At times, I’ve also juggled (in addition to vim and tmux) hotkeys for my current tiling WM of choice and extra hotkeys to swap between machines via barrier. I’m not sure how I’m able remember what I had for breakfast, much less someone’s name.
At times, I’ve also juggled (in addition to vim and tmux) hotkeys for my current tiling WM of choice and extra hotkeys to swap between machines via barrier. I’m not sure how I’m able remember what I had for breakfast, much less someone’s name.
Not sure if directly relevant, but there’s been a rush of really good PC games lately after a long dry spell.
It warmed my nerd heart that the first thing I spotted in the mpvpaper repo was an animated Steins Gate background.
I suspect there’s some variance between distros that would alter your opinion slightly, but I can also still appreciate the before-systemd days where some Linux versions kept the important bits in a single rc file. Your preference is understandable.
Real nerds use Ctrl [ instead so they don’t leave home row.
The only thing that’s halted my rampant use of vim is… Neovim.
I do it all the time. 🤪
I can navigate and organize my own notes 10 times faster than if I used most alternatives, especially with plugins like Neorg that support visually distinct markup output via concealer configs. There’s even a presentation mode.
This. Esc, then b. Or if you’re a stickler for keeping you hands on home row, Ctrl [ does the trick as well. Bonus points for making that more comfortable via a remapping of Caps Lock to control (or swapping the two).
I find it ironic to this day that, after having spent so much time identifying the most fitting tiling window manager for my needs (i3), my journey through GNU Screen to tmux resulted in an almost complete absence of necessity for tiling at all. Heck, if it weren’t for my gaming and streaming needs, I actually could skip X entirely.
Vim/Neovim has orgmode too, these days 🤪