Post 795939 by nobody@octodon.social
 (DIR) More posts by nobody@octodon.social
 (DIR) Post #795181 by thorthenorseman@octodon.social
       2018-10-27T08:40:54Z
       
       0 likes, 0 repeats
       
       Either, everyone knows entirely different subsets of vim commands, or I'm really bad at vim. The truth is probably somewhere in between.The extent of my vim knowledge is pretty much this:- bunch of .vimrc settings- tiny bit of vim script- [i]nsert, [v]isual modes- [ESC]ape mode- [y]ank, [d]elete, [p]aste- [w]rite, [r]ead, [q]uit- / (search)- %s (regex search/replace)- < (indent left), > (indent right)I'm aware of marks, buffers, windows and tabs but haven't explored them.
       
 (DIR) Post #795625 by kouk@ieji.de
       2018-10-27T09:31:39Z
       
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       @thorthenorsemanThat's pretty much the subset I use, and for everything else I usually open up the help window.
       
 (DIR) Post #795939 by nobody@octodon.social
       2018-10-27T09:52:34Z
       
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       @thorthenorsemanOnce I learned that 'q' then a letter records a macro and '@' then the letter plays it, everything got a lot faster.
       
 (DIR) Post #796609 by TeddyDD@octodon.social
       2018-10-27T10:32:11Z
       
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       @thorthenorseman maybe try Kakoune wink wink https://github.com/mawww/kakouneIt usus small set of very logical commands that compose well s you don't have to learn much.
       
 (DIR) Post #801863 by SuperFloppies@mastodon.technology
       2018-10-27T16:54:57Z
       
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       @thorthenorseman I am even worse. I know how to enter and exit insert mode, how to move around and do sed things in it. That’s about it.