From 4962c60c6fee44c51261daa03bf3362a1c8aa54e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: zeertzjq Date: Sun, 20 Jul 2025 22:05:46 +0800 Subject: [PATCH] vim-patch:partial:d3170f5: runtime(doc): Tweak documentation about tab pages (#35007) closes: vim/vim#17799 https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/d3170f59e06c843461be981dfe62b5f13fd57a4d Co-authored-by: Hirohito Higashi --- runtime/doc/index.txt | 2 +- runtime/doc/tabpage.txt | 18 +++++++++--------- 2 files changed, 10 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-) diff --git a/runtime/doc/index.txt b/runtime/doc/index.txt index 0e3de064d9..c47d92a3f5 100644 --- a/runtime/doc/index.txt +++ b/runtime/doc/index.txt @@ -516,7 +516,7 @@ tag command action in op-pending and Visual mode ~ tag command action in Normal mode ~ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ~ |CTRL-W_CTRL-B| CTRL-W CTRL-B same as "CTRL-W b" -|CTRL-W_CTRL-C| CTRL-W CTRL-C no-op |CTRL-W_CTRL-C| +|CTRL-W_CTRL-C| CTRL-W CTRL-C no-op |CTRL-W_CTRL-D| CTRL-W CTRL-D same as "CTRL-W d" |CTRL-W_CTRL-F| CTRL-W CTRL-F same as "CTRL-W f" CTRL-W CTRL-G same as "CTRL-W g .." diff --git a/runtime/doc/tabpage.txt b/runtime/doc/tabpage.txt index deb5bfb9ad..1d0a267d86 100644 --- a/runtime/doc/tabpage.txt +++ b/runtime/doc/tabpage.txt @@ -28,9 +28,9 @@ commands, |:windo|, |:all| and |:ball| (when not using the |:tab| modifier). The commands that are aware of other tab pages than the current one are mentioned below. -Tabs are also a nice way to edit a buffer temporarily without changing the -current window layout. Open a new tab page, do whatever you want to do and -close the tab page. +Tab pages are also a nice way to edit a buffer temporarily without changing +the current window layout. Open a new tab page, do whatever you want to do +and close the tab page. *tab-ID* *tabid* *tabpageid* Each tab page has a unique identifier called the tab ID. This identifier will @@ -146,7 +146,7 @@ something else. :tabclose $ " close the last tab page :tabclose # " close the last accessed tab page -When a tab is closed the next tab page will become the current one. This +When a tab page is closed the next tab page will become the current one. This behaviour can be customized using the 'tabclose' option. *:tabo* *:tabonly* @@ -250,7 +250,7 @@ REORDERING TAB PAGES: :[N]tabm[ove] Move the current tab page to after tab page N. Use zero to make the current tab page the first one. N is counted before - the move, thus if the second tab is the current one, + the move, thus if the second tab page is the current one, `:tabmove 1` and `:tabmove 2` have no effect. Without N the tab page is made the last one. > :.tabmove " do nothing @@ -274,9 +274,9 @@ REORDERING TAB PAGES: :tabmove +1 " as above -Note that although it is possible to move a tab behind the N-th one by using -:Ntabmove. And move it by N places by using :+Ntabmove. For clarification what -+N means in this context see |[range]|. +Note that although it is possible to move a tab page behind the N-th one by +using :Ntabmove. And move it by N places by using :+Ntabmove. For +clarification what +N means in this context see |[range]|. LOOPING OVER TAB PAGES: @@ -396,7 +396,7 @@ pages and define labels for them. Then get the label for each tab page. > let s ..= ' %{MyTabLabel(' .. (i + 1) .. ')} ' endfor - " after the last tab fill with TabLineFill and reset tab page nr + " after the last tab page fill with TabLineFill and reset tab page nr let s ..= '%#TabLineFill#%T' " right-align the label to close the current tab page