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98 lines
3.3 KiB
Plaintext
98 lines
3.3 KiB
Plaintext
kak(1)
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======
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NAME
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----
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kak - a vim inspired, selection oriented code editor
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SYNOPSIS
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--------
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*kak* [-q] [-u] [-n] [-l] [-e command] [-f command] [-p session_id] [-c session_id|[[-d] -s session_id] file ...
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DESCRIPTION
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-----------
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Kakoune is a code editor heavily inspired by Vim, as such most of its commands are similar to Vi's ones, and it
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shares Vi's "keystrokes as a text editing language" model.
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Kakoune can operate in two modes, normal and insertion. In insertion mode, keys are directly inserted into the
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current buffer. In normal mode, keys are used to manipulate the current selection and to enter insertion mode.
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Kakoune has a strong focus on interactivity, most commands provide immediate and incremental results, while still
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being competitive (as in keystroke count) with Vim.
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Kakoune works on selections, which are oriented, inclusive range of characters, selections have an anchor and
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a cursor character. Most commands move both of them, except when extending selection where the anchor character
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stays fixed and the cursor one moves around.
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OPTIONS
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-------
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-q::
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in filter mode, be quiet about errors applying keys
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-u::
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use a dummy user interface, for testing purposes
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-n::
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do not source kakrc files on startup
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-l::
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list existing sessions
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-d::
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run as a headless session (requires -s)
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-e <command>::
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execute argument on initialisation
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-f <command>::
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act as a filter, executing given keys on given files
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-p <session_id>::
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just send stdin as commands to the given session
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-c <session_id>::
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connect to given session
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-s <session_id>::
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set session name
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file::
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one or more files to edit
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At startup, if -n is not specified, Kakoune will try to source the file '../share/kak/kakrc' relative to the
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kak binary. This kak file will then try to recursively source any files in *$XDG_CONFIG_HOME*'/kak/autoload'
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(with *$XDG_CONFIG_HOME* defaulting to *$HOME*'/.config', and falling back to '../share/kak/autoload' if that
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autoload directory does not exist), and finally *$XDG_CONFIG_HOME*'/kak/kakrc'.
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That leads to the following behaviour: by default, with no user autoload directory, the system wide autoload
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directory is used, once the user wants control on autoloading, they can create an autoload directory and eventually
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symlink individual scripts, or the whole system wide autoload directory. They can as well add any new scripts not
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provided with Kakoune.
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EXAMPLES
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--------
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kak /path/to/file::
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Edit a file
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kak ./file1.txt /path/to/file2.c::
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Edit multiple files (multiple buffers will be created)
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kak -f "ggO// kak: tabstop=8<esc>" *.c::
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Insert a modeline that sets the tabstop variable at the beginning of several source code files
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kak -e "man dup2"::
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Use Kakoune as a man pager
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FILES
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-----
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If not started with the -n switch, Kakoune will source the '../share/kak/kakrc' file relative to the kak binary,
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which will source additional files:
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* if the *$XDG_CONFIG_HOME*'/kak/autoload' directory exists, load every '*.kak' files in it, and load
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recursively any subdirectory
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* if it does not exists, fall back to the system wide autoload directory in '../share/kak/autoload'
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After that, if it exists, source the *$XDG_CONFIG_HOME*'/kak/kakrc' file which should be used for user
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configuration. In order to continue autoloading site-wide files with a local autoload directory, just add a symbolic
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link to '../share/kak/autoload' into your local autoload directory.
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