This plugin provides a discoverable shortcut system for Vim that is inspired by Spacemacs and powered by fzf.vim. It displays a searchable menu of shortcuts when you pause partway while typing a shortcut, say, because you forgot the rest of it or because you just want to see the shortcut menu again to discover what else is available. You can interactively filter the menu by typing more shortcut keys or parts of shortcut descriptions shown in the menu.
- fzf.vim plugin.
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Clone this Git repository as follows, or download and extract its contents.
git clone https://github.com/sunaku/vim-shortcut.git ~/vim-shortcut
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Run the following commands in Vim to start using this plugin immediately, or add them to your vimrc file to automate this whenever you start Vim.
:set runtimepath+=~/vim-shortcut :runtime plugin/shortcut.vim
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Run the following command inside Vim to learn more about using this plugin.
:help shortcut.vim
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Use the
Shortcut!
prefix (with a bang) to describe existing shortcuts. -
Use the
Shortcut
prefix (without a bang) to define brand new shortcuts. -
Use the
:Shortcuts
command to display a searchable menu of shortcuts. -
Use the
g:shortcuts
variable to access shortcuts keys and descriptions. -
Use the
g:shortcuts_overwrite_warning
variable to detect any conflicts.
I recommend that you define these two shortcuts for discovery and fallback
(feel free to change the <Leader>
key to your own commonly used prefix):
Shortcut show shortcut menu and run chosen shortcut
\ noremap <silent> <Leader><Leader> :Shortcuts<Return>
Shortcut fallback to shortcut menu on partial entry
\ noremap <silent> <Leader> :Shortcuts<Return>
The fallback shortcut's keys should represent the common prefix used by most of your shortcuts so that it can automatically launch the shortcut menu for you when you pause partway while typing a shortcut, say, because you forgot the rest of it or because you just want to see the shortcut menu again to discover what else is available. However, this is not a strict requirement because you might find it useful to map shortcuts with uncommon prefixes when you know them by heart and you thereby feel that a fallback is unnecessary. As a result, you can map any keys to any shortcut, regardless of the prefix! Furthermore, you can set up multiple fallback shortcuts too, one per prefix.
Use Shortcut!
with a bang to describe shortcuts that are already defined:
Shortcut! keys description
For more examples, see my vimrc:
Shortcut! [f go to previous file in current file's directory
Shortcut! ]f go to next file in current file's directory
Any extra whitespace is ignored.
Simply prefix any existing map
command with Shortcut
and a description.
For example, take this mapping:
map definition
Add Shortcut
and description:
Shortcut description map definition
You can use multiple lines too:
Shortcut description
\ map definition
For more examples, see my vimrc:
Shortcut duplicate before cursor and then comment-out
\ map <Space>cP <Plug>NERDCommenterYank`[P
Shortcut fzf files in directory and go to chosen file
\ nnoremap <silent> <Space>ef :Files<Return>
Shortcut save file as...
\ nnoremap <silent> <Space>yf :call feedkeys(":saveas %\t", "t")<Return>
for i in range(1,9)
execute 'Shortcut go to tab number '. i .' '
\ 'nnoremap <silent> <Space>'. i .'t :tabfirst<Bar>'. i .'tabnext<Return>'
endfor
Shortcut comment-out using FIGlet ASCII art decoration
\ nnoremap <silent> <Space>c@ V:call CommentUsingFIGlet()<Return>
\|vnoremap <silent> <Space>c@ :<C-U>call CommentUsingFIGlet()<Return>
function! CommentUsingFIGlet()
" ...
endfunction
Any extra whitespace is ignored.
Run :help shortcut.vim
or see the doc/shortcut.txt
file.
Developers can run the vim-vspec tests:
gem install bundler # first time
bundle install # first time
bundle exec vim-flavor test # every time
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Copyright 2015 Suraj N. Kurapati https://github.com/sunaku
Distributed under the same terms as Vim itself.