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Re: how to indent
From: |
Alan Mackenzie |
Subject: |
Re: how to indent |
Date: |
Tue, 14 Mar 2006 20:28:39 +0000 |
User-agent: |
tin/1.4.5-20010409 ("One More Nightmare") (UNIX) (Linux/2.0.35 (i686)) |
billy <bp1497@att.com> wrote on 14 Mar 2006 03:59:06 -0800:
> My original source was built using vim with auto indent shut off. Now
> every line I enter new gets indented different that what I had. I had
> vim set for tab to be 2 spaces. How can I force the remainder of a
> file to indent to the standards of what emacs has as auto indenting. A
> pretty print ?
What sort of file is this? C, C++, perl, Fortran, Cobol, Python, ....?
It makes a difference to what you need to do.
However, if you're talking about C, try writing the following into your
.emacs[*]:
(setq c-basic-offset 2)
, which will set the indentation step to 2 characters. To re-indent the
whole file in one go (you're a braver man than I ;-), do C-x h (which
"marks" the whole buffer) and then C-M-\ (that's
"control-meta-backslash", where the "meta" key is (probably) your left
alt key).
[*] If you haven't got one, do "C-x C-f ~/.emacs" (that's
"control-x,control-x", followed by "~/.emacs"). Then you'll have one.
--
Alan Mackenzie (Munich, Germany)
Email: aacm@muuc.dee; to decode, wherever there is a repeated letter
(like "aa"), remove half of them (leaving, say, "a").
- how to indent, billy, 2006/03/14
- Re: how to indent,
Alan Mackenzie <=