SPC
SPCfind file,switch bufferA.browse files:MX;EX<switch buffer
| function gmailAutoarchive() { | |
| var delayDays = 2; // will only impact emails more than 48h old | |
| var maxDate = new Date(); | |
| maxDate.setDate(maxDate.getDate()-delayDays); // what was the date at that time? | |
| // Get all the threads labelled 'autoarchive' | |
| var label = GmailApp.getUserLabelByName("autoarchive"); | |
| var threads = label.getThreads(0, 400); | |
| // | |
| // Copyright (c) 2018 by CMASS Robotics team. All Rights Reserved. | |
| // | |
| #include "main.h" | |
| #include <string> | |
| #include <cstdarg> | |
| #include <memory> | |
| short _auto_selected_id = 1; |
| #!/bin/bash | |
| set -o errexit | |
| set -o nounset | |
| set -o pipefail | |
| target="${1:-/opt/sublime_merge/sublime_merge}" | |
| check_sha() { | |
| local sha_valid |
In Neovim, the . character repeats "the most recent action"; however, this is not always respected by plugin actions. Here we will explore how to build dot-repeat support directly into your plugin, bypassing the requirement of dependencies like repeat.vim.
When some buffer-modifying action is performed, Neovim implicitly remembers the operator (e.g. d), motion (e.g. iw), and some other miscellaneous information. When the dot-repeat command is called, Neovim repeats that operator-motion combination. For example, if we type ci"text<Esc>, then we replace the inner contents of some double quotes with text, i.e. "hello world" → "text". Dot-repeating from here will do the same, i.e. "more samples" → "text".