neovim/runtime/doc/os_unix.txt
Michael Reed 10b2a0e529 Remove 'ttyfast'
refs #1045 #1051

This was enabled by default a while ago (#1051), and has apparently not
created any issues.  The amount of actual code related to it is tiny, so
it has been removed.
2015-02-08 17:46:09 -05:00

60 lines
2.4 KiB
Plaintext

*os_unix.txt* For Vim version 7.4. Last change: 2005 Mar 29
VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar
*unix* *Unix*
This file contains the particularities for the Unix version of Vim.
For compiling Vim on Unix see "INSTALL" and "Makefile" in the src directory.
The default help file name is "/usr/local/lib/vim/help.txt" The files
"$HOME/.vimrc" and "$HOME/.exrc" are used for configuration. Additionally
"/usr/local/etc/vimrc" is used first. If "/usr/local/share" exists it is used
instead of "/usr/local/lib".
Temporary files (for filtering) are put in "/tmp". If you want to place them
somewhere else, set the environment variable $TMPDIR to the directory you
prefer.
With wildcard expansion you can use '~' (home directory) and '$'
(environment variable).
*fork* *spoon*
For executing external commands fork()/exec() is used when possible, otherwise
system() is used, which is a bit slower. The output of ":version" includes
|+fork| when fork()/exec() is used, |+system()| when system() is used. This
can be changed at compile time.
(For forking of the GUI version see |gui-fork|.)
Because terminal updating under Unix is often slow (e.g. serial line
terminal, shell window in suntools), the 'showcmd' and 'ruler' options
are off by default.
When using Vim in an xterm the mouse clicks can be used by Vim by setting
'mouse' to "a". If there is access to an X-server gui style copy/paste will
be used and visual feedback will be provided while dragging with the mouse.
If you then still want the xterm copy/paste with the mouse, press the shift
key when using the mouse. See |mouse-using|. Visual feedback while dragging
can also be achieved via the 'ttymouse' option if your xterm is new enough.
*terminal-colors*
To use colors in Vim you can use the following example (if your terminal
supports colors, but "T_Co" is empty or zero): >
:set t_me=^[[0;1;36m " normal mode (undoes t_mr and t_md)
:set t_mr=^[[0;1;33;44m " reverse (invert) mode
:set t_md=^[[1;33;41m " bold mode
:set t_se=^[[1;36;40m " standout end
:set t_so=^[[1;32;45m " standout mode
:set t_ue=^[[0;1;36m " underline end
:set t_us=^[[1;32m " underline mode start
[the ^[ is an <Esc>, type CTRL-V <Esc> to enter it]
For real color terminals the ":highlight" command can be used.
The file "tools/vim132" is a shell script that can be used to put Vim in 132
column mode on a vt100 and lookalikes.
vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl: