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mention C-o and C-v in the tutorial
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@ -27,6 +27,7 @@ The idea behind Tridactyl is to allow you to navigate the web more efficiently w
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- Ignore mode
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- This mode passes all keypresses through to the web page. It is useful for websites that have their own keybinds, such as games and Gmail.
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- You can toggle the mode with `Shift-Insert`, `Ctrl-Alt-Backtick`, or `Shift-Esc`.
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* While in ignore mode, you can execute a single normal mode binding by pressing `<C-o>` followed by the keys for the binding.
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Almost all of the modes are controlled by series of keypresses. In this tutorial, a sequence of keys such as `zz` should be entered by pressing the key `z`, letting go, and then pressing the key `z`. There is no need to hold both keys at once, if that were even possible. (`zz` resets the zoom level to the default, so it probably didn't seem to do anything). Sometimes `help` refers to a command that must be entered in command mode; it should hopefully always be clear from context which we mean.
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@ -26,6 +26,7 @@ Many keypresses in normal mode take you into another mode. `t`, for example, put
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* Protip: quickly search for the source of a quote by using `;p` to copy a paragraph, and `P` to search the internet for it
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* `zi`,`zo`,`zz` zoom in, out and return to the default zoom
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* Search text with Firefox's standard `/` binding, jump from match to match with `<C-g>` or `<C-G>` (note that it isn't possible to rebind searching/jumping between matches for now). If you want to use Firefox's `<C-f>` search you'll have to run `unbind <C-f>`.
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- `<C-v>` sends the next keystroke to the current website, bypassing bindings
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All the keys in normal mode are bound to commands; for example, `j` is bound to `scrolline 10`. If you are ever curious as to what a key sequence does in normal mode, you can simply use `:bind [keys]` and the command line will tell you to which command they are bound.
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