I guess you could try:
Edit X/^'.. ./ e
The leading apostrophe selects dirty windows (also directories won't
match), and the trailing dot (note the space) ensures filename is set.
If you want to reread non-dirty... then +Errors and dirs/ should be
excluded - this looks uglier:
Edit X:^... [^+].*[^\/]$: e
(and will also ignore 1-letter filenames, if you care).
--
On Tue, Mar 24, 2015 at 06:21:19PM +0100, Aram Santogidis wrote:
> Thanks for your response Ilya.
>
> I tried your first suggestion I get the following Error.
>
> Edit: no file name given
>
> For the second suggestion I get this Error.
>
> Edit: <dir-name> is a directory
>
> I closed the directory windows and it was executed, however dot was replaced
> with the contents of a file.
> In this case the dot is not pointing to all text.
>
> So this didn't worked either.
>
> PS: I'm using p9p acme.
>
> On Tue, Mar 24, 2015 at 6:14 PM, Kostarev Ilya <uvelichitel@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Or even
> Edit X r
>
> --
> Kostarev Ilya
>
>
> On 24 Mar 2015 at 20:04:41, Kostarev Ilya (uvelichitel@gmail.com) wrote:
>
> Seems
> Edit X/.*/ r
> can do
> --
> Kostarev Ilya
>
>
> On 24 Mar 2015 at 19:54:03, Aram Santogidis (gnubuntux@gmail.com) wrote:
>
> Hi all,
>
> imagine you have multiple files open in acme and then you
>
> $ git checkout somebranch
>
> now there is the need to update the views of each open file. You can type
> Get in the tag of each
> window and middle-click it, yes. It would be nice to have a Getall along
> the lines of Putall, though.
>
> I was wondering what is the best way to handle the above situation.
>
> Thanks!
> Aram
>
>
Antons Šušpans (Suspans),
+371 29498719,
<antox@ml.lv>