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Tip 1377 Printable Monobook Previous Next

created 2006 · complexity basic · author gosaca · version 6.0


Access MSDN help for a specific keyword from gvim on Windows.

Add following to gvimrc:

nmap <F1> :silent ! start iexplore "http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&btnI=I\%27m+Feeling+Lucky&q=site\%3Amsdn.microsoft.com\%20<cWORD>"<CR>

This accomplishes the following:

  • Starts a new instance of Internet Explorer.
  • Navigates to Google search.
  • Limits the search to site msdn.microsoft.com.
  • Searches for the term under the cursor.
  • Navigates the browser directly to the first page returned from the search.

For example, putting your cursor over WaitForSingleObject and hitting <F1> brings you directly to the documentation for that API on the MSDN site.

Use :set ch=2 to avoid the Hit Enter To Continue message.

The space between "!" and "start" is needed to avoid a "command not found" error. The space causes Vim to send the start command to the cmd.exe shell. Start is a cmd command, not a separate program.

Comments[]

Is there any reason that you don't search msdn directly? Something like:

nmap <F3> :silent !cmd /C start iexplore "http://search.msdn.microsoft.com/search/default.aspx?query=<cWORD>"<CR>;

The msdn search brings you to a search results page, from which you must click on another link to get the desired documentation.

Using Google's I'm Feeling Lucky feature navigates you directly to the first page returned by the search, which more often than not is the page you want (since you have limited your search to the msdn.microsoft.com site).

This closely replicates the function of context sensitive help via F1 when working in MSDEV.

In addition, you can always change the site: filter in the search query string to something other than msdn, if you aren't working on a win32 project.


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