From 3993e88764bfe3415b0a7bff83a5ba630cf9cfe1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Kyle Meyer Date: Sun, 1 Feb 2015 18:54:41 -0500 Subject: Rework key chords - Use letter pairs that are rare in both directions. For really common commands, try to keep my fingers on home row. - Remove some key chords for less frequent commands. For Projectile, just bind switching projects and the commander because most other things are available with one more key from the commander. My strategy for key chord bindings was to lead with ',' or ';' and then follow with any letter. The idea was that, with the languages and coding conventions I was using at the time, when I inserted a comma or semicolon, they were usually followed by a non-letter (typically a space or a new line). But, this is actually not a good way to go about this because Key chord mode accepts the two-letter combination in either order. In practice, I didn't end up unintentionally calling a command too often, but it did happen enough to be slightly annoying. John Cook recently posted a table [1] of bigram frequencies, which is a good starting point for updating my key chords. [1]: http://www.johndcook.com/blog/2015/02/01/rare-bigrams/ --- lisp/init-view.el | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) (limited to 'lisp/init-view.el') diff --git a/lisp/init-view.el b/lisp/init-view.el index 38e2c64..75ffafd 100644 --- a/lisp/init-view.el +++ b/lisp/init-view.el @@ -9,6 +9,6 @@ (define-key view-mode-map "[" 'backward-paragraph) (define-key view-mode-map "j" 'km/imenu)) -(key-chord-define-global ",v" 'view-mode) +(key-chord-define-global "hq" 'view-mode) (provide 'init-view) -- cgit v1.2.3