For a long time, I had been "thinking" of learning vim. The first thing I tried was 'vimtutor' which was quite easy to get started with but at the same time, I could not grasp all the things taught in it. The very mistake I made in going through vimtutor
was trying to learn all the commands at the same time. And also it was due to my keyboard layout (colemak). The k
, l
, h
, j
keys are quite not in vim "order"
After completing the vimtutor
I tried using vim but with no success. I kept getting stuck at small tasks like copy
and paste
, changing modes
. After using for some "hours" I got this feeling of being less productive. So I eventually gave up the idea of "learning" vim.
Few months later I again had this hunger for learning vim. To make sure that I don't give up like the last time, I asked couple of my friends( Swojeet and Rabin ) to try and learn vim
together. We printed the vim cheatsheet and also learned few vim configurations. Now after 2 months of using vim with the minimum configuration as possible, I can confidently say that I'm quite comfortable with VIM. I'm still a long way to be able to do things like pro but I understand that it'll take time.
If you are also trying to learn vim and are stuck in exit
, you should get a friend with whom you can learn it.
Looking forward for suggestions.
Top comments (10)
Learning vim is a hard but rewarding challenge :) Glad to see you manage to overcome the first hurdle!
As you are comfortable with the basics, I recommend having a look at this answer here. You might have understood this already, but I recommend everyone that uses vim to have a look at this to make sure they understand the essence of how to be productive using vim. It also contains some good examples. It definitely helped me a lot to get motivated in the beginning :)
Thanks Jorin for this recommendation. It would be very helpful for me. Could you also take a look at my .vimrc file on github and recommend what more should I be adding on that ?
I think configuration is something really individual and you have to find out what works well for you.
I try to keep my configuration minimal and only add things I understand.
You chose a nice plugin manager with
vim-plug
. You can also tell it to only load packages for certain languages to speed up loading, like this:If you feel comfortable with the features you use and like to learn something new, I recommend having a look at the
:terminal
feature that comes with Vim 8 and also NeoVim.Keyboard shortcut mappings are one of the most subjective topics. Personally I prefer mapping unused key combos instead of using
<Leader>
, but you have to find out what works best for you.You can have a look at my configuration if you search for some inspiration.
In terms of plugins my favorites are fugitive + gitgutter for Git and surround, commentary and unimpaired for great new shortcuts/functionality that I use every day. But better don't start using them all at once :)
Also remember that you can always lookup help:
What does this plugin do?
:h fugitive
What is this shortcut?
:h K
I have tried as well. But I don't really get the point of using Vim as my main editor. I can do simple edits with it when I have to (eg SSH) but for my daily work, I prefer a better editor like VSCode, Atom or Sublime. Why would I waste the time I can be earning money or learning something better just to learn how to use an old editor so I can type faster or look cooler among devs? I like having the luxury of extensions, intellisense etc in my modern-day editor. But this is just my personal opinion.
Thanks for your opinion.
I can recommend some git utilities such as
junegunn/gv.vim
andtpope/vim-fugitive
. Some commands I use from these plugins::Ggrep somepattern | cw
: Searches file contents which are tracked by git.:Gblame
: Does a git blame from your editor. You can also go back in time by selecting the commit and pressing~
.O
on a commit will open the entire commit in a new tab.:Gbrowse!
: (requirestpope/vim-rhubarb
plugin on top of fugitive): Generates a Github link with the correct branch and file and puts it into your clipboard. Also works from visual mode.:GV!
: Displays the change history of the current file.One suggestion about your
.vimrc
. Instead of usekien/ctrlp.vim
, use the oficial fork where the development is happening:ctrlpvim/ctrlp.vim
.Updated. Thanks, Diego.
After sometime working using vim(one year), I moved to vscode, but using vim keybindings (github.com/VSCodeVim/Vim)
I'm just started to feel that I'm spending too much time with vim configuration instead of just doing work.
Duckduckgo.com has a very nice vim cheatsheet too, native to the search tool!!
By the way, I started to write quick tips and tutorials for Vim beginners, to help them deal with specific configs and get excited with tricks you can use.
You can check it on medium.com/vim-drops !
Cheers!✌️👨💻⌨️👩💻✌️