vim-colemak
hop.nvim
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vim-colemak | hop.nvim | |
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14 | 46 | |
205 | 2,407 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 2.9 | |
almost 6 years ago | 8 months ago | |
Vim Script | Lua | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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vim-colemak
- Ortholinear and QWERTY: Shifting the last row to the right?
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Anyone have experience with Neovim and Colemak or Devorak keyboard layout?
https://github.com/jooize/vim-colemak plugin with common remappings for colemak. modify it to taste but it's a good start. the other commenter said switching layouts isn't worth it, in my case it cured rsi. you probably won't type faster though.
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Practice typing by retyping ENTIRE novels
This is a pretty unavoidable downside of alt keyboard layouts. For vim you'd probably want a plugin like https://github.com/jooize/vim-colemak.
If you maintain your QWERTY muscle memory, you can use it as a fallback in foreign environments, but figuring out how to smoothly setup RC files on any target is probably the ideal: https://serverfault.com/questions/400522/how-to-use-a-custom...
Personally. I gave up on Dvorak in part due to this friction when I started introducing more and more tools like Vimperator (Firefox plugin, superseded by Tridactyl) into my workflow. The flexibility of switching on a vim mode anywhere and having it be 95% what I want is very high. The other factor was I still did a lot of same-machine peering then, which it added a lot of friction to. I do know highly capable engineers who go fully down the typing-ergonomics rabbit hole and stay there, but it does consume a fair amount of one's yak-shaving budget.
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Does anyone have a neovim/vim config where all of the colemak keys are remapped to the qwerty keys?
If you still wanna remap keys, you should search for a plugin such as this. They usually do a good job of remapping every key and deal with plugins keymaps compatibility.
- Vim with non-qwerty layout?
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I Do Not Use HJKL to Move the Cursor
Plugins probably to make your hands stay at QWERTY layout
- Using colemak in the terminal is very painful HELP !!
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Just wondering. Is it?
Yes, very easily, people have even worked out suggested sensible keymaps for you. I think the main problem is if you're learning vim for the first time it's going to increase the learning curve quite a bit; commands like cib (change inside brackets) or yap (yank around paragraph), where you form instructions semantically, start using gibberish letters which increases the initial cognitive burden. You also can't use vi/vim on any other system.
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Need help with remapping keys
When i tried switch to colemak, i found this plugin https://github.com/jooize/vim-colemak
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I want to run a command when i go into normal mode , insert mode starting, and quitting vim.
Hi, I want to run a command to change my keyboard layout when i change from normal to insert, on start and exit. I have do some research I didn't find anything that I think would work. My current solution remaps the keys in a non vim like fashion.
hop.nvim
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hardtime.nvim - A Neovim plugin helping you establish good command workflow and habit
Personally I like to just hop using the hop plugin: https://github.com/phaazon/hop.nvim
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Using hop.nvim on empty line breaks plugin (bug?)
I am using hop.nvim and hop.nvim works great most of the time except when I'm on an empty line. Suppose I'm editing this snippet and ^ represents my cursor
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Rapidly selecting/copying in kitty?
I waas thinking about something ala https://github.com/phaazon/hop.nvim to do fast selections, f.e.: -Entering visual mode or a specific mode -Search for f.e. 2 characters -Getting "hints" (like in vimium) for the matches -Being able to select and copy the hinted matches and being able to chose to either yank a line, a word, a url... etc
- Question regarding vertical movement
- Neovim - Workflow para Java, C# e JS/TypeScript (Atualização com Neovim 0.8 e LSP)
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Quick tip: One keymap can save you from using multiple plugins
So I was previously using a bunch of plugins to be able to move between frequently used block delimiters "(){}...", things like Vim-matchup or Nvim-treesitter-textobjects. However, i had the sudden realization that what I was really doing was hopping between block delimiters most of the time, so I uninstalled all of them and created a keymap that works faster and requires only one plugin Hop.nvim, which I already use to obtain EasyMotion like movements. Here's the keymap, you can customize it to your liking to add common characters where you hop to (be careful as it is not a regular regex expression):
- Always Pin Your Neovim Plugins
- (Neo)Vim motions on speed
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sneak vs lightspeed vs vanilla
I prefer to use Hop with :HopWord. It just highlight every word in buffer. f({char}) ({char})
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Launch a `/` search only in the visible part of a buffer
If you are interested in a plugin solution, there is HopPattern in https://github.com/phaazon/hop.nvim
What are some alternatives?
kmonad - An advanced keyboard manager
lightspeed.nvim - deprecated in favor of leap.nvim
dactyl-manuform
leap.nvim - Neovim's answer to the mouse 🦘
vim-dvorak - Dvorak key mappings for Vim.
vim-easymotion - Vim motions on speed!
qmk_firmware - Open-source keyboard firmware for Atmel AVR and Arm USB families
vim-sneak - The missing motion for Vim :athletic_shoe:
etc - My Very Own ~/etc
AceJump - 🅰️ single character search, select, and jump
serenity-vim - Alternate VIM mappings
vim-dadbod-ui - Simple UI for https://github.com/tpope/vim-dadbod