This reminds me of old style text adventures, that frequently have to deal with this kind of ambiguity, and only manage it to a limited degree. For example: > kill the man Which man? > the one with the knife I don't see…
A much better move is to switch to emacs and use something like evil-mode to keep your vim-fu useful. After all, you can emulate vim in emacs, but the converse is not true. :P https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PeVQwYUxYEg
This reminds me of old style text adventures, that frequently have to deal with this kind of ambiguity, and only manage it to a limited degree. For example: > kill the man Which man? > the one with the knife I don't see…
A much better move is to switch to emacs and use something like evil-mode to keep your vim-fu useful. After all, you can emulate vim in emacs, but the converse is not true. :P https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PeVQwYUxYEg