Mercurial > vim
view runtime/icons/README.txt @ 14548:806e1a2648c6 v8.1.0287
patch 8.1.0287: MAX is not defined everywhere
commit https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/37b15568c26e669c333903a70422eacc09488f79
Author: Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org>
Date: Tue Aug 14 22:08:25 2018 +0200
patch 8.1.0287: MAX is not defined everywhere
Problem: MAX is not defined everywhere.
Solution: Define MAX where needed.
author | Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 14 Aug 2018 22:15:05 +0200 |
parents | b89555e4acab |
children |
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Choose your preferred icon and replace the standard Vim icon with it. [This is for the Amiga] When started from Workbench, Vim opens a window of standard terminal size (80 x 25). Trying to change this by adding a tool type results in a window that disappears before Vim comes up in its own window. If you want Vim to start with another size, it can be done using IconX. Follow these steps: 1. Create a script file called e.g. Vim.WB, with a single line in which the Vim executable is started: Echo "Vim" > Vim.WB Protect Vim.WB +s 2. Rename the Vim icon to Vim.WB. 3. By default, the Vim icon is a program icon. Change the icon type from "program" to "project" using IconEdit from the "Tools" directory. 4. Change the icon settings using "information" from the WorkBench's "icon" menu: - The default program, of course, is "IconX". - A stack size of 4096 should be sufficient. - Create a WINDOW tooltype of the desired size. The appropriate values depend on your WB font. Example: On a standard non-interlaced WB screen with full overscan resolution (724 x 283 ), the WINDOW tooltype "CON:30/10/664/273" results in a horizontally centered window with 80 columns and 32 lines. Now Vim comes up with the new window size.