Thread: shift-insert not working
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From: Elias P. <el...@us...> - 2003-08-27 13:32:43
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Hello! For some reason, the Shift-Insert combination doesn't work for me in gvim/cream. The same combination however works in all other applications I'm using, to paste something. E.g. mozilla, gedit, anjuta, even xterm. Ctrl-v works as paste, Ctrl-Insert works as copy (as well as Ctrl-c). Just Shift-Insert which I'm used to does nothing. I'm using Debian Sid, and gvim version is 6.1, cream version 0-23. Any solution is much appreciated. Thanks, -- Elias Pschernig <el...@us...> |
From: Steve H. <dig...@mi...> - 2003-08-28 02:24:08
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On Wed, 2003-08-27 at 09:31, Elias Pschernig wrote: > Hello! > > For some reason, the Shift-Insert combination doesn't work for me in > gvim/cream. The same combination however works in all other > applications I'm using, to paste something. E.g. mozilla, gedit, > anjuta, even xterm. > > Ctrl-v works as paste, Ctrl-Insert works as copy (as well as > Ctrl-c). Just Shift-Insert which I'm used to does nothing. > > I'm using Debian Sid, and gvim version is 6.1, cream version 0-23. > > Any solution is much appreciated. Hmm... can't seem to find a problem, what desktop? Everything's fine for me on GNOME 2.2.0/RH9. You might check your platform shortcuts--mine has *way* too many pre-assigned keys by default, so I end up removing them all and starting over. -- Steve Hall [ dig...@mi... ] Cream... the Vim text editor in sheep's clothing! http://cream.sourceforge.net |
From: Elias P. <el...@us...> - 2003-08-28 11:55:52
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On Thu, 2003-08-28 at 04:22, Steve Hall wrote: > Hmm... can't seem to find a problem, what desktop? Everything's fine > for me on GNOME 2.2.0/RH9. You might check your platform > shortcuts--mine has *way* too many pre-assigned keys by default, so I > end up removing them all and starting over. Debian's Gnome 2.2.2 here. But it's not in the keyboard shortcuts in Desktop Preferences->Keyboard Shortcuts. And since I can use Shift-Insert in every other application (also non-gnome), it must obviously be defined somewhere. Just, I have no idea where. Also searching for "X11 shift-insert" in google turned up nothing, except maybe i found that middle-mouse-button and shift-insert do the same. I experimented some more, and it seems like gnome applications have ctrl-c/ctrl-ins and ctrl-v/shift-ins/middle mouse as copy/paste. And just selecting some text, then clicking somewhere, is an additional way of putting something into the copy buffer. And the middle-mouse click does first change the cursor to the click pos, then does the pasting. And if copy/paste is done between different gnome apps, the middle-click uses its own paste buffer. For some non-Gnome apps (i.e. xterm), only selecting means copy, and middle mouse *and* shift-insert work as paste (ctrl-c,ctrl-v,ctrl-insert seem to do nothing). For mozilla, everything works like in gnome apps. For cream, everything is different. Shift-Insert does nothing. Just selecting something does nothing (i.e. when i click middle-mouse or paste in another app, it doesn't paste the selected text, but the one which was last selected in the other app). The middle mouse button only works after 2 clicks, and pastes what was selected in anoter app only, not what was selected in cream. Maybe this is where the problem lies, it somehow discards the first middle click, and shift-insert is mapped to a first-middle-click by cream? Ctrl-Insert/Ctrl-C/Ctrl-V work. Anyway, I'm quite puzzled. I'm using the default Debian/Gnome, and as I described, all gnome apps work, and most other apps work, even if they are using some odd paste by middle-mouse/copy by select behavior. Just cream (unmodified 0-23) doesn't allow me to do Shift-Insert. Maybe I can try modifying the cream configs somehow? I found the Shift-Insert mappings in .cream/cream-keys.vim, and tried removing them, but no change. Hm, and the default gvim without cream seems to do what it wants.. so i didn't do much testing there :) -- Elias Pschernig <el...@us...> |
From: Steve H. <dig...@mi...> - 2003-08-30 13:39:18
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On Thu, 2003-08-28 at 07:53, Elias Pschernig wrote: > On Thu, 2003-08-28 at 04:22, Steve Hall wrote: > > > > Hmm... can't seem to find a problem, what desktop? Everything's > > fine for me on GNOME 2.2.0/RH9. You might check your platform > > shortcuts--mine has *way* too many pre-assigned keys by default, > > so I end up removing them all and starting over. > > Debian's Gnome 2.2.2 here. But it's not in the keyboard shortcuts in > Desktop Preferences->Keyboard Shortcuts. And since I can use > Shift-Insert in every other application (also non-gnome), it must > obviously be defined somewhere. Just, I have no idea where. It *is* defined by Cream, exactly as Ctrl+V: imap <silent> <C-v> x<BS><C-o>:call Cream_paste("i")<CR> imap <silent> <S-Insert> x<BS><C-o>:call Cream_paste("i")<CR> > Also searching for "X11 shift-insert" in google turned up nothing, > except maybe i found that middle-mouse-button and shift-insert do > the same. I experimented some more, and it seems like gnome > applications have ctrl-c/ctrl-ins and ctrl-v/shift-ins/middle mouse > as copy/paste. And just selecting some text, then clicking > somewhere, is an additional way of putting something into the copy > buffer. And the middle-mouse click does first change the cursor to > the click pos, then does the pasting. And if copy/paste is done > between different gnome apps, the middle-click uses its own paste > buffer. > > For some non-Gnome apps (i.e. xterm), only selecting means copy, and > middle mouse *and* shift-insert work as paste > (ctrl-c,ctrl-v,ctrl-insert seem to do nothing). > > For mozilla, everything works like in gnome apps. > > For cream, everything is different. The clipboard standard has been defined for a while, but some apps do not follow it correctly. There are actually two main clipboards available: one to store the selection ("*) and the global clipboard across apps ("+). The Unix standard is that middle mouse pastes the *selection* clipboard. Many people find this unintuitive and bothersome (myself, Windows users, Apple users) and so it is disabled by default in Cream. Cut/Copy/Paste all use the *global* clipboard and middle mouse does nothing. But due to some "prodding" by some on this list, we now offer an option to use the selection clipboard under the preferences menu. You should find when using it that making a selecting and using middle-mouse to paste work per the Unix standard. However it does not change the behavior of Ctrl+X/C/V, nor Shift+Del/Ctrl+Ins/Shift+Ins. If either of Cream's clipboards don't interact properly with another app, it's possible that the app isn't using the standard correctly. Read :help clipboard for more. > Shift-Insert does nothing. > > Just selecting something does nothing (i.e. when i click > middle-mouse or paste in another app, it doesn't paste the selected > text, but the one which was last selected in the other app). > > The middle mouse button only works after 2 clicks, and pastes what > was selected in anoter app only, not what was selected in cream. > Maybe this is where the problem lies, it somehow discards the first > middle click, and shift-insert is mapped to a first-middle-click by > cream? > > Ctrl-Insert/Ctrl-C/Ctrl-V work. > > Anyway, I'm quite puzzled. I'm using the default Debian/Gnome, and > as I described, all gnome apps work, and most other apps work, even > if they are using some odd paste by middle-mouse/copy by select > behavior. Just cream (unmodified 0-23) doesn't allow me to do > Shift-Insert. > > Maybe I can try modifying the cream configs somehow? I found the > Shift-Insert mappings in .cream/cream-keys.vim, and tried removing > them, but no change. Hm, and the default gvim without cream seems to > do what it wants.. so i didn't do much testing there :) Could it be that you are expecting Shift+Insert to copy the selection buffer? Again, I find Shift+Insert to work as documented on both RH9/GNOME2 and Win95-2k. If you still can't get it to work as we're documenting, I have one more test we can run. Or if you want your clipboard keys to operate on the selection clipboard, I can give you code to help you get the desired behavior. (And sorry for the delay in reponse, I've been out of town for a few days.) -- Steve Hall [ dig...@mi... ] Cream... the Vim text editor in sheep's clothing! http://cream.sourceforge.net |
From: Elias P. <el...@us...> - 2003-08-30 14:29:31
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On Sat, 2003-08-30 at 15:37, Steve Hall wrote: [..] > The clipboard standard has been defined for a while, but some apps do > not follow it correctly. There are actually two main clipboards > available: one to store the selection ("*) and the global clipboard > across apps ("+). > > The Unix standard is that middle mouse pastes the *selection* > clipboard. Many people find this unintuitive and bothersome (myself, > Windows users, Apple users) and so it is disabled by default in Cream. > Cut/Copy/Paste all use the *global* clipboard and middle mouse does > nothing. > > But due to some "prodding" by some on this list, we now offer an > option to use the selection clipboard under the preferences menu. You > should find when using it that making a selecting and using > middle-mouse to paste work per the Unix standard. However it does not > change the behavior of Ctrl+X/C/V, nor Shift+Del/Ctrl+Ins/Shift+Ins. Thanks! This solves it! When I switch to Middle-Mouse-X-Style, Shift-Insert works. When I switch to normal style again, it stops working again. I understand that this is not what *should* happen, but it makes cream so much nicer to me, since my fingers automatically hit Shift-Insert for pasting after years of getting used to it in windows :) > If either of Cream's clipboards don't interact properly with another > app, it's possible that the app isn't using the standard correctly. > Read :help clipboard for more. > [..] > > Could it be that you are expecting Shift+Insert to copy the selection > buffer? Again, I find Shift+Insert to work as documented on both > RH9/GNOME2 and Win95-2k. If you still can't get it to work as we're > documenting, I have one more test we can run. Or if you want your > clipboard keys to operate on the selection clipboard, I can give you > code to help you get the desired behavior. Well, I don't use middle mouse at all. I just wanted to copy/paste *within* cream - and it only works with the X-mouse-style for me, for some reason. I'd expect someone else who uses Gnome2 from Debian/Sid to experience the same, since I don't think I made any changes to any config files. > (And sorry for the delay in reponse, I've been out of town for a few > days.) I almost thought it's again one of those things only I experience, and nobody else has ever seen let alone has a solution for it :) I almost feel bad for not seeing/trying that one option myself now.. maybe it should be renamed to "Use X-Pasting-Style" instead of "X-Mouse-Style". Hm, I just tried some more, and what is happening now is, Shift-Insert behaves like the middle mouse button in cream. I didn't know of this 2 buffers before, so it was hard to notice, but what happens now is: In cream, I select a word A, then hit cltr-c or shift-insert. Now I select word B. If I now hit ctrl-v, word A is pasted. If I hit shift-insert (or middle mouse) word B is pasted. So, it still isn't working like it does in other Gnome apps. E.g. Im writing this in Evolution, and there, if I do the same thing, Shift-Insert pastes word A, not word B. I hope you can still follow what I'm saying :) In short, everything works the same, just Shift-Insert magically gets another meaning in cream. With X-mouse-style, it pastes the selection. With normal-mouse-style, it does nothing. So, ideally, I'd of course like Shift-Insert to paste what was copied, not what was selected - but that's a very minor annoyance compared to not working at all. Anyway, if there's anything else I could try, given the current (un-explainable?) behavior, please tell me.. -- Elias Pschernig <el...@us...> |
From: Jon W. <jo...@je...> - 2003-08-30 15:21:58
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On Sat, 2003-08-30 at 15:28, Elias Pschernig wrote: [...snip...] > > Well, I don't use middle mouse at all. I just wanted to copy/paste > *within* cream - and it only works with the X-mouse-style for me, for > some reason. I'd expect someone else who uses Gnome2 from Debian/Sid to > experience the same, since I don't think I made any changes to any > config files. I'll second that - not a big problem for me (I never use middle-mouse pasting), but it is there. [...snip...] -- Jon ^^^ (0 0) jellybob.co.uk ---o0O-----O0o---- |
From: Steve H. <dig...@mi...> - 2003-09-01 13:28:14
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On Sat, 2003-08-30 at 11:22, Jon Wood wrote: > On Sat, 2003-08-30 at 15:28, Elias Pschernig wrote: > > > > I just wanted [Shift+Ins] to copy/paste *within* cream - and it > > only works with the X-mouse-style for me, for some reason. I'd > > expect someone else who uses Gnome2 from Debian/Sid to experience > > the same, since I don't think I made any changes to any config > > files. > > I'll second that - not a big problem for me (I never use middle-mouse > pasting), but it is there. What Vim verison and patch level? (Output of :version.) -- Steve Hall [ dig...@mi... ] Cream... the Vim text editor in sheep's clothing! http://cream.sourceforge.net |
From: Jon W. <jo...@je...> - 2003-09-01 13:34:25
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On Mon, 2003-09-01 at 14:26, Steve Hall wrote: > On Sat, 2003-08-30 at 11:22, Jon Wood wrote: > > On Sat, 2003-08-30 at 15:28, Elias Pschernig wrote: > > > > > > I just wanted [Shift+Ins] to copy/paste *within* cream - and it > > > only works with the X-mouse-style for me, for some reason. I'd > > > expect someone else who uses Gnome2 from Debian/Sid to experience > > > the same, since I don't think I made any changes to any config > > > files. > > > > I'll second that - not a big problem for me (I never use middle-mouse > > pasting), but it is there. > > What Vim verison and patch level? (Output of :version.) Version 6.1, patch 1-474 -- Jon ^^^ (0 0) jellybob.co.uk ---o0O-----O0o---- |
From: Steve H. <dig...@mi...> - 2003-09-03 06:10:43
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On Mon, 2003-09-01 at 09:35, Jon Wood wrote: > On Mon, 2003-09-01 at 14:26, Steve Hall wrote: > > On Sat, 2003-08-30 at 11:22, Jon Wood wrote: > > > On Sat, 2003-08-30 at 15:28, Elias Pschernig wrote: > > > > > > > > I just wanted [Shift+Ins] to copy/paste *within* cream - and > > > > it only works with the X-mouse-style for me, for some reason. > > > > I'd expect someone else who uses Gnome2 from Debian/Sid to > > > > experience the same, since I don't think I made any changes to > > > > any config files. > > > > > > I'll second that - not a big problem for me (I never use > > > middle-mouse pasting), but it is there. > > > > What Vim verison and patch level? (Output of :version.) > > Version 6.1, patch 1-474 Ok, so that's not the problem. ;) What does :imap <S-Insert> produce? Hopefully x<BS><C-O>:call Cream_paste("i")<CR> If so, I have no idea why the result for Ctrl+V would be any different, it is *exactly* the same mapping. And I don't understand why it's not reproducable on RH9 gVim 6.1.390, why just Debian/Sid? What if you actually enter the function call with arg from the command line? Any other Cream users out there with a Shift+Insert mapping that does not paste the clipboard (the same as Ctrl+V)? -- Steve Hall [ dig...@mi... ] Cream... the Vim text editor in sheep's clothing! http://cream.sourceforge.net |
From: Elias P. <el...@us...> - 2003-09-04 07:11:42
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On Wed, 2003-09-03 at 08:09, Steve Hall wrote: > On Mon, 2003-09-01 at 09:35, Jon Wood wrote: > > On Mon, 2003-09-01 at 14:26, Steve Hall wrote: > > > On Sat, 2003-08-30 at 11:22, Jon Wood wrote: > > > > On Sat, 2003-08-30 at 15:28, Elias Pschernig wrote: > > > > > > > > > > I just wanted [Shift+Ins] to copy/paste *within* cream - and > > > > > it only works with the X-mouse-style for me, for some reason. > > > > > I'd expect someone else who uses Gnome2 from Debian/Sid to > > > > > experience the same, since I don't think I made any changes to > > > > > any config files. > > > > > > > > I'll second that - not a big problem for me (I never use > > > > middle-mouse pasting), but it is there. > > > > > > What Vim verison and patch level? (Output of :version.) > > > > Version 6.1, patch 1-474 > > Ok, so that's not the problem. ;) > > What does :imap <S-Insert> produce? Hopefully > > x<BS><C-O>:call Cream_paste("i")<CR> > For me, it says "No mapping found" when I start with "normal middle mouse" and "! <S-Insert> <MiddleMouse>" when I start with "X-style middle mouse". Heh, guess that explains everything.. so the question now is, who overwrites the default cream settings? I have ~/.vimrc, ~/.gvimrc and ~/.cream, like the installation tells. Running grep, I get this: > grep -r S-Insert ~/.vimrc ~/.gvimrc ~/.cream /home/elias/.cream/cream-keys.vim:imap <silent> <S-Insert> x<BS><C-o>:call Cream_paste("i")<CR> /home/elias/.cream/cream-keys.vim:vmap <silent> <S-Insert> :<C-u>call Cream_paste("v")<CR> /home/elias/.cream/cream-lib.vim:"vmap <S-Insert> <C-v> /home/elias/.cream/cream-lib.vim:"imap <S-Insert> <C-v> Which I guess is what it should be, since I didn't modify it. Does it make any sense? -- Elias Pschernig <el...@us...> |
From: Steve H. <dig...@mi...> - 2003-09-04 11:31:37
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On Thu, 2003-09-04 at 03:10, Elias Pschernig wrote: > On Wed, 2003-09-03 at 08:09, Steve Hall wrote: > > > > What does :imap <S-Insert> produce? Hopefully > > > > x<BS><C-O>:call Cream_paste("i")<CR> > > For me, it says "No mapping found" when I start with "normal middle > mouse" and "! <S-Insert> <MiddleMouse>" when I start with > "X-style middle mouse". Heh, guess that explains everything.. so the > question now is, who overwrites the default cream settings? Indeed! I bet you have a system-wide vimrc that is interfering. Check your :version output to find this file and examine. You might also explore any plugins installed, too. > I have ~/.vimrc, ~/.gvimrc and ~/.cream, like the installation tells. > > Running grep, I get this: > > => grep -r S-Insert ~/.vimrc ~/.gvimrc ~/.cream > /home/elias/.cream/cream-keys.vim:imap <silent> <S-Insert> x<BS><C-o>:call Cream_paste("i")<CR> > /home/elias/.cream/cream-keys.vim:vmap <silent> <S-Insert> :<C-u>call Cream_paste("v")<CR> > /home/elias/.cream/cream-lib.vim:"vmap <S-Insert> <C-v> > /home/elias/.cream/cream-lib.vim:"imap <S-Insert> <C-v> > > Which I guess is what it should be, since I didn't modify it. Does > it make any sense? Yes, I don't think you'll find these in Cream. ;) Something else on the distro is unmapping these. You can read :help startup to read about how Vim initializes and from where settings are initialized. I think we're getting closer... -- Steve Hall [ dig...@mi... ] Cream... the Vim text editor in sheep's clothing! http://cream.sourceforge.net |
From: Elias P. <el...@us...> - 2003-09-04 13:28:20
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On Thu, 2003-09-04 at 13:30, Steve Hall wrote: > On Thu, 2003-09-04 at 03:10, Elias Pschernig wrote: > > On Wed, 2003-09-03 at 08:09, Steve Hall wrote: > > > > > > What does :imap <S-Insert> produce? Hopefully > > > > > > x<BS><C-O>:call Cream_paste("i")<CR> > > > > For me, it says "No mapping found" when I start with "normal middle > > mouse" and "! <S-Insert> <MiddleMouse>" when I start with > > "X-style middle mouse". Heh, guess that explains everything.. so the > > question now is, who overwrites the default cream settings? > > Indeed! I bet you have a system-wide vimrc that is interfering. Check > your :version output to find this file and examine. You might also > explore any plugins installed, too. > Yes. The Debian package "vim" installs a default config file "/etc/vim/gvimrc", as well as a symlink to it in "/usr/share/vim/gvimrc", which has the lines: map <S-Insert> <MiddleMouse> map! <S-Insert> <MiddleMouse> in it. I removed both lines, and everything works now like I want it :) I wonder if this should be reported to Debian as a bug-report? But as long as Cream isn't included in Debian, it's probably not a bug. Maybe add a warning for Debian users somewhere in the Cream FAQ instead. Or in the installation docs, when it says to copy over gvimrc to your home dir, add something like "watch out for key mappings in your system wide config files which will take precedence over whatever mappings are done by Cream in the ~/gvimrc, so in this case you have to delete them". -- Elias Pschernig <el...@us...> |
From: Jon W. <jo...@je...> - 2003-09-04 16:47:58
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On Thu, 2003-09-04 at 14:27, Elias Pschernig wrote: [...snip...] > > I wonder if this should be reported to Debian as a bug-report? But as > long as Cream isn't included in Debian, it's probably not a bug. Maybe > add a warning for Debian users somewhere in the Cream FAQ instead. Or in > the installation docs, when it says to copy over gvimrc to your home > dir, add something like "watch out for key mappings in your system wide > config files which will take precedence over whatever mappings are done > by Cream in the ~/gvimrc, so in this case you have to delete them". I think it should probably be reported (and you've gone and made me want to build a Debian package of Cream now :P) -- Jon ^^^ (0 0) jellybob.co.uk ---o0O-----O0o---- |
From: Steve H. <dig...@mi...> - 2003-09-06 03:33:10
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On Thu, 2003-09-04 at 12:48, Jon Wood wrote: > > (and you've gone and made me want to build a Debian package of Cream > now :P) :) If you're actually serious, check in with Christoph Haas (cc:) who has already put effort into this. -- Steve Hall [ dig...@mi... ] Cream... the Vim text editor in sheep's clothing! http://cream.sourceforge.net |
From: Christoph H. <em...@ch...> - 2003-09-06 10:36:57
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On Fri, Sep 05, 2003 at 11:31:44PM -0400, Steve Hall wrote: > On Thu, 2003-09-04 at 12:48, Jon Wood wrote: > > (and you've gone and made me want to build a Debian package of Cream > > now :P) > :) If you're actually serious, check in with Christoph Haas (cc:) who > has already put effort into this. The package is ready. I am currently in the NM (new maintainer) queue and about to get permissions to upload the package into the distribution. I hope this process will be done shortly. Regards Christoph -- ~ ~ ".signature" [Modified] 3 lines --100%-- 3,41 All |
From: Steve H. <dig...@mi...> - 2003-09-06 04:09:34
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On Thu, 2003-09-04 at 09:27, Elias Pschernig wrote: > On Thu, 2003-09-04 at 13:30, Steve Hall wrote: > > > > I bet you have a system-wide vimrc that is interfering. > > Yes. The Debian package "vim" installs a default config file > "/etc/vim/gvimrc" [snip] > I wonder if this should be reported to Debian as a bug-report? But > as long as Cream isn't included in Debian, it's probably not a bug. > Maybe add a warning for Debian users somewhere in the Cream FAQ > instead. Or in the installation docs, when it says to copy over > gvimrc to your home dir, add something like "watch out for key > mappings in your system wide config files which will take precedence > over whatever mappings are done by Cream in the ~/gvimrc, so in this > case you have to delete them". Yes, the warning route is probably best. I found a less harmful system vimrc on Red Hat, so let's just warn everybody. ;) -- Steve Hall [ dig...@mi... ] Cream... the Vim text editor in sheep's clothing! http://cream.sourceforge.net |
From: Steve H. <dig...@mi...> - 2003-09-01 13:26:45
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On Sat, 2003-08-30 at 10:28, Elias Pschernig wrote: > > Thanks! This solves it! When I switch to Middle-Mouse-X-Style, > Shift-Insert works. When I switch to normal style again, it stops > working again. I understand that this is not what *should* happen, No, it really shouldn't. I'm bothered that Ctrl+V and Shift+Ins don't work the same, yet I have no idea why. > In short, everything works the same, just Shift-Insert magically > gets another meaning in cream. With X-mouse-style, it pastes the > selection. With normal-mouse-style, it does nothing. > > So, ideally, I'd of course like Shift-Insert to paste what was > copied, not what was selected - but that's a very minor annoyance > compared to not working at all. Anyway, if there's anything else I > could try, given the current (un-explainable?) behavior, please tell > me.. You said your version of Vim is 6.1. Is that 6.1.0 or have some patches been applied? (First few lines of :version) -- Steve Hall [ dig...@mi... ] Cream... the Vim text editor in sheep's clothing! http://cream.sourceforge.net |
From: Elias P. <el...@us...> - 2003-09-01 13:54:23
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On Mon, 2003-09-01 at 15:25, Steve Hall wrote: [..] > You said your version of Vim is 6.1. Is that 6.1.0 or have some > patches been applied? (First few lines of :version) Here's the complete :version: :version VIM - Vi IMproved 6.1 (2002 Mar 24, compiled May 27 2003 22:36:09) Included patches: 1-474 Compiled by Luca Filipozzi <lfi...@de...> Normal version with GTK GUI. Features included (+) or not (-): +autocmd -balloon_eval +browse +builtin_terms +byte_offset +cindent +clientserver +clipboard +cmdline_compl +cmdline_hist +cmdline_info +comments +cryptv +cscope +dialog_con_gui +diff +digraphs -ebcdic -emacs_tags +eval +ex_extra +extra_search -farsi +file_in_path +find_in_path +folding -footer +fork() +gettext -hangul_input +iconv +insert_expand +jumplist +keymap +langmap +libcall +linebreak +lispindent +listcmds +localmap +menu +mksession +modify_fname +mouse +mouseshape -mouse_dec +mouse_gpm -mouse_jsbterm -mouse_netterm +mouse_xterm +multi_byte +multi_lang -netbeans_intg -osfiletype +path_extra -perl +postscript +printer -python +quickfix +rightleft -ruby +scrollbind +signs +smartindent -sniff +statusline -sun_workshop +syntax +tag_binary +tag_old_static -tag_any_white -tcl +terminfo +termresponse +textobjects +title +toolbar +user_commands +vertsplit +virtualedit +visual +visualextra +viminfo +vreplace +wildignore +wildmenu +windows +writebackup +X11 +xfontset +xim +xterm_clipboard -xterm_save system vimrc file: "$VIM/vimrc" user vimrc file: "$HOME/.vimrc" user exrc file: "$HOME/.exrc" system gvimrc file: "$VIM/gvimrc" user gvimrc file: "$HOME/.gvimrc" system menu file: "$VIMRUNTIME/menu.vim" fall-back for $VIM: "/usr/share/vim" Compilation: gcc -c -I. -Iproto -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -DFEAT_GUI_GTK -I/usr/include/gtk-1.2 -I/usr/include/glib-1.2 -I/usr/lib/glib/include -I/usr/X11R6/include -O2 -DFEAT_LANGMAP -DFEAT_KEYMAP -DFEAT_SIGNS -DFEAT_RIGHTLEFT -I/usr/X11R6/include Linking: gcc -L/usr/X11R6/lib -L/usr/local/lib -o vim -L/usr/lib -L/usr/X11R6/lib -lgtk -lgdk -rdynamic -l gmodule -lglib -ldl -lXi -lXext -lm -lXt -lncurses -lgpm -ldl -- Elias Pschernig <el...@us...> |