![]() ![]() I believe the last time I wrote this thing I had it set-up so that every new file I opened was opened in a new tmux window in the current instance of iTerm2. (at least I did since I always used slightly non standard stuff and wanted it done my own way, ie., inside tmux). Super is represented in MacVim and in gtk2 gvim.You'll probably have to edit the wrapper script a few times. But some of the key combinations may not work in all the terminal emulators. Step 3 is trying to open your *.txt file and then banging your forehead on the table when it doesn't work. EDIT: An even better way to use MacVims CLI executable in your shell is to. I've forgotten where everything is but this will most likely be in /Library/ somewher) MacVim is more integrated in the whole OS than Vim in the Terminal or even. When Gary Bernhardt executes a shell command from Destroy All Software, for example this: :ls The command looks as if it had 'spawn a new shell' - it takes the whole window, with its own theme. (Again, I used guides on the internet for this. You can probably sorta do this using dialogue menus n what not for OSX but trust me when I say it's far more robust and easier if you do this by creating/editing a mysterious plist file somewhere. I moved /Applications/MacVim.app/Contents/bin/mvim to. Step 2 is setting this thing as default for all *.txt files, blank no-extension files, *.md, and whatever other file extension you want. I am really not understanding how to open MacVim from inside the terminal, and also open it IN the terminal. I followed (99% copy/paste) some guides on the internet for this. Unable to execute doesn't mean a missing library (you'd get the usual cannot open shared object file message after the executable starts). The script is going to launch your executable (vim), inside your terminal, and open the file in it. The wrapper script will be the "app" that you set as default for *.txt files. Step 1 is gonna be making a "wrapper" script (language will be AppleScript). For mark (which starts up Marked) I have a link to executable file. ![]() Ok so this is actually possible, don't worry! I'm going off of memory here since it's been years since I've actually used a mac. I cant live without terminal integration of some sort. ![]()
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