# Go To Beginning And End Of Line There are two movements that I often find useful in Vim when trying to position my cursor relative to the current line. - `0` - go to the first character of the line - `$` - go to the end of the line For instance, I may use `0` to jump to beginning of a line so that I can then make a block-visual selection of several lines to insert some text in front of each line. Or perhaps I'm already in visual mode and I want to move the cursor (and visual selection) to the end of the line. I hit `$` to do that. Then I might `y` (yank) or `c` (delete into insert mode). It's also worth noting that with code indentation, `0` moves the cursor to the very first position of the line whereas `^` moves the cursor to the first non-whitespace character. The former essentially accounts for code indentation. For example, imagine you're in the middle of line 3 in the following example. Depending on what you're trying to do, you may want to jump to one or the other position. ```ruby class Greeting def hello(name) puts "Hello, #{name || 'world'}!" # say hi end end ``` See `:h 0` for Vim help files on these motions. They are all located near each other.