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Full Discussion: Weird behavior of Vi
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Weird behavior of Vi Post 302631645 by hypsis on Friday 27th of April 2012 03:54:39 PM
Old 04-27-2012
Weird behavior of Vi

Hi there,

I am a bit puzzled by a weird behavior of Vi. I very simply would like to add increased numbers in some files. Since I have many thousands entries per file and many files, I would like to macro it in vi.

To do this, I enter the first number ("0001") on the first line and then yank it, insert it at the right place one line below, increment it and return to starting position on the line.
Code:
qa
4y<right arrow>
<down arrow>
<left arrow>
p
[Ctrl + a]
4<left arrow>

And it works Smilie ... by batches of either 7 lines, 70 lines or 700 lines Smilie . Because after each number "7", the auto-increase jumps to the next X0, X00 or X000!? Smilie
Examples :
... 0006 0007 0010 0011 ...
... 0036 0037 0040 0041 ...
... 0076 0077 0100 0101 ...
... 0156 0157 0160 0161 ...
... 0776 0777 1000 1001 ..., etc

It doesn't make any sense and I really very much don't understand.... Does anybody know what's going on ? Smilie

cheers!
J

[edit: typo]

Last edited by hypsis; 04-27-2012 at 05:01 PM..
 

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set_color(1)							       fish							      set_color(1)

NAME
set_color - set_color - set the terminal color set_color - set the terminal color Synopsis set_color [-v --version] [-h --help] [-b --background COLOR] [COLOR] Description Change the foreground and/or background color of the terminal. COLOR is one of black, red, green, brown, yellow, blue, magenta, purple, cyan, white and normal. o -b, --background Set the background color o -c, --print-colors Prints a list of all valid color names o -h, --help Display help message and exit o -o, --bold Set bold or extra bright mode o -u, --underline Set underlined mode o -v, --version Display version and exit Calling set_color normal will set the terminal color to whatever is the default color of the terminal. Some terminals use the --bold escape sequence to switch to a brighter color set. On such terminals, set_color white will result in a grey font color, while set_color --bold white will result in a white font color. Not all terminal emulators support all these features. This is not a bug in set_color but a missing feature in the terminal emulator. set_color uses the terminfo database to look up how to change terminal colors on whatever terminal is in use. Some systems have old and incomplete terminfo databases, and may lack color information for terminals that support it. Download and install the latest version of ncurses and recompile fish against it in order to fix this issue. Version 1.23.1 Sun Jan 8 2012 set_color(1)
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