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-rw-r--r--Editor/vim/doc/DrawIt.txt489
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l---------Editor/vim/doc/latex-suite-quickstart.txt.gz1
l---------Editor/vim/doc/latex-suite.txt.gz1
l---------Editor/vim/doc/latexhelp.txt.gz1
-rw-r--r--Editor/vim/doc/surround.txt205
-rw-r--r--Editor/vim/doc/tags56
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diff --git a/Editor/vim/doc/DrawIt.txt b/Editor/vim/doc/DrawIt.txt
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-DrawIt.txt* The DrawIt Tool Nov 25, 2013
-
-Authors: Charles E. Campbell <NdrchipO@ScampbellPfamily.AbizM>
- Sylvain Viart <molo@multimania.com>
- (remove NOSPAM from Campbell's email first)
-Copyright: Copyright (C) 2004-2013 Charles E. Campbell
- Permission is hereby granted to use and distribute this code,
- with or without modifications, provided that this copyright
- notice is copied with it. Like anything else that's free,
- DrawIt.vim and DrawItPlugin.vim are provided *as is*; it comes
- with no warranty of any kind, either expressed or implied. By
- using this plugin, you agree that in no event will the copyright
- holder be liable for any damages resulting from the use of this
- software.
-
-
-==============================================================================
-1. Contents *drawit-contents* {{{1
-
- 1. Contents......................: |drawit-contents|
- 2. DrawIt Manual.................: |drawit|
- 3. DrawIt Usage..................: |drawit-usage|
- Starting....................: |drawit-start|
- Stopping....................: |drawit-stop|
- User Map Protection.........: |drawit-protect|
- Drawing.....................: |drawit-drawing|
- Tip.........................: |drawit-tip|
- Changing Drawing Characters.: |drawit-setdrawit|
- Moving......................: |drawit-moving|
- Erasing.....................: |drawit-erase|
- Example.....................: |drawit-example|
- Visual Block Mode...........: |drawit-visblock|
- Brushes.....................: |drawit-brush|
- DrawIt Modes................: |drawit-modes|
- 4. DrawIt History................: |drawit-history|
-
-
-==============================================================================
-2. DrawIt Manual *drawit* {{{1
- *drawit-manual*
- /===============+============================================================\
- || Starting & | ||
- || Stopping | Explanation ||
- ++--------------+-----------------------------------------------------------++
- || \di | start DrawIt |drawit-start| ||
- || \ds | stop DrawIt |drawit-stop| ||
- || :DIstart | start DrawIt |drawit-start| ||
- || :DIstart S | start DrawIt in single-bar mode |drawit-start| ||
- || :DIstart D | start DrawIt in double-bar mode |drawit-start| ||
- || :DIsngl | start DrawIt in single-bar mode |drawit-start| |drawit-sngl| ||
- || :DIdbl | start DrawIt in double-bar mode |drawit-start| |drawit-dbl| ||
- || :DIstop | stop DrawIt |drawit-stop| ||
- || :DrawIt[!] | start/stop DrawIt |drawit-start| |drawit-stop| ||
- || | ||
- ++==============+===========================================================++
- || Maps | Explanation ||
- ++--------------+-----------------------------------------------------------++
- || | The DrawIt routines use a replace, move, and ||
- || | replace/insert strategy. The package also lets one insert||
- || | spaces, draw arrows by using the following characters or ||
- || | keypad characters: ||
- || +-----------------------------------------------------------++
- || <left> | move and draw left |drawit-drawing| ||
- || <right> | move and draw right, inserting lines/space as needed ||
- || <up> | move and draw up, inserting lines/space as needed ||
- || <down> | move and draw down, inserting lines/space as needed ||
- || <s-left> | move cursor left |drawit-move| ||
- || <s-right> | move cursor right, inserting lines/space as needed ||
- || <s-up> | move cursor up, inserting lines/space as needed ||
- || <s-down> | move cursor down, inserting lines/space as needed ||
- || <space> | toggle into and out of erase mode ||
- || > | insert a > and move right (draw -> arrow) ||
- || < | insert a < and move left (draw <- arrow) ||
- || ^ | insert a ^ and move up (draw ^ arrow) ||
- || v | insert a v and move down (draw v arrow) ||
- || <pgdn> | replace with a \, move down and right, and insert a \ ||
- || <end> | replace with a /, move down and left, and insert a / ||
- || <pgup> | replace with a /, move up and right, and insert a / ||
- || <home> | replace with a \, move up and left, and insert a \ ||
- || \> | insert a fat > and move right (draw -> arrow) ||
- || \< | insert a fat < and move left (draw <- arrow) ||
- || \^ | insert a fat ^ and move up (draw ^ arrow) ||
- || \v | insert a fat v and move down (draw v arrow) ||
- ||<s-leftmouse> | drag and draw with current brush |drawit-brush| ||
- ||<c-leftmouse> | drag and move current brush |drawit-brush| ||
- || | ||
- ||==============+===========================================================++
- ||Visual Cmds | Explanation ||
- ||--------------+-----------------------------------------------------------++
- || | The drawing mode routines use visual-block mode to ||
- || | select endpoints for lines, arrows, and ellipses. Bresen- ||
- || | ham and Bresenham-like algorithms are used for this. ||
- || | ||
- || | These routines need a block of spaces, and so the canvas ||
- || | routine must first be used to create such a block. The ||
- || | canvas routine will query the user for the number of ||
- || | lines to hold |'textwidth'| spaces. ||
- || +-----------------------------------------------------------++
- || \a | draw arrow from corners of visual-block selected region || |drawit-a|
- || \b | draw box on visual-block selected region || |drawit-b|
- || \c | the canvas routine (will query user, see above) || |drawit-c|
- || \e | draw an ellipse on visual-block selected region || |drawit-e|
- || \f | flood figure with a character (you will be prompted) || |drawit-f|
- || \l | draw line from corners of visual-block selected region || |drawit-l|
- || \s | spacer: appends spaces up to the textwidth (default: 78) || |drawit-s|
- || | ||
- ++==============+===========================================================++
- || Function and Explanation ||
- ++--------------+-----------------------------------------------------------++
- || :call SetDrawIt('vertical','horizontal','crossing','\','/','X','*') ||
- || set drawing characters for motions for moving ||
- || and for the ellipse drawing boundary |drawit-setdrawit| ||
- || default motion ||
- || | up/down, ||
- || - left/right, ||
- || + -| crossing, ||
- || \ downright, ||
- || / downleft, and ||
- || X \/ crossing ||
- ++=======================+==================================================++
- || Commands | Explanation ||
- ++-----------------------+--------------------------------------------------++
- || :SetBrush a-z | sets brush (register) to given register ||
- || :'<,'>SetBrush a-z | yanks visual block to brush |drawit-brush||| ||
- || :DInrml | switch to normal mode |drawit-nrml| ||
- || :DIsngl | switch to single-line mode |drawit-sngl| ||
- || :DIdbl | switch to double-line mode |drawit-dbl| ||
- \============================================================================/
-
-
-==============================================================================
-3. DrawIt Usage *drawit-usage* {{{1
-
-STARTING *drawit-start* {{{2
-\di (starts in normal drawing mode) *drawit-\di*
-:DrawIt (starts in normal drawing mode) *drawit-DrawIt*
-:DIstart (starts in normal drawing mode) *drawit-DIstart*
-:DIstart S (starts in single-bar drawing mode)
-:DIstart D (starts in double-bar drawing mode)
-:DInrml (starts in normal drawing mode) *drawit-DInrml*
-:DIsngl (starts in single-bar drawing mode) *drawit-DIsngl*
-:DIdbl (starts in double-bar drawing mode) *drawit-DIdbl*
-
-Typically one puts <drawit.vim> into the .vim/plugin directory
-(vimfiles\plugin for Windows) where it becomes always available. It uses a
-minimal interface (\di: you can think of it as *D*raw*I*t or *D*rawIt
-*I*nitialize) to start it and (\ds: *D*rawIt *S*top) to stop it. Instead of
-using "\" you may specify your own preference for a map leader (see
-|mapleader|).
-
-With a trailing 'S', :DIstart will begin in single-bar mode (see |drawit-sngl|).
-With a trailing 'D', :DIstart will begin in double-bar mode (see |drawit-dbl|).
-Similarly, :DIsngl and :DIdbl will start DrawIt as well as begin in
-single-bar or double-bar mode, respectively.
-
-A message, "[DrawIt]", will appear on the message line.
-
-
-STOPPING *drawit-stop* {{{2
-\ds
-:DIstop
-:DrawIt!
-
-When you are done with DrawIt, use \ds to stop DrawIt mode. Stopping DrawIt
-will restore your usual options and remove the maps DrawIt set up.
-
-A message, "[DrawIt off]", will appear on the message line.
-
- *drawit-utf16*
- *drawit-utf8* *drawit-unicode*
-NORMAL, SINGLE BAR, AND DOUBLE BAR MODES *drawit-sngl* *drawit-dbl*
-:DInrml :DIsngl :DIdbl
-
-One may use these commands to start up Drawit in normal, single-bar, or
-double-bar modes, respectively. When your |'encoding'| is utf-8 or utf-16,
-DrawIt supports drawing with special box characters (single-bar, double_bar).
-These commands are also used to switch to normal, single-bar, or double-bar
-modes.
-
-
-USER MAP PROTECTION *drawit-protect* {{{2
-
-Starting DrawIt causes it to set up a number of maps which facilitate drawing.
-DrawIt accommodates users with conflicting maps by saving both maps and user
-options and before setting them to what DrawIt needs. When you stop DrawIt
-(|drawit-stop|), DrawIt will restore the user's maps and options as they were
-before DrawIt was started.
-
-
-OPTIONS *drawit-options* {{{2
-
- *g:drawit_insertmode*
-g:drawit_insertmode : if this variable exists and is 1 then maps are
- made which make cursor-control drawing available
- while in insert mode, too. Otherwise, DrawIt's
- maps only affect normal mode.
-
-DRAWING *drawit-drawing* {{{2
-
-After DrawIt is started, use the number pad or arrow keys to move the cursor
-about. As the cursor moves, DrawIt will then leave appropriate "line"
-characters behind as you move horizontally, vertically, or diagonally, and
-will transparently enlarge your file to accommodate your drawing as needed.
-The trail will consist of -, |, \, / characters (depending on which direction
-and SetDrawIt() changes), and + and X characters where line crossings occur.
-You may use h-j-k-l to move about your display and generally use editing
-commands as you wish even while in DrawIt mode.
-
-Another tool that may be used to convert Ascii-art into nice pictures is
-available at https://github.com/christiangoltz/shaape .
-
-
-CHANGING DRAWING CHARACTERS *drawit-setdrawit* {{{2
-
-The SetDrawIt() function is available for those who wish to change the
-characters that DrawIt uses. >
-
- ex. :call SetDrawIt('*','*','*','*','*','*','*')
- ex. :call SetDrawIt('-','|','-','\','/','/','*')
-<
-The first example shows how to change all the DrawIt drawing characters to
-asterisks, and the second shows how to give crossing priority to - and /.
-The default setting is equivalent to: >
-
- :call SetDrawIt('|','-','+','\','/','X','*')
-<
-where SetDrawit()'s arguments refer, in order, to the >
-
- vertical drawing character
- horizontal drawing character
- horizontal/vertical crossing drawing character
- down right drawing character
- down left drawing character
- diagonal crossing drawing character
- ellipse boundary drawing character
-<
-
-TIP *drawit-tip*
-
-I have found that sometimes one or more of the <home>, <end>, <pageup>,
-and <pagedown> keys give unique sequences but are not interpreted
-properly by Vim. This problem impacts DrawIt as it uses those four
-keys to signify diagonal moves/drawing. One solution I use is to
-put into my <.vimrc> file mapings like:
-
- map ^V... <home>
-
-where the ellipsis (...) is the actual character sequence produced by
-hitting the key. The way to generate such maps is to type "map ",
-followed by three control-v presses, press the associated key, then
-a space followed by the proper interpretation sequence (ie. <home>).
-
-
-MOVING *drawit-move* *drawit-moving* {{{2
-
-DrawIt supports shifting the arrow keys to cause motion of the cursor. The
-motion of the cursor will not modify what's below the cursor. The cursor
-will move and lines and/or spaces will be inserted to support the move as
-required. Your terminal may not support shifted arrow keys, however, or Vim
-may not catch them as such. For example, on the machine I use, shift-up
-(<s-up>) produced <Esc>[161q, but vim didn't know that sequence was a <s-up>.
-I merely made a nmap:
-
- nmap <Esc>[161q <s-up>
-
-and vim thereafter recognized the <s-up> command.
-
-
-ERASING *drawit-erase* {{{2
-<space>
-
-The <space> key will toggle DrawIt's erase mode/DrawIt mode. When in [DrawIt
-erase] mode, a message "[DrawIt erase]" will appear and the number pad will
-now cause spaces to be drawn instead of the usual drawing characters. The
-drawing behavior will be restored when the <space> key toggles DrawIt back
-to regular DrawIt mode.
-
-
-EXAMPLES *drawit-example* {{{2
-
-Needless to say, the square spirals which follow were done with DrawIt and
-a bit of block editing with Vim: >
-
- +------------ -----------+ +------------ -----------+ +------------
- |+----------+ +---------+| |+----------+ +---------+| |+----------+
- ||+--------+| |+-------+|| ||+--------+| |+-------+|| ||+--------+|
- |||-------+|| ||+------||| |||-------+|| ||+------||| |||-------+||
- ||+-------+|| ||+------+|| ||+-------+|| ||+------+|| ||+-------+||
- |+---------+| |+--------+| |+---------+| |+--------+| |+---------+|
- +-----------+ +----------+ +-----------+ +----------+ +-----------+
-
-VISUAL BLOCK MODE FOR ARROWS LINES BOXES AND ELLIPSES *drawit-visblock* {{{2
-
-\a : draw arrow from corners of visual-block selected region *drawit-a*
-\b : draw box on visual-block selected region *drawit-b*
-\c : the canvas routine (will query user, see above) *drawit-c*
-\e : draw an ellipse on visual-block selected region *drawit-e*
-\f : flood figure with a character (you will be prompted) *drawit-f*
-\l : draw line from corners of visual-block selected region *drawit-l*
-\s : spacer: appends spaces up to the textwidth (default: 78) *drawit-s*
-
-The DrawIt package has been merged with Sylvain Viart's drawing package (by
-permission) which provides DrawIt with visual-block selection of
-starting/ending point drawing of arrows (\a), lines (\l), and boxes (\b).
-Additionally I wrote an ellipse drawing function using visual block
-specification (|drawit-e|).
-
-One may create a block of spaces for these maps to operate in; the "canvas"
-routine (\c) will help create such blocks. First, the s:Canvas() routine will
-query the user for the number of lines s/he wishes to have, and will then fill
-those lines with spaces out to the |'textwidth'| if user has specified it;
-otherwise, the display width will be used.
-
-Although most of the maps use visual-block selection, that isn't true of the
-\f map. Instead, it assume that you have already drawn some closed figure
-and want to fill it with some character.
-
-The Sylvain Viart functions and the ellipse drawing function depend
-upon using visual block mode. As a typical use: >
-
- Example: * \h
- DrawIt asks: how many lines under the cursor? 10
- DrawIt then appends 10 lines filled with blanks
- out to textwidth (if defined) or 78 columns.
- * ctrl-v (move) \b
- DrawIt then draws a box
- * ctrl-v (move) \e
- DrawIt then draws an ellipse
-<
-Select the first endpoint with ctrl-v and then move to the other endpoint.
-One may then select \a for arrows, \b for boxes, \e for ellipses, or \l for
-lines. The internal s:AutoCanvas() will convert tabs to spaces and will
-extend with spaces as needed to support the visual block. Note that when
-DrawIt is enabled, virtualedit is also enabled (to "all").
->
- Examples:
-
- __ _ *************** +-------+
- \_ _/ **** **** | |
- \_ _/ ** ---------> ** | |
- \_ _/ **** **** | |
- \__/ <------- *************** +-------+
-
- \l \a \e and \a \b
-<
- *drawit-setbrush*
-BRUSHES *drawit-brush* {{{2
->
- :SetBrush [a-z]
-<
- Set the current brush to the selected brush register:
->
- ex. :SetBrush b
-
- :'<,'>SetBrush [a-z]
-<
- Select text for the brush by using visual-block mode: ctrl-v, move .
- Then set the current text into the brush register: (default brush: a)
->
- <leftmouse>
-<
- Select a visual-block region. One may use "ay, for example,
- to yank selected text to register a.
->
- <shift-leftmouse>
-<
- One may drag and draw with the current brush (default brush: a)
- by holding down the shift key and the leftmouse button and moving
- the mouse. Blanks in the brush are considered to be transparent.
->
- <ctrl-leftmouse>
-<
- One may drag and move a selection with <ctrl-leftmouse>. First,
- select the region using the <leftmouse>. Release the mouse button,
- then press ctrl and the <leftmouse> button; while continuing to press
- the button, move the mouse. The selected block of text will then
- move along with the cursor.
->
- \ra ... \rz
-<
- Replace text with the given register's contents (ie. the brush).
->
- \pa ... \pz
-<
- Like \ra ... \rz, except that blanks are considered to be transparent.
-
- Example: Draw the following >
- \ \
- o o
- *
- ---
-< Then use ctrl-v, move, "ay to grab a copy into register a.
- By default, the current brush uses register a (change brush
- with :SetBrush [reg]). Hold the <shift> and <leftbutton>
- keys down and move the mouse; as you move, a copy of the
- brush will be left behind.
-
-
-DRAWIT MODES *drawit-modes* {{{2
-
- -[DrawIt] regular DrawIt mode (|drawit-start|)
- -[DrawIt off] DrawIt is off (|drawit-stop| )
- -[DrawIt erase] DrawIt will erase using the number pad (|drawit-erase|)
-
- g:DrChipTopLvlMenu: by default its "DrChip"; you may set this to whatever
- you like in your <.vimrc>. This variable controls where
- DrawIt's menu items are placed.
-
-
-==============================================================================
-4. History *drawit-history* {{{1
-
- 13 Sep 05, 2013 * improved s:Strlen() -- now uses |strdisplaywidth()|
- if available.
- Sep 13, 2013 * (Paul Wagland) found a case where lines were
- being drawn with the wrong character. This
- affected the Bresenham-algorithm based
- drawing facility (ie. lines and arrows
- specified by visual blocks;
- |drawit-a|, |drawit-l|).
- 12 Nov 16, 2012 * (Alexandre Viau) arrows weren't being drawn.
- Fixed.
- Nov 29, 2012 * (Kim Jang-hwan) reported that with
- g:Align_xstrlen set to 3 that the cursor was
- moved (linewise) after invocation. This
- problem also afflicted DrawIt. Fixed.
- 11 Jan 21, 2010 * (Evan Stern) several places were using
- hardcoded drawing characters instead of
- b:di_... equivalents.
- Feb 22, 2011 * for menus, &go =~# used to insure correct case
- Sep 22, 2011 * ctrl-leftmouse (see |drawit-brush|) now moves the
- selected text entirely, no longer leaving a copy
- of the text where it was initially.
- Nov 07, 2011 * included support for utf-8 box drawing characters
- Nov 16, 2011 * included support for utf-8 single-double characters
- Nov 16, 2011 * included support for cp437 box drawing characters
- Dec 06, 2011 * included support for box and line drawing (\b, \l)
- support for utf-8 / cp437 box drawing characters
- Dec 06, 2011 * fat arrows now use utf-8 characters when available
- Jan 30, 2012 * \f supported when using utf-8/cp437 box drawing
- characters as boundary characters
- 10 Jun 12, 2008 * Fixed a bug with ctrl-leftmouse (which was leaving
- a space in the original selected text)
- Mar 24, 2009 * :DrawIt starts, :DrawIt! stops DrawIt mode.
- Mar 24, 2009 * I've included <script> modifiers to the maps to
- cause rhs remapping only with mappings local to
- the script (see |:map-script|)
- 9 Sep 14, 2007 * Johann-Guenter Simon fixed a bug with s:DrawErase();
- it called SetDrawIt() and that call hadn't been
- updated to account for the new b:di_ellipse
- parameter.
- 8 Feb 12, 2007 * fixed a bug which prevented multi-character user
- maps from being restored properly
- May 03, 2007 * Extended SetDrawIt() to handle b:di_ellipse, the
- ellipse boundary drawing character
- * Changed "Holer" to "Canvas", and wrote AutoCanvas(),
- which allows one to use the visual-block drawing
- maps without creating a canvas first.
- * DrawIt implements using the ctrl-leftmouse to move
- a visual-block selected region.
- * Floods can now be done inside an ellipse
- * DrawIt's maps are now all users of <buffer>
- 7 Feb 16, 2005 * now checks that "m" is in &go before attempting to
- use menus
- Aug 17, 2005 * report option workaround
- Nov 01, 2005 * converted DrawIt to use autoload feature of vim 7.0
- Dec 28, 2005 * now uses cecutil to save/restore user maps
- Jan 18, 2006 * cecutil now updated to use keepjumps
- Jan 23, 2006 * :DIstart and :DIstop commands provided; thus users
- using "set noremap" can still use DrawIt.
- Jan 26, 2006 * DrawIt menu entry now keeps its place
- Apr 10, 2006 * Brushes were implemented
- 6 Feb 24, 2003 * The latest DrawIt now provides a fill function.
- \f will ask for a character to fill the figure
- surrounding the current cursor location. Plus
- I suggest reading :he drawit-tip for those whose
- home/pageup/pagedown/end keys aren't all working
- properly with DrawIt.
- 08/18/03 * \p[a-z] and \r[a-z] implemented
- 08/04/03 * b:..keep variables renamed to b:di_..keep variables
- StopDrawIt() now insures that erase mode is off
- 03/11/03 * included g:drawit_insertmode handling
- 02/21/03 * included flood function
- 12/11/02 * deletes trailing whitespace only if holer used
- 8/27/02 * fat arrowheads included
- * shift-arrow keys move but don't modify
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:fdm=marker
diff --git a/Editor/vim/doc/imaps.txt.gz b/Editor/vim/doc/imaps.txt.gz
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diff --git a/Editor/vim/doc/latex-suite-quickstart.txt.gz b/Editor/vim/doc/latex-suite-quickstart.txt.gz
deleted file mode 120000
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+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
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diff --git a/Editor/vim/doc/latex-suite.txt.gz b/Editor/vim/doc/latex-suite.txt.gz
deleted file mode 120000
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+++ /dev/null
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-/usr/share/vim/addons/doc/latex-suite.txt.gz \ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/Editor/vim/doc/latexhelp.txt.gz b/Editor/vim/doc/latexhelp.txt.gz
deleted file mode 120000
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+++ /dev/null
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-/usr/share/vim/addons/doc/latexhelp.txt.gz \ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/Editor/vim/doc/surround.txt b/Editor/vim/doc/surround.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 30a642a..0000000
--- a/Editor/vim/doc/surround.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,205 +0,0 @@
-*surround.txt* Plugin for deleting, changing, and adding "surroundings"
-
-Author: Tim Pope <http://tpo.pe/>
-License: Same terms as Vim itself (see |license|)
-
-This plugin is only available if 'compatible' is not set.
-
-INTRODUCTION *surround*
-
-This plugin is a tool for dealing with pairs of "surroundings." Examples
-of surroundings include parentheses, quotes, and HTML tags. They are
-closely related to what Vim refers to as |text-objects|. Provided
-are mappings to allow for removing, changing, and adding surroundings.
-
-Details follow on the exact semantics, but first, consider the following
-examples. An asterisk (*) is used to denote the cursor position.
-
- Old text Command New text ~
- "Hello *world!" ds" Hello world!
- [123+4*56]/2 cs]) (123+456)/2
- "Look ma, I'm *HTML!" cs"<q> <q>Look ma, I'm HTML!</q>
- if *x>3 { ysW( if ( x>3 ) {
- my $str = *whee!; vllllS' my $str = 'whee!';
-
-While a few features of this plugin will work in older versions of Vim,
-Vim 7 is recommended for full functionality.
-
-MAPPINGS *surround-mappings*
-
-Delete surroundings is *ds* . The next character given determines the target
-to delete. The exact nature of the target is explained in |surround-targets|
-but essentially it is the last character of a |text-object|. This mapping
-deletes the difference between the "i"nner object and "a"n object. This is
-easiest to understand with some examples:
-
- Old text Command New text ~
- "Hello *world!" ds" Hello world!
- (123+4*56)/2 ds) 123+456/2
- <div>Yo!*</div> dst Yo!
-
-Change surroundings is *cs* . It takes two arguments, a target like with
-|ds|, and a replacement. Details about the second argument can be found
-below in |surround-replacements|. Once again, examples are in order.
-
- Old text Command New text ~
- "Hello *world!" cs"' 'Hello world!'
- "Hello *world!" cs"<q> <q>Hello world!</q>
- (123+4*56)/2 cs)] [123+456]/2
- (123+4*56)/2 cs)[ [ 123+456 ]/2
- <div>Yo!*</div> cst<p> <p>Yo!</p>
-
-*ys* takes a valid Vim motion or text object as the first object, and wraps
-it using the second argument as with |cs|. (It's a stretch, but a good
-mnemonic for "ys" is "you surround".)
-
- Old text Command New text ~
- Hello w*orld! ysiw) Hello (world)!
-
-As a special case, *yss* operates on the current line, ignoring leading
-whitespace.
-
- Old text Command New text ~
- Hello w*orld! yssB {Hello world!}
-
-There is also *yS* and *ySS* which indent the surrounded text and place it
-on a line of its own.
-
-In visual mode, a simple "S" with an argument wraps the selection. This is
-referred to as the *vS* mapping, although ordinarily there will be
-additional keystrokes between the v and S. In linewise visual mode, the
-surroundings are placed on separate lines and indented. In blockwise visual
-mode, each line is surrounded.
-
-A "gS" in visual mode, known as *vgS* , behaves similarly. In linewise visual
-mode, the automatic indenting is suppressed. In blockwise visual mode, this
-enables surrounding past the end of the line with 'virtualedit' set (there
-seems to be no way in Vim Script to differentiate between a jagged end of line
-selection and a virtual block selected past the end of the line, so two maps
-were needed).
-
- *i_CTRL-G_s* *i_CTRL-G_S*
-Finally, there is an experimental insert mode mapping on <C-G>s and <C-S>.
-Beware that the latter won't work on terminals with flow control (if you
-accidentally freeze your terminal, use <C-Q> to unfreeze it). The mapping
-inserts the specified surroundings and puts the cursor between them. If,
-immediately after the mapping and before the replacement, a second <C-S> or
-carriage return is pressed, the prefix, cursor, and suffix will be placed on
-three separate lines. <C-G>S (not <C-G>s) also exhibits this behavior.
-
-TARGETS *surround-targets*
-
-The |ds| and |cs| commands both take a target as their first argument. The
-possible targets are based closely on the |text-objects| provided by Vim.
-All targets are currently just one character.
-
-Eight punctuation marks, (, ), {, }, [, ], <, and >, represent themselves
-and their counterparts. If the opening mark is used, contained whitespace is
-also trimmed. The targets b, B, r, and a are aliases for ), }, ], and >
-(the first two mirror Vim; the second two are completely arbitrary and
-subject to change).
-
-Three quote marks, ', ", `, represent themselves, in pairs. They are only
-searched for on the current line.
-
-A t is a pair of HTML or XML tags. See |tag-blocks| for details. Remember
-that you can specify a numerical argument if you want to get to a tag other
-than the innermost one.
-
-The letters w, W, and s correspond to a |word|, a |WORD|, and a |sentence|,
-respectively. These are special in that they have nothing to delete, and
-used with |ds| they are a no-op. With |cs|, one could consider them a
-slight shortcut for ysi (cswb == ysiwb, more or less).
-
-A p represents a |paragraph|. This behaves similarly to w, W, and s above;
-however, newlines are sometimes added and/or removed.
-
-REPLACEMENTS *surround-replacements*
-
-A replacement argument is a single character, and is required by |cs|, |ys|,
-and |vS|. Undefined replacement characters (with the exception of alphabetic
-characters) default to placing themselves at the beginning and end of the
-destination, which can be useful for characters like / and |.
-
-If either ), }, ], or > is used, the text is wrapped in the appropriate pair
-of characters. Similar behavior can be found with (, {, and [ (but not <),
-which append an additional space to the inside. Like with the targets above,
-b, B, r, and a are aliases for ), }, ], and >. To fulfill the common need for
-code blocks in C-style languages, <C-}> (which is really <C-]>) adds braces on
-lines separate from the content.
-
-If t or < is used, Vim prompts for an HTML/XML tag to insert. You may specify
-attributes here and they will be stripped from the closing tag. End your
-input by pressing <CR> or >. If <C-T> is used, the tags will appear on lines
-by themselves.
-
-If s is used, a leading but not trailing space is added. This is useful for
-removing parentheses from a function call with csbs.
-
-CUSTOMIZING *surround-customizing*
-
-The following adds a potential replacement on "-" (ASCII 45) in PHP files.
-(To determine the ASCII code to use, :echo char2nr("-")). The carriage
-return will be replaced by the original text.
->
- autocmd FileType php let b:surround_45 = "<?php \r ?>"
-<
-This can be used in a PHP file as in the following example.
-
- Old text Command New text ~
- print "Hello *world!" yss- <?php print "Hello world!" ?>
-
-Additionally, one can use a global variable for globally available
-replacements.
->
- let g:surround_45 = "<% \r %>"
- let g:surround_61 = "<%= \r %>"
-<
-Advanced, experimental, and subject to change: One can also prompt for
-replacement text. The syntax for this is to surround the replacement in pairs
-of low numbered control characters. If this sounds confusing, that's because
-it is (but it makes the parsing easy). Consider the following example for a
-LaTeX environment on the "l" replacement.
->
- let g:surround_108 = "\\begin{\1environment: \1}\r\\end{\1\1}"
-<
-When this replacement is used, the user is prompted with an "environment: "
-prompt for input. This input is inserted between each set of \1's.
-Additional inputs up to \7 can be used.
-
-Furthermore, one can specify a regular expression substitution to apply.
->
- let g:surround_108 = "\\begin{\1environment: \1}\r\\end{\1\r}.*\r\1}"
-<
-This will remove anything after the first } in the input when the text is
-placed within the \end{} slot. The first \r marks where the pattern begins,
-and the second where the replacement text begins.
-
-Here's a second example for creating an HTML <div>. The substitution cleverly
-prompts for an id, but only adds id="" if it is non-blank. You may have to
-read this one a few times slowly before you understand it.
->
- let g:surround_{char2nr("d")} = "<div\1id: \r..*\r id=\"&\"\1>\r</div>"
-<
-Inputting text replacements is a proof of concept at this point. The ugly,
-unintuitive interface and the brevity of the documentation reflect this.
-
-Finally, It is possible to always append a string to surroundings in insert
-mode (and only insert mode). This is useful with certain plugins and mappings
-that allow you to jump to such markings.
->
- let g:surround_insert_tail = "<++>"
-<
-ISSUES *surround-issues*
-
-Vim could potentially get confused when deleting/changing occurs at the very
-end of the line. Please report any repeatable instances of this.
-
-Do we need to use |inputsave()|/|inputrestore()| with the tag replacement?
-
-Indenting is handled haphazardly. Need to decide the most appropriate
-behavior and implement it. Right now one can do :let b:surround_indent = 1
-(or the global equivalent) to enable automatic re-indenting by Vim via |=|;
-should this be the default?
-
- vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl:
diff --git a/Editor/vim/doc/tags b/Editor/vim/doc/tags
deleted file mode 100644
index 54ecdda..0000000
--- a/Editor/vim/doc/tags
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,56 +0,0 @@
-cs surround.txt /*cs*
-drawit DrawIt.txt /*drawit*
-drawit-DIdbl DrawIt.txt /*drawit-DIdbl*
-drawit-DInrml DrawIt.txt /*drawit-DInrml*
-drawit-DIsngl DrawIt.txt /*drawit-DIsngl*
-drawit-DIstart DrawIt.txt /*drawit-DIstart*
-drawit-DrawIt DrawIt.txt /*drawit-DrawIt*
-drawit-\di DrawIt.txt /*drawit-\\di*
-drawit-a DrawIt.txt /*drawit-a*
-drawit-b DrawIt.txt /*drawit-b*
-drawit-brush DrawIt.txt /*drawit-brush*
-drawit-c DrawIt.txt /*drawit-c*
-drawit-contents DrawIt.txt /*drawit-contents*
-drawit-dbl DrawIt.txt /*drawit-dbl*
-drawit-drawing DrawIt.txt /*drawit-drawing*
-drawit-e DrawIt.txt /*drawit-e*
-drawit-erase DrawIt.txt /*drawit-erase*
-drawit-example DrawIt.txt /*drawit-example*
-drawit-f DrawIt.txt /*drawit-f*
-drawit-history DrawIt.txt /*drawit-history*
-drawit-l DrawIt.txt /*drawit-l*
-drawit-manual DrawIt.txt /*drawit-manual*
-drawit-modes DrawIt.txt /*drawit-modes*
-drawit-move DrawIt.txt /*drawit-move*
-drawit-moving DrawIt.txt /*drawit-moving*
-drawit-options DrawIt.txt /*drawit-options*
-drawit-protect DrawIt.txt /*drawit-protect*
-drawit-s DrawIt.txt /*drawit-s*
-drawit-setbrush DrawIt.txt /*drawit-setbrush*
-drawit-setdrawit DrawIt.txt /*drawit-setdrawit*
-drawit-sngl DrawIt.txt /*drawit-sngl*
-drawit-start DrawIt.txt /*drawit-start*
-drawit-stop DrawIt.txt /*drawit-stop*
-drawit-tip DrawIt.txt /*drawit-tip*
-drawit-unicode DrawIt.txt /*drawit-unicode*
-drawit-usage DrawIt.txt /*drawit-usage*
-drawit-utf16 DrawIt.txt /*drawit-utf16*
-drawit-utf8 DrawIt.txt /*drawit-utf8*
-drawit-visblock DrawIt.txt /*drawit-visblock*
-ds surround.txt /*ds*
-g:drawit_insertmode DrawIt.txt /*g:drawit_insertmode*
-i_CTRL-G_S surround.txt /*i_CTRL-G_S*
-i_CTRL-G_s surround.txt /*i_CTRL-G_s*
-surround surround.txt /*surround*
-surround-customizing surround.txt /*surround-customizing*
-surround-issues surround.txt /*surround-issues*
-surround-mappings surround.txt /*surround-mappings*
-surround-replacements surround.txt /*surround-replacements*
-surround-targets surround.txt /*surround-targets*
-surround.txt surround.txt /*surround.txt*
-vS surround.txt /*vS*
-vgS surround.txt /*vgS*
-yS surround.txt /*yS*
-ySS surround.txt /*ySS*
-ys surround.txt /*ys*
-yss surround.txt /*yss*