updated for version 7.0066

This commit is contained in:
Bram Moolenaar
2005-04-15 21:00:38 +00:00
parent 4499d2ee58
commit 402d2fea70
89 changed files with 6389 additions and 928 deletions

View File

@ -177,16 +177,16 @@ by setting a variable (ex. scp uses the variable g:netrw_scp_cmd,
which is defaulted to "scp -q").
Ftp, an old protocol, seems to be blessed by numerous implementations.
Unfortunately, some implementations are noisy (ie., add junk to the end
Unfortunately, some implementations are noisy (i.e., add junk to the end
of the file). Thus, concerned users may decide to write a NetReadFixup()
function that will clean up after reading with their ftp. Some Unix systems
(ie., FreeBSD) provide a utility called "fetch" which uses the ftp protocol
(i.e., FreeBSD) provide a utility called "fetch" which uses the ftp protocol
but is not noisy and more convenient, actually, for <netrw.vim> to use.
Consequently, if "fetch" is executable, it will be used to do reads for
ftp://... (and http://...) . See |netrw-var| for more about this.
For rcp, scp, sftp, and http, one may use network-oriented file transfers
transparently; ie.
transparently; i.e.
>
vim rcp://[user@]machine/path
vim scp://[user@]machine/path
@ -198,7 +198,7 @@ that file. Your ftp must be able to use the <.netrc> file on its own, however.
vim ftp://[user@]machine[[:#]portnumber]/path
<
However, ftp will often need to query the user for the userid and password.
The latter will be done "silently"; ie. asterisks will show up instead of
The latter will be done "silently"; i.e. asterisks will show up instead of
the actually-typed-in password. Netrw will retain the userid and password
for subsequent read/writes from the most recent transfer so subsequent
transfers (read/write) to or from that machine will take place without
@ -625,7 +625,7 @@ NETRW BROWSER VARIABLES *netrw-browse-var*
g:netrw_timefmt specify format string to strftime() (%c)
g:netrw_winsize specify initial size of new o/v windows
INTRODUCTION TO DIRECTORY BROWSING
INTRODUCTION TO DIRECTORY BROWSING *file-explorer*
Netrw supports the browsing of directories on the local system and on remote
hosts, including generating listing directories, entering directories, editing