If you have typed an <ESC> by mistake, you can get rid of it with a C-g.

quoting the emacs tutorial. made me giggle

  • lemmesay@discuss.tchncs.de
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    2 months ago

    I use both(or many, actually).

    • emacs for working on languages that I’m learning, and coding challenges websites(e.g.: codewars)
    • vim for one-off config edits, browser navigation
    • neovim(lazyvim) for rust and lua, and at home
    • vscodium(with neovim key bindings) for typescript, and at work
    • android studio(with vim keybindings) for kotlin/compose
    • xcode for swift/ui
    • nano when I feel funny
      • lemmesay@discuss.tchncs.de
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        2 months ago

        haha, I used nano a lot before I learnt vim. but now, I find it confusing when pressing jk appears on the screen instead of my cursor going down/up.

        it’s not a nano problem, just my muscle memory(for the same reason I swapped mac’s keys)