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forked from aniani/vim

updated for version 7.3.248

Problem:    PC Install instructions missing install instructions.
Solution:   Step-by-step explanation. (Michael Soyka)
This commit is contained in:
Bram Moolenaar 2011-07-15 13:52:04 +02:00
parent 37a02ca1c2
commit 734d99804b
2 changed files with 64 additions and 3 deletions

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@ -11,9 +11,9 @@ The file "feature.h" can be edited to match your preferences. You can skip
this, then you will get the default behavior as is documented, which should
be fine for most people.
With the exception of the last two sections (Windows 3.1 and MS-DOS),
this document assumes that you are building Vim for Win32
(Windows NT/2000/XP/2003/Vista and Windows 95/98/Me)
With the exception of two sections (Windows 3.1 and MS-DOS), this document
assumes that you are building Vim for Win32 or later.
(Windows 95/98/Me/NT/2000/XP/2003/Vista/7)
Contents:
@ -27,6 +27,9 @@ Contents:
8. Windows 3.1
9. MS-DOS
10. Installing after building from sources
The currently preferred method is using the free Visual C++ Toolkit 2008
|msvc-2008-express|, the produced binary runs on most MS-Windows systems. If
you need the executable to run on Windows 98 or ME, use the 2003 one
@ -409,3 +412,59 @@ will work properly! Esp. handling multi-byte file names.
If you get all kinds of strange error messages when compiling, try adding
changing the file format from "unix" to "dos".
10. Installing after building from sources
==========================================
[provided by Michael Soyka]
After you've built the Vim binaries as described above, you're ready to
install Vim on your system. However, if you've obtained the Vim sources
using Mercurial or by downloading them as a unix tar file, you must first
create a "vim73" directory. If you instead downloaded the sources as
zip files, you can skip this setup as the zip archives already have the
correct directory structure.
A. Create a Vim "runtime" subdirectory named "vim73"
-----------------------------------------------------
If you obtained your Vim sources as zip files, you can skip this step.
Otherwise, continue reading.
Go to the directory that contains the Vim "src" and "runtime"
directories and create a new subdirectory named "vim73".
Copy the "runtime" files into "vim73":
copy runtime\* vim73
B. Copy the new binaries into the "vim73" directory
----------------------------------------------------
Regardless of how you installed the Vim sources, you need to copy the
new binaries you created above into "vim73":
copy src\*.exe vim73
copy src\GvimExt\gvimext.dll vim73
copy src\xxd\xxd.exe vim73
C. Move the "vim73" directory into the Vim installation subdirectory
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Move the "vim73" subdirectory into the subdirectory where you want Vim
to be installed. Typically, this subdirectory will be named "vim".
If you already have a "vim73" subdirectory in "vim", delete it first
by running its unstal.exe program.
D. Install Vim
---------------
"cd" to your Vim installation subdirectory "vim\vim73" and run the
"install.exe" program. It will ask you a number of questions about
how you would like to have your Vim setup. Among these are:
- You can tell it to write a "_vimrc" file with your preferences in the
parent directory.
- It can also install an "Edit with Vim" entry in the Windows Explorer
popup menu.
- You can have it create batch files, so that you can run Vim from the
console or in a shell. You can select one of the directories in your
PATH or add the directory to PATH using the Windows Control Panel.
- Create entries for Vim on the desktop and in the Start menu.
Happy Vimming!

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@ -709,6 +709,8 @@ static char *(features[]) =
static int included_patches[] =
{ /* Add new patch number below this line */
/**/
248,
/**/
247,
/**/