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Visual Vim reference: color-coded keyboard, prefix overlays, progressive lessons, plugin tips, and progress tracking. Vim What? is the interactive Vim command reference that lives in your browser. Forget a key? Click the toolbar icon — the full keyboard is right there, color-coded and clickable, with rich descriptions, examples, and official docs links for every command. Teal — Motion (moves the cursor: w, b, f, /) Orange — Operator (acts on a motion: d, y, c, =) Yellow — Command (direct action: i, o, p, u) Gray — Extra (prefix or special: g, z, ", @) Red text — Enters insert mode (i, a, o, s, c...) Visual keyboard — every Vim command on a full keyboard. Click any key for a detailed description, usage examples, and a direct link to the official Vim docs. Dual-layer keyboard — every key shows both the normal and shifted command stacked together. No toggle needed — the full picture is always visible. 9 progressive lessons — commands are introduced gradually across 9 named levels: 1 — Move & survive 2 — Insert & line basics 3 — Words & operators 4 — Find on line 5 — Yank & paste 6 — Search 7 — Visual mode 8 — Navigate the file 9 — Marks & macros Current-level keys are outlined so you always know what to focus on. Keys from previous levels stay visible but slightly muted. Inactive keys fade into the background. Prefix overlays — toggle g, z, or Ctrl mode to instantly see what every key does with that prefix, overlaid directly on the keyboard. Non-mapped keys hide their labels so only relevant commands show. Plugin tips — key info includes annotations for popular plugins like vim-surround, vim-commentary, vim-unimpaired, CamelCaseMotion, vim-asterisk, and more. Search — type any key or keyword to instantly highlight matching keys across the entire keyboard. Key of the Day — a different letter key is featured each day with its full description. Great for building muscle memory over time. Progress tracking — mark keys as learned. A green dot appears on each learned key and the Progress panel shows your completion by category. Text Objects reference — a dedicated panel for i/a text object selectors (iw, a(, i", it...), color-coded and grouped by category. Custom mappings — save your personal remaps and notes per key or sequence (e.g. leader+w, gd, Ctrl-p). They appear highlighted on the keyboard and in the info panel. Keyboard navigation — press any key on your physical keyboard to select it on screen. Press Escape to clear the selection, or press Escape again to close the popup. Whether you are just starting with Vim or filling in gaps in your knowledge, Vim What? keeps the full command set one click away — without leaving your browser.
Vimium C - All by Keyboard
A keyboard shortcut tool for keyboard-based page navigation and browser tab operations with an advanced omnibar and global shortcuts Vimium C is an open source browser extension that provides keyboard-based inner-page navigation, browser tab operations, and an enhanced search panel, so you may take full advantages of your browser without a mouse or touchpad. It supports all original commands of Vimium and some new useful commands (a full list can be seen in a help dialog in the Vimium C Options page). And it can map a same key sequence to different commands for different websites (and/or for different active elements in page). For example: * press `f` to hint all clickable elements of the current web page * press `o` to show a search panel ("Vomnibar", a safe iframe) to search in your history, bookmarks, opened tabs and configured search engines, and you can even remove a history or tab by selecting a search result and pressing Shift+Delete * press j, k, h, l to scroll down/up/left/right on web pages * press "/" to search for text; press "v" to enter Visual Mode (just like VIM) * press Shift+J, Shift+K, `g0`, `g$` to switch to the previous/next/first/last tab * press `x` to remove a tab, and Shift+X to restore recently closed tabs (sessions), and many other commands * command repetition: for example, pressing `5X` (`5`, Shift+X) will restore 5 recent closed tabs * configure key mappings to bind Vimium C's tens of commands to other key sequences, and add options to switch command behaviors * apply block lists and allow lists of key mappings on configurable special websites and URLs It can copy any selected text and current tab's title and URL to the system clipboard, and read the clipboard to search the copied text using a specified search engine. It can also enable/disable websites' image loading and even JavaScript execution, if you trigger its command "toggleCS". This functionality requires a permission of "Change your settings that control websites' access to features such as cookies, JavaScript ...", and Vimium C promises that it won't do any thing secretly, but only act on what key sequences you press. It will provide 8 "global" browser shortcuts: createTab, previousTab, nextTab, reloadTab, and some others, so you may bind some key sequences to them, and then these commands will work even when a page has no focus (e.g. when the browser address bar is focused). It will register an omnibox keyword "v", and if you input "v" and press Space on the browser address bar (omnibox), you can do searches for history, bookmarks and tabs just like you're inputting on its Vomnibar. It supports encoded URLs, and you can search Chinese, Japanese and Korean words in URLs of history and bookmarks. You may configure it to decode URLs in a charset of your locale . It will download all synced settings from the Internet during the first installation, and you may enable/disable the syncing on certain computers. If you have any exclusion rule for key mappings, it will monitor browser tab URL changes to re-check whether a new URL matches your URL pattern list. For more information about release notes, rebinding your keys and how to use many of Vimium C's features, please see here: https://github.com/gdh1995/vimium-c#readme , or https://gitee.com/gdh1995/vimium-c#git-readme . There're also wiki pages. V2.xx now uses the Manifest V3 feature on your browser, and the minimum required version has been increased to Chromium 102 on Vimium C v2.11.x. In the future, Vimium C v2.14+ may require Chromium 109+, so that it will work faster and more robustly. # Declaration for Applicable Regions When people in "all regions" visit this store, Vimium C and other extensions published by [gdh1995](https://github.com/gdh1995) are always available. But This behavior is only to make these extensions easier to use, but DOES NOT EXPRESS OR IMPLIED the author (gdh1995) "agrees or has no objection to" that "Taiwan" can be parallel to "China", which was an **inappropriate** status quo in the stores' pages on 2021-06-03. According to [The Constitution of the People's Republic of China](http://www.npc.gov.cn/npc/c505/201803/e87e5cd7c1ce46ef866f4ec8e2d709ea.shtml) and international consensus, Taiwan is an inalienable part of the sacred territory of the People's Republic of China.
Sourcegraph
Connect Sourcegraph to GitHub. Open repos, compare revisions and search code directly from Chrome's Omnibox for faster development. Make it work on your code host • GitHub: No action required. Your extension works here by default. • GitHub Enterprise: click the extension icon and update the "Sourcegraph URL" Make it work for private code To use the browser extension with your private repositories, you must set up a private Sourcegraph instance and connect it to the extension.
Octotree - GitHub code tree
Browser extension that enhances GitHub code review and exploration. Features * Fast IDE-like code tree * Quick search in tree format * Bookmark repos, issues, PRs, files * Support GitHub themes * Support private repositories * High performance, working with repositories of any size NO BS POLICY: Octotree doesn't track you or share/care about your data at all. GitHub tokens are only needed when you want to access private repositories or exceed GitHub API rate limit. Octotree stores tokens in your browser storage and only uses them to authenticate with GitHub.
GhostText
Write in the browser with your text editor. Whenever you’re writing more than a little snippet of code anywhere on the web, activate GhostText to open your preferred text editor and enjoy your own development environment. GhostText is a browser extension that connects to your editor via its own extension. Install both extensions and, if necessary, start the GhostText server in the editor’s extension. • Sublime Text • VS Code • Emacs • Vim • Neovim • and more You can find more information on the "Website" link or contribute on GitHub (You'll find the link on the same website)