I didn't really used kakoun but i did watch some Videos and See the Website and also i Heard about kakoun before Helix kakoun IS more complete and more mature but after some Video IT do Looks good but it does Look Like IT hast less GitHub Stars than Helix and the configuration seems was Harder than Helix wo If you want more control use kakoun but for ease of use and Performance use helix
For some simple stuff that might be the case but for me the way selection first makes me able to do multicursor stuff and more complicaded commands in a very intuitive way makes it 100% worth it
@@PPo2 Makes sense. I am wondering if by adding one or two custom key bindings one could, in a very smart way, shorten the length of most commands in some way.
@@Mojo_DK You can use the existing keybindings smartly to use fewer keys. For example, type "be" instead of "miw" to select within a word. Use "tc" instead of "vgec" to change to the end of the line.
Hope you like video, sorry for being absent for 8 month and also sorry for the audio problem i was sick.
Cool video
VERY HELPFUL
Thanks
How would you compare it with the Kakoune editor if you’re familiar.
I didn't really used kakoun but i did watch some Videos and See the Website and also i Heard about kakoun before Helix kakoun IS more complete and more mature but after some Video IT do Looks good but it does Look Like IT hast less GitHub Stars than Helix and the configuration seems was Harder than Helix wo If you want more control use kakoun but for ease of use and Performance use helix
I heard that for vim you need less key strokes. Is that correct? If so, what is you opinion on that?
For some simple stuff that might be the case but for me the way selection first makes me able to do multicursor stuff and more complicaded commands in a very intuitive way makes it 100% worth it
@@PPo2 Makes sense. I am wondering if by adding one or two custom key bindings one could, in a very smart way, shorten the length of most commands in some way.
@@Mojo_DK You can use the existing keybindings smartly to use fewer keys. For example, type "be" instead of "miw" to select within a word. Use "tc" instead of "vgec" to change to the end of the line.