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why exit when you can do everything inside

as I'm going through the process of learning vim, I'm discovering newfound powers. one of them being to execute commands from vim itself.

below examples might better explain some of them:

  1. want to see what files are in current directory? enter command mode(by typing :) and follow it by a bang(!). then do ls like you'd do in a terminal and press enter. this is not limited to just ls. you can enter any command that you can enter in terminal. for example: :! uname --operating-system (which will output GNU/Linux :))

  2. so you want to quickly save just a certain part of your file into another file? just select everything you need by entering visual mode(v) and do :w filename(actual command you'll see would be '<,'>:w filename). verify it using 1.(i.e., :! cat filename.

  3. want to quickly paste another file into current one? do :r filename. it'll paste its contents below your cursor.

  4. or maybe you want to paste results of a command? do :r !ls *.png.

vim is my ~ sweet ~ now. make it yours too.

qwertychomp ,

Dangol modern Linux users, haven't even heard of Ed. Every text editor is bloat, ed is life!

nutbutter ,

You can keep your vim. I am happy with my nano.

cacheson ,
@cacheson@kbin.social avatar

I love these memes that turn into threads full of vim tips. You really can do anything within vim. You can even exit vim!: !killall vim

tdawg ,

It's like learning an instrument really. Just need to practice and eventually muscle memory will carry you

khapyman ,

I will not make vim my sweet as it is optimized for us keyboard. Most of the shortcuts are awful in my native (Finnish) layout. As much of a heretic I am, there is a place for mouse and windowing display managers.

What I do miss from the Redmont dystopia is Notepad++. Can do anything, can be explained over the phone.

lemmesay OP ,
@lemmesay@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

bonus point: if you like inception, do :term, press i and start another (n)vim session :)

CriticalMiss ,

I love vim, but it wasn't always like this. When I was a Linux newbie one of the things that irritated me most is that tutorials aimed at beginners told readers to use vim, without explaining how to maneuver it. People, if you write tutorials aimed at beginners please use nano, even if it's not your preferred text editor.

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