▲ | eviks 4 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
> unless your hand is glued to the resting keys It is, the hint is in the name! > even if it were the resting keys might not be hjkl So? Use the other resting keys, resting is key here, not their labels > even if they are they will by default type hjkl and not move the cursor in any other software you ever use except vim. Sorry, but your knowledge of the software world is too shallow, there are other apps that do that, specifically, file managers. Also you can use them universally in all apps with an extra modifier (right alt to do everything with a single hand), so > gained from using vim for other thing will literally include every single app that uses cursor keys | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | Kon5ole 3 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
>It is, the hint is in the name! Just about any line of text I write daily uses symbols not reachable from the resting position, and once my hand has left that position the arrow keys are easier to find. (Inverted T of course, with home/end/pgdown/pgup cluster). >there are other apps that do that, specifically, file managers The point is that you ("you" in this case being a typical user, not you personally) will open applications every day where hjkl does nothing at all with the cursor, and you have to use the arrow keys anyway. This is mental friction that remains even after you spent years internalizing the hjkl cursor moving flaw. Faced with this situation a user can choose to either use the arrow keys in vim, or go full Stockholm syndrome and change the default in every other piece of software to match vim. If that seems like a good idea, it might be worth remembering that the creator of vi didn't choose hjkl because he thought it superior to using arrow keys - he did it because the computer he used had no arrow keys! ;-) | |||||||||||||||||
|