[CentOS] Vim scripting - cursor motion

Sat Jun 11 16:37:41 UTC 2011
Alain Péan <alain.pean at lpp.polytechnique.fr>

Le 11/06/2011 18:22, Les Mikesell a écrit :
> On 6/11/11 11:08 AM, Alain Péan wrote:
>>>> So this was my first-ever vim script. So far I am not convinced about
>>>> vim scripting (ok, I was warned, too)... Test cycle is slow (modify
>>>> script, quit the realfile, open realfile again with vim -s script).
>>>> Verbal error messages would be useful. There is supposed to be
>>>> "integrated debugger". I would like to know more.
>>> I'd still recommend learning to do it in perl as being likely faster and more
>>> generally useful, especially if the sql db you mentioned can be accessed
>>> directly. The regeps will be approximately the same and it is easy to find perl
>>> example code for DBI operations and manipulating files.  And unlike working in
>>> shell/awk/editors, you very seldom find an operation that perl can't do itself
>>> so it often ends up simpler than the shell wrapper you need for other tools.
>>>
>> I hope not to begin a flame war, but I would recommend Python. It can do
>> the same things as Perl (regexp ansd so on), but is easier and faster to
>> learn, and the code is also much more readeable...
> There is sort-of a tradeoff in the syntax choices between the languages.  Perl
> is easier to write because it is flexible and you can use a syntax that
> resembles something you already know (shell/c/awk) with simple changes.  That
> makes other peoples perl less readable, but not your own.  The other win for
> perl is that any operation that would take more than a page of code that you are
> likely to want to do has almost certainly already been done and is available as
> a module on CPAN (and possibly packaged as an rpm).  Does python have anything
> to match that yet?  How many database types can it access with available
> modules?  Perl's DBI/DBD connector list is pretty large.
>

Here it is. It seems to me rather large, even if I don't know the 
equivalent list for Perl :
http://wiki.python.org/moin/DatabaseInterfaces

There are also a very large number of Python modules available, and 
tools to easily install them, for example there :
http://pypi.python.org/pypi

Alain