Say that I run :set all
inside vim
in command mode, this command outputs a lot of stuff as expected, how i can redirect this output to an external application capable of reading an incoming buffer, let's say gedit
?
1 Answer
Using ViM: How to redirect ex command output into current buffer or file?, you could redirect the output directly to a file, and then open it with Gedit or any other editor of choice just like any other file.
:redir >your_file | silent set all | redir END
Edit:
As mentioned by romainl in the comments, you could also copy this directly to your system clipboard if Vim is compiled with +clipboard
. Then you could just paste it in another program use ctrlv as usual.
:redir @+ | silent set all | redir END
-
so nothing "on the fly" and more direct like a pipe in the shell, like so
date | gedit
? May 25, 2013 at 10:18 -
@user2384250 It might be possible using something like
vim -c
, but I haven't seen anything like that before.– timssMay 25, 2013 at 10:20 -
1Today is
:redir
day! If Vim is compiled with clipboard support, the following may be more direct ::redir @+ | silent set all | redir END
.– romainlMay 25, 2013 at 11:11