Nah, who cares. We even have guys around who claim that they like vim. Just another crazy isn’t a reason to get torches. We save them for a real occasion.
like? I fing love Vim. It’s like a peanut butter and jelly sandwich made of sunk cost fallacy and Stockholm syndrome.
I’ve spent years using it, so I know every (reasonable) key combination and don’t need my mouse* to wiz around even very large documents. It’s on every pc/server I use by default, it’s on my phone. I can run it on a server from a console window with no window manager.
I get there’s a lot not to like, but it’s like 10% of my DevOPS superpower.
Nah, who cares. We even have guys around who claim that they like vim. Just another crazy isn’t a reason to get torches. We save them for a real occasion.
I wouldn’t say like, I just don’t know how to quit it.
https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/linux-unix/how-to-exit-vim/
And here I’ve just been shutting the power off for years!
(That’s on me, I should have put a /s by my pun above)
like? I fing love Vim. It’s like a peanut butter and jelly sandwich made of sunk cost fallacy and Stockholm syndrome.
I’ve spent years using it, so I know every (reasonable) key combination and don’t need my mouse* to wiz around even very large documents. It’s on every pc/server I use by default, it’s on my phone. I can run it on a server from a console window with no window manager.
I get there’s a lot not to like, but it’s like 10% of my DevOPS superpower.
When I quit using vim, I noticed how easier and brighter my life became. But I am a programmer, not a sysadmin.
It is admittedly not the best IDE for your computer.
I like vim and emacs, but I also agree so I’m not sure how to feel