Senior Software Engineer at Google working on Google Meet 👨💻 Helping developers be more awesome 🔥 author, speaker & nerd 🧙🏼♂️ into JavaScript, TypeScript, Vim & pixelart ❤️
I've updated the article to add a note on that :D Thank you! It looks like this behavior only applies to the quotes text object and not the others though.
Yup, I'm not really bothered by it because the awesome targets plugin extends that behavior to the rest of the text pairs as well as arbitrary separators: , . ; : + - = ~ _ * # / | \ & $. That's such a sane default, I wish it was in vim to begin with!
Senior Software Engineer at Google working on Google Meet 👨💻 Helping developers be more awesome 🔥 author, speaker & nerd 🧙🏼♂️ into JavaScript, TypeScript, Vim & pixelart ❤️
Oooooh that's so gooooood! Indeed that feels like it should be the default behavior. I had started a thread in my brain thinking about how I could implement that behavior for the rest of the operators but it is awesome there's already a plugin that does that! Thank you for sharing!!!! :D
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I've updated the article to add a note on that :D Thank you! It looks like this behavior only applies to the quotes text object and not the others though.
Yup, I'm not really bothered by it because the awesome targets plugin extends that behavior to the rest of the text pairs as well as arbitrary separators:
, . ; : + - = ~ _ * # / | \ & $
. That's such a sane default, I wish it was in vim to begin with!Oooooh that's so gooooood! Indeed that feels like it should be the default behavior. I had started a thread in my brain thinking about how I could implement that behavior for the rest of the operators but it is awesome there's already a plugin that does that! Thank you for sharing!!!! :D