36

I'm learning Vim and with it came the urge to use 'hjkl' and friends on every other program, including mouse operated programs like browsers.

How can I use these keyboard shortcuts, or something similar?

I'm using Linux.

4
  • Thanks all, I'm writing this with Vimperator.. Apr 23, 2009 at 17:31
  • 9
    Totally awesome topic. Let the Vim march towards Earth domination begins!
    – gorsky
    Feb 13, 2010 at 19:42
  • 1
    Most of the Vimperator developers have forked it and are now developing it as Pentadactyl (see dactyl.sourceforge.net/pentadactyl/index). Nov 10, 2010 at 15:07
  • This would probably be better suited to SuperUser.
    – Zaz
    Feb 26, 2015 at 9:05

25 Answers 25

28

Off the top of my head...

  • Vimperator for Firefox.
  • Awesome, WMII, Xmonad or ion3 window manager.
  • Evince supports hjkl.
  • vifm filemanager
  • there are vi keybindings for readline, which enables them for many terminal apps
  • xzgv image viewer
4
  • I would also add: mpd + ncmpc: music dwm: another window manager
    – Tabitha
    Apr 23, 2009 at 1:19
  • 5
    This answer should be wiki so we can add links to the relevant software ;)
    – matpie
    Apr 29, 2009 at 21:41
  • +viplugin for eclipse (viplugin.com/viplugin) Jul 18, 2010 at 16:38
  • I prefer Vrapper to viplugin, as it also preserves eclipse keybindings. With Vrapper you can use the normal eclipse bindings to start unit tests and such but retain the advantages of vi in normal text editing.
    – sluukkonen
    Jul 30, 2010 at 18:42
10

Gmail and several of the other Google apps natively support Vi-like motions.

Also, you might want to try Vimperator and, most definitely, Nethack!

2
  • 3
    +1 nethack is most definitely productivity software.
    – Josh Lee
    Nov 28, 2009 at 2:58
  • @Vijay, jk takes you through conversations. Jul 18, 2010 at 16:31
6

Give scrotwm a try. It's a tiling window manager with vim-like bindings by default, written by coders who use vim!

And vimperator for Firefox makes my life much, much easier.

For Bourne-like shells (ksh, bash, ...) try set -o vi to make your command line use vi keys.

6

File manager with vi movement key-bindings and much more: ranger.

5

If you use Eclipse, then viPlugin is the best vi-like editor for it.

I always stick the following two lines in my /etc/inputrc (or ~/.inputrc if I don't have root access):

set editing-mode vi
set keymap vi
5

Zathura is a nice and small pdf reader and with built-in vim-like commands. It feels like you opened your pdf document in vim. (e.g.: the ':' button brings up the same prompt.)

5

Others:

  • ViEmu: plugin for Visual Studio, Word, Outlook, and SQL Server
  • Komodo Edit: developer's editor
  • AbiWord: word processor
  • Editra: developer's editor
  • VimPlugin: plug Vim into Eclipse. I couldn't get it working under Windows or Mac OS X.
  • Eclim: another Vim plugin for Eclipse.
  • Viper: Old vi emulator for Emacs
  • Evil: Recent Vim emulator for Emacs
  • IdeaVim: Vim emulator for the IntelliJ family of editors, RubyMine, PyCharm, etc.
2
  • Evil for Vim emulation in Emacs is virtually flawless. It will probably replace Viper as Emacs' built-in Vim emulator relatively soon (I use it constantly :) Dec 17, 2013 at 18:10
  • I've been using Evil for several months, in preference to Vim itself. Dec 20, 2013 at 22:43
4

Okular, the PDF reader of KDE 4 supports HJKL.

4

Viper works, but if you're used to Vim, it is lacking a lot of keybindings that will end up messing you up. Theres also jvi for Netbeans, which I find more complete than the Eclipse plugins. Kate also recently added Vi-emulation mode

I also consider xmonad, to be superior to Awesome, Ion etc.

1
  • Evil for Vim emulation in Emacs is virtually flawless. It will probably replace Viper as Emacs' built-in Vim emulator relatively soon (I use it constantly :) Dec 17, 2013 at 18:09
3

Vimium for Google Chrome.

3

Check out:

  • dwb — a web browser
  • ranger — a terminal-based file manager
  • Zathura — a PDF viewer
  • Vimium — a vim keybindings extension for Chrome(ium)
  • Evil — the (in)famous Emacs plugin that turns Emacs into Vim, if you ever feel the need to do that
  • i3, xmonad, dwm — tiling window managers that are controlled from the keyboard
3

Lightweight (30k zpi) FimFx for Firefox - does less than Vimperator, but for a good reason.

2

For xpdf, add these to your ~/.xpdfrc:

bind h any scrollLeft(35)
bind l any scrollRight(35)
bind k any scrollUpPrevPage(35)
bind j any scrollDownNextPage(35)

bind ctrl-f any scrollDownNextPage(320)
bind ctrl-b any scrollUpPrevPage(320)

bind ctrl-d any scrollDownNextPage(160)
bind ctrl-u any scrollUpPrevPage(160)

bind g      any gotoPage(1)
bind G  any gotoLastPage
bind /          any find
2

You can use xmodmap to make win+hjkl to work as arrow keys.
Make a file named Xmodmap. Add the following content:

keycode 133 = Mode_switch
keysym j = j J Down
keysym l = l L Right
keysym h = h H Left
keysym k = k K Up

Load it using xmodmap Xmodmap
Note: Run xev to find out keycode for win key. 133 is just an example.

2

Qutebrowser hasn't been mentioned, which is much better than the plugins.

1

I used Ion as a window manager on Linux for a while. It uses keybindings similar to Vim to move between windows, if I recall correctly. It won't make your apps support hjkl movement, but the window manager is a place to start.

1

Apart from the already mentioned, you could also bind those keys to left... nd so on (with ahk). I've also noticed that several web apps use that movement keys (gmail, greader, ....)

1

Try keynav, for controlling the mouse pointer using your keyboard.

http://www.semicomplete.com/projects/keynav/

1

VisVim for Visual Studio
CubicleVim for outlook

1

If you use mpd for listening to music, then I strongly recommend PIM

2
1

Google Reader respects jk keybindings. I'm sure there are more that they support - feel free to edit my answer.

1

Mutt - mail client - can be configured to move hjkl, i configure some more vim keys. take some time to configure as it's a bit different from other mail clients. Mutt is not Muttator, is a terminal GUI application.

1

cVim for chrome is awesome. I am currently using it. https://github.com/1995eaton/chromium-vim

1

Shortcut Manager extension for chrome.

You can use something like this to configure basic vim movement keys:

// ==UserScript==
// @ShortcutManager
// @name Scroll up by 25 pixels
// @key k
// @include *
// @exclude https://*mail.google.com/*
// @execute ScrollUp(["25"])
// ==/UserScript==

Other useful snippets:

// @key g
// @execute ScrollToTop([])
 
// @key Shift+g
// @execute ScrollToBottom([])
0

How to get Vim keybindings in Adobe Reader on SuperUser

(my answer to that question is an AutoHotKey script that will even get you proper search functionality with /, n, and N, but admittedly I haven't verified a port to Linux or Mac yet)

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