaelmichael
    In a previous question I asked about mapping evaluated code to a new window in MacVim. I got a great solution, but it presented another question: How can I map a key command in my .vimrc that involves piping output in the shell? As a simple example, let's say I wanted to pipe the results of ls -a to a new MacVim window. From the Vim command line I can enter !ls -a | mvim -, and the results will appear in a new window. Great! Now, I add that to my .vimrc: nmap <Leader>r :w !ls | mvim<CR> Vim now throws an error every time I try to source my .vimrc, which reads as follows: E492: Not an editor command: mvim<CR> Any ideas on how to overcome this?

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  • Installing Command-T breaks MacVim

    - by Mark Szymanski
    I am trying to install Command-T on MacVim. I followed the installation instructions exactly but I get this error when trying to start MacVim (from a terminal via the mvim command line utility). dyld: lazy symbol binding failed: Symbol not found: _rb_intern2 Referenced from: /Users/mark/.vim/ruby/command-t/ext.bundle Expected in: flat namespace dyld: Symbol not found: _rb_intern2 Referenced from: /Users/mark/.vim/ruby/command-t/ext.bundle Expected in: flat namespace Vim: Caught deadly signal TRAP Vim: Finished.

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  • Subversion with MacVim configured as the editor

    - by Steve Kuo
    I'm using Subversion to checkin a file on OSX. I have my EDITOR variable configured to MacVim My .profile includes: export EDITOR=/Applications/MacVim/mvim When I checkin with the -m option (svn ci somefile), MacVim gets launched but then Subversion immediately displays: Log message unchanged or not specified (a)bort, (c)ontinue, (e)dit: It displays this before I get a chance to save my log message in MacVim. Is there a way to get SVN to use MacVim as the log message editor?

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  • Outputing UTF-8 string on Mac OS's Terminal

    - by SuperBloup
    I got a programm in haskell outputting utf-8 using the package utf8-string and using only the output functions of this package. I set the encoding of each file I write to this way : hSetEncoding myFile utf8 {- myFile may be stdout -} but when I try to output : alpha = [fromEnum 0x03B1] {- a -} instead of the nice alpha letter I got on Linux (or in a file on windows), I got the following : α The weird thing is even if I try to write the output on a file, I can't read it back with mvim as an utf-8 file. Is there any way to get the correct behaviour

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  • MacVim + tmux or: The Copy Paste Riddle

    - by Konzepz
    Now this is weird. Copied a chunk of a text from somewhere into clipboard. Ran mvim from a tmux buffer. Opened a file in MacVim. Pasted the text. MacVim results with the error: E353: Nothing to register + Nothing gets pasted. The plot thickens: I try to copy this error -- paste fails. I go over the same steps, this time running MacVim from a regular Terminal window (without tmux) -- Everything is in its right place. Whaa?

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  • $PATH in Vim doesn't match Terminal

    - by donut
    I'm using MacVim and when I don't launch it from the Terminal (mvim) its $PATH does not include what I have set in my .bash_profile. It only seems to have the default values, /usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin. I'm running OS X 10.5.8. Even if I could set it manually in my .vimrc that would be okay, though I would prefer it to pull from the same place as Terminal. I've tried following what one site suggested, adding let $PATH += /blah/foo:/bar/etc to no avail. Edit/Solution: See my answer below. MacVim has an option to fix this.

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  • Applescript won't open applications on my external monitor

    - by jpadvo
    I'm trying to open a new MacVim window with Applescript, and have found partial success with this: do shell script "cd \"~/code/application\"; ~/bin/mvim > /dev/null 2>&1" This works fine, and opens a new MacVim window with it's working directory set to ~/code/application. BUT it always opens on the screen of my laptop, not on the external monitor with the currently active space where I am working. Is there a way to get MacVim to open in the current space? Edit: same problem with opening a finder window: tell application "Finder" to make new Finder window

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  • MacVim, Command-T: SEGV

    - by Ramon Tayag
    Details: OSX 10.7.4 I installed the latest MacVim via Homebrew: $ command-t brew install macvim ==> Downloading https://github.com/b4winckler/macvim/tarball/snapshot-64 Already downloaded: /Library/Caches/Homebrew/macvim-7.3-64.tgz ==> ./configure --with-features=huge --with-tlib=ncurses --enable-multibyte --with-macarchs=x86_64 --enable-perlinterp --enable-pythoninterp --enable-rubyinterp --enable-t ==> make getenvy ==> make ==> Caveats MacVim.app installed to: /usr/local/Cellar/macvim/7.3-64 To link the application to a normal Mac OS X location: brew linkapps or: ln -s /usr/local/Cellar/macvim/7.3-64/MacVim.app /Applications ==> Summary /usr/local/Cellar/macvim/7.3-64: 1733 files, 27M, built in 53 seconds $ command-t brew linkapps Linking /usr/local/Cellar/macvim/7.3-64/MacVim.app Finished linking. Find the links under ~/Applications. $ command-t ruby -v ruby 1.8.7 (2011-12-28 patchlevel 357) [universal-darwin11.0] $ command-t rvm list rvm rubies ree-1.8.7-2012.02 [ i686 ] ruby-1.8.7-p358 [ i686 ] ruby-1.9.2-p290 [ x86_64 ] ruby-1.9.2-p320 [ x86_64 ] ruby-1.9.3-p194 [ x86_64 ] # Default ruby not set. Try 'rvm alias create default <ruby>'. # => - current # =* - current && default # * - default $ command-t cd ~/.vim/bundle/vim-command-t/ruby/command-t ruby extconf.rb $ command-t ruby extconf.rb checking for ruby.h... yes creating Makefile $ command-t make cc -arch i386 -arch x86_64 -pipe -bundle -undefined dynamic_lookup -o ext.bundle ext.o match.o matcher.o -L. -L/System/Library/Frameworks/Ruby.framework/Versions/1.8/usr/lib -L. -arch i386 -arch x86_64 -lruby -lpthread -ldl -lobjc ld: warning: ignoring file ext.o, file was built for unsupported file format which is not the architecture being linked (i386) ld: warning: ignoring file match.o, file was built for unsupported file format which is not the architecture being linked (i386) ld: warning: ignoring file matcher.o, file was built for unsupported file format which is not the architecture being linked (i386) $ command-t mvim MacVim then opens here. But when I open Command-T, MacVim crashes and I see this in the command line: $ command-t dyld: lazy symbol binding failed: Symbol not found: _rb_intern2 Referenced from: /Users/ramon/.vim/bundle/vim-command-t/ruby/command-t/ext.bundle Expected in: flat namespace dyld: Symbol not found: _rb_intern2 Referenced from: /Users/ramon/.vim/bundle/vim-command-t/ruby/command-t/ext.bundle Expected in: flat namespace Vim: Caught deadly signal TRAP Vim: Finished. The problem I have is very similar to this, except that I switched to the system Ruby and still got the error.

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