I would like findstr /m background *.vim | gvim
to open all *.vim
files containing background
in a single instance of gvim - but I can't get the piping to work.
This is very similar to this question but instead of capturing the stdin output I would like GViM to treat the output as a list of files to be opened - and on a Windows system so xargs isn't guaranteed. Any ideas?
I can think of a few ways of doing this:
Use vimgrep: after running gvim, enter:
:vimgrep /background/ **/*.vim
This will populate the quickfix list with all of the matches (possibly more than one per file), so you can use things like :copen
, :cw
, :cn
etc to navigate (see :help quickfix
)
Use findstr
to give you a list of files and then get vim to open those files:
findstr /m background *.vim > list_of_files.txt
gvim list_of_files.txt
" In Gvim, read each file into the buffer list:
:g/^/exe 'badd' getline('.')
" Open the files in tabs:
:bufdo tabedit %
This will load each file, but will keep the list of files open as well (you can always bunload it or whatever).
Edit:
Using :tabedit
on a list of files didn't work (I'd only tested :badd
). You can get round this by either using badd and then bufdo (as above) or by doing something like this (put it in your vimrc):
command! -range=% OpenListedFiles <line1>,<line2>call OpenListedFiles()
function! OpenListedFiles() range
let FileList = getline(a:firstline, a:lastline)
for filename in FileList
if filereadable(filename)
exe 'tabedit' filename
endif
endfor
endfunction
Then simply open the file containing all of your required file names and type:
:OpenListedFiles
Use the server functionality and some batch script magic (which I don't understand as I use bash)
@echo off
REM Welcome to the hideous world of Windows batch scripts
findstr /m background *.vim > list_of_files.txt
REM Run GVIM (may not be required)
gvim
REM Still in command prompt or .bat file here
REM for each line in the file "list_of_files.txt", pass the line to OpenInTab
for /f %%i in (list_of_files.txt) do call:OpenInTab %%i
goto:eof
:OpenInTab
REM Open the file in a separate tab of an existing vim instance
gvim --remote-tab %~1
goto:eof
Eeeurrgh.
If it were me, I would go with the "Use vim's built-in cleverness" option. Actually, that's not true: I'd use cygwin's bash script and just use bash, but if I HAD to do it with the native tools, I'd use the built-in cleverness approach.
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