Yan's Excellent Dotfiles! ==== There are two main goals accomplished in my dotfiles to produce insane productivity * All common bash commands should be two and three character mnemonic aliases * Most vim tasks, especially those having to do with navigation, should be mapped to a single Capital Letter or two letter mnemonic. Setup for Bash --- To set these up as your own (careful, don't overwrite your bash_profile unintentionally!): git clone git://github.com/skwp/dotfiles ~/.dotfiles ln -s ~/.dotfiles/bash_profile ~/.bash_profile . ~/.bash_profile Lots of things I do every day are done with two or three character mnemonic aliases. Please feel free to edit them: ae # alias edit ar # alias reload Setup for Vim --- To use the vim files: ln -s ~/.dotfiles/vimrc ~/.vimrc ln -s ~/.dotfiles/vim ~/.vim The .vimrc is well commented and broken up by settings. I encourage you to take a look and learn some of my handy aliases, or comment them out if you don't like them, or make your own. These are things I use every day to be insanely productive. Hope you like em. * F - instantly Find definition of class (must have exuberant ctags installed) * B - show Buffer explorer * S - Show buffers in LustyJuggler (use asdfjkl home row keys to then select buffer) * T - Tag list (list of methods in a class) * K - git grep for the Kurrent word under the cursor * O - Open a GitGrep command line with a quote pretyped (close the quote yourself) * M - show my Marks (set a mark with mX where X is a letter, navigate to mark using 'X). Uppercase marks to mark files, lowercase marks to use within a file. * Z - jump back and forth between last two buffers * Q - Quit a window (normally Ctrl-w,c) * \Q - Kill a buffer completely (normally :bw) * Ctrl-j and Ctrl-k to move up and down roughly by functions * vv and ss - vertical and horizontal split windows by double tapping * H,L,I,M - to move left, right, up, down between windows * Ctrl-\ - Show NerdTree (project finder) and expose current file * cf - Copy Filename of current file into system (not vi) paste buffer * // - clear the search * ,, - use EasyMotion - type that and then type one of the highlighted letters. I'm just exploring this one. Setup for Git --- To use the gitconfig (some of the git bash aliases rely on my git aliases) ln -s ~/.dotfiles/gitconfig ~/.gitconfig Read through the gitconfig to find out what's in store. OSX Hacks --- The osx file is a bash script that sets up sensible defaults for devs and power users under osx. Read through it before running it. To use: ./osx OSX KeyBindings for systemwide text editing --- I am also experimenting with Brett Terpstra's OSX KeyBindings (github: ttscoff/KeyBindings) for good text editing features across the entire OS. To install: git submodule update mkdir -p ~/Library/KeyBindings ln -s KeyBindings/DefaultKeyBinding.dict ~/Library/KeyBindings/ More info: http://brettterpstra.com/keybinding-madness/ Credits === I can't take credit for all of this. The vim files are a combination of work by tpope, scrooloose, and many hours of scouring blogs, vimscripts, and other places for the cream of the crop of vim and bash awesomeness. TODO === I started migrating to tpope's pathogen, but only a few plugins are currently under vim/bundles. For more tips and tricks === Follow my blog: http://yanpritzker.com