Mercurial > vim
view runtime/doc/os_qnx.txt @ 33566:e1e3805fcd96 v9.0.2028
patch 9.0.2028: confusing build dependencies
Commit: https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/5d03525cdef5db1b1cedfa26c6f8a21aaa207ec0
Author: Yee Cheng Chin <ychin.git@gmail.com>
Date: Sun Oct 15 09:50:53 2023 +0200
patch 9.0.2028: confusing build dependencies
Problem: confusing build dependencies
Solution: clean them up, make them parallelizable
Separate vim binary and unittest dependencies, make them parallelizable
Clean up make dependencies so Vim and unit test binaries only depend on
the object files they need. This fixes an existing issue where after
running unit tests, the Vim binary would be invalidated, which results
in it having to be linked again when running script tests, even though
Vim was already previously built.
Make link.sh (script we use to link those binaries) generate namespaced
temporary files for each app to avoid them colliding with each other.
This allows `unittesttargets` to be built in parallel.
These fixes are useful when using link-time-optimization as the link
phase could now take minutes rather than a few seconds.
closes: #13344
Signed-off-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Co-authored-by: Yee Cheng Chin <ychin.git@gmail.com>
author | Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 15 Oct 2023 10:00:03 +0200 |
parents | f8116058ca76 |
children | 4635e43f2c6f |
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*os_qnx.txt* For Vim version 9.0. Last change: 2005 Mar 29 VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Julian Kinraid *QNX* *qnx* 1. General |qnx-general| 2. Compiling Vim |qnx-compiling| 3. Terminal support |qnx-terminal| 4. Photon GUI |photon-gui| 5. Photon fonts |photon-fonts| 6. Bugs & things To Do ============================================================================== 1. General *qnx-general* Vim on QNX behaves much like other unix versions. |os_unix.txt| 2. Compiling Vim *qnx-compiling* Vim can be compiled using the standard configure/make approach. If you want to compile for X11, pass the --with-x option to configure. Otherwise, running ./configure without any arguments or passing --enable-gui=photon, will compile vim with the Photon gui support. Run ./configure --help , to find out other features you can enable/disable. 3. Terminal support *qnx-terminal* Vim has support for the mouse and clipboard in a pterm, if those options are compiled in, which they are normally. The options that affect mouse support are |'mouse'| and |'ttymouse'|. When using the mouse, only simple left and right mouse clicking/dragging is supported. If you hold down shift, ctrl, or alt while using the mouse, pterm will handle the mouse itself. It will make a selection, separate from what vim's doing. When the mouse is in use, you can press Alt-RightMouse to open the pterm menu. To turn the mouse off in vim, set the mouse option to nothing, set mouse= 4. Photon GUI *photon-gui* To start the gui for vim, you need to run either gvim or vim -g, otherwise the terminal version will run. For more info - |gui-x11-start| Supported features: :browse command |:browse| :confirm command |:confirm| Cursor blinking |'guicursor'| Menus, popup menus and menu priorities |:menu| |popup-menu| |menu-priority| Toolbar |gui-toolbar| |'toolbar'| Font selector (:set guifont=*) |photon-fonts| Mouse focus |'mousefocus'| Mouse hide |'mousehide'| Mouse cursor shapes |'mouseshape'| Clipboard |gui-clipboard| Unfinished features: Various international support, such as Farsi & Hebrew support, different encodings, etc. This help file Unsupported features: Find & Replace window |:promptfind| Tearoff menus Other things which I can't think of so I can't list them 5. Fonts *photon-fonts* You set fonts in the gui with the guifont option > :set guifont=Lucida\ Terminal < The font must be a monospace font, and any spaces in the font name must be escaped with a '\'. The default font used is PC Terminal, size 8. Using '*' as the font name will open a standard Photon font selector where you can select a font. Following the name, you can include optional settings to control the size and style of the font, each setting separated by a ':'. Not all fonts support the various styles. The options are, s{size} Set the size of the font to {size} b Bold style a Use antialiasing i Italic style Examples: Set the font to monospace size 10 with antialiasing > :set guifont=monospace:s10:a < Set the font to Courier size 12, with bold and italics > :set guifont=Courier:s12:b:i < Select a font with the requester > :set guifont=* < 6. Bugs & things To Do Known problems: - Vim hangs sometimes when running an external program. Workaround: put this line in your |vimrc| file: > set noguipty Bugs: - Still a slight problem with menu highlighting. - When using phditto/phinows/etc., if you are using a font that doesn't support the bold attribute, when vim attempts to draw bold text it will be all messed up. - The cursor can sometimes be hard to see. - A number of minor problems that can fixed. :) Todo: - Improve multi-language support. - Options for setting the fonts used in the menu and toolbar. - Find & Replace dialog. - The clientserver features. - Maybe tearoff menus. - Replace usage of fork() with spawn() when launching external programs. vim:tw=78:sw=4:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl: