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author Steve Losh <steve@stevelosh.com>
date Tue, 16 Oct 2012 19:52:33 -0400
parents ffdf05081a2e
children 52cc06ab5af8
branches/tags (none)
files introduction.markdown scratch.markdown

Changes

--- a/introduction.markdown	Tue Oct 16 19:51:19 2012 -0400
+++ b/introduction.markdown	Tue Oct 16 19:52:33 2012 -0400
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
 Before reading this book you should be comfortable using Vim and know what terms
 like "buffer", "window" and "insert mode" mean.
 
-LVSTHW is divided roughly into three sections:
+The book is divided roughly into three sections:
 
 * The first covers basic Vim commands that you can use in your `~/.vimrc` file
   to customize Vim quickly and easily.
@@ -13,12 +13,12 @@
 * The third walks through the creation of a sample plugin intended for
   distribution to other Vim users.
 
-Currently the book is a work in progress.  Once it's finished you'll be able to
-buy ebook and possibly hard copy versions.  If you want to get on the mailing
-list to know when it's officially completed you can sign up at [Learn Vimscript
-the Hard Way on Leanpub][leanpub].
+Currently Learn Vimscript the Hard Way is a work in progress.  Once it's
+finished you'll be able to buy ebook and possibly hard copy versions.  If you
+want to get on the mailing list to know when it's officially completed you can
+sign up at [Learn Vimscript the Hard Way on Leanpub][leanpub].
 
-The book is [copyright][license] 2011 by Steve Losh, all rights reserved.  You
+The book is [copyright][license] 2012 by Steve Losh, all rights reserved.  You
 can redistribute it as long as you don't make any changes and don't charge for
 it.
 
--- a/scratch.markdown	Tue Oct 16 19:51:19 2012 -0400
+++ /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
@@ -1,19 +0,0 @@
-Line Continuation
------------------
-
-We're going to stray from the topic for a moment to talk about coding style.
-Put the following code into your `~/.vimrc` file:
-
-    echom "foo" .
-    \     "bar" .
-    \     "baz"
-
-Restart Vim and run `:messages` to see that Vim echoed "foobarbaz" to the
-messages log.
-
-A backslash at the beginning of a line in a Vimscript file tells Vim that this
-line is a continuation of the previous one.  This is unlike Python where the
-backslash goes at the *end* of the first line, instead of the beginning of the
-second.
-
-This lets you split long lines for easier readability.