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chris-marsh / twoline_prompt.sh
Created November 2, 2017 17:00 — forked from mkottman/twoline_prompt.sh
A two-line colored Bash prompt (PS1) with Git branch and a line decoration which adjusts automatically to the width of the terminal. Recognizes SVN, Git and Fossil version control systems and shows the current branch/revision.
# A two-line colored Bash prompt (PS1) with Git branch and a line decoration
# which adjusts automatically to the width of the terminal.
# Recognizes and shows Git, SVN and Fossil branch/revision.
# Screenshot: http://img194.imageshack.us/img194/2154/twolineprompt.png
# Michal Kottman, 2012
RESET="\[\033[0m\]"
RED="\[\033[0;31m\]"
GREEN="\[\033[01;32m\]"
BLUE="\[\033[01;34m\]"
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chris-marsh / grok_vi.mdown
Created February 16, 2016 15:32 — forked from nifl/grok_vi.mdown
Your problem with Vim is that you don't grok vi.

Answer by Jim Dennis on Stack Overflow question http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1218390/what-is-your-most-productive-shortcut-with-vim/1220118#1220118

Your problem with Vim is that you don't grok vi.

You mention cutting with yy and complain that you almost never want to cut whole lines. In fact programmers, editing source code, very often want to work on whole lines, ranges of lines and blocks of code. However, yy is only one of many way to yank text into the anonymous copy buffer (or "register" as it's called in vi).

The "Zen" of vi is that you're speaking a language. The initial y is a verb. The statement yy is a simple statement which is, essentially, an abbreviation for 0 y$:

0 go to the beginning of this line. y yank from here (up to where?)