If you have quoted arguments, not just the exe path, then you may need to do some fancy quoting, like below. The main problem is not the exe path itself, but the arguments. I found this webpage helpful for similar problems myself:
http://blogs.msdn.com/b/twistylittlepassagesallalike/archive/2011/04/23/everyone-quotes-arguments-the-wrong-way.aspx
Not sure offhand and don't have time to check, but if you have a quoted argument then sample below may be closer to what you need:
silent! exe 'r!"C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 9.0\Common7\IDE\TF.exe" history /followbranches \^"#\^"'
Also, I wonder whether the quotes around the path may need special treatment since they are around only a portion of the full command. In any case, the quotes \^" work for main quotes in command line and ^" for quotes embedded in other quotes. I have in the past found it useful to experiment with the command at a windows prompt, remembering to test it with the way Vim prepares it, which is with your command prepended by c:\windows\sys32\cmd.exe .
On second thought, I think when I was working with similar problem I never did get to point of solving command with both quoted arguments and quoted exe-path-with-spaces in same command. I expect there's way to do it, but I instead just created a soft link to the exe in path with no spaces. E.g.:
mklink c:\users\myname\myexe c:\program files(x86)\myapp\myexe.exe
After having done that there's no need to quote the exe command itself and quoting the argument with \^" worked fine. I am of course curious about how to quote an exe-with-spaces that also has quoted arguments.
EDIT: I think I found way around my problem with quoting, don't have VS to test with your exact command but here's what I think may work from command line:
cmd /k ""C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 9.0\Common7\IDE\TF.exe" history /followbranches ^"#^""
If that works for you from command line then I think only issue is getting Vim to include the /k switch. (Also, there could be issue with Windows command line "throwing away" the /followbranch switch, because of the forward slash, but maybe not.)
EDIT2: I think the trick for doing it from Vim is just to include the 'cmd /k' as part of the command you're running. You end up with several levels of shells opening, but I don't think that's a problem. For an example, here's on that runs from Vim, with (1) spaces in exe path, (2) quoted argument (the (message .. ) ) and even (3) a quote within a quoted argument (\^"hi\^"). This command opens an Emacs instance and has Emacs print message "hi":
!cmd /k ""c:\program files (x86)\emacs\emacs\bin\emacs.exe" --eval ^"(message \^"hi\^")^""
And yet one more EDIT: Including your own 'cmd /k' does create problems, I think, if you're trying not just to execute the external command, but to read its output back into the Vim buffer. In that case you could redirect the output to a file in the user's home directory and the use :read to insert into the buffer. If there's some way to get Vim's own cmd to use k switch then this would be unnecessary, but if not then at least this provides good workaround.
:!c:\Program\ /Files\ /(x86)\Microsoft\ /Visual\ /Studio\ /9.0\Common7\IDE\TF.exe– John Riselvato Nov 14 '11 at 17:19