Guides

Sequences Guide

TanStack Hotkeys supports multi-key sequences in Vue, where keys are pressed one after another rather than simultaneously.

Basic Usage

vue
<script setup lang="ts">
import { useHotkeySequence } from '@tanstack/vue-hotkeys'

useHotkeySequence(['G', 'G'], () => {
  window.scrollTo({ top: 0, behavior: 'smooth' })
})
</script>

Many sequences at once

When you need several sequences—or a reactive list whose length changes—use useHotkeySequences instead of many useHotkeySequence calls. One composable registers every sequence safely.

vue
<script setup lang="ts">
import { useHotkeySequences } from '@tanstack/vue-hotkeys'

useHotkeySequences([
  { sequence: ['G', 'G'], callback: () => scrollToTop() },
  { sequence: ['D', 'D'], callback: () => deleteLine(), options: { timeout: 500 } },
])
</script>

Options merge like useHotkeys: HotkeysProvider defaults, then commonOptions, then each definition’s options.

Sequence Options

ts
useHotkeySequence(['G', 'G'], callback, {
  timeout: 1000,
  enabled: true,
})

Reactive enabled

When disabled, the sequence stays registered (visible in devtools); only execution is suppressed.

vue
<script setup lang="ts">
import { ref } from 'vue'
import { useHotkeySequence } from '@tanstack/vue-hotkeys'

const isVimMode = ref(true)

useHotkeySequence(['G', 'G'], () => scrollToTop(), {
  enabled: isVimMode,
})
</script>

Global Default Options via Provider

vue
<script setup lang="ts">
import { HotkeysProvider } from '@tanstack/vue-hotkeys'
</script>

<template>
  <HotkeysProvider
    :default-options="{
      hotkeySequence: { timeout: 1500 },
    }"
  >
    <AppContent />
  </HotkeysProvider>
</template>

meta

Sequences support the same meta option as hotkeys, allowing you to attach a name and description for use in shortcut palettes and devtools.

ts
useHotkeySequence(['G', 'G'], () => scrollToTop(), {
  meta: { name: 'Go to Top', description: 'Scroll to the top of the page' },
})

See the Hotkeys Guide for details on declaration merging and introspecting registrations.

Chained modifier chords

Each step can use modifiers (for example Mod+K then Mod+C). You can use the same modifier on consecutive steps:

ts
useHotkeySequence(['Shift+R', 'Shift+T'], () => doNextAction())

While a sequence is in progress, modifier-only keydown events (Shift, Control, Alt, or Meta pressed alone) are ignored: they do not advance the sequence and do not reset progress. A user can press Shift alone between Shift+R and Shift+T without breaking the sequence.

Common Patterns

Vim-Style Navigation

ts
useHotkeySequence(['G', 'G'], () => scrollToTop())
useHotkeySequence(['G', 'Shift+G'], () => scrollToBottom())
useHotkeySequence(['D', 'D'], () => deleteLine())
useHotkeySequence(['D', 'W'], () => deleteWord())
useHotkeySequence(['C', 'I', 'W'], () => changeInnerWord())

Konami Code

ts
useHotkeySequence(
  ['ArrowUp', 'ArrowUp', 'ArrowDown', 'ArrowDown', 'B', 'A'],
  () => enableEasterEgg(),
  { timeout: 2000 },
)

Under the Hood

useHotkeySequence uses the singleton SequenceManager. You can also access it directly:

ts
import { createSequenceMatcher, getSequenceManager } from '@tanstack/vue-hotkeys'

const manager = getSequenceManager()
const matcher = createSequenceMatcher(['G', 'G'], { timeout: 1000 })