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Home/ Questions/Q 579153
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T14:20:11+00:00 2026-05-13T14:20:11+00:00

I use MacVim (and gvim) a lot. I’m familiar with and use a lot

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I use MacVim (and gvim) a lot. I’m familiar with and use a lot of the basic movement commands (b, w, $, 0, G). However, for a lot of things—such as selecting particular lines on the screen or jumping to a particular column in a different line—I use the mouse (sometimes in concert with my left hand on the keyboard). It also helps that my mouse has a scroll wheel and buttons for changing tabs.

I also need to admit… I use the arrow keys on my keyboard rather than hjkl.

I think that my speed (and posture at the computer) will be improved by not having to escape from insert mode, and from keeping both hands on the main part of the keyboard.

What convinced you to abandon the mouse? What are the most helpful shortcuts for moving quickly between lines and columns, scrolling, etc.?

This question is inspired by this recent post

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T14:20:12+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 2:20 pm

    I think that my speed (and posture at
    the computer) will be improved by not
    having to escape from insert mode

    No, you must escape from insert mode right after you typed what you want. It quickly becomes a reflex, so you don’t really lose time (I sometimes even press escape after completing a web form…). Normal mode isn’t just for moving around, it’s used to perform most operations (save from typing): for instance deleting or moving sections of text. You also benefit from entering insert mode with the appropriate key: o to start a line, S to replace a line (while keeping indentation), A to move to the end of the line, c+motion to replace a few words or until a given character… All of these save keystrokes.

    The mouse seems fast, but in reality it isn’t precise, so you lose time (in addition to the constant back and forth with the keyboard). ViM has a long list of moving commands (see :help usr_03) which, when mastered, are faster than the mouse in most situations.

    Use search the most you can (/, ?, *, #, f, t…). I personally use Ctrl+(d,u,f,b) a lot. Also, Ctrl+(o, i) and `` are really useful to go back where you were before a search or something else.

    h, j, k, l are there to place your right hand near to useful commands (i, u, o…): I always have my fingers on them. The arrows force you to move your hand a lot.

    Try to look at a few commands in :help, then use them a lot, and you’ll get habits about what you should use to move according to the situation. Nobody uses ViM the same way.

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