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(Add KDE4 qdbus command to update konsole tab with current vim editing filename.) Tag: Visual edit |
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− | In |
+ | In KDE3 the renameSession will set the Konsole name. Add this to your [[vimrc]] file to name the session after the edited file. |
autocmd BufReadPost * :silent !dcop $KONSOLE_DCOP_SESSION renameSession % |
autocmd BufReadPost * :silent !dcop $KONSOLE_DCOP_SESSION renameSession % |
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autocmd VimLeavePre * :silent !dcop $KONSOLE_DCOP_SESSION renameSession $PWD |
autocmd VimLeavePre * :silent !dcop $KONSOLE_DCOP_SESSION renameSession $PWD |
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+ | In KDE4 the qdbus will set the Konsole tab name. Create a script in your $PATH(for example: $HOME/bin) named as update_konsole_tab: |
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+ | <pre> |
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+ | #!/bin/bash |
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+ | |||
+ | if [ "CHK$KONSOLE_DBUS_SESSION" == "CHK" ];then |
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+ | exit 0 |
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+ | fi |
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+ | |||
+ | OLD_FORMAT="%n" |
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+ | QDBUS_COMMAND="qdbus org.kde.konsole $KONSOLE_DBUS_SESSION" |
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+ | |||
+ | if [ "CHK$1" == "CHKset" ];then |
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+ | $QDBUS_COMMAND org.kde.konsole.Session.setTabTitleFormat 0 '' |
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+ | $QDBUS_COMMAND org.kde.konsole.Session.setTitle 0 "$2" |
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+ | fi |
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+ | |||
+ | if [ "CHK$1" == "CHKclean" ];then |
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+ | $QDBUS_COMMAND org.kde.konsole.Session.setTabTitleFormat 0 '%n' |
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+ | fi |
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+ | </pre> |
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+ | |||
+ | Then add these lines into your [[vimrc]]: |
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+ | <pre> |
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+ | autocmd BufReadPost * :silent !update_konsole_tab set 'vim: %:t' |
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+ | autocmd VimLeavePre * :silent !update_konsole_tab clean |
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+ | </pre> |
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==Comments== |
==Comments== |
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Dan thanks for the vim help, however I do not use konsole. |
Dan thanks for the vim help, however I do not use konsole. |
Revision as of 02:15, 25 August 2014
created March 28, 2003 · complexity intermediate · author warb · version 6.0
In KDE3 the renameSession will set the Konsole name. Add this to your vimrc file to name the session after the edited file.
autocmd BufReadPost * :silent !dcop $KONSOLE_DCOP_SESSION renameSession %
This one set the title to the current working dirctory when you leave vim.
autocmd VimLeavePre * :silent !dcop $KONSOLE_DCOP_SESSION renameSession $PWD
In KDE4 the qdbus will set the Konsole tab name. Create a script in your $PATH(for example: $HOME/bin) named as update_konsole_tab:
#!/bin/bash if [ "CHK$KONSOLE_DBUS_SESSION" == "CHK" ];then exit 0 fi OLD_FORMAT="%n" QDBUS_COMMAND="qdbus org.kde.konsole $KONSOLE_DBUS_SESSION" if [ "CHK$1" == "CHKset" ];then $QDBUS_COMMAND org.kde.konsole.Session.setTabTitleFormat 0 '' $QDBUS_COMMAND org.kde.konsole.Session.setTitle 0 "$2" fi if [ "CHK$1" == "CHKclean" ];then $QDBUS_COMMAND org.kde.konsole.Session.setTabTitleFormat 0 '%n' fi
Then add these lines into your vimrc:
autocmd BufReadPost * :silent !update_konsole_tab set 'vim: %:t' autocmd VimLeavePre * :silent !update_konsole_tab clean
Comments
Dan thanks for the vim help, however I do not use konsole. So I modified my .tcshrc with this:
# This makes it possible to make vim automagically set the date and time # in the title bar. # alias vimdate '/bin/date "+%A, %B %e, %Y Time: %H:%M"' setenv mydate `vimdate` alias vi 'setenv mydate `vimdate` ; /usr/bin/vim \!* ; cd `pwd`'
then I read the how to for setting or unsetting the title in vim, so I set my .vimrc with this:
:auto BufEnter * let &titlestring = $USER . " on " . hostname() . " : \ Viming: " . expand("%:p") . " Date: " . $mydate :set title titlestring=%<%F%=%l/%L-%P titlelen=70
This with the .tcshrc mod will give you your name on machine Viming : filename : date and time.
I might not always use kde, so I have my xterm do my title work for me. My .tcshrc for my xterms, looks like this:
### --------------------------------------------------------------- # This is where cd is overloaded and it adjusts the prompt. # # cds: change directory hybrid queueish stack set cds = ( $HOME ) # alias cd 'if ( ${#cds} >= 4 ) shift cds;\\ chdir \!*;\\ setprompt;\\ set cds = ( $cds $cwd );\\ echo $cds' # alias lastdir 'if ( ${#cds} <= 1 ) set cds = ( $cds $cwd );\\ @ idx = ${#cds} - 1;\\ chdir $cds[$idx];\\ setprompt;\\ set cds = ( $cds[1-$idx] );\\ echo $cds;\\ unset idx' # setprompt # ### --------------------------------------------------------------- # # ### --------------------------------------------------------------- # This is where the title bar of the xterm is set. # alias date '/bin/date "+%A, %B %e, %Y Time: %H:%M:%S"' # if ($?tcsh) then # set prompt="$host{`whoami`}%\!: " # if ($?term) then alias cwdcmd 'echo -n "^[]2;" "$USER on $host : $cwd `date`^G"' cwdcmd endif #else # regular csh # set prompt="$hostnm{`whoami`}\!: " # if ($term == xterm) echo -n "^[]0;$hostnm^G" endif # ### ---------------------------------------------------------------
Note: In the alias cwdcmd line, after the `echo -n "^[]2;" the ^[ is a control h, I think.
This is why I aliases vi to 'setenv mydate `vimdate` ; /usr/bin/vim \!* ; cd `pwd` When I do a cd `pwd` it automatically changes my title bar to:
me on machine : $PWD day, date, Time: time.
This works with xterm, aterm, wterm, kterm, rxvt, and konsole. Please feel free to email me if you would like me to send you a copy.
Also I run Debian, so there for everything is generic; so I had to figure out how to modify/customize everything with dot files; this way I learn more by doing it myself.
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