&dactyl.appName;
is a free media player add-on for &dactyl.host;, which
combines the best features of the
CMus
music player and the
Vim
text editor.
To provide the most authentic CMus/Vim experience, the &dactyl.host; toolbar
is hidden.
If you really need it, type: :set guioptions+=T to get it back.
If you don't like &dactyl.appName; at all, you can uninstall it by typing
:extdelete &dactyl.appName; or :extdisable &dactyl.appName; to disable it.
If you like it but can't remember the shortcuts, then press F1 or
:help to get this help window back.
author donation
&dactyl.appName; was written by
Prathyush Thota. If you
appreciate my work on &dactyl.appName; and want to encourage
me working on it more, you can either send me greetings, patches
or make a donation:
Of course as a believer in free open source software, only make
a donation if you really like &dactyl.appName; and the money
doesn't hurt -- otherwise just use it, recommend it and like it
:)
Help topics
Starting &dactyl.appName;: How &dactyl.appName; starts up, where it reads the config file...
Player mode: Interacting with the media player.
Browsing: Basic mappings and commands needed for a browsing session (how to open a web page or go back in history).
Buffer: Operations on the current document like scrolling or copying text.
Command-line mode: Command-line editing.
Insert mode: Insert-mode editing.
Options: A description of all options.
Text search commands: Searching for text in the current buffer.
Tabs: Managing your tabbed browsing session.
Hints: Selecting hyperlinks and other page elements.
Key mappings, abbreviations, and user-defined commands: Defining new key mappings, abbreviations and user commands.
Expression evaluation: Executing JavaScript.
Marks: Using bookmarks, QuickMarks, history and local marks.
Repeating commands: Using macros to repeat recurring workflows.
Automatic commands: Automatically executing code on certain events.
Printing: Printing pages.
&dactyl.appName;'s GUI: Accessing &dactyl.host; menus, dialogs and the display panels.
Styling the GUI and web pages: Changing the styling of content pages and &dactyl.appName; itself.
Error and informational messages: A description of messages and error messages.
Developer information: How to write docs or plugins.
Various commands: Other help which didn't fit into any other category.
Index: An index of all commands and options.
You can also jump directly to the help of a specific command
with :help o or :help :set.
Tab completion available for all commands with support for "longest" matching when set in 'wildmode'
Hit-a-hint like navigation of links (start with f to follow a link)
Advanced completion of bookmark and history URLs (searching also in title, not only URL)
Vim-like statusline with a Wget-like progress bar
Minimal GUI (easily hide useless menubar and toolbar with :set guioptions=)
Ability to :source JavaScript files, and to use a [a]~/.melodactylrc[a] file with syntax highlighting if you install http://code.google.com/p/pentadactyl-labs/issues/detail?id=50[melodactyl.vim]
Easy quick searches (:open foo will search for "foo" in google, :open ebay terminator will search for "terminator" on ebay) with support for &dactyl.host; keyword bookmarks and search engines
Count supported for many commands (3 will go back 3 pages)
Beep on errors
Marks support (ma to set mark a on a web page, 'a to go there)
QuickMarks support (quickly go to previously marked web pages with goa-zA-Z0-9)
:map and :command support (and feedkeys() for script writers)
:time support for profiling
Move the text cursor and select text with Vim keys and a Visual mode
External editor support
Macros to replay key strokes
AutoCommands to execute actions on certain events
A comprehensive help system, explaining all commands, mappings and options
Contact
Please send comments/bug reports/patches to the mailing list,
where we will properly answer any questions. You can also join
the
#pentadactyl
IRC channel on
OFTC or check the
Wiki
for
frequently asked questions (FAQ).
Make sure, you have read the
TODO
file first, as we are aware of many things which can be improved
when we find time for it or receive patches.