This morning I decided to give Scribes another try. It has some great and cool features such a snippets (see the demo) and automatic word completion.
It also offers a pretty big set of keyboard shortcuts, some of them solve those little repetitive tasks you are used to if you edit a lot of code (like “free current line” or “free next line” to make space for more code).
So I thought a cheatsheet would be a good thing to start with and to have at hand. It took me a lot of time, expecially because I have been experimenting with a couple of tools I had never tried before, Scribus and Inkscape. I finally decided to go with the latter, as it gave me more ease of control on images.
I publish here the result for everyone to use. See further CC licence details clicking on the image below.
Get the cheatsheet from Flickr at different sizes or download the local copy (JPG 361KB).

This is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 License.
Nice idea and very useful -
I prefer Scribes for my
I prefer Scribes for my editor. I know enough vi/vim to edit system files when it is more annoying to sudo or gksudo them into another editor. Someone tried to tell me the different keystrokes to make vi really useful and my eyes started glossing over.
Post new comment