 What do we use T for in Vim? Well, we use it to take us till a certain character. It is a motion key. Till. Hey, welcome back to another episode of a short series on the Vim alphabet. From A to Z, we cover every letter in Vim and what it does. Today, we're talking about T. Let's open up our editor for lipsum.txt. You'll see that this is very similar to F and I'll post a link to F in the card above. F allowed us to find a certain character. So if I type F and I, it's going to move the cursor to that character and it's going to sit right on that character. Now, if I want to go before that character, I can use T. So we'll go till I and that'll put us our cursor right before that character. Now, we can also use a number before this. So we can see that we have two T's here. If I wanted to go to till T, that'll put me on this E character right here. It's kind of a convoluted way to navigate. I don't use it that often unless I know exactly that I'm jumping to a specific character. In code, I use this a lot for special characters like ankle brackets and things of that nature, commas, et cetera. Now, uppercase T is just kind of going backwards. It's the opposite direction. So if I wanted to move backwards towards this T into this space right here, I do a capital T, T and it moves backwards till the T. Now, if you have any questions about how T works, just do colon H, T and get all of the documentation on that. That's all I have for T. It's not a very complicated command. Just remember that it is related to F. So everything that you know about F is going to apply to T as well. It's just going to be on the side of the character, not putting your cursor right on the character. So that's it. I hope you learned something today. If not, better like tomorrow as we cover you, which we've actually been using through this entire course. See you tomorrow.