ĵaŭ, 08 Apr 2010, Duane Johnson skribis: > Thanks for your insights, Tony. I think these will be particularly > useful to an intermediate Vim user, although diving in to these > resources as a beginner certainly won't hurt. > > I think what I'm looking for is something like vimtutor, but just > slanted a little more toward developing muscle-memory. I want a solid > base of knowing that "w" goes to the next word, and that "h" means > left and "l" means right, for example. I know this sort of thing is > probably ridiculously easy for you, but that's where I'm at. > > Thanks, > Duane > > On Apr 7, 11:41 pm, Tony Mechelynck <antoine.mechely...@gmail.com> > wrote: > [---=| TOFU protection by t-prot: 91 lines snipped |=---]
>From my own experience, the most effective way is just make vim the default text editor. I also printed a cheatsheet on paper and carried it with me while travelling in metro or sitting on toilet. PS. the norm of this mailing list is "BOTTOM POST". -- regards, ==================================================== GPG key 1024D/4434BAB3 2008-08-24 gpg --keyserver subkeys.pgp.net --recv-keys 4434BAB3 -- You received this message from the "vim_use" maillist. Do not top-post! Type your reply below the text you are replying to. For more information, visit http://www.vim.org/maillist.php To unsubscribe, reply using "remove me" as the subject.