Well, someone's finally done it. William Tan has put together a set of vi key bindings for Microsoft Word. (Thanks for the pointer, NTK!) I just downloaded and installed it, and thought I'd mention a few things.
1. The author mentions the instability ("alpha" nature) of the code. I haven't run it long, but I get quite a few "Error 5346" and "Error 4198" messages. I'm no VB expert (nor even a newbie) so I have no idea what those mean. It didn't seem to affect the document I was editing.
2. Installing the .dot file exposed some weirdness. The default location where you're supposed to put these files (on WinXP, with Word 2003) is c:\Documents And Settings\Username\Application Data\Microsoft\Word\Startup\
. Both the Application Data
and Microsoft
directories in the above path were hidden from Windows Explorer and the dir
command in the shell, but you can cd
to them.
The easiest way to install the .dot file is to open up Word, navigate via menus: Tools / Options / File Locations / Startup. Click the modify button, which brings up a file dialog box. Then drag the .dot file to that dialog box.
All in all, I'm glad someone has done this. Now, if only they'd do it for an IDE editor. Errm, I mean a free IDE--I know Visual Slickedit has a killer vi emulation mode. Yes, I know about Vimulator for jEdit, but the author's language ("This plugin is in the early stages of implementation and does not yet provide a consistent or reliable VI-style interface."), along with the fact it was last released in 2002, scared me away. Actually, it looks like there is one available for Eclipse: viPlugin.
Regardless, a very cool hack. Thanks, William.
Posted by moore at May 14, 2004 10:45 AM