> Well, this is the same guy who praised the anti-intuitive, incredibly awkward 'hjkl' movement keys (yeah, I just *love* mapping orthogonal > movement axes to a single line) over the completely intuitive arrow-keypad (gosh, the down key is on the bottom and the up key is on top! Amazing!).
Um, you really missed the point, BADLY, why do you take so much offence? Because you don't understand how to use vim? The point was that when you lift your hand and put it on the arrowkeys, your concentration breaks which is a bad thing, and makes you less productive, why don't you just go read the article again, it has some *great* points.
> Well, this is the same guy who praised the anti-intuitive, incredibly awkward 'hjkl' movement keys (yeah, I just *love* mapping orthogonal
> movement axes to a single line) over the completely intuitive arrow-keypad (gosh, the down key is on the bottom and the up key is on top! Amazing!).
Um, you really missed the point, BADLY, why do you take so much offence? Because you don't understand how to use vim?
The point was that when you lift your hand and put it on the arrowkeys, your concentration breaks which is a bad thing, and makes you less productive, why don't you just go read the article again, it has some *great* points.