diff options
author | Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org> | 2019-12-17 21:27:18 +0100 |
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committer | Bram Moolenaar <Bram@vim.org> | 2019-12-17 21:27:18 +0100 |
commit | 6f345a1458df2db03fba7863492404e9dc8b817c (patch) | |
tree | 6eda4ac072ea9ae8440d5597fb1f8a2f438fc576 /runtime/doc/quickfix.txt | |
parent | a48e78e11f2b647183fd12f569020756b17d7683 (diff) |
patch 8.2.0017: OS/2 and MS-DOS are still mentionedv8.2.0017
Problem: OS/2 and MS-DOS are still mentioned, even though support was
removed long ago.
Solution: Update documentation. (Yegappan Lakshmanan, closes #5368)
Diffstat (limited to 'runtime/doc/quickfix.txt')
-rw-r--r-- | runtime/doc/quickfix.txt | 16 |
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/runtime/doc/quickfix.txt b/runtime/doc/quickfix.txt index 8662854e5c..5879727d2b 100644 --- a/runtime/doc/quickfix.txt +++ b/runtime/doc/quickfix.txt @@ -935,11 +935,11 @@ or simpler > "$*" can be given multiple times, for example: > :set makeprg=gcc\ -o\ $*\ $* -The 'shellpipe' option defaults to ">" for the Amiga, MS-DOS and Win32. This -means that the output of the compiler is saved in a file and not shown on the -screen directly. For Unix "| tee" is used. The compiler output is shown on -the screen and saved in a file the same time. Depending on the shell used -"|& tee" or "2>&1| tee" is the default, so stderr output will be included. +The 'shellpipe' option defaults to ">" for the Amiga and Win32. This means +that the output of the compiler is saved in a file and not shown on the screen +directly. For Unix "| tee" is used. The compiler output is shown on the +screen and saved in a file the same time. Depending on the shell used "|& +tee" or "2>&1| tee" is the default, so stderr output will be included. If 'shellpipe' is empty, the {errorfile} part will be omitted. This is useful for compilers that write to an errorfile themselves (e.g., Manx's Amiga C). @@ -1384,9 +1384,9 @@ normally happens by matching following characters and items. When nothing is following the rest of the line is matched. If "%f" is followed by a '%' or a backslash, it will look for a sequence of 'isfname' characters. -On MS-DOS, MS-Windows and OS/2 a leading "C:" will be included in "%f", even -when using "%f:". This means that a file name which is a single alphabetical -letter will not be detected. +On MS-Windows a leading "C:" will be included in "%f", even when using "%f:". +This means that a file name which is a single alphabetical letter will not be +detected. The "%p" conversion is normally followed by a "^". It's used for compilers that output a line like: > |