Well sure you do, because you have trained yourself to do that. But how many people can say that? And what's the value in leaving everybody else out when you design your tools?
No, but there is value in RTFM before you comment. The arrow keys work perfectly well in vim, and you're welcome to use them if you want. Page Up and Page Down too.
But at the end of the day, it's still just historical cruft. It's there, it won't kill anyone if it stays there, but it's not something awesome either. It's just an evolutionary dead-end; the male nipple of software design.
Did you miss the part where he explained why hjkl were more efficient than the arrow keys? It's right there in the part you quoted.
Kids these days. Next thing you know, you're going to be telling us you discovered a great new editor named emacs...
No, but there is value in RTFM before you comment. The arrow keys work perfectly well in vim, and you're welcome to use them if you want. Page Up and Page Down too.
But at the end of the day, it's still just historical cruft. It's there, it won't kill anyone if it stays there, but it's not something awesome either. It's just an evolutionary dead-end; the male nipple of software design.
Did you miss the part where he explained why hjkl were more efficient than the arrow keys? It's right there in the part you quoted.
Kids these days. Next thing you know, you're going to be telling us you discovered a great new editor named emacs...