Keyboard Shortcuts extension for Safari
Vimari is a Safari extension that provides vim style keyboard based navigation. This lets you control Safari from your keyboard instead of having to use your mouse to open links, scroll, etc. The code is heavily based on vimium, a Chrome extension that provides much more extensive features.
Vimari attempts to provide a lightweight port of vimium to Safari, taking the best components of vimium and adapting them to Safari.
- Download Vimari for free from the Mac App Store
- Launch Vimari.app
- Click "Open in Safari Extensions Preferences", Safari's Extension Preferences should open
- Make sure that the checkbox for the Vimari extension is ticked
- Go back to Vimari.app and press the reload button to check the status of the app. If it says "Enabled" then it is ready.
- You may need to relaunch Safari for the extension to work
- Download the latest version of Vimari
- Unzip it
- Move it to your
/Applications
folder - Launch Vimari.app
- Click "Open in Safari Extensions Preferences...", Safari's Extension Preferences should open
- Make sure that the checkbox for the Vimari extension is ticked
- Go back to Vimari.app and press the reload button to check the status of the app. If it says "Enabled" then it is ready.
- You may need to relaunch Safari for the extension to work
Download the Vimari 1.13 and double-click the file.
Modifier - Modifier key to hold down with your action key. If you leave it blank you don't need to hold down anything (default setting).
Excluded URLs - Comma separated list of website URLs you don't want
to use vimari with. To exclude GitHub for example, provide the value
github.com
or http://github.com
. It's smart and should handle all
possible domain cases.
Link Hint Characters - Allowed characters to be used when generating link shortcuts.
Extra detection by cursor style - Detect clickable links by looking for HTML elements having cursor style set to "pointer".
Scroll Size - How much each scroll will move on the page.
Vimari v2.1+
Smooth Scroll - Scroll smoothly through the page.
Normal vs Insert mode - Isolate website keybindings from the Vimari keybindings. In normal mode you can use the Vimari keybindings while in insert mode you can use the websites own keybindings.
Transparent Bindings - Full keybinding isolation might not be your style, instead the transparent bindings setting (when enabled) allows you to use all non-Vimari-bound keys to interact with the web page as if you were in insert mode.
Multiple Bindings - You can bind multiple keybindings to a Vimari
action. This is done by specifying an array of bindings in the
configuration file, like so: "goToPageTop": ["g g", "shift+k"]
.
These bindings are the ones set by default, however you are able to change them in the settings.
f Toggle links
F Toggle links (open link in new tab)
k Scroll up
j Scroll down
h Scroll left
l Scroll right
u Scroll up half page
d Scroll down half page
g g Go to top of page
G Go to bottom of page
g i Go to first input
H History back
L History forward
r Reload
w Next tab
q Previous tab
x Close current tab
t Open new tab
Vimari v2.1+
i Enter insert mode
ESC Enter normal mode
CTRL+[ Enter normal mode
Vimari is built as a Safari Extension, this poses some limits on what is possible through the extension. However default Safari shortcuts can help you keep your hands at the keyboard. Some helpful ones are listed here:
-
Focus URL Bar ⌘l - This is a feature not available in Vimari, it is also helpful where extensions are not loaded (for example on
topsites://
). By focusing the URL Bar you can go to a website where the extension is loaded. -
Reader mode ⇧⌘R - Currently Vimari does not support entering Reader mode (due to API limitations), also navigation inside reader mode (for example using j or k) is not supported.
-
Re-open last closed tab ⇧⌘T - Allows you to reopen a recently closed tab.
Copyright (C) 2011 Guy Halford-Thompson. See LICENSE for details.