view runtime/tools/vim_vs_net.cmd @ 34118:941f7dc1c7dd v9.1.0023

patch 9.1.0023: xxd: few problems with EBCDIC for z/OS (MVS) Commit: https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/48a75f3dfb906a2d333a7b1c3545e2eb359596db Author: Igor Todorovski <itodorov@ca.ibm.com> Date: Tue Jan 9 21:05:48 2024 +0000 patch 9.1.0023: xxd: few problems with EBCDIC for z/OS (MVS) Problem: xxd: few problems with EBCDIC for z/OS (MVS) Solution: Fix xxd build and support ASCII and UTF-8 on z/OS (MVS) natively, add MVS guard checks with __CHARSET_LIB, support $LIBS in the Makefile (Igor Todorovski) related: #13821 Signed-off-by: Igor Todorovski <itodorov@ca.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
author Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
date Fri, 12 Jan 2024 18:00:05 +0100
parents 584c835a2de1
children
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@rem
@rem To use this with Visual Studio .Net
@rem Tools->External Tools...
@rem Add
@rem      Title     - Vim
@rem      Command   - d:\files\util\vim_vs_net.cmd
@rem      Arguments - +$(CurLine) $(ItemPath)
@rem      Init Dir  - Empty
@rem
@rem Courtesy of Brian Sturk
@rem
@rem --remote-silent +%1 is a command +954, move ahead 954 lines
@rem --remote-silent %2 full path to file
@rem In Vim
@rem    :h --remote-silent for more details
@rem
@rem --servername VS_NET
@rem This will create a new instance of vim called VS_NET.  So if you open
@rem multiple files from VS, they will use the same instance of Vim.
@rem This allows you to have multiple copies of Vim running, but you can
@rem control which one has VS files in it.
@rem
start /b gvim.exe --servername VS_NET --remote-silent "%1"  "%2"