When I was first starting out in software engineering, it felt like there was a never-ending barrage of tooling to learn. After more than a decade in CLI environments, I still find myself constantly learning new features and fun facts - but it’s fairly rare that I learn something new that I end up u...
These Ctrl keys are shortcuts from Emacs - there's a Bash settings to switch to vi-mode if you so wish. Anyway, the first Emacs was written in 1981, probably on a PDP-11, which did not have Home and End! Same reason Neovim uses "yank" instead of "copy". ctrl-c/ctrl-v did not exist as a shortcut back when vi was being written!
I know you didn't intend to be mean or anything, but maaaaaan kids these days don't know their history (not entirely your fault, btw)😆
This tip is super useful to me because not everyone is using a PC. On a PC sure, I would use the Home and End keys all the time. Now I'm using a laptop as my main computer and the Home and End keys are in a weird position that even to this day, 4ish years of laptop use, I still have to actually look at the keys to find them.
That's horrible for muscle memory, every time I switch desk/keyboard I have to re-learn the position of the home/end/delete/PgUp/PgDn keys.
I got used to Ctrl-a / Ctrl-e and it became second nature, my hands don't have to fish for extra keys, to the point that it becomes annoying when a program does not support that. Some map Ctrl-a to "Select all" so, for input fields where the selection is one line, I'd rather Ctrl-a then left/right to go to the beginning/end than fish for home/end, wherever they are.
Whatever is deleted is stored in the "killring" and can be pasted(yanked) back with Ctrl-y (like someone else already mentioned), consecutive uses of Alt-delete/Alt-d add to the killring.
Alt-b / Alt-f moves one word backwards / forwards
Alt-t swaps (translocates) the current word with the previous one
Ctrl-_ undo last edit operation
All those bindings are the same as in emacs.
Also, normally Ctrl-d inserts the end-of-file character, and typically can be used to close an active shell session or when you have some other interpreter open in the terminal for interactive input.