-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Hello, It is weird indeed. The windows is resized exatcly as it should for me here. By the way you say that your version of gvim/vim is 7.4.729, but in the official 13.1 reposotiry the latest version is 7.4.052. From where did you installed yours ? Directly from a source (it seems as the latest one according to https://code.google.com/p/vim/source/browse/)? Regards, I. Petrov On Fri, 5 Jun 2015, toothpik wrote:
On Fri, Jun 05, 2015 at 11:29:09PM +0300, I. Petrov wrote:
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Hello,
On Fri, 5 Jun 2015, toothpik wrote:
On Thu, Jun 04, 2015 at 05:43:23PM -0400, Anton Aylward wrote:
On 06/03/2015 08:34 PM, toothpik wrote:
I am running openSUSE v 13.1, konsole v 2.11.3, gvim v 7.4.729
if I start a gvim session from the konsole command line it assumes the same dimensions as konsole -- if I instead start gvim from the alt-F2 run starter it assumes whatever dimensions I have specified in my startup script, or it defaults to a cute 25 line by 80 column display
can someone tell me how to end the tyranny of konsole sizing my gvim windows?
I wonder if you have aliasing vis 'search' going on.
no aliases for vim, but I use the heck out of sym-links -- g for gvim and v for vim -- much easier to type and totally irrelevant to the resizing problem
if i use 'gvim' i get small windows, but different positions for each of your two use cases.
but if in the xterm of the konsole window I run 'vim' or 'vi' it appears as you describe, the complete window.
as it is designed
When I run 'alias' I don't see anything to do with vim or gvim or vi Please don't get confused between bash's 'alias' and the email alias mechanism.
yes I know what aliases are in bash -- I have dozens of them for changing directory
There is also 'alternatives'. I don't have any set up for vim, gvim or vi
I know what vim I am executing, I compile it myself -- for me it resides on /usr/local/bin, and this too is irrelevant to the resizing problem
I have a work-around, alt-F2, and hope we can end this thread -- clearly no-one here knows how to end konsole's tyranny and poking around with irrelevancies is helping no-one
Are you saying that delaying the execution of the .vim file by adding a sleep command at the top of it, does not help ? Did you try to increase the time e.g. to 500ms or 1s ?
it "helps," but it isn't a solution: with a second sleep the column setting in the script is honored by the window manager, but the lines setting, while honored by vim, is not honored by the window manager and I wind up with a big swath of lines that aren't really there in the bottom of the window -- there are 42 vim lines and 18 lines of inaccessible nothing -- profoundly weird
it does the same with a two second sleep and a five second sleep
those inaccessible lines don't go away even after the session has started and I issue a
:set lines=42
command -- something in kdm or kde is holding that window to 60 lines and it won't let go unless and until I grab the bottom of the window with the mouse and move it up
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