On Thu, Dec 8, 2016 at 8:24 AM Dario Lesca <d.lesca@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Il giorno gio, 08/12/2016 alle 14.53 +0200, Ahmad Samir ha scritto:
> To revert that change I created a ~/.vimrc (even an empty one works)
> and for good measure added this line to it:
> set mouse=
>
Thank, this command:
$ echo 'set mouse=' >> ~/.vimrc
disable this new "feature" and restore the previous behavior.
Another (annoying) thing to do on all new system witch I install and
use.
Probably it would be better that this feature was disabled by default
in a next update.
What is your opinion?
This is very surprising behavior that I saw today. I spent quite a bit of time going through my .vimrc file to try to find which setting "fixed" the problem. Apparently, an empty file would have done the trick... such a waste of time. :)
A more intuitive behavior would be for the user's settings to be merged with the defaults. Creating an .vimrc to change a whitespace option, and seeing that has an effect on mouse behavior is very strange.
A more intuitive behavior would be for the user's settings to be merged with the defaults. Creating an .vimrc to change a whitespace option, and seeing that has an effect on mouse behavior is very strange.
Thanks
--
Dario Lesca
(inviato dal mio Linux Fedora 24 Workstation)
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