From 2a778912251874f9b808f82e61244efcd12210aa Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Akshay Date: Thu, 16 Apr 2020 13:40:50 +0530 Subject: rerender with pandoc --- docs/posts/bash_harder_with_vim/index.html | 92 +++++++++++++++--------------- 1 file changed, 47 insertions(+), 45 deletions(-) (limited to 'docs/posts/bash_harder_with_vim/index.html') diff --git a/docs/posts/bash_harder_with_vim/index.html b/docs/posts/bash_harder_with_vim/index.html index 396fcfa..17c066a 100644 --- a/docs/posts/bash_harder_with_vim/index.html +++ b/docs/posts/bash_harder_with_vim/index.html @@ -37,60 +37,62 @@ Bash Harder With Vim
-

Bash is tricky, don't let your editor get in your way. Here's a couple of neat -additions you could make to your vimrc for a better shell programming -experience.

- -

Man pages inside vim

- -

Source this script to get started:

- -
runtime ftplugin/man.vim
-
- -

Now, you can open manpages inside vim with :Man! It adds nicer syntax highlighting -and the ability to jump around with Ctrl-] and Ctrl-T.

- + + + + + + + bash_harder_with_vim + + + + +

Bash is tricky, don’t let your editor get in your way. Here’s a couple of neat additions you could make to your vimrc for a better shell programming experience.

+

Man pages inside vim

+

Source this script to get started:

+
runtime ftplugin/man.vim
+

Now, you can open manpages inside vim with :Man! It adds nicer syntax highlighting and the ability to jump around with Ctrl-] and Ctrl-T.

By default, the manpage is opened in a horizontal split, I prefer using a new tab:

- -
let g:ft_man_open_mode = 'tab'
-
- -

Scratchpad to test your commands

- -

I often test my sed substitutions, here is -a sample from the script used to generate this site:

- +
let g:ft_man_open_mode = 'tab'
+

Scratchpad to test your commands

+

I often test my sed substitutions, here is a sample from the script used to generate this site:

# a substitution to convert snake_case to Title Case With Spaces
-echo "$1" | sed -E -e "s/\..+$//g"  -e "s/_(.)/ \u\1/g" -e "s/^(.)/\u\1/g"
-
- +echo "$1" | sed -E -e "s/\..+$//g" -e "s/_(.)/ \u\1/g" -e "s/^(.)/\u\1/g"

Instead of dropping into a new shell, just test it out directly from vim!

- +
yy
+ +
q:p
+
syntax off            # previously run commands
 edit index.html       # in a buffer!
 w | so %
-!echo "new_post.md" | sed -E -e "s/\..+$//g"  --snip--
-^--- note the use of '!'
-
-
  • Hit enter with the cursor on the line containing your command!

    - +!echo "new_post.md" | sed -E -e "s/\..+$//g" --snip-- +^--- note the use of '!' +
      +
    • Hit enter with the cursor on the line containing your command!
    • +
    $ vim
     New Post         # output
    -Press ENTER or type command to continue
    -
  • - +Press ENTER or type command to continue + +
    -- cgit v1.2.3