![]() I know it doesn't display very well because it needs a fixed-width font (I have manually jiggled it about a bit to try and improve it), but it's better than nothing and should give you an idea.Ĭopy and paste upside-down and back-to-front. Contact details are in the top of the README file *** If you think it's rubbish then PLEASE let me know why - it's far more useful than just 'voting it down' (which really doesn't help at all). *** If you have any suggestions for improving this, then please let me know. The best I can suggest is to try it it will probably work and if it doesn't then let me know and I'll see if I can sort it NOTE: I really have no idea what the minimum vim version requirement is to run DrawX and I don't know of a practical way of finding out (I've only used it on v8.2). You can also define your own based on any character you like, so you can draw an ellipse with characters if you want There are several built-in drawing styles. They also provide support for centre cut-out, upside-down and back-to-front pasting Support is provided for joining lines, and placing special characters etcģ/ A flood-fill operation that allows you to fill any arbitrary shape with any character you likeĤ/ Some special cut and paste operations that are better suited than the standard operations to dealing with ASCII art they all operate in-place rather than performing any delete or insert operations (basically they are less likely to make a mess of things!). ![]() There are several drawing functions provided -ġ/ Box and ellipse drawing - This allows quick drawing of arbitrary-sized boxes and ellipses, optionally filled with blank spaceĢ/ Tracing - This allows you to move the cursor around and trace a path as you go. As well as supporting standard ASCII characters, it also supports a number of different line-drawing styles courtesy of the wider Unicode character set You can draw boxes and lines, and there is support for easily including special characters in your drawings. Or just use the terminal version of vim :-)ĭrawX makes ASCII-art drawing relatively easy. ![]() A way around this seems to be to use another register (specify " for yank and paste), or you may find that using "00p (or P) works ok to paste the last yank to the default register. Anyway, this bug will cause \0p (and P) mappings to refuse to work. I have seen this myself with nvim-qt on Windows but I have read reports of it on other GUI versions (not just nvim, but possibly limited to Windows). **GUI PASTE BUG** It has come to my attention that there seems to be a bug in some GUI vim versions that means that getregtype() does not return the correct value for the default clipboard register. This is unfortunate, but was necessary in order to accommodate some of the new paste operations NOTE: Version 16/05/21 onwards changes the mapping for entering trace mode from '0' to '00'. DrawX : ASCII and Unicode Art (etch-a-sketch style) ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |