Holy shit! It’s so easy and accesible. The best part is that it’s simpky build in to linux (or wsl). It’s just a terminal command “vimtutor”.
I’m astonished that nobody has ever told me about this before.
Holy shit! It’s so easy and accesible. The best part is that it’s simpky build in to linux (or wsl). It’s just a terminal command “vimtutor”.
I’m astonished that nobody has ever told me about this before.
While true, as an old Vim user, I’m recommending finding some other modal-editor: too much cruft in Vim.
I hear Helix is modal.
( modal-editors help bash one against one’s unconscious-mind’s woodenness: forcing switching-of-levels, & if you read “The Design of Everyday Things”, which Adam Savage also recommends people read, as he found it life-changing, then you’ll read that NOT-switching-levels is a racial mental-defect: we just enforce-harder, instead of switching-levels, & break opportunity we’re in!
So, modal-editing helps break that ignorance, giving us better ability to get out from the wrong-level into the right-for-the-context level, & therefore I absolutely recommend modal editors, for nearly-all.
However, vi & vim … a bit too much cruft, in the crystallization.
Clean-slate optimization of what commands are in, what key-codes are for what, etc, ought produce a better tool. )
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