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forked from aniani/vim

updated for version 7.3.966

Problem:    There is ":py3do" but no ":pydo".
Solution:   Add the ":pydo" command. (Lilydjwg)
This commit is contained in:
Bram Moolenaar
2013-05-17 16:40:06 +02:00
parent cfef5ff23e
commit d620aa9be4
8 changed files with 122 additions and 17 deletions

View File

@@ -57,6 +57,22 @@ Example: >
Note: Python is very sensitive to the indenting. Make sure the "class" line
and "EOF" do not have any indent.
*:pydo*
:[range]pydo {body} Execute Python function "def _vim_pydo(line, linenr):
{body}" for each line in the [range], with the
function arguments being set to the text of each line
in turn, without a trailing <EOL>, and the current
line number. The function should return a string or
None. If a string is returned, it becomes the text of
the line in the current turn. The default for [range]
is the whole file: "1,$".
{not in Vi}
Examples:
>
:pydo return "%s\t%d" % (line[::-1], len(line))
:pydo if line: return "%4d: %s" % (linenr, line)
<
*:pyfile* *:pyf*
:[range]pyf[ile] {file}
Execute the Python script in {file}. The whole
@@ -485,27 +501,14 @@ sure edit "gvim.exe" and search for "python\d*.dll\c".
8. Python 3 *python3*
*:py3* *:python3*
The |:py3| and |:python3| commands work similar to |:python|. A simple check
The `:py3` and `:python3` commands work similar to `:python`. A simple check
if the `:py3` command is working: >
:py3 print("Hello")
< *:py3file*
The |:py3file| command works similar to |:pyfile|.
The `:py3file` command works similar to `:pyfile`.
*:py3do* *E863*
:[range]py3do {body} Execute Python function "def _vim_pydo(line, linenr):
{body}" for each line in the [range], with the
function arguments being set to the text of each line
in turn, without a trailing <EOL>, and the current
line number. The function should return a string or
None. If a string is returned, it becomes the text of
the line in the current turn. The default for [range]
is the whole file: "1,$".
{not in Vi}
The `:py3do` command works similar to `:pydo`.
Examples:
>
:py3do return "%s\t%d" % (line[::-1], len(line))
:py3do if line: return "%4d: %s" % (linenr, line)
Vim can be built in four ways (:version output):
1. No Python support (-python, -python3)