view runtime/doc/pi_gzip.txt @ 9104:2242a5766417 v7.4.1836

commit https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/1d429610bf9e99a6252be8abbc910d6667e4d1da Author: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org> Date: Tue May 24 15:44:17 2016 +0200 patch 7.4.1836 Problem: When using a partial on a dictionary it always gets bound to that dictionary. Solution: Make a difference between binding a function to a dictionary explicitly or automatically.
author Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
date Tue, 24 May 2016 15:45:06 +0200
parents 359743c1f59a
children 9f48eab77d62
line wrap: on
line source

*pi_gzip.txt*   For Vim version 7.4.  Last change: 2012 Jul 19


		  VIM REFERENCE MANUAL    by Bram Moolenaar


Editing compressed files with Vim		*gzip* *bzip2* *compress*

1. Autocommands			|gzip-autocmd|

The functionality mentioned here is a |standard-plugin|.
This plugin is only available if 'compatible' is not set.
You can avoid loading this plugin by setting the "loaded_gzip" variable: >
	:let loaded_gzip = 1

{Vi does not have any of this}

==============================================================================
1. Autocommands						*gzip-autocmd*

The plugin installs autocommands to intercept reading and writing of files
with these extensions:

	extension	compression ~
	*.Z		compress (Lempel-Ziv)
	*.gz		gzip
	*.bz2		bzip2
	*.lzma		lzma
	*.xz		xz

That's actually the only thing you need to know.  There are no options.

After decompressing a file, the filetype will be detected again.  This will
make a file like "foo.c.gz" get the "c" filetype.

If you have 'patchmode' set, it will be appended after the extension for
compression.  Thus editing the patchmode file will not give you the automatic
decompression.  You have to rename the file if you want this.

==============================================================================
 vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl: