Kakoune-inspired key bindings, modes, menus and scripting for Visual Studio Code.
Dance provides Kakoune-inspired commands and key bindings for Visual Studio Code, as well as support for custom modes and scripting.
Added key bindings are (mostly) compatible with Kakoune's, but are meant to be an addition to Visual Studio Code, rather than an emulation layer on top of it.
- Kakoune is an efficient and lightweight editor with a very small ecosystem. VS Code is an entire IDE with a huge ecosystem and many existing extensions.
- Kakoune is Unix-only.
- Whether you prefer Vim, Emacs or Kakoune key bindings is a matter of preference. I, for one, prefer Kakoune's.
- Vim's key bindings are already available to VS Code users.
Why is it merely 'inspired' by Kakoune?
- Unlike VSCodeVim which attempts to emulate Vim, Dance's only goal is to
provide VS Code-native commands and
key bindings that are inspired by Kakoune.
- Some features are provided to mimic Kakoune's behavior (e.g. treating positions as coordinates of characters, rather than carets between characters like VS Code), but are optional.
- Kakoune, Vim and VS Code are all fully-fledged text editors; therefore, they have overlapping features. For instance, where VSCodeVim provides its own multi-cursor and command engines to feel more familiar to existing Vim users, Dance leaves multi-cursor mode and editor commands to VS Code entirely.
For most commands, the usage is the same as in Kakoune. However, the following changes have been made:
All modes are custom. By default, the normal
and insert
modes are defined,
and many Kakoune-inspired keybindings are available. More modes can be
created, though. These modes are configured with dance.modes
.
For an example of this (which both creates a new mode and adds keybindings to it), see "Extend select mode" in the wiki.
Dance by default uses caret-based selections just like VS Code. This means a selection is anchored between two carets (i.e. positions between characters), and may be empty.
If you prefer character-based selections like Kakoune, please set
"selectionBehavior": "character"
in the configuration of the mode in which you
wish to use character-based selections. This mode is designed to work with
block-style cursors, so your configuration would typically look like:
"dance.modes": {
"insert": {
// ...
},
"normal": {
"cursorStyle": "block",
"selectionBehavior": "character",
// ...
}
},
If this is enabled, Dance will internally treat selections as inclusive ranges between two characters and imply that each selection contains at least one character.
Most keybindings exposed by Dance are actually implemented by running several
Dance commands in a row. For instance, dance.modes.set.normal
is actually a
wrapper around dance.modes.set
with the argument { mode: "normal" }
.
Commands that take an input, like dance.modes.set
, will prompt a user for a
value if no argument is given.
Additionally to having commands with many settings, Dance also exposes the
dance.run
command, which runs JavaScript code. That code has access to
the Dance API, and can perform operations with more control than Dance
commands. Where Dance commands in the dance.selections
namespace operate the
same way on all selections at once, dance.run
can be used to
individually manipulate selections. It can also be used to run several commands
at once.
Finally, the Dance API is exported by Dance. Other VS Code extensions can
specify that they depend on Dance (with the
extensionDependencies
property),
and then access the API by calling
activate
:
const { api } = await vscode.extensions.getExtension("gregoire.dance")
.activate();
Pipes no longer accept shell commands, but instead accept "expressions", those being:
-
#<shell command>
: Pipes each selection into a shell command (the shell respects theterminal.integrated.automationProfile.<os>
profile). -
/<pattern>[/<replacement>[/<flags>]
: A RegExp literal, as defined in JavaScript. Do note the addition of areplacement
, for commands that add or replace text. -
<JS expression>
: A JavaScript expression in which the following variables are available:$
: Text of the current selection.$$
: Array of the text of all the selections.i
: Index of the current selection.n
: Number of selections in$$
.
Depending on the result of the expression, it will be inserted differently:
string
: Inserted directly.number
: Inserted in its string representation.boolean
: Inserted astrue
orfalse
.null
: Inserted asnull
.undefined
: Inserted as an empty string.object
: Inserted as JSON.- Any other type: Leads to an error.
/(\d+),(\d+)/$1.$2/g
replaces12,34
into12.34
.i + 1
replaces1,1,1,1,1
into1,2,3,4,5
, assuming that each selection is on a different digit.
Dance provides several status bar segments (left-aligned) exposing info similar to Kakoune's default mode-line. Most of them are hidden by default and only shown contextually:
- current mode: click to switch to another mode
- macro recording status: click to stop recording
- current count prefix: click to reset to 0
- current register: click to unset
- dance error: click to copy the full description of the last error
Dance also provides a custom view which lists all registers and their contents.
A few changes were made from Kakoune, mostly out of personal preference, and to make the extension integrate better with VS Code.
- The default yank register
"
maps to the system clipboard. RegExp
s given to Dance commands support being given additional flags with the(?i)
syntax (but only at the start of the pattern).- Registers can have arbitrary names. If the name of a register starts with a single space character, it will be local to the current document.
- When using the default configuration (that is to say, these settings can be
modified):
- The cursor is not a block, but a line: Dance focuses on selections, and using a line instead of a block makes it obvious whether zero or one characters are selected. Besides, the line-shaped cursor is the default in VS Code.
- Changing the mode will also change the
editor.lineNumbers
configuration value toon
ininsert
mode, andrelative
in normal mode.
- Dance uses the built-in VS Code key bindings, and therefore does not override
the
type
command. However, it sometimes needs access to thetype
command, in dialogs and register selection, for instance. Consequently, it is not compatible with extensions that always override thetype
command, such as VSCodeVim; these extensions must therefore be disabled. - If you're on Linux and your keybindings don't work as expected (for instance,
swapescape
is not respected), take a look at the VS Code guide for troubleshooting Linux keybindings. TL;DR: adding"keyboard.dispatch": "keyCode"
to your VS Code settings will likely fix it.
There are unfortunately still bugs lurking around. If you find one, please ensure that it has not been reported yet and submit a test that does not pass and can be used to reliably reproduce the bug.
If you'd like to add or improve a feature, please make sure that no similar
feature has been requested in the issues and file a new issue for it. This
will ensure that no two people work on the same feature at the same time, and
will be a good place to ask for help in case you want to tackle this yourself.
Since some features are not general enough, it may be requested of you to make a
plugin that uses the Dance API or to simply use scripts in the meantime.
When contributing, please be mindful of the existing coding conventions and naming.
Your PR will be rebased on top of master
in order to keep a clean commit
history. Please avoid unnecessary commits (git commit --amend
is your friend).
Pre-release versions
follow the pattern <major>.<minor>.<prev-patch><pre-release>
, so for instance
pre-release 1
of version 0.5.13
is 0.5.12001
.