Hey, everyone. I just edited an answer to one of my questions and it seems the answer became a "community wiki". Does this happen every time you edit an answer to your question? Now the guy that answered can't gain rep from the answer, right? I didn't want this to happen... http://vi.stackexchange.com/questions/698/deleting-groups-of-autoindents-in-insert-mode/720#720
user4704
No.
user4704
It normally happens automatically after a certain number of edits, but two is not that number (unless it is drastically lower for beta sites).
user4704
The edit history says the original poster made it a CW answer.
Thank you, @Carpetsmoker. It could have been an accident. Or maybe the poster felt the answer really needed to be edited (he wrote he was not on a computer) and dediced to post it as a wiki. Either way now I know it was not my fault, thank you.
I think we should have a tag e.g. minimize-keystrokes for questions that are about doing a particular task in as few keystrokes as possible.
Faster way to move a block of text
Move vertically to a specific character on a different line
How to paste and remove current line
Expand a visual select...
I have found answers to legitimate vi/vim questions in other sites, such as SO, tex.SE, etc.
Is it ok to post questions that are already in another SE site?
At this point I don't really remember where I found many of the the answers to my questions.
Would that change the answer to the above...
Sublime Text has vi integration by providing package called Vintage. It is there by default.
Are vi commands (Vintage) in Sublime Text editor should be on topic then?
Using vi in shell is very simple and can be activated by the command:
set -o vi
or:
export EDITOR=vi VISUAL=vi
Should vi-style command line commands be on topic?
I am glad to be a part of a new Stack site. I would like to help moderate, design the site, or help in some greater way. I know that SE sites focus on users being the source of power.. But as of right now I do not know nearly as much as other users here -- So I would like to share my power in som...
g:netrw_win95ftp =1 if using Win95, will remove four trailing blank lines that o/s's ftp "provides" on transfers =0 force normal ftp behavior (no trailing line removal)
Vim is one of those programs where no feature is removed ... ever ... it seems
But good to know that Vim can FTP on my Win95 machine :-)