golf
dance
golf | dance | |
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3 | 6 | |
119 | 413 | |
- | - | |
9.2 | 6.2 | |
2 months ago | 21 days ago | |
Shell | TypeScript | |
The Unlicense | ISC License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
golf
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Why Kakoune
I'd probably use Helix if it had 1:1 Kakoune keybindings. Or even Vim bindings.
Vim bindings are not the most consistent, but they are ubiquitous. Every program that offers Vim mode has very similar keymap. If modal text editor deviates from them, it better be for good reason.
Kakoune bindings are very different from Vim, but they are provably and objectively [1] better, so that's fine. They are also more consistent and there is a clear idea behind the whole design. It's written down in documentation. You might prefer Vim or Emacs, but at least you can see that changes from well known Vim scheme are not made at whim.
Helix keymap feels like it was improvised without any thought behind it. „Let's take Kakoune binds and add back visual mode cuz I feel like it.” Currently, they are designed by committee in this GitHub issue[2]. I don't see any design notes and explanations why should I spend time learning Helix keymap.
[1]: https://github.com/mawww/golf
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Is there objective data on the "most efficient" modal editor?
People claim that their new(er) modal text editor is better/faster/requires fewer keystrokes than vi/vim/neovim, but I have yet to see some clear, objective, concrete data to back these claims up (like a benchmark of the editors for the same tasks). Is there anything of this sort? I know there's this, but it's only about kakoune/vim and it seems a little biased.
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Kakoune Code Editor
Judging by https://github.com/mawww/golf kakoune is capable of completing the majority of the same editing tasks as vim in a very similar amount of keystrokes. The main advantage of multiple selections is that you can see which text you will operate on ahead of time, rather than having to first select which operation you want (delete/yank/change/etc) and then which text it will affect. I think pointing out that vim's selections aren't as capable as kakoune's is a fair response, and saying that you can accomplish similar things without selections is a bit of a deflection.
dance
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Why Kakoune – The quest for a better code editor
For those of you that use VS Code, there is a plugin[1] that follow a lot of the Kakoune grammar but doesn't try to emulate fully, opting instead for better integration with vscode. I have been using it for a few years after using Kakoune for a few and then trying and failing to make my own Kakoune emulation mode for vscode.
[1]: https://github.com/71/dance
- Kakoune/Helix Keybindings in VSCode
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A Vim Guide for Advanced Users
Yes, you'll have to tweak the default keybindings a bit to match Helix but I am using dance successfully:
https://github.com/71/dance
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"Helix these nuts" - The Primeagan™
VSCode: https://github.com/71/dance
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What tools do you use in your everyday programming?
VSCode with Dance https://github.com/71/dance and Kakoune / kak-lsp otherwise. Sometimes Doom Emacs.
- Kakoune Code Editor
What are some alternatives?
nvim-config
kakoune-easymotion - kakoune plugin for navigating like the easymotion vim mode
symflower-kakoune - Unit test generation for the Kakoune editor with Symflower
Dina-Font-TTF-Remastered - A partial manual reworking of the Dina Bitmap font converted to TTF format
one.kak - Atom "One" color schemes for Kakoune.
helix - A post-modern modal text editor.
helix-vim - A Vim-like configuration for Helix
kakoune-wakatime - WakaTime! For Kakoune! Yay!
incsearch.vim - :flashlight: Improved incremental searching for Vim
kakoune - mawww's experiment for a better code editor