No way, you met json irl?
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.
I guess the obvious one is “holding spacebar for control key”
Look, my setup works for me. Can you please just add an option to reenable spacebar heating?
I map caps lock to esc with setxkbmap. Much more fun ergonomically.
I 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.
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.
I mapped kj instead. Can’t remember why, but I like it that way.
Unfortunately 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.I guess I just don’t write “blackjack and hookers” often enough. Sigh, I’ll never make a good Redditor.
Funny, I’ve never actually had “kj” interrupt me in vim. Maybe once. It’s a funny way of realising I’ve never written certain words in vim!
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.
M-x dunnet
Runs Colossal Cave Adventure in emacs. “YOU ARE STANDING AT THE END OF A ROAD BEFORE A SMALL BRICK BUILDING.”
I was curious what the original said: https://thejenkinscomic.wordpress.com/2020/05/06/memory/
how is a vim joke better then the original lmao
Wow, I think we’re still ahead.
Ctrl+D = Alt+F4 in CMD.exe so that I can exit from that black box in the way the good lord intended.
All hail nano