No way, you met json irl?
99 0 Reply25 0 ReplyLMFAO! Perfect.
2 1 Reply
I typically don't know what I'm doing, so my favorite binding is :q!
57 0 ReplyI guess the obvious one is "holding spacebar for control key"
56 0 ReplyLook, my setup works for me. Can you please just add an option to reenable spacebar heating?
52 0 ReplyReference: xkcd #1172 - Workflow
Hover text: There are probably children out there holding down spacebar to stay warm in the winter! YOUR UPDATE MURDERS CHILDREN.
30 0 Reply
That's horrifying
6 0 Reply
Not sure if this is obscure or not: I have F12 bound to cycle through the low- to high-contrast versions of my color scheme so I can keep working when the sun hits my shitty laptop screen.
20 0 Replythis is definitely obscure
7 0 Reply
I was curious what the original said: https://thejenkinscomic.wordpress.com/2020/05/06/memory/
19 0 ReplyThe original sucks ngl
28 0 ReplyWow, I think we're still ahead.
13 0 Replyhow is a vim joke better then the original lmao
5 0 ReplyThe Jenkins is epic
2 0 Reply
I've mapped jk to escape because it's rare and it's separate fingers in home row, so it's faster than e.g. jj.
15 0 ReplyI mapped kj instead. Can't remember why, but I like it that way.
5 0 ReplyUnfortunately both of those are used in common English or computer words. The only letter pairs not used are: bq, bx, cf, cj, dx, fq, fx, fz, hx, jb, jc, jf, jg, jq, jv, jx, jz, kq, kz, mx, px, qc, qd, qg, qh, qj, qk, ql, qm, qn, qp, qq, qr, qt, qv, qx, qy, qz, sx, tx, vb, vc, vf, vj, vm, vq, vw, vx, wq, wx, xj, zx.
Personally I have mappings based on
<CR>
, and press it twice to get a real newline.3 0 Reply
All hail nano
16 5 ReplyThat's some shitty, lossy compression.
9 0 ReplyNah man, that is some crispy jpeg memes
5 0 ReplyI want to solve: What is .jpg?
1 0 Reply
M-x dunnet
Runs Colossal Cave Adventure in emacs. "YOU ARE STANDING AT THE END OF A ROAD BEFORE A SMALL BRICK BUILDING."
9 0 ReplyWhat?!
And to think I was going to take an early night...
3 0 Reply
I have
\yeet
bound toggdG
(backslash being my leader key)Edit: Detail about leader. I'd add the proper binding but markdown's being weird.
9 0 Replyso you use 5 keystrokes to get out of typing 4.
1 0 ReplyTechnically yes. However I figured it'd be a funny one to have in my vimrc.
Also capital G requires a shift press, so not sure how many keystrokes that counts as.
2 0 Reply
good meme
9 0 ReplyWell, you see, I spilled coffee on my mechanical keyboard, permanently breaking the 2/@ key, so I mapped it to pause/break..
7 0 ReplyCtrl+a, Ctrl+c, alt-tab, Ctrl+z, enter.
"This is mine now."
8 1 ReplyI have a Logitech G600 and have all those and more on the side buttons, lol.
1 0 Reply
I map caps lock to esc with setxkbmap. Much more fun ergonomically.
6 0 ReplyI use caps for switching languages instead of alt+shift or super+space.
Very efficient thing when you need to use your native language and some code in one text message or code block.
4 0 Reply
Not a Vim user, but no matter what software I'm using, I might think about its keybindings like the first week of getting familiar with it; at one point they become muscle memory and I stop thinking about them.
6 0 ReplyYep. The primary advantage of keyboard control. It stops being something you engage your conscious brain for.
1 0 Reply
I like the one of Isaac
5 0 ReplyMe with my dwm key binds.
4 0 Replyalt+z for saving, I guess?
4 0 ReplyCtrl+D = Alt+F4 in CMD.exe so that I can exit from that black box in the way the good lord intended.
3 1 ReplyThis really had me laugh 😂😂
2 0 Replyi use vim tips and still cant remember names, what gives?
3 1 Replymeta-; for commenting marked lines (not in vim)
1 0 Reply