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URL: https://dev.to/quasabe/keyboard-shortcuts-847-combinations-to-memorize-mouse-gestures-just-wiggle-1o68

⇱ Keyboard shortcuts: 847 combinations to memorize. Mouse gestures: just wiggle. - DEV Community


Keyboard shortcuts: 847 combinations to memorize. Mouse gestures: just wiggle.

Hold right-click, draw a direction, done. Navigate backward, comment code, close tabs — no cheat sheet required.

Your mouse called. It wants more responsibility.

👁 comment code

The Problem

We all know the drill. You're deep in the zone, reading through code, and you want to navigate back. Do you reach for Alt+Left? Or was it Ctrl+-? Or maybe it's buried in some menu you haven't opened in months?

I kept losing my flow state just to remember which shortcut does what. So I built something different.

What I Built

Mouse Gestures for Visual Studio lets you execute any VS command by holding the right mouse button and drawing a simple pattern.

  • Hold right mouse button
  • Draw a gesture (←, →, ↑, ↓, or combinations)
  • Release — command fires instantly

No memorizing. No menus. Your hand is already on the mouse anyway.

Default Gestures Out of the Box

Gesture Action
← Left Navigate Backward
→ Right Navigate Forward
↑ Up Uncomment Selection
↓ Down Comment Selection
↓→ Down-Right Close Document

Fully Customizable

Don't like the defaults? Open Tools → Mouse Gesture Settings and:

  • Record any pattern you want
  • Map it to any of hundreds of Visual Studio commands
  • Enable/disable gestures individually

👁 go to def gesture

Why Not Just Learn the Shortcuts?

Shortcuts are great — I still use them. But mouse gestures have one advantage: they're spatial and directional, which makes them stick in muscle memory differently. "Swipe left to go back" just makes sense in a way that Alt+Left doesn't.

Also — during presentations and pair programming, it looks pretty cool.

Try It

🔗 Visual Studio Marketplace
🐙 GitHub

Would love to hear what gestures you'd map — drop a comment below!