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authorPaul Buetow <paul@buetow.org>2023-04-09 14:09:09 +0300
committerPaul Buetow <paul@buetow.org>2023-04-09 14:09:09 +0300
commit9f2db9add8f91918f65e6115899df46a2bb5416d (patch)
tree39e83d20e4416eb369c6363d1cd5ae6f77a946e9
parent52bd2c196e9ca21a01b0f6c04afc127916423b9e (diff)
Update content for md
-rw-r--r--gemfeed/2022-11-24-i-tried-emacs-but-i-switched-back-to-neovim.md5
-rw-r--r--index.md2
-rw-r--r--uptime-stats.md2
3 files changed, 5 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/gemfeed/2022-11-24-i-tried-emacs-but-i-switched-back-to-neovim.md b/gemfeed/2022-11-24-i-tried-emacs-but-i-switched-back-to-neovim.md
index 052a65d3..23209fe8 100644
--- a/gemfeed/2022-11-24-i-tried-emacs-but-i-switched-back-to-neovim.md
+++ b/gemfeed/2022-11-24-i-tried-emacs-but-i-switched-back-to-neovim.md
@@ -64,7 +64,8 @@ NeoVim is also programmable with Lua, which seems to be a step up and Vim comes
One example is my workflow of how I compose my blog articles (e.g. this one you are currently reading): I am writing everything in NeoVim, but I also want to have every paragraph checked against Grammarly (as English is not my first language). So I write a whole paragraph, then I select the entire paragraph via visual selection with `SHIFT+v`, and then I press `,y` to yank the paragraph to the systems clipboard, then I paste the paragraph to Grammarly's browser window with `CTRL+v`, let Grammarly suggest the improvements, and then I copy the result back with `CTRL+c` to the system clipboard and in NeoVim I type `,i` to insert the result back overriding the old paragraph (which is still selected in visual mode) with the new content. That all sounds a bit complicated, but it's surprisingly natural and efficient.
To come back to the example, for the clipboard integration, I use this small VimScript snippet, and I didn't have to dig into any Lisp or Perl for this:
-```
+
+```vim
" Clipboard
vnoremap ,y !pbcopy<CR>ugv
vnoremap ,i !pbpaste<CR>
@@ -117,7 +118,7 @@ E-Mail your comments to hi@paul.cyou :-)
This is the VimScript I mentioned earlier, which parses a table of contents index of my scanned paper journals and opens the corresponding PDF at the right page in `zathura`:
-```
+```vim
function! ReadJournalPageNumber()
let page = expand("<cword>")
if page !~# '^\d\+$'
diff --git a/index.md b/index.md
index 433e0b18..09d6a785 100644
--- a/index.md
+++ b/index.md
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
# foo.zone
-> This site was generated at 2023-04-09T14:02:25+03:00 by `Gemtexter`
+> This site was generated at 2023-04-09T14:08:52+03:00 by `Gemtexter`
```
|\---/|
diff --git a/uptime-stats.md b/uptime-stats.md
index 0296d891..90a41b3f 100644
--- a/uptime-stats.md
+++ b/uptime-stats.md
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
# My machine uptime stats
-> This site was last updated at 2023-04-09T14:02:25+03:00
+> This site was last updated at 2023-04-09T14:08:52+03:00
The following stats were collected via `uptimed` on all of my personal computers over many years and the output was generated by `guprecords`, the global uptime records stats analyser of mine.