![]() ![]() ![]() If you work mainly with GUI apps ( YummyFTP + GitX + Charles, for example) you may prefer MacVim. MacVim supports multiple windows with tabbed editing and a host of other features such as: Bindings to standard OS X keyboard shortcuts (-Z, -V, -A, -G, etc.), Transparent backgrounds, Full-screen mode, Multibyte editing with OS X input methods and automatic font substitution, ODB editor. MacVim is more integrated in the whole OS than Vim in the Terminal or even GVim in Linux, it follows a lot of Mac OS X's conventions. NOTE: Curious as to where these workflows are stored? I was…it’s in /users//Library/Services. Anything you are used to do in Vim will work exactly the same way in MacVim. Simply un-check it to disable and/or click the space on the right to add a keyboard shortcut. To enable/disable context menu services or to add keyboard shortcuts to them open Finder and click Services -> Services Preferences and find the service you created in the list. Now simply right-click any file in the Finder and select the context menu option you created to edit it with MacVim. Save your workflow (the name you choose will be what’s displayed on the context menu – I saved mine as “Edit”). From the Pass input: pull down select “ as arguments” and enter the following into the script window. ![]() Now drag the “ Run Shell Script” action to your Services workflow (the empty space on the right). From the Actions Library click Utilities. MacPorts, formerly known as DarwinPorts, is a package management system designed to simplify the installation of software on the Mac OS X and Darwin. Launch Automator and from the workflow template menu choose a Service template. Here’s how to configure one in Snow Leopard using Automator. Therefore having an Edit with Vim right-click context menu option which I can execute on any file type is essential for me. bak however, it has temporarily become a hassle to open it back up for viewing (because no default text editor is associated with. Since the original file extension has been changed to. This way I can quickly go back if a change in the new file screws things up. Often times before making changes to a file, I’ll make a copy of it and add “.bak” to the original file name’s extension. As a result I am used to right-clicking files with any extension and editing it with Vim from the context menu (or is it contextual menu? I forget). Apple - Open a new MacVim window with AppleScript Apple - launchd. I’ve been using Vim for making quick changes to files in Unix and Windows for years. Mac System Preferences Not RespondingThen choose Force Quit from the drop-down list. ![]()
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