833 Convert DOS/Windows line endings to Linux line endings in Vim 523 Convert ^M (Windows) line breaks to normal line breaks 670 What does the ^M character mean in Vim? 9 gVim - Pattern not found: ^M when trying to remove newline 1 Best place/phase to resolve '^M'...
MAC endings (\r) show as ^M (less shows these) DOS\Windows endings (\r\n) show as ^M$ (less does not appear to show these) Use dos2unix to get rid of the DOS (^M$) endings Use mac2unix to get rid of the MAC (^M) endings - dos2unix won't get rid of these. I had ...
if it fails all windows' statuslines will show `failed`.To avoid always showing old status information, the status information is cleaned for each package after `60` seconds. This can be changed with the |'g:go_statusline_duration'| setting.*...
On Windows,builtin.help_tagspicker does not show any help tags. To fix this, the following changes are needed: util.path_tailchecks unix separator/on Windows and leave the original implementation intact on unix systems. Line endings should be taken carefully on Windows.vim.splitwith only newl...
447 ; E_COMPILE_ERROR|E_RECOVERABLE_ERROR|E_ERROR|E_CORE_ERROR (Show only errors) 448 ; Default Value: E_ALL & ~E_NOTICE & ~E_STRICT & ~E_DEPRECATED 449 ; Development Value: E_ALL 450 ; Production Value: E_ALL & ~E_DEPRECATED & ~E_STRICT ...
CallOnChange("Loading '+"+ fileName +"' with success!"+ Environment.NewLine + correctedLineEndings); }catch(ShaderLoadException e) { var correctedLineEndings = e.Message.Replace("\n", Environment.NewLine); CallOnChange("Error while compiling shader '"+ fileName +"'"+ Environment.NewLine ...
// Create the command to show on the Integration settings pageLPCWSTRCreateCommand(CEStr& rsReady){ rsReady =L"";for(INT_PTR i =0; i < ourSwitches.size(); i++) { Switch* ps = ourSwitches[i]; _ASSERTE(ps && !ps->szSwitch.IsEmpty());boolbOpt = !ps->szOpt.IsEmpty();boolb...
Show 2 more comments 5 What is this ^M? The ^M is a carriage-return character. If you see this, you're probably looking at a file that originated in the DOS/Windows world, where an end-of-line is marked by a carriage return/newline pair, whereas in the Unix world, end-of-...
On Linux, Vim doesn't like Windows line endings and you seem to have a lot of them. Same as above, the trailing^Mis the problem. line 58: E15: Invalid expression: '\<\h\w*\>'^M And so on… This command :%s/<C-v><CR>// ...
One easy way to strip out the DOS line endings is to use the ff option: :set ff=unix :wq Now your file is back to the good-old-Unix-way. If you want to add the DOS line-endings (to keep a printer happy, or transfer files with Windows friends who don't have nice tools) you...