I have a small problem I cant find the solution to:
On my italian keyboard one key holds the two simbols "<" and ">":
[key] = "<"
[shift]+[key] = ">"
I'd like to remap them so that the result ins inverted as I use > much more than <.
I can't find a way to write this in ahk. I tried with
<::>
+>::<
and
<::>
>::<
The result with the above is that both pressing the key and shift+key returns ">".
I understand what "confuses" ahk but I can't find a workaround.
Any suggestions?
Try
#UseHook ; prevents the Send command from triggering the hotkey itself
<:: Send >
+<:: Send <
Related
I am working in vim. I have a piece text that looks like :
one = 24
two = 52
three = 56
four = 74
Is there a way to use visual select to yank and paste up to the equal to sign in each line ? I want an operation that leaves me with the following result :
one = 24
two = 52
three = 56
four = 74
one =
two =
three =
four =
My current solution is to copy the whole thing, then jump to the one = 24 line in what I copied and then record this macro : 0f=ld$j to #w and then repeat it three times with 3#w. Is there a way to do this using visual select and yank and paste ?
I tend to use :substitute for these things
" First I yank and paste, in normal mode
yapP
" Then I transform
gv " to reselect, while in normal mode
:s/=.*/=/ " that will actual display :'<,'>s/.....
The actual reselection part may need a little work depending on where the cleared snippet shall appear. May be something like yapo<esc>p:'[,']s/=.*/=/ + enter
You can visually select the lines to apply normal commands to them with :norm.
Thus, you could do:
ggVG:norm f=ld$
How about
:global /=/ copy $ | substitute /=\zs.*//
We use global to select the original lines, then copy them to the end $ and remove the parts after = with substitute.
You could use a mapping like this
vnoremap ,s y:let #"=system('sed -nE "s/=.*/=/p"',#")<cr>
When selecting now some lines in in visual mode, type ,s. This will put the desired modification into the " register and you can paste them now using p wherever you want.
I have a code segment like below.
type Account struct {
Id int
UserId int
Name string
Address string
City string
State string
CountryId string
}
I want to delete all the data types. Is there a key combination to this?
I tried <C-V> and select the first letter of all data types in a vertical line, hoping d + $ would work post that, however vim only takes the first input d and deletes the first letter.
Use <C-v> to enter visual block mode, select the lines you want to change and then D to delete until the end of those.
From :h v_D :
{Visual}["x]X or *v_X* *v_D* *v_b_D*
{Visual}["x]D Delete the highlighted lines [into register x] (for
{Visual} see |Visual-mode|). In Visual block mode,
"D" deletes the highlighted text plus all text until
the end of the line. {not in Vi}
Note that, as mentioned in the help, X and D are not equivalent in visual block mode (X only deletes the current selection, not until the end of the line).
You can move to the left brace, press the % key and issue:
s/ \+[^ ]* *$/
to get:
type Account struct
Id
UserId
Name
Address
City
State
CountryId
}
The substitution removes all non-white-space characters at the end of the line.
You can use C-V and select the first column of all data type, then do $ to select until the end of the line, followed by x or d to delete.
Visually select all those lines with v6j.
Remove the extra stuff with :'<,'>norm ElD ('<,'> is added automatically for you).
Also, watch out for trailing space!
Not the shortest possible sequence but following is more natural to me
vi{ - Visually select the inner paragraph
'<,'>norm weld$ (typed as :norm weld$)
witch breaks down to
'<,'>norm - Apply normal commands over the selection
wel - jump to the end of the first word
d$ - delete until the end of the line
If I have multi-line line snippet:
length = 1;
keys = NewKey(value);
gt_backref = NULL;
ls_backref = NULL;
And I need to paste yanked (<ctrl>-V+y) node-> between every line of snippet:
node->length = 1;
node->keys = NewKey(value);
node->gt_backref = NULL;
node->ls_backref = NULL;
How do I paste yanked text in several sequential lines? Something like <ctrl>-V+<shift>-I but for paste, not for typed text.
<C-v>{motion}I<C-r>"<Esc>
Enter visual block mode with <C-v>.
Extend your selection.
Hit I to enter insert mode.
Do <C-r>" to insert the content of the unnamed register.
Hit <Esc> to apply the change to all the selected lines.
Or with :normal:
:[range]norm I<C-r>"<CR>
Well, if you select the text with Shift-V, then do a regex
:'<,'>s/.*/node->&/
that would add node-> to the selected lines.
or I guess even simpiler
:'<,'>s/^/node->/
If it's more complicated, maybe you would create some kind of macro with a search to find the type of lines you want to replace and run the same regex replace on each of those lines
This answer based on #Shaun's answer. This really needs a macro. But the correct regexp is
:'<,'>s/\(^\s\+\)/\1node->/
Because I need to take into account indentation.
But this approach does not universal. For every particular case we need new regexp.
I found the article about putting excel cells into an email using the RangetoHTML function in VBA. It works like a charm, but now I’m facing a Problem.
If there are Umlaut (e.g.: ü, ä, ö) in the cells the result in the email shows strange symbols (e.g.: ä, …).
I looked up the written temp.htm file. On the first view of this file, it seems the umlaute are correctly written, but after looking through the file with an hex editor i found that the written symbols are not correct.
The function which writes the file is: PublishObjects.Add
So I hope someone can help me with this.
Edit: Added a testfile. Word and Office is needed.
Select the table and run the procedure SendMail.
You will always have problems with vba and foreign chars and the web.
EDIT:
Because you can't separate the cell values from the html the function below will unfortunately not work in this situation. BUT:
if you Save a copy of the document with western European windows encoding it will work.
(See comments below).
To be able to do that you press "Save As" and there is a dropdown on the left side of the save button (Tools) which will give you a dialog where you can change the encoding.
The image has ben lifted from technet and always save web.. is not necessary.
EOF EDIT:
This is a function I have used, Unfortunately can't remember who I got it from, But its from the olden days of vba and classic asp
Put your email cell formula into this function and it should work because all the letters are html encoded. Its slow and makes a bad overhead. But it will work.
Function HtmlEncode(ByVal inText As String) As String
Dim i As Integer
Dim sEnc As Integer
Dim repl As String
HtmlEncode = inText
For i = Len(HtmlEncode) To 1 Step -1
sEnc = Asc(Mid$(HtmlEncode, i, 1))
Select Case sEnc
Case 32
repl = " "
Case 34
repl = """
Case 38
repl = "&"
Case 60
repl = "<"
Case 62
repl = ">"
Case 32 To 127
'Numbers
Case Else
repl = "&#" & CStr(sEnc) & ";" 'Encode it all
End Select
If Len(repl) Then
HtmlEncode = Left$(HtmlEncode, i - 1) & repl & Mid$(HtmlEncode, i + 1)
repl = ""
End If
Next
End Function
I am using ruby on rails but that does not matter much for this question. Let's say that i have a statement like this
error = 'this is an error message'
I have noticed that I end up doing this a lot
error = 'this is an error message'
puts "error = #{error.inspect}"
I am sure a macro can be written which would take the work on the left hand side of left most = and then create another line along with template shown above.
I am using mvim on mac. Any pointer in terms of where I should start to look for developing what I want.
Try snipmate:
http://www.vim.org/scripts/script.php?script_id=2540
I recorded a simple macro that does your sample. To record a macro type q followed by what register you want the macro to be put in (convention calls for qq). To play the macro type # then the macro register. You can view this at :help recording
To write the macro, use the following commands (and here is how is should look in the register)
^yEoputs "error = #{^Op.inspect}"^[
^ moves to the first non whitespace character of the line
yE yanks to the end of the space separated word.
o Puts you in insert mode on the next line
puts "error = #{ is the text that you type out
^O is ctrl+O (capital letter o) - this allows the next, and only the next command to be run in command mode, which is...
p Puts the yanked word, after this command is run you're still in insert mode
.inspect}" is the text that you type and finally...
^[ is Esc
I would go for:
nnoremap µ :s/^\s*\(\k\+\)\s*=.*/&\rputs "\1 = #{\1.inspect}"/<cr>
:s presents the advantage of doing the job plus matching the assigned variable if any. Doing the same thing with classical commands like yw, p, etc would be more cumbersome.
If the template become more complex, we can rely on template-file expanders as long as they easily permit to call viml function like matchstr(). Of course, in that case I would use mu-template with the following template-file:
VimL:" $Id: {rtp}/template/ruby/inspect.template
VimL: let s:value_start = '¡'
VimL: let s:value_end = '¡'
VimL: let s:reindent = 1
VimL: let s:marker_open = '<+'
VimL: let s:marker_close = '+>'
VimL: let s:varname = matchstr(getline(line('.')-1), '^\s*\zs\k\+\ze\s*=')
VimL: if empty(s:varname) |throw "the previous line don't assign any variable" |endif
puts "¡s:varname¡ = #{¡s:varname¡.inspect}"<++>
VimL:"vim: encoding=utf-8
If you're doing these on the fly, a snipmate snippet could look like this:
${1:error} = '${2:error message here}'
puts "error = #{$1.inspect}"
If, on the other hand you're just wanting to output pre-existing variables for debugging purposes. Nick-Canzoneri's macro may be more useful.