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I use perforce for my revision control, when I hit 'p4 change' it always opens up the list on emacs, and we all know the pain of deleting text in it. How do i change it to gedit or vim or anything else? My default text editor is gedit.

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    This has nothing to with Emacs. I'm removing the tag and adding p4. Apr 11, 2012 at 16:34

7 Answers 7

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On the command line, set P4EDITOR either as an environment variable or in the P4CONFIG file.

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    That's the variable. I'd be surprised if it didn't respect EDITOR too though. Apr 12, 2012 at 4:37
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    Perforce will respect EDITOR if P4EDITOR is unset. Apr 17, 2013 at 13:56
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From the command line,

p4 set P4EDITOR="C:\File Editor\editor.exe"

You can test that this was successfull by running the following command after, which should launch your desired editor.

p4 workspace

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I had similar problem on my Windows system.
It always used to open clumsy notepad. I am more comfortable with TextPad, so to change default perforce editor, I made following changes: I opened System Properties and added new environment variable as following:

Name: `P4EDITOR` 
Value: `C:\Program Files (x86)\TextPad 4\TextPad.exe`

After that open a new CMD and there you go !!!

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For Notepad++ I needed to use this command -multiInst to trigger edits.

p4 set P4EDITOR="C:\Program Files (x86)\Notepad++\notepad++.exe -multiInst"
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Try setting the EDITOR environment variable. Also, the command line p4 should have an option to specify an editor. Also, the .p4config file might have something as well.

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Also need to check if EDITOR/P4EDITOR path is correct. If path is wrong, perforce will choose previously working editor.

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In the case of WSL, likely your p4 binary is provided for Windows platform as the path and operations are most compatible there, so it's p4.exe most likely. Then simple wawy of setting editor in P4EDITOR is not just enough, we have to convert input argument of filepath which is provided in Windows-based into Linux path.

This solution dated back 19 years ago still works

The concept is to

  • Create a bash/shell script that accept the argument.
  • Then in the script we can use wslpath $1 to convert Windows path into Linux path.
  • The script can be just
#!/bin/bash
vim `wslpath $1`

I thought I might not be able to use Vim to edit change, or client spec of perforce and have to end up using whatever provided like Notepad (not against it, but I just want to use Vim). This solution works for me.

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