Man. Florian teaches Vim so seemingly effortlessly. It’s clear he has a lot of passion for Vim and has put many, many hours into practicing and customizing his setup.
0:00:00 intro 0:01:19 why use vim? What can you do with it? 0:07:19 installation 0:09:00 basics 0:09:44 how to exit vim? 0:11:28 insert and normal modes 0:17:28 line numbers 0:20:00 relative line numbers 0:21:08 various options 0:22:11 .vimrc 0:24:30 key bindings 0:27:35 visual mode 0:28:25 deleting 0:28:34 yanking/copying/pasting 0:31:10 changing/replacing 0:33:35 navigating vim way
Loved Vim for 15+ years. Its a superb editor. Coupled with sed commands you can handdle large data sets for research easily. Many editors also provide vim flavor and that is a impressive. Thanks for making this video and hope many hardcore programmers will adopt vim seeing benefit. Disclaimer: Yes, its addictive. Its hard to get started as well.
I think most younger folks that grew up in the modern era may not realize that the early computers were all operated from the keyboard. The Apollo landing computer only had a 3 by 5 keyboard (0-9, +, -) and some seven other main keys (CLR, PRG, ENTER, RESET etc). Hence was natural to find short-cuts for typing in commands quickly - an art that vanished with the emergence of the mouse (a concept Xerox invented and Jobs adapted in his Mac computer).
The biggest reason for why you'd want to learn to use a text editing environment like Vim or Emacs is that using the keyboard allows you to get the commands into your muscle memory. It's like playing an instrument. After training, your fingers automatically perform complex motions without you thinking about it. That's something that you will never ever be able to using a mouse and menus. I am an Emacs user, but I am watching this to learn Vim (read Neovim) because that's the only thing that I can make run on my old and seriously weak Celeron based laptop.
I'm using vim in the basic way like at up to the 24 minutes of this video. With this tutorial I'm gonna use vim more often than I should this time, GOD willing. Thanks Florian and FCC for this wonderful tutorial on vim.
Outstanding. The presentation is well-structured and smooth, not amateur. Listening is easy and captivating. I have to force myself to break away. I also go back to specific points in the presentation that I want to emphasize for myself.
Vim was the coolest thing I learned last year. It has improved my productivity. Pairing it with tmux is super cool too, as well as fzf to fuzzy find and open files via the terminal. Getting use to the keys at first takes a while, but consistent practice or forcing yourself to code/write is what worked for me. There’s some cool tricks too. I think learning the basics is enough and you can pick up those tricks along the way by watching UA-cam or looking online. Configuration is a hill to climb itself, but :h for the win. What helped me was looking at how others set up their configs via their repos.
@@hispantrapmusic301 hes referring to the difficulty of getting vim/nvim on par with an ide. stuff like lsp, file explorers, etc. If you re new to vim learning both the binds and how to configure vim is kinda hard, so a lot of people use vim distributions (think about it like linux distributions) which basically are preconfigured setups that include all the "goodies" out of the box. lunarvim is a famous distribution that is visually appearling, has lsp preconfigured, a nice file explorer, and nice keybinds to get started with.out of the box vim is not great.
How curious: during years I have been looking forward to make my own IDE mirroring Vim behaviour (or at least fantasying with the idea), then *I find out you already did so*. Impressive, most impressive.
I just buy the vim master class tutorial from udemy, after following some youtubers and developers talking sweet of vim after you get use to it. After watching several free tutorials in youtube I decided to buy the course and give it a try
This is awsome. I want to learn vim because I'm tired of VS code being slow as ****. Great course so far and can't wait to get better at it and use it on a daily basis at work
Really useful. I use vim quite a bit but only in the most basic way. I've been through this at double speed and need to go back over stuff (of course) - I'm sure I'm going to be using it more, and better, now because of this. Thanks.
this was useful. Thanks. Was hoping to learn a bit about how to add plugins or more complex vim configurations, but I'll look for that elsewhere. Thanks a lot for your time of making this video.
We need more outcomes based tutorials like this to on board more users into vim. Can you please update description or place syllabus and time stamps within comments?
I will also like to see timestamps, it will make easier to re-watch the beginner intro. Tambien me gustaria que agregaran timestamps, seria mas sencillo revisar las intrucciones para principiante.
This is great! What I have been looking for about a few weeks now. I am an extremely slow navigator, mostly because I have a movement disorder. VIM helps me close the gap and probably widen it in my favor from Devs that are quick with their hands. I have been reading so many articles and tutorials. I have been combing VIM help system (Which has a lot of good stuff to get back to later) first I need to get up and running in VIM to use as a basic/lightweight IDE for HTML, CSS, JS and Rust, and once it is useable I can dive in and learn. VS Code is so bloated with stuff that gets in my way and it feels like a waste of time to learn when it seems clear VIM is way more versatile, especially when getting into embedded systems with Rust. I have been dipping my foot in Linux (mostly Ubuntu since v6, almost 20 years now) Just need some functionality that is not included in VIM with out some additional plugins, but I don't see anything geared to starting that even gets into that stuff, that people probably need to make the initial move.
I have used vim for a year right now and I have to tell you it kinda 'No Pain No Gain", first time i used this it kinda shoot me into the face but right I don't even to touch the mouse anymore
I've used vim for years but never bother to learn that many of it's features. Learned a few new tricks here! One thing I never new about was the register for yanked/cut strings, but even if I yank say 3 lines, only the latest shows up in the registry? Deleted (or cut) lines can pile up. I thought I could yank a bunch of lines and then use them later, which could be handy.
for anyone who want to try vim, but have a windows (and dont want to install WSL , for whatever reason) , you can install cmder (it is like a terminal app) very good ui AND yes , vim is alrealdy configured in it, give it a try , it was helpful when i was starting out with vim
1. Once you open a file, on with vi namefile.txt will open in normal mode where any key has its own purpose 2. : Is for commands, to quite :q to save :w to quite and save :wq, :set number... :set relativenumber
Great video, thanks for sharing, I'll try to use Vim in my daily basis, I am an iOS Developer and XCode started to include Vim as editor so I want to begin using it.
The reason for hjkl was due to terminal compatibility back when Vi was written. The arrow keys had different mapping from terminal to terminal. Vim kept the mapping due to users base request, 😊
@@kartikpandey8739 It is. Nowadays, especially when using laptop keyboards. You can get used to "HJKL" by using the keyboard-raised marker on the "J" as an anchor point. This is how I map it in my head: "J" Down is down. Easy to find by the raised bump "H" is left. Located left of the "J." "K and L" is Located right of the "J". When lost and not looking at the keyboard, I always feel for the "J." As from Vi/Vim and the command, it takes time, but it is easier to edit code/text than with the mouse. Here is a list of commands I use daily: :wq! exit : split split screen : vsplit vertical split screen wr replace word w to to next word b to go back a word >> to tab to the text ~ change case to Case 0 to the beginning of the line % to the end of the line ddp to swap lines %d select all file v to select yy to copy p to paste u to undo best of luck
@@shfunky Thank you so much! I had very nice video on my native language, but some things didn't work on Subsystem (Ubuntu by the way), so I wasted a lot of time. Thank you so much!
If you make a habit of saying out loud what you are doing when executing vim commands, you are not going to have to remember the keybinds, because they are essentially just the initials of what you are saying. "yank inner word" you'll remember that way easier than y+i+w.
While wathing this, I have spent the past hour trying to figure out why you look familiar. I have finally found it. You remind me of Varga from breaking bad.
as an outsider, i can totally understand the power this tool possesses but it looks so overwhelming to get started with. i hope i practice and do more hands on to get used to it
What a Legend! Thank you for this vid. Just wrote my first program using VIM, feeling like a badass coder for real! It doesn't work though lol, busy debugging. Many thanks FCC and Florian, very well explained. I would be keen to watch a vid or read up more on the plugins you use in vim and why if you ever make such content, will keep an eye out on your channel and on here. I ❤FCC 4 EVA!!!
I'm only 15 minutes into this tutorial and my mind is blown. I feel like I've been wasting so much time using my mouse when writing code! My only fear is that I'll become so used to it that I'll want it here in my browser. WAIT, someone made a Vim Chrome extension....
It was a very helpful tutorial, thank you very much! It was very useful to get started with Vim and get a general idea about it. I know that Vim is a really powerful editor and I think there's a lot of efficiency to be gained from using it. And this video helped me a lot to get started.
Man. Florian teaches Vim so seemingly effortlessly. It’s clear he has a lot of passion for Vim and has put many, many hours into practicing and customizing his setup.
Thank you for your kind words Quincy :)
Hol' Up... There's flair on UA-cam ??! Since when ?!!
0:00:00 intro
0:01:19 why use vim? What can you do with it?
0:07:19 installation
0:09:00 basics
0:09:44 how to exit vim?
0:11:28 insert and normal modes
0:17:28 line numbers
0:20:00 relative line numbers
0:21:08 various options
0:22:11 .vimrc
0:24:30 key bindings
0:27:35 visual mode
0:28:25 deleting
0:28:34 yanking/copying/pasting
0:31:10 changing/replacing
0:33:35 navigating vim way
00:35:51 deletion of words
0:47:00 intermediate stuff
0:59:00 registers and macros
1:04:53 Neovim and plugins
1:11:28 Vim support
1:14:06 Outro
you madlad!
@@Extorc thank you
Very nice. Clean, precise, no waffle, and no irritating music or distracting animations. Why can't all youtube tuts be as good as this?
I've watched I think 3 vim tutorials, every time I learn something new, now I learned the ci", ci) ci}
Very useful, thanks a lot!
hey could u link me all those tutorials ?
finally... I can exit Vim 😂
😄😄
😂😂
Hahahaha. Relatable af
😂 😂 😂 😂
Esc + :wq
This video is a public utility to our lives! I've watched just until 29 minutes, just for learning the basics. Thanks for this video!
Loved Vim for 15+ years. Its a superb editor. Coupled with sed commands you can handdle large data sets for research easily. Many editors also provide vim flavor and that is a impressive. Thanks for making this video and hope many hardcore programmers will adopt vim seeing benefit. Disclaimer: Yes, its addictive. Its hard to get started as well.
Never thought I would see a 1 hour tutorial of a code editor
Edit: holy shit! Never knew I needed this tutorial! Gonna help me a lot. Thanks dude
I am new at coding, and the way you explained was very convincing and inspired me to learn all this stuff faster. Thank you.
I think most younger folks that grew up in the modern era may not realize that the early computers were all operated from the keyboard. The Apollo landing computer only had a 3 by 5 keyboard (0-9, +, -) and some seven other main keys (CLR, PRG, ENTER, RESET etc). Hence was natural to find short-cuts for typing in commands quickly - an art that vanished with the emergence of the mouse (a concept Xerox invented and Jobs adapted in his Mac computer).
The biggest reason for why you'd want to learn to use a text editing environment like Vim or Emacs is that using the keyboard allows you to get the commands into your muscle memory. It's like playing an instrument. After training, your fingers automatically perform complex motions without you thinking about it. That's something that you will never ever be able to using a mouse and menus. I am an Emacs user, but I am watching this to learn Vim (read Neovim) because that's the only thing that I can make run on my old and seriously weak Celeron based laptop.
00:35:51 deletion of words
00:42:38 jumping between parenthesis
00:43:46 jumping to next symbol
00:44:24 deleting till symbol
I'm using vim in the basic way like at up to the 24 minutes of this video. With this tutorial I'm gonna use vim more often than I should this time, GOD willing. Thanks Florian and FCC for this wonderful tutorial on vim.
Thank you folks, vim is super handy and the more you excel the more it helps go through logs and understand the flow and debug the issues.
¡Gracias!
Outstanding. The presentation is well-structured and smooth, not amateur. Listening is easy and captivating. I have to force myself to break away. I also go back to specific points in the presentation that I want to emphasize for myself.
can't stop watching at 3 am. my dream course
i've been using the stuff i learned here for 4 months and it has really improved my coding! thank you!
Vim was the coolest thing I learned last year. It has improved my productivity. Pairing it with tmux is super cool too, as well as fzf to fuzzy find and open files via the terminal. Getting use to the keys at first takes a while, but consistent practice or forcing yourself to code/write is what worked for me. There’s some cool tricks too. I think learning the basics is enough and you can pick up those tricks along the way by watching UA-cam or looking online. Configuration is a hill to climb itself, but :h for the win. What helped me was looking at how others set up their configs via their repos.
Just get lunar vim and you would have saved yourself for most of the trouble
@@sorvex9what’s the difference?
@@hispantrapmusic301 hes referring to the difficulty of getting vim/nvim on par with an ide. stuff like lsp, file explorers, etc. If you re new to vim learning both the binds and how to configure vim is kinda hard, so a lot of people use vim distributions (think about it like linux distributions) which basically are preconfigured setups that include all the "goodies" out of the box. lunarvim is a famous distribution that is visually appearling, has lsp preconfigured, a nice file explorer, and nice keybinds to get started with.out of the box vim is not great.
How curious: during years I have been looking forward to make my own IDE mirroring Vim behaviour (or at least fantasying with the idea), then *I find out you already did so*. Impressive, most impressive.
I started very briefly on Sublime Text as a teen and then used vscode ever since. Really excited to try this
Yeaaa I love sublime. Using it currently, I dropped vscode for sublime
Finally I can save and exit from vim successfully.
Thanks It's very useful now I can continue with vim for my daily editor.
the first 8 min of this video motivated me so much to watch all the video in one day
This is simply a tutorial of the HIGHEST QUALITY, cudos, will most likely watch it a third time or more
Thanks!
FCC is a magician .. just today I was having difficulty exiting VIM
Damn ... Here you are ... Now i will be an. Expert user 😁😁
I'm gonna get SO addicted to this...
I just buy the vim master class tutorial from udemy, after following some youtubers and developers talking sweet of vim after you get use to it. After watching several free tutorials in youtube I decided to buy the course and give it a try
Florian Dedov the God of vim. Most of the time he use vim.
as a person who works all day in excel and hates to use the mouse i appreciate the ability to menu dive and call features with the keys
Starting learning because of college course... Ended up loving VIM
After watching 40 minutes I'm like a magician :D Thanks!
I only used vim because I'm in the terminal so much, but now I'm determined to make vim my primary editor for c programming.
me too.
This is awsome. I want to learn vim because I'm tired of VS code being slow as ****. Great course so far and can't wait to get better at it and use it on a daily basis at work
Really useful. I use vim quite a bit but only in the most basic way. I've been through this at double speed and need to go back over stuff (of course) - I'm sure I'm going to be using it more, and better, now because of this. Thanks.
this was useful. Thanks. Was hoping to learn a bit about how to add plugins or more complex vim configurations, but I'll look for that elsewhere. Thanks a lot for your time of making this video.
Now this is something I've been wishing for a long time!
We need more outcomes based tutorials like this to on board more users into vim. Can you please update description or place syllabus and time stamps within comments?
I agree, this video should have timestamps since watching the entire session in one sitting is not likely.
I will also like to see timestamps, it will make easier to re-watch the beginner intro.
Tambien me gustaria que agregaran timestamps, seria mas sencillo revisar las intrucciones para principiante.
The idea is to get wet and not drink from the firehose. Do it in chunks if you are new, over time this should be rewarding.
@@e555t66 I'll give it a try
Thank you very much. I discovered vim 2 days ago and I already love it.
This is great! What I have been looking for about a few weeks now. I am an extremely slow navigator, mostly because I have a movement disorder. VIM helps me close the gap and probably widen it in my favor from Devs that are quick with their hands. I have been reading so many articles and tutorials. I have been combing VIM help system (Which has a lot of good stuff to get back to later) first I need to get up and running in VIM to use as a basic/lightweight IDE for HTML, CSS, JS and Rust, and once it is useable I can dive in and learn. VS Code is so bloated with stuff that gets in my way and it feels like a waste of time to learn when it seems clear VIM is way more versatile, especially when getting into embedded systems with Rust. I have been dipping my foot in Linux (mostly Ubuntu since v6, almost 20 years now)
Just need some functionality that is not included in VIM with out some additional plugins, but I don't see anything geared to starting that even gets into that stuff, that people probably need to make the initial move.
I have used vim for a year right now and I have to tell you it kinda 'No Pain No Gain", first time i used this it kinda shoot me into the face but right I don't even to touch the mouse anymore
Thanks so much dude, this was incredibly comprehensive and wasted none of my time.
It helps me to learn more advanced vim tricks. I was suck with vim motion for months.
I was trying to learn VIM.
Adios VS Code!
VIM, I'm coming!!!
You guys rock!!!
you're crazy
@@karma_yogi_42 nah
How l used to shut the whole computer just to quit vim 🤣🤣 thanks bro love this no more scared of vim
What a relief... i finally jailbreaked from VIM, stuck for a while so i have to use my phone to google an escape plan 😄
I've used vim for years but never bother to learn that many of it's features. Learned a few new tricks here!
One thing I never new about was the register for yanked/cut strings, but even if I yank say 3 lines, only the latest shows up in the registry? Deleted (or cut) lines can pile up. I thought I could yank a bunch of lines and then use them later, which could be handy.
Video Starts at 8:59
Done till 47:32
Best Vim turorial ever!
Even there's lot of code editor like vscode, atom.. But VIM is one of the favorite editor for linux distribution❤❤❤❤❤
for anyone who want to try vim, but have a windows (and dont want to install WSL , for whatever reason) , you can install cmder (it is like a terminal app) very good ui AND yes , vim is alrealdy configured in it, give it a try , it was helpful when i was starting out with vim
I use wsl 1 and it's pretty handy for me.
Such a great video for free is crazy !
Omg, this is exactly what I needed, thanks a lot guys
Got everything I needed as a beginner from a single video. Big Thanks :)
1. Once you open a file, on with vi namefile.txt will open in normal mode where any key has its own purpose
2. : Is for commands, to quite :q to save :w to quite and save :wq, :set number... :set relativenumber
You are doing a great job free code camp
Brilliantly awesome
Keep it up ✌😊💕🤗🤗
You definitely convinced me to check out your channel. Good job!
Brilliant tutorial! Thank you and congratulations!
Great video, thanks for sharing, I'll try to use Vim in my daily basis, I am an iOS Developer and XCode started to include Vim as editor so I want to begin using it.
Just watched NeuralNine's videos!! Great tutorials keep doing
This tutorial is the hardest to learn vim!
Absolute legend of a channel
Thank you for convincing me to use vim
Very nice !
Best vim course.
The reason for hjkl was due to terminal compatibility back when Vi was written. The arrow keys had different mapping from terminal to terminal. Vim kept the mapping due to users base request, 😊
So is it useful? I find it a bit overkill.
@@kartikpandey8739 It is. Nowadays, especially when using laptop keyboards. You can get used to "HJKL" by using the keyboard-raised marker on the "J" as an anchor point.
This is how I map it in my head:
"J" Down is down. Easy to find by the raised bump
"H" is left. Located left of the "J."
"K and L" is Located right of the "J".
When lost and not looking at the keyboard, I always feel for the "J."
As from Vi/Vim and the command, it takes time, but it is easier to edit code/text than with the mouse.
Here is a list of commands I use daily:
:wq! exit
: split split screen
: vsplit vertical split screen
wr replace word
w to to next word
b to go back a word
>> to tab to the text
~ change case to Case
0 to the beginning of the line
% to the end of the line
ddp to swap lines
%d select all file
v to select
yy to copy
p to paste
u to undo
best of luck
If i remember correctly those keys were used because the computer vi was created in had arrows on the hjkl keys.
Thank you folks for this video.
This was an excellent tutorial! I've learned a TON of stuff about Vim! Thank you so much Florian!
Hi, I want to ask:
Is it able on Windows/Subsystem for Windows (I haven't watched video btw)
@@MrsSashkina Hey there. Yes, I believe it is possible. I've tried it on Debian WSL on Windows 11 and was able to follow the video without any issues.
@@shfunky Thank you so much!
I had very nice video on my native language, but some things didn't work on Subsystem (Ubuntu by the way), so I wasted a lot of time. Thank you so much!
If you make a habit of saying out loud what you are doing when executing vim commands, you are not going to have to remember the keybinds, because they are essentially just the initials of what you are saying. "yank inner word" you'll remember that way easier than y+i+w.
Everyone should try the undo tree feature, this is absolutely amazing.
While wathing this, I have spent the past hour trying to figure out why you look familiar. I have finally found it.
You remind me of Varga from breaking bad.
Finally. I can actually use Vim now.
I recommend installing preconfigured vim like LazyVim to get started.
great video guys as always keep rocking..
as an outsider, i can totally understand the power this tool possesses but it looks so overwhelming to get started with. i hope i practice and do more hands on to get used to it
What a Legend! Thank you for this vid. Just wrote my first program using VIM, feeling like a badass coder for real! It doesn't work though lol, busy debugging. Many thanks FCC and Florian, very well explained. I would be keen to watch a vid or read up more on the plugins you use in vim and why if you ever make such content, will keep an eye out on your channel and on here. I ❤FCC 4 EVA!!!
Hi, I want to ask:
Is it able on Windows/Subsystem for Windows (I haven't watched video btw)
@@MrsSashkina yes, it works on WSL
Thank you for this awesome guide, I love to learn new tools and this will be very handy for me in my learning process.
I have no words, thanks you!
very helpful for a beginner like me. Thankyou so much
Yeah dude we are learning fext editor
I'm glad I switched to Linux from Windows, and I should have done it earlier 😃
Thank you so much for this video, it really helped me to understand better the use of this text editor.
Thank you so much
It helps me a lot
I've just started learning linux..and now I'm half through the video hope it's ends well for me😅
22:25 how to save things like set numbers n all as default
I'm only 15 minutes into this tutorial and my mind is blown. I feel like I've been wasting so much time using my mouse when writing code!
My only fear is that I'll become so used to it that I'll want it here in my browser. WAIT, someone made a Vim Chrome extension....
Timing is so great
Brilliant stuff! I am using Vim emulation for Visual Studio Code while I'm getting the hang of it. :D
Thank You!
You helped me alot to setup my first `.vimrc` configuration file for my VIM.
I am so happy!!
Wonderful mastering
Tutorial starts at 0:09:00
It was a very helpful tutorial, thank you very much! It was very useful to get started with Vim and get a general idea about it. I know that Vim is a really powerful editor and I think there's a lot of efficiency to be gained from using it. And this video helped me a lot to get started.
Great. I have been looking for a vim tutorial.
This video was helpful. Thankyou.
Thank you for the detailed tuto, helped me a lot!
I was looking for this thank you so much guys ❤️
It took me a while, but I cracked the code! 🎉
VIM is life !
Thanks! Great overview
This is what I needed!!
Amazing video on teaching Vim, thank you very much!
Thank you so much dude.... Helped me a lot
Nice, now waiting for a vimscript course