Mercurial > vim
annotate runtime/doc/if_cscop.txt @ 27096:d539c144aeb4 v8.2.4077
patch 8.2.4077: not all Libsensors files are recognized
Commit: https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/8d9e470aa91a93da7d6bda62521aef69a79e956d
Author: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
Date: Thu Jan 13 14:49:10 2022 +0000
patch 8.2.4077: not all Libsensors files are recognized
Problem: Not all Libsensors files are recognized.
Solution: Add "sensors.d/*" pattern. (Doug Kearns)
author | Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 13 Jan 2022 16:00:05 +0100 |
parents | 3e661b0cf500 |
children | f8116058ca76 |
rev | line source |
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27036 | 1 *if_cscop.txt* For Vim version 8.2. Last change: 2022 Jan 08 |
7 | 2 |
3 | |
4 VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Andy Kahn | |
5 | |
6 *cscope* *Cscope* | |
7 This document explains how to use Vim's cscope interface. | |
8 | |
9 Cscope is a tool like ctags, but think of it as ctags on steroids since it | |
10 does a lot more than what ctags provides. In Vim, jumping to a result from | |
11 a cscope query is just like jumping to any tag; it is saved on the tag stack | |
12 so that with the right keyboard mappings, you can jump back and forth between | |
13 functions as you normally would with |tags|. | |
14 | |
15 1. Cscope introduction |cscope-intro| | |
16 2. Cscope related commands |cscope-commands| | |
17 3. Cscope options |cscope-options| | |
18 4. How to use cscope in Vim |cscope-howtouse| | |
19 5. Limitations |cscope-limitations| | |
20 6. Suggested usage |cscope-suggestions| | |
21 7. Availability & Information |cscope-info| | |
22 | |
23 This is currently for Unix and Win32 only. | |
24 | |
25 ============================================================================== | |
26 1. Cscope introduction *cscope-intro* | |
27 | |
28 The following text is taken from a version of the cscope man page: | |
29 | |
30 ----- | |
31 | |
32 Cscope is an interactive screen-oriented tool that helps you: | |
33 | |
34 Learn how a C program works without endless flipping through a thick | |
35 listing. | |
36 | |
37 Locate the section of code to change to fix a bug without having to | |
38 learn the entire program. | |
39 | |
40 Examine the effect of a proposed change such as adding a value to an | |
41 enum variable. | |
42 | |
43 Verify that a change has been made in all source files such as adding | |
44 an argument to an existing function. | |
45 | |
46 Rename a global variable in all source files. | |
47 | |
48 Change a constant to a preprocessor symbol in selected lines of files. | |
49 | |
50 It is designed to answer questions like: | |
51 Where is this symbol used? | |
52 Where is it defined? | |
53 Where did this variable get its value? | |
54 What is this global symbol's definition? | |
55 Where is this function in the source files? | |
56 What functions call this function? | |
57 What functions are called by this function? | |
58 Where does the message "out of space" come from? | |
59 Where is this source file in the directory structure? | |
60 What files include this header file? | |
61 | |
62 Cscope answers these questions from a symbol database that it builds the | |
63 first time it is used on the source files. On a subsequent call, cscope | |
64 rebuilds the database only if a source file has changed or the list of | |
65 source files is different. When the database is rebuilt the data for the | |
66 unchanged files is copied from the old database, which makes rebuilding | |
67 much faster than the initial build. | |
68 | |
69 ----- | |
70 | |
71 When cscope is normally invoked, you will get a full-screen selection | |
72 screen allowing you to make a query for one of the above questions. | |
73 However, once a match is found to your query and you have entered your | |
74 text editor to edit the source file containing match, you cannot simply | |
75 jump from tag to tag as you normally would with vi's Ctrl-] or :tag | |
76 command. | |
77 | |
78 Vim's cscope interface is done by invoking cscope with its line-oriented | |
79 interface, and then parsing the output returned from a query. The end | |
80 result is that cscope query results become just like regular tags, so | |
81 you can jump to them just like you do with normal tags (Ctrl-] or :tag) | |
82 and then go back by popping off the tagstack with Ctrl-T. (Please note | |
83 however, that you don't actually jump to a cscope tag simply by doing | |
84 Ctrl-] or :tag without remapping these commands or setting an option. | |
85 See the remaining sections on how the cscope interface works and for | |
86 suggested use.) | |
87 | |
88 | |
89 ============================================================================== | |
90 2. Cscope related commands *cscope-commands* | |
91 | |
27036 | 92 *:cscope* *:cs* *:scs* *:scscope* *E259* *E262* *E560* *E561* |
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93 All cscope commands are accessed through suboptions to the cscope commands. |
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94 `:cscope` or `:cs` is the main command |
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95 `:scscope` or `:scs` does the same and splits the window |
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96 `:lcscope` or `:lcs` uses the location list, see |:lcscope| |
7 | 97 |
98 The available subcommands are: | |
99 | |
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100 *E563* *E564* *E566* *E568* *E622* *E623* *E625* |
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101 *E626* *E609* |
7 | 102 add : Add a new cscope database/connection. |
103 | |
104 USAGE :cs add {file|dir} [pre-path] [flags] | |
105 | |
106 [pre-path] is the pathname used with the -P command to cscope. | |
107 | |
108 [flags] are any additional flags you want to pass to cscope. | |
109 | |
110 EXAMPLES > | |
111 :cscope add /usr/local/cdb/cscope.out | |
112 :cscope add /projects/vim/cscope.out /usr/local/vim | |
113 :cscope add cscope.out /usr/local/vim -C | |
114 < | |
2596 | 115 *cscope-find* *cs-find* *E567* |
7 | 116 find : Query cscope. All cscope query options are available |
117 except option #5 ("Change this grep pattern"). | |
118 | |
119 USAGE :cs find {querytype} {name} | |
120 | |
121 {querytype} corresponds to the actual cscope line | |
122 interface numbers as well as default nvi commands: | |
123 | |
124 0 or s: Find this C symbol | |
125 1 or g: Find this definition | |
126 2 or d: Find functions called by this function | |
127 3 or c: Find functions calling this function | |
128 4 or t: Find this text string | |
129 6 or e: Find this egrep pattern | |
130 7 or f: Find this file | |
131 8 or i: Find files #including this file | |
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132 9 or a: Find places where this symbol is assigned a value |
7 | 133 |
1847 | 134 For all types, except 4 and 6, leading white space for {name} is |
135 removed. For 4 and 6 there is exactly one space between {querytype} | |
136 and {name}. Further white space is included in {name}. | |
137 | |
7 | 138 EXAMPLES > |
139 :cscope find c vim_free | |
1847 | 140 :cscope find 3 vim_free |
7 | 141 < |
1847 | 142 These two examples perform the same query: functions calling |
143 "vim_free". > | |
144 | |
145 :cscope find t initOnce | |
146 :cscope find t initOnce | |
147 < | |
148 The first one searches for the text "initOnce", the second one for | |
149 " initOnce". > | |
7 | 150 |
151 :cscope find 0 DEFAULT_TERM | |
152 < | |
153 Executing this example on the source code for Vim 5.1 produces the | |
154 following output: | |
155 | |
156 Cscope tag: DEFAULT_TERM | |
157 # line filename / context / line | |
158 1 1009 vim-5.1-gtk/src/term.c <<GLOBAL>> | |
159 #define DEFAULT_TERM (char_u *)"amiga" | |
160 2 1013 vim-5.1-gtk/src/term.c <<GLOBAL>> | |
161 #define DEFAULT_TERM (char_u *)"win32" | |
162 3 1017 vim-5.1-gtk/src/term.c <<GLOBAL>> | |
163 #define DEFAULT_TERM (char_u *)"pcterm" | |
164 4 1021 vim-5.1-gtk/src/term.c <<GLOBAL>> | |
165 #define DEFAULT_TERM (char_u *)"ansi" | |
166 5 1025 vim-5.1-gtk/src/term.c <<GLOBAL>> | |
167 #define DEFAULT_TERM (char_u *)"vt52" | |
168 6 1029 vim-5.1-gtk/src/term.c <<GLOBAL>> | |
169 #define DEFAULT_TERM (char_u *)"os2ansi" | |
170 7 1033 vim-5.1-gtk/src/term.c <<GLOBAL>> | |
171 #define DEFAULT_TERM (char_u *)"ansi" | |
172 8 1037 vim-5.1-gtk/src/term.c <<GLOBAL>> | |
173 # undef DEFAULT_TERM | |
174 9 1038 vim-5.1-gtk/src/term.c <<GLOBAL>> | |
175 #define DEFAULT_TERM (char_u *)"beos-ansi" | |
176 10 1042 vim-5.1-gtk/src/term.c <<GLOBAL>> | |
177 #define DEFAULT_TERM (char_u *)"mac-ansi" | |
178 11 1335 vim-5.1-gtk/src/term.c <<set_termname>> | |
179 term = DEFAULT_TERM; | |
180 12 1459 vim-5.1-gtk/src/term.c <<set_termname>> | |
181 if (STRCMP(term, DEFAULT_TERM)) | |
182 13 1826 vim-5.1-gtk/src/term.c <<termcapinit>> | |
183 term = DEFAULT_TERM; | |
184 14 1833 vim-5.1-gtk/src/term.c <<termcapinit>> | |
185 term = DEFAULT_TERM; | |
186 15 3635 vim-5.1-gtk/src/term.c <<update_tcap>> | |
187 p = find_builtin_term(DEFAULT_TERM); | |
188 Enter nr of choice (<CR> to abort): | |
189 | |
190 The output shows several pieces of information: | |
191 1. The tag number (there are 15 in this example). | |
192 2. The line number where the tag occurs. | |
193 3. The filename where the tag occurs. | |
194 4. The context of the tag (e.g., global, or the function name). | |
195 5. The line from the file itself. | |
196 | |
197 help : Show a brief synopsis. | |
198 | |
199 USAGE :cs help | |
200 | |
2596 | 201 *E261* |
7 | 202 kill : Kill a cscope connection (or kill all cscope connections). |
203 | |
204 USAGE :cs kill {num|partial_name} | |
205 | |
206 To kill a cscope connection, the connection number or a partial | |
207 name must be specified. The partial name is simply any part of | |
208 the pathname of the cscope database. Kill a cscope connection | |
209 using the partial name with caution! | |
210 | |
211 If the specified connection number is -1, then _ALL_ cscope | |
212 connections will be killed. | |
213 | |
214 reset : Reinit all cscope connections. | |
215 | |
216 USAGE :cs reset | |
217 | |
218 show : Show cscope connections. | |
219 | |
220 USAGE :cs show | |
221 | |
665 | 222 *:lcscope* *:lcs* |
223 This command is same as the ":cscope" command, except when the | |
224 'cscopequickfix' option is set, the location list for the current window is | |
225 used instead of the quickfix list to show the cscope results. | |
226 | |
7 | 227 *:cstag* *E257* *E562* |
228 If you use cscope as well as ctags, |:cstag| allows you to search one or | |
229 the other before making a jump. For example, you can choose to first | |
230 search your cscope database(s) for a match, and if one is not found, then | |
231 your tags file(s) will be searched. The order in which this happens | |
232 is determined by the value of |csto|. See |cscope-options| for more | |
233 details. | |
234 | |
235 |:cstag| performs the equivalent of ":cs find g" on the identifier when | |
236 searching through the cscope database(s). | |
237 | |
238 |:cstag| performs the equivalent of |:tjump| on the identifier when searching | |
239 through your tags file(s). | |
240 | |
241 | |
242 ============================================================================== | |
243 3. Cscope options *cscope-options* | |
244 | |
245 Use the |:set| command to set all cscope options. Ideally, you would do | |
246 this in one of your startup files (e.g., .vimrc). Some cscope related | |
247 variables are only valid within |.vimrc|. Setting them after vim has | |
248 started will have no effect! | |
249 | |
250 *cscopeprg* *csprg* | |
251 'cscopeprg' specifies the command to execute cscope. The default is | |
252 "cscope". For example: > | |
253 :set csprg=/usr/local/bin/cscope | |
254 < | |
255 *cscopequickfix* *csqf* *E469* | |
256 {not available when compiled without the |+quickfix| feature} | |
257 'cscopequickfix' specifies whether to use quickfix window to show cscope | |
236 | 258 results. This is a list of comma-separated values. Each item consists of |
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259 |cscope-find| command (s, g, d, c, t, e, f, i or a) and flag (+, - or 0). |
7 | 260 '+' indicates that results must be appended to quickfix window, |
261 '-' implies previous results clearance, '0' or command absence - don't use | |
236 | 262 quickfix. Search is performed from start until first command occurrence. |
263 The default value is "" (don't use quickfix anyway). The following value | |
33 | 264 seems to be useful: > |
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265 :set cscopequickfix=s-,c-,d-,i-,t-,e-,a- |
33 | 266 < |
7 | 267 *cscopetag* *cst* |
2908 | 268 If 'cscopetag' is set, the commands ":tag" and CTRL-] as well as "vim -t" |
269 will always use |:cstag| instead of the default :tag behavior. Effectively, | |
270 by setting 'cst', you will always search your cscope databases as well as | |
271 your tag files. The default is off. Examples: > | |
7 | 272 :set cst |
273 :set nocst | |
274 < | |
2873 | 275 *cscoperelative* *csre* |
2908 | 276 If 'cscoperelative' is set, then in absence of a prefix given to cscope |
277 (prefix is the argument of -P option of cscope), basename of cscope.out | |
278 location (usually the project root directory) will be used as the prefix | |
279 to construct an absolute path. The default is off. Note: This option is | |
280 only effective when cscope (cscopeprg) is initialized without a prefix | |
281 path (-P). Examples: > | |
2873 | 282 :set csre |
283 :set nocsre | |
284 < | |
7 | 285 *cscopetagorder* *csto* |
286 The value of 'csto' determines the order in which |:cstag| performs a search. | |
287 If 'csto' is set to zero, cscope database(s) are searched first, followed | |
288 by tag file(s) if cscope did not return any matches. If 'csto' is set to | |
289 one, tag file(s) are searched before cscope database(s). The default is zero. | |
290 Examples: > | |
291 :set csto=0 | |
292 :set csto=1 | |
293 < | |
294 *cscopeverbose* *csverb* | |
295 If 'cscopeverbose' is not set (the default), messages will not be printed | |
296 indicating success or failure when adding a cscope database. Ideally, you | |
297 should reset this option in your |.vimrc| before adding any cscope databases, | |
298 and after adding them, set it. From then on, when you add more databases | |
299 within Vim, you will get a (hopefully) useful message should the database fail | |
300 to be added. Examples: > | |
301 :set csverb | |
302 :set nocsverb | |
303 < | |
304 *cscopepathcomp* *cspc* | |
305 The value of 'cspc' determines how many components of a file's path to | |
306 display. With the default value of zero the entire path will be displayed. | |
307 The value one will display only the filename with no path. Other values | |
308 display that many components. For example: > | |
309 :set cspc=3 | |
310 will display the last 3 components of the file's path, including the file | |
311 name itself. | |
312 | |
313 ============================================================================== | |
314 4. How to use cscope in Vim *cscope-howtouse* | |
315 | |
316 The first thing you need to do is to build a cscope database for your | |
317 source files. For the most basic case, simply do "cscope -b". Please | |
318 refer to the cscope man page for more details. | |
319 | |
320 Assuming you have a cscope database, you need to "add" the database to Vim. | |
321 This establishes a cscope "connection" and makes it available for Vim to use. | |
322 You can do this in your .vimrc file, or you can do it manually after starting | |
323 vim. For example, to add the cscope database "cscope.out", you would do: | |
324 | |
325 :cs add cscope.out | |
326 | |
327 You can double-check the result of this by executing ":cs show". This will | |
328 produce output which looks like this: | |
329 | |
330 # pid database name prepend path | |
331 0 28806 cscope.out <none> | |
332 | |
333 Note: | |
334 Because of the Microsoft RTL limitations, Win32 version shows 0 instead | |
335 of the real pid. | |
336 | |
337 Once a cscope connection is established, you can make queries to cscope and | |
338 the results will be printed to you. Queries are made using the command | |
339 ":cs find". For example: | |
340 | |
341 :cs find g ALIGN_SIZE | |
342 | |
343 This can get a little cumbersome since one ends up doing a significant | |
344 amount of typing. Fortunately, there are ways around this by mapping | |
345 shortcut keys. See |cscope-suggestions| for suggested usage. | |
346 | |
347 If the results return only one match, you will automatically be taken to it. | |
348 If there is more than one match, you will be given a selection screen to pick | |
349 the match you want to go to. After you have jumped to the new location, | |
350 simply hit Ctrl-T to get back to the previous one. | |
351 | |
352 | |
353 ============================================================================== | |
354 5. Limitations *cscope-limitations* | |
355 | |
356 Cscope support for Vim is only available on systems that support these four | |
357 system calls: fork(), pipe(), execl(), waitpid(). This means it is mostly | |
358 limited to Unix systems. | |
359 | |
360 Additionally Cscope support works for Win32. For more information and a | |
361 cscope version for Win32 see: | |
362 | |
363 http://iamphet.nm.ru/cscope/index.html | |
364 | |
20 | 365 The DJGPP-built version from http://cscope.sourceforge.net is known to not |
366 work with Vim. | |
367 | |
1931 | 368 Hard-coded limitation: doing a |:tjump| when |:cstag| searches the tag files |
369 is not configurable (e.g., you can't do a tselect instead). | |
7 | 370 |
371 ============================================================================== | |
372 6. Suggested usage *cscope-suggestions* | |
373 | |
374 Put these entries in your .vimrc (adjust the pathname accordingly to your | |
375 setup): > | |
376 | |
377 if has("cscope") | |
378 set csprg=/usr/local/bin/cscope | |
379 set csto=0 | |
380 set cst | |
381 set nocsverb | |
382 " add any database in current directory | |
383 if filereadable("cscope.out") | |
384 cs add cscope.out | |
385 " else add database pointed to by environment | |
386 elseif $CSCOPE_DB != "" | |
387 cs add $CSCOPE_DB | |
388 endif | |
389 set csverb | |
390 endif | |
391 | |
392 By setting 'cscopetag', we have effectively replaced all instances of the :tag | |
393 command with :cstag. This includes :tag, Ctrl-], and "vim -t". In doing | |
394 this, the regular tag command not only searches your ctags generated tag | |
395 files, but your cscope databases as well. | |
396 | |
397 Some users may want to keep the regular tag behavior and have a different | |
398 shortcut to access :cstag. For example, one could map Ctrl-_ (underscore) | |
399 to :cstag with the following command: > | |
400 | |
401 map <C-_> :cstag <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> | |
402 | |
403 A couple of very commonly used cscope queries (using ":cs find") is to | |
404 find all functions calling a certain function and to find all occurrences | |
405 of a particular C symbol. To do this, you can use these mappings as an | |
406 example: > | |
407 | |
408 map g<C-]> :cs find 3 <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> | |
409 map g<C-\> :cs find 0 <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> | |
410 | |
411 These mappings for Ctrl-] (right bracket) and Ctrl-\ (backslash) allow you to | |
412 place your cursor over the function name or C symbol and quickly query cscope | |
413 for any matches. | |
414 | |
415 Or you may use the following scheme, inspired by Vim/Cscope tutorial from | |
416 Cscope Home Page (http://cscope.sourceforge.net/): > | |
417 | |
418 nmap <C-_>s :cs find s <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> | |
419 nmap <C-_>g :cs find g <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> | |
420 nmap <C-_>c :cs find c <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> | |
421 nmap <C-_>t :cs find t <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> | |
422 nmap <C-_>e :cs find e <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> | |
423 nmap <C-_>f :cs find f <C-R>=expand("<cfile>")<CR><CR> | |
424 nmap <C-_>i :cs find i ^<C-R>=expand("<cfile>")<CR>$<CR> | |
425 nmap <C-_>d :cs find d <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> | |
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426 nmap <C-_>a :cs find a <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> |
7 | 427 |
428 " Using 'CTRL-spacebar' then a search type makes the vim window | |
429 " split horizontally, with search result displayed in | |
430 " the new window. | |
431 | |
432 nmap <C-Space>s :scs find s <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> | |
433 nmap <C-Space>g :scs find g <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> | |
434 nmap <C-Space>c :scs find c <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> | |
435 nmap <C-Space>t :scs find t <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> | |
436 nmap <C-Space>e :scs find e <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> | |
437 nmap <C-Space>f :scs find f <C-R>=expand("<cfile>")<CR><CR> | |
438 nmap <C-Space>i :scs find i ^<C-R>=expand("<cfile>")<CR>$<CR> | |
439 nmap <C-Space>d :scs find d <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> | |
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440 nmap <C-Space>a :scs find a <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> |
7 | 441 |
442 " Hitting CTRL-space *twice* before the search type does a vertical | |
443 " split instead of a horizontal one | |
444 | |
445 nmap <C-Space><C-Space>s | |
446 \:vert scs find s <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> | |
447 nmap <C-Space><C-Space>g | |
448 \:vert scs find g <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> | |
449 nmap <C-Space><C-Space>c | |
450 \:vert scs find c <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> | |
451 nmap <C-Space><C-Space>t | |
452 \:vert scs find t <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> | |
453 nmap <C-Space><C-Space>e | |
454 \:vert scs find e <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> | |
455 nmap <C-Space><C-Space>i | |
456 \:vert scs find i ^<C-R>=expand("<cfile>")<CR>$<CR> | |
457 nmap <C-Space><C-Space>d | |
458 \:vert scs find d <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> | |
9344
33c1b85d408c
commit https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/802a0d902fca423acb15f835d7b09183883d79a0
Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
parents:
8951
diff
changeset
|
459 nmap <C-Space><C-Space>a |
33c1b85d408c
commit https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/802a0d902fca423acb15f835d7b09183883d79a0
Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
parents:
8951
diff
changeset
|
460 \:vert scs find a <C-R>=expand("<cword>")<CR><CR> |
7 | 461 |
462 ============================================================================== | |
463 7. Cscope availability and information *cscope-info* | |
464 | |
465 If you do not already have cscope (it did not come with your compiler | |
466 license or OS distribution), then you can download it for free from: | |
467 http://cscope.sourceforge.net/ | |
468 This is released by SCO under the BSD license. | |
469 | |
470 In Solaris 2.x, if you have the C compiler license, you will also have | |
471 cscope. Both are usually located under /opt/SUNWspro/bin | |
472 | |
473 There is source to an older version of a cscope clone (called "cs") available | |
474 on the net. Due to various reasons, this is not supported with Vim. | |
475 | |
476 The cscope interface/support for Vim was originally written by | |
477 Andy Kahn <ackahn@netapp.com>. The original structure (as well as a tiny | |
12968 | 478 bit of code) was adapted from the cscope interface in nvi. |
7 | 479 *cscope-win32* |
13125 | 480 For a cscope version for Win32 see (seems abandoned): |
12968 | 481 https://code.google.com/archive/p/cscope-win32/ |
7 | 482 |
236 | 483 Win32 support was added by Sergey Khorev <sergey.khorev@gmail.com>. Contact |
147 | 484 him if you have Win32-specific issues. |
7 | 485 |
14421 | 486 vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl: |