On 05/24/2010 08:47 PM, torbenh wrote:
On Mon, May 24, 2010 at 06:00:05PM +0200, Olivier
Guilyardi wrote:
> On 05/24/2010 01:47 PM, torbenh wrote:
>> On Mon, May 24, 2010 at 12:36:43PM +0200, Olivier Guilyardi wrote:
[.......]
I agree with most of what was above.
I think
that some day I need to seat and work a couple of days on optimizing my
Vim setup. Maybe even learn the scripting part..
hmm... completionwise i am pretty happy with the normal completion.
what i basically need is jumping to a tag working with c++
(without :ts for selecting the right one if that method name was
ambiguous)
hmmm... i will have a look at omnicomplete
maybe it contains the necessary logic to achieve this.
if your
still into vim you might want to have a look at
http://eclim.org/
thats pretty awesome :)
I have to try this, especially the headless mode, thank
you :-)
However, it's not that I really like the Eclipse Java machinery. But I'm
currently forced to use it, and I have to witness that source refactoring for
function, class renaming, and a couple of other features are awesome.
I'll give a try to Eclim to see what it has to offer in this regard.
it makes most of eclipses awesomeness accessible.
while retaining the awesomeness of vim.
i only tried it with java though. would be interesting how well it works
with C.
Now look what just happened to me. I've been working for about 6 hours doing
Java in Eclipse, making rather major changes. And I press run, it just works, no
error except a couple ones that I expected.
This IDE with all this syntax checking and refactoring tools (and I might call
them bells and whistles sometimes..) produces a real "added value".
That makes me think that the development environment can really completely
change the way you perceive a language or framework. There must be something to
do for C lovers too, be it in Eclipse or not. Maybe that's Eclim, or a lot of
Vim scripting (patching ?) that awaits me ;-)
eclim does a lint upon every :w
you instantly get marks to errors.
it pretty much does all the error hiliting that eclipse does too.
its basically just a different frontend to eclipse.
eclipse is running inside a nailgun server and vim communicates with
it via nailgun invocations.
it will probably work similarly if you use eclipse cdt.
but i prefer to have a real buildsystem with C++
and then eclipse doesnt know about your c files.