Sometimes, you edit text outside of Vim. These are sad times. Enter vim-anywhere!
Once invoked, vim-anywhere will open a buffer. Close it and its contents are copied to your clipboard and your previous application is refocused.
This is a fork of the original vim-anywhere optimised for Linux systems and simplified to remove possible bugs and issues.
Linux:
- Gnome (or a derivative)
- gVim
curl -fsSL https://raw.github.com/miroslavvidovic/vim-anywhere/master/install | bash
~/.vim-anywhere/update
~/.vim-anywhere/uninstall
xbindkey append
"./.vim-anywhere/bin/run"
control+alt + v
to your .xbindkeysrc
Gnome
$ gconftool -t str --set /desktop/gnome/keybindings/vim-anywhere/binding <custom binding>
I3WM
$ echo "bindsym $mod+Alt+v exec ~/.vim-anywhere/bin/run" >> ~/.i3/config # remember to reload your config after
Adjust in case $mod
is not set to ctrl.
vim-anywhere creates a temporary file in /tmp/vim-anywhere
when
invoked. These files stick around until you restart your system, giving you
a temporary history.
View your history:
$ ls /tmp/vim-anywhere
Reopen your most recent file:
$ vim $( ls /tmp/vim-anywhere | sort -r | head -n 1 )
I use Vim for almost everything. I wish I didn't have to say almost. My usual workflow is to open Vim, write, copy the text out of my current buffer and paste it into whatever application I was just using. vim-anywhere attempts to automate this process as much as possible, reducing the friction of using Vim to do more than just edit code.
Love vim-anywhere? Hate it? Want to change it completely? Email me or open an issue and lets talk. Pull requests, suggestions and issues of any kind are welcome with open arms.
MIT.