Sujet : Re: In vim, how to tell which version of a syntax file is being used?
De : gazelle (at) *nospam* shell.xmission.com (Kenny McCormack)
Groupes : comp.editorsDate : 17. Feb 2025, 02:03:17
Autres entêtes
Organisation : The official candy of the new Millennium
Message-ID : <vou1sl$bu4q$1@news.xmission.com>
References : 1 2 3 4
User-Agent : trn 4.0-test77 (Sep 1, 2010)
In article <
m1f72mF7p5kU1@mid.individual.net>,
Jens Schweikhardt <
usenet@schweikhardt.net> wrote:
Kenny McCormack <gazelle@shell.xmission.com> wrote
in <voreqk$akck$1@news.xmission.com>:
...
# Isn't there some kind of "verbose mode" that makes VIM tell you every file
# it sources (as it is sourcing it)? That would be closer to the truth, but
# still not ideal.
>
Does :scriptnames work for you?
It does. But it still looks to me like an approximation.
I.e., still not ideal, but could be a possible workaround.
Note that my VIM sessions tend to be very long-lived and I end up with
dozens of files (i.e., buffers) loaded, so the output of :scriptnames is
quite long and lists the syntax files for lots of different languages.
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