# vim-combo ## why Have you ever wanted to obsessively classify your performance against know people of yours with a not-really-so-relevant score in different programming languages? This plugin comes right to the rescue! ## what It keeps track of a "combo" counter that increases every time you press a key. Waiting for too long resets such counter. Deleting won't increase your combo but it will reset the timer. By default, the timer is 1 second. It may seem tight but longer timers lead to incredibly big combos too easily. Pasting counts as 1 (be it in Insert-Paste or directly from clipboard), movement does not affect the counter. ## how It uses a function called on buffer change (autocmd on TextChangedI) to increases the counter. Current time is checked every time against last recorded time. vim-combo keeps track of your best combos for each filetype with files inside the hidden `.combo` folder (`~/.vim/.combo`). Every time vim loads, the best combo is loaded from file (one is kept for each filetype edited). Every time you get a new best score, the value on file is replaced. # powermode for vim? vim-combo is inspired by the power-mode many more graphical editors have. While all the particles and text shaking is nice, the thing I really wanted was to keep track of my typing combos. There already are few plugins which provide particles (vim-particle, vim-power-mode) but they require gui and some fiddling. vim-combo can run on any system since it's only vim script! # quickstart If you just load this with a plugin manager, your combo will be tracked but not displayed anywhere. Current combo string is kept in `g:combo`, you can place it anywhere you'd like. If you don't have specific statusbar edits, you can add ``` set statusline=%{g:combo} ``` in your `.vimrc`. # configuring * You can change the combo timeout by overriding `g:timeout` in your `.vimrc`. Defaults to 1. * You can access the whole combo string in `g:combo`. You can find current score in `g:combo_counter` and best score for file in `g:combo_best`. * You can bind function `Cheated()` to a key. If you by accident register an unfair value, you can call it to revert. # is this fast? vim-combo should be pretty fast. It runs a lot but does very little (time difference, counter). If you have any issue contact me!