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48 lines
1.4 KiB
Plaintext
48 lines
1.4 KiB
Plaintext
Vi(m) to Kakoune:
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=================
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Most operations in Kakoune are reversed compared to Vim: In kak, you first
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select the text you want to act on, then you edit it. This way, things are
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much more consistent, as for example, kak does not need a key for delete
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character, the delete key handles this just fine as long as you did not
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select more than a character (but clearing selection is only one space away).
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delete a word:
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* vim: dw
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* kak: wd
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delete a character:
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* vim: x
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* kak: d or <space>d
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copy a line:
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* vim: yy
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* kak: xy
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global replace:
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* vim: :%s/word/replacement<ret>
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* kak: %sword<ret>creplacement<esc>
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join line with next:
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* vim: J
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* kak: alt-J
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delete to line end:
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* vim: d$
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* kak: alt-ld or gld
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some classic vim moves are not bound to the same key, this is due to Kakoune
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using shifted moves to append to selection, so moves that were bound to non
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alphabetic chars had to change.
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* % become m (for matching), however m will replace selection with the next
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block, if you want to get a selection from current point to next block end,
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you should use <space>M (<space> clears the trim to one character)
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* 0 and $ became alt-h and alt-l. Another binding is gh and gl.
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:[gv]/re/cmd
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to emulate :g or :v, use % to select the whole buffer, alt-s to get
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one selection by line, and then alt-k or alt-K in order to keep only the
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selections matching (or not matching) the entered regex.
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