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132 lines
5.6 KiB
Plaintext
132 lines
5.6 KiB
Plaintext
KAKOUNE(1)
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==========
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NAME
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----
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faq - a
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How to pronounce the name of the project and what does it mean ?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The name of the project is pronounced "Kak-oon", and is a word taken from a
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New Caledonian dialect based on french. It means a hard blow, usually a punch,
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but generally refers to a blow into which which all of one's strength went.
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Is there going to be a Windows port of Kakoune ?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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As many features provided by UNIX systems would be missing, or if anything
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much less performant on a Windows system, the incentive to porting the
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project to this operating system is pretty low.
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Moreover, you can get pretty decent performance by using Kakoune on Cygwin
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(which is officially supported).
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Can you get rid of the `boost` dependency and just use std::regex ?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The `boost-regex` library provides use with several features that are heavily
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relied upon across several core scripts, and a few of them are not available
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in the standard `std::regex` implementations. Therefore, until the standard
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catches up with `boost` in terms of features, the latter will remain a hard
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-mandatory- dependency.
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Kakoune is very slow on big files, what can I do about it ?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The default build mode (set in the `Makefile` of the `src` directory of the
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project) is "debug", which makes it convenient to track issues but also
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affects performance. To disable the debug mode, recompile the project by
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setting the `debug` variable in `src/Makefile` to `no`.
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Note that if your distribution provides a "kakoune" package, the program should
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already be built in non-debug mode (if you still experience slowness, please
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report the issue on the bug tracker).
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Can I use Kakoune as a pager ?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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.
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Are there any non-console based frontends available ?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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No graphical frontend is currently officially maintained, you can however
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try experimental community-developed ones.
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How do I automatically indent code, as Vim does with `=` ?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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As `Kakoune` doesn't parse the contents of the buffers, there is no builtin
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equivalent for this Vim feature. Use a formatter/prettifier dedicated to
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the language you're using with the help of the `|` key.
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Example: `%|indent<ret>` to indent an entire buffer with C code.
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Note that some languages have a default formatter set, which you can use
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with the `:format` command.
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Can Kakoune automatically complete the parameters of my functions ?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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As mentioned in the above question about Vim's `=` key, Kakoune does not
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parse the contents of a buffer by itself, which makes it impossible for
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the editor to propose candidates upon completion.
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However, support for such a feature can be achieved through the use of a
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dedicated tool, as is the case with `clang` and C code: you can use the
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`clang-enable-autocomplete` and `clang-complete` builtin commands whenever
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editing a C/C++ file, and completion will work on function parameters.
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Note that the same features are available for python buffers, with the
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`jedi` script.
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Why aren't widely known command line shortcuts such as <c-w> or <c-u> available in Kakoune ?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Despite their widespread availability in multiple tools, those shortcuts do
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not fit the paradigm that Kakoune implements, which is based on selections
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first.
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However, you can easily declare key mappings in your configuration file
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to be able to use those control-based shortcuts in insert mode (c.f. the
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"map" command in the "commands" documentation page).
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How can I explore the filesystem the way Vim's NerdTree does ?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The builtin file completion engine used when opening a file for editing
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(using the `:edit` command and letting the suggestions popup in the menu
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beneath) is much more convenient than Vim's, which should suit basic needs.
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However, if you need an actual explorer to interact with the editor,
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you can create a Kakoune script that will spawn the tool in question,
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which should in return send an "edit" command followed by the path of the
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file you selected to the current Kakoune session (e.g. `echo "eval -client
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$kak_client edit /path/to/file" | kak -p $kak_session`).
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Why aren't there other scopes similar to `%sh{}` e.g. python ?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Supporting custom scopes would add hard dependencies to the project, which
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is too much of an drawback when balanced against the low cost of using
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an interpreter in a regular shell scope (e.g. `%sh{ python -c "..." }`).
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The shell scope allows users to spawn any interpreter they want, for a minimal
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cost in terms of performance, it is therefore the reason why it's the only
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one available by default.
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Can I disable auto-indentation completely ?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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All the indentation hooks are conventionally named `<lang>-indent`, which
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allows us to use the `disabled_hooks` variable to disable indentation
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globally with the following command: `set global disabled_hooks '.+-indent'`
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Can I disable syntax highlighting completely ?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Similarly to the indentation hooks, the name format followed by the
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highlighting hooks is `<lang>-highlight`. You can thus disable syntax
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highlighting using the following command: `set global disabled_hooks
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'.+-highlight'`
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