Great, thanks. That works and I think I can find my way to customising it, writing commands to join lines back together after editing and such.
What's the performance impact here, does TextMate create a new instance of sh every time I hit space?
The ideal case for me, and this would be surpassing raw Vim (as in without a script) here, would be that TextMate could detect "linked" lines in scopes and reflow them dynamically, so deleting characters from a long line would allow words from the surrogate lines to return to the first line, and typing characters on an intermediate line would reflow the block. Am I right in thinking this would be impossible to do transparently in a command because it's not possible to infer the block that needs to be reflowed? Once the block was identified you could just pass it to a script relatively easily.
On 24 Mar 2006, at 15:02, Allan Odgaard wrote:
if [[ $TM_COLUMN_NUMBER -gt 78 ]] then echo -ne '\n\t\t' else echo -ne ' ' fi
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