![]() ![]() Im even embarrassed to say I shopped there. So i walk out with this $10 shirt with the piece removed, back into my mustang going back to my place.I will never shop at shitty v.i.m again. So hes causing a scene and Im pulling out my debit card until he refuses. So he gives me the shirt like I made the error on the receipt or stole it because a black guy cant afford a $10 shirt. Ill pay for it, i just want the piece removed. Then Pakastani guy who barely spoke clear english started asking about the body spray i used and my hat.im like wtf that gotta do with this $10 shirt. She didnt seem to really care but she admitted to making the error. Luckily a familiar face came to the counter, the same girl who rang me up. Why would I who makes $40k a year drive a mustang and have my own place STEAL A $10. Why didnt your security Buzz? Why your guard didnt spot it when he dug in my bag before i left?. Im like.bro.1 of your girls rang me up and i walked out with that piece on the shirt. Hes telling me the receipt doesnt match the items and assuming I STOLE A $10 SHIRT. She call her boss some Pakastani indian dude. No beeping walking in, check homie at the door let him know they didnt remove the piece. Im like wtf? Are they serious? Throw that shirt in the bag 2/13Get off work today 2/15. it looks good.i go to the mirror, still has the electronic security piece on it. Swipe my card, homie check my bag at the exit, i walk out, get in my droptop mustang to go back to my place. Supposed to use the EXCHANGE credit towards the new items.so my difference came to about $16. Only tried the shirt on once when i got home and put it back in the bag with the receipt.I go back to the store few days later and tell the girl i want to exchange for the same shirt just smaller size, she tells me to pick out what i want.so i pickup a few more shirts with the smaller one i wanted. I came there to exchange a shirt i had bought because it was a little too big and I wanted something more fitted. But you won't have this directory, it's specific to machines I use on my own network.The worst. On my system, I also have a file at ~/.vimrc but this does not appear in this list because it is a link to another file, stored under ~/Linux-Config. Which is quite useful because it tells us that there are 2 example files installed in the share directorys for both gvim and vim, and that there are also some system-wide config files below /etc/. On my system this produces /usr/share/vim/vim82/vimrc_example.vim (The information for which you would obtain from :version as explained in other answers.) Example result on my system The reason is that this will show you what files you actualy have available on the system currently, rather than what you might put on your system. There are many answers already, but it can sometimes be useful to simply run a "find" for anything containing the name "vimrc". Useful Information can be obtained using the find commandįind / -iname "*vimrc*" -type f 2>/dev/null If you want to see what it's set to, start up Vim and use the command :echo $VIM * $VIM may not be set in your shell, but is always set inside Vim. Resetting other options (see 'compatible'). Vimrc file in the current directory, or the "VIMINIT" environment variable is ![]() But as soon as a user vimrc file is found, or a When Vim starts, the 'compatible' option is on. Note that the mere existence of a user vimrc will change Vim's behavior by turning off the compatible option. The files are searched in the order specified above and only the first MS-Windows $HOME/_vimrc, $HOME/vimfiles/vimrcĪmiga s.vimrc, home.vimrc, home:vimfiles:vimrc Places for your personal initializations: Unix $HOME/.vimrc or $HOME/.vim/vimrc They are the same type ofįile, but "exrc" is what Vi always used, "vimrc" is a Vim specific Sometimes also referred to as "exrc" file. In most cases, settings in the user vimrc will override settings in the system vimrc.Ī file that contains initialization commands is called a "vimrc" file.Įach line in a vimrc file is executed as an Ex command line. ![]() Also, changes here will affect other users on a multi-user system. If you modify this file your changes may be overwritten if you ever upgrade Vim. The system vimrc is not a good place you keep your personal settings. The system vimrc should normally be left unmodified and is located in the $VIM * directory. If you cannot find $HOME/.vimrc (or $HOME/_vimrc on Windows) then you can, and probably should, just create it. The user vimrc file often does not exist until created by the user.
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