Hi Tohiko,
The easiest way to deal with these unwanted jumps is simply to press
<ctrl-o>. Vim doesn't close the file - it just goes to the background.
You shouldn't lose your undo stack unless you re-open it.
Best,
Mike
On Mon, Sep 17, 2012 at 6:07 AM, Alessandro Pezzoni
<ale...@la...> wrote:
> On Mon, Sep 17, 2012 at 11:42:20AM +0300, Tohiko Looka wrote:
>> One of the annoying features of vim-latex is that it automatically
>> goes to the first error or warning after a compilation
>> This is annoying because I lose my undo stack and I have to open the
>> file again. It also sometimes goes to unrelated files like aux files
>> for example.
>>
>> How can I disable this behavior?
>
>> I forgot to mention that I do have
>> Tex_GoToError=0
>> But the quickfix window still pops up and the file with the error is
>> automatically opened
>
> Greetings to you.
> If my memory doesn't fail me, this is issue is actually due to vim's
> error parser and not (directly) to vim-latex. Basically, to properly fix
> this you can sanitize LaTeX's error messages before passing them to vim.
> Here [1] you can find some ideas on that line (the "rubber" link is
> dead, you can find it here [2]).
> Please note that I didn't have a chance to try out this setup, yet.
>
> I hope this helps,
> Alessandro
>
> [1] http://phaseportrait.blogspot.it/2008/03/fixing-vim-latex-compiler-error.html
> [2] https://launchpad.net/rubber
>
>
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