diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'runtime/doc/cmdline.txt')
-rw-r--r-- | runtime/doc/cmdline.txt | 22 |
1 files changed, 11 insertions, 11 deletions
diff --git a/runtime/doc/cmdline.txt b/runtime/doc/cmdline.txt index e2207659e9..e909ba6a75 100644 --- a/runtime/doc/cmdline.txt +++ b/runtime/doc/cmdline.txt @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -*cmdline.txt* For Vim version 8.2. Last change: 2019 Nov 26 +*cmdline.txt* For Vim version 8.2. Last change: 2019 Dec 17 VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar @@ -75,7 +75,7 @@ CTRL-V Insert next non-digit literally. Up to three digits form the decimal value of a single byte. The non-digit and the three digits are not considered for mapping. This works the same way as in Insert mode (see above, |i_CTRL-V|). - Note: Under Windows CTRL-V is often mapped to paste text. + Note: Under MS-Windows CTRL-V is often mapped to paste text. Use CTRL-Q instead then. When |modifyOtherKeys| is enabled then special Escape sequence is converted back to what it was without |modifyOtherKeys|, @@ -943,9 +943,9 @@ These modifiers can be given, in this order: separator is removed. Thus ":p:h" on a directory name results on the directory name itself (without trailing slash). When the file name is an absolute path (starts with "/" for - Unix; "x:\" for MS-DOS, WIN32, OS/2; "drive:" for Amiga), that - part is not removed. When there is no head (path is relative - to current directory) the result is empty. + Unix; "x:\" for WIN32; "drive:" for Amiga), that part is not + removed. When there is no head (path is relative to current + directory) the result is empty. :t Tail of the file name (last component of the name). Must precede any :r or :e. :r Root of the file name (the last extension removed). When @@ -1042,12 +1042,12 @@ option contains "sh", this is done twice, to avoid the shell trying to expand the "!". *filename-backslash* -For filesystems that use a backslash as directory separator (MS-DOS, Windows, -OS/2), it's a bit difficult to recognize a backslash that is used to escape -the special meaning of the next character. The general rule is: If the -backslash is followed by a normal file name character, it does not have a -special meaning. Therefore "\file\foo" is a valid file name, you don't have -to type the backslash twice. +For filesystems that use a backslash as directory separator (MS-Windows), it's +a bit difficult to recognize a backslash that is used to escape the special +meaning of the next character. The general rule is: If the backslash is +followed by a normal file name character, it does not have a special meaning. +Therefore "\file\foo" is a valid file name, you don't have to type the +backslash twice. An exception is the '$' sign. It is a valid character in a file name. But to avoid a file name like "$home" to be interpreted as an environment variable, |