@ -33,11 +33,15 @@ Emacs has *a lot of keybindings*, sometimes it's useful to just start mashing ke
Emacs has *some strange default keybindings*, they're not like any other editor you've likely ever used. To overcome this nearly show-stopping hurdle, we turn Emacs into Vim[fn:1] with *Evil Mode - The Extensible VI Layer for Emacs*[fn:2].
+ Enable visual line motions outside of ~visual-line-mode~ buffers
#+begin_src emacs-lisp
(use-package evil
:custom (evil-want-integration t) ;; Required for `evil-collection'.
While covering substantial ground towards our goal, the default keybindings implemented in *Evil*[fn:2] alone are *lacking* compared to what you would expect from *Vim*[fn:1]. There's, of course, a communicated curated package *evil-collection*[fn:6] that does a much better job implementing the proper keybindings.
@ -86,6 +90,7 @@ If you're like me and started with Emacs using a framework like *Doom*[fn:3] or
:global-prefix dotfiles/leader-key-global))
#+end_src
** Transient bindings
Create transient keybindings with a shared prefix through *Hydra*[fn:10]. This is also used by a number of third-party packages as a completion system. An implementation example is available in the *Font* section of the [[file:interface.org][Interface]] module.