You will not be surprised to learn that all of these, and many more, are out-of-the-box, one- or two-keystroke commands in Vim (and other such text editors). (OK, (iii) is two keystrokes plus the text you're searching for.) [6/N]
Useful thread. Thanks. I should have been clearer that some of the difference isn't mysterious at all. Operations like "delete everything up to the next semicolon" are very common in code and much less common in writing. [1/N]
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Slightly more generally, the fact that the line is so often a logical unit in code makes operations on lines really valuable in editing code. And, again, "go to the last place where the current token appears" is very common in code, less so in English. [2/N]
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And, again, I'm interested that the best setups (for me, and I guess also for
@jasoncummings86) are these stitched-together hybrids. Vim and Emacs have a large set of out-of-the-box commands, but in OS-like contexts where all sorts of customization etc. is possible. [3/N] - Show replies
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