| I did not downvote you but here are some possible reasons: 1. If you're coming from regular vim you should expect having to bundle syntax files for languages that aren't hugely popular. 2. Shortcuts on a vim frontend should be pretty self-evident for a regular vim user. And some reading on the documentation as well until the 1.0 release. 3. This is a good point, but you did not clarify your point well as I assume you meant discoverability and ease-of-use of configuration. Still, I think it's valuable feedback and actually captures some issues that are being worked now: 1. People coming from IDEs expect everything to work out-of-box and perhaps in the future some plugins will be bundled by default (configurable to not be the case for veteran users). 2. Recently a lot of features out of regular vim were added such as markdown preview, browser tab, file explorer and sneak mode; which have particular keybindings. For the moment they should be visible when you run the 'Quick Open' menu (`<c-p>`) but seems like there should be another way to discover these. An issue will be opened for this case. 3. Discoverability of options and configuration UI is a current issue indeed and there are plans to improve it (https://github.com/onivim/oni/issues/976). I hope the downvotes do not discourage you from giving further feedback as it's best when given sincerely, issues are very welcome, thanks! |