![]() The basics are covered here.Ĭream was a version of vim, but it isn't as standard, and no longer developed. This is vim's built-in extension to emulate windows-style keyboard shortcuts. ![]() Here are some quick notes for how I could make that happen. After all, aren't we supposed to be able to customize things? I'm not against learning new shortcuts gradually over time, and I'm also not against taking some time to set it up so I don't have to, at least not at first, perhaps not ever. (I'll wait while some computer fundamentalists contain their emotions or depart.) I'm just getting started and there's a lot to learn.īut, no, thank you, I don't want to learn all-new keyboard shortcuts, because my goal is speed and learning them will slow me down and worse, it'll frustrate me, and besides I don't need to learn that right now. My goal is startup speed with low resource usage, and vim has got that. ![]() I'd like to use vim as the text editor for the very fast writing laptop I'm putting together. There's a name for that style of key bindings, Common User Access, or CUA. All my life I've used VXCZ keys for paste, cut, copy, undo.
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