people who have gone from neo/VI/m to Emacs or wise verse - what made you swap?
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people who have gone from neo/VI/m to Emacs or wise verse - what made you swap? what made you then either stay or revert?
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people who have gone from neo/VI/m to Emacs or wise verse - what made you swap? what made you then either stay or revert?
From my first steps in #Unix land, I learned #Vim and became fluent.
Decades later, when a boring job left me surveilled, without internet access, and with lots of waiting, I needed a way to look busy, and chose to learn #Emacs from the tutorial. I could take it easy and there was not much else to distract me.
I would not say I left #Vim for #Emacs; the fluency never really left, and I am comfortable in either. But I do primarily use Emacs today: power and support.
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people who have gone from neo/VI/m to Emacs or wise verse - what made you swap? what made you then either stay or revert?
@hell emacs or die
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people who have gone from neo/VI/m to Emacs or wise verse - what made you swap? what made you then either stay or revert?
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people who have gone from neo/VI/m to Emacs or wise verse - what made you swap? what made you then either stay or revert?
Some years ago I needed to keep password strings readable so I could type them into remote UIs and pasting from Password Gorilla wasn't an option the way all this was set up. I couldn't use anything that wrote temp files (management requirement, regardless of whether the software could be configured to write temp files). I recalled that emacs buffers were not written to disk and used emacs for that stuff. Things predictably grew from there.
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people who have gone from neo/VI/m to Emacs or wise verse - what made you swap? what made you then either stay or revert?
@hell vim->kakoune->emacs
The realisation that editing efficiency is mostly worthless. In emacs I have well designed UI/UX for all tasks beyond pure text editing, which is much more valuable.
F.e. I can create a custom documentation viewer with code generation from XML files in like thirty minutes, which integrates natively with all other emacs features. Or inspect DBus messages.
It's like a shell, but instead of a CLI prompt you have a hypertext interface and a saner language.
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people who have gone from neo/VI/m to Emacs or wise verse - what made you swap? what made you then either stay or revert?
@hell @catsalad I first learned vi before vim was around, and I’ve always used vi/vim for like system administration type edits
I switched to Emacs for code mostly becuse it did syntax highlighting, but also had more programming freatures than old school vi. (I always used vi emulation mode for search and replace in emacs
)I used vim for a while later, and then eventually moved to TextMate and then SublimeText. I’ve been fine with either vim or Emacs, though it takes me a while to get in the hang of using the right commands
TM and Sublime are both support some of the weird emacs key commands I remember -
people who have gone from neo/VI/m to Emacs or wise verse - what made you swap? what made you then either stay or revert?
@hell The grass is always greener
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people who have gone from neo/VI/m to Emacs or wise verse - what made you swap? what made you then either stay or revert?
@hell Emacs is the devil. Vim for life!
(More reasonably, I learned vi very early in my career on SCO Unix and once it became muscle memory, Emacs didn’t have a chance. Also, vi is usually either already installed or easily available on even the tiniest of *nix systems, which keeps me in practice to this day.)
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people who have gone from neo/VI/m to Emacs or wise verse - what made you swap? what made you then either stay or revert?
@hell I started with vim arbitrarily, switched to emacs ~6 years later because a friend was really talked up org mode. After a few months (3-12?) I went back to vim because my wrist pain was coming back.
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people who have gone from neo/VI/m to Emacs or wise verse - what made you swap? what made you then either stay or revert?
@hell I started with pico because I used Pine as my mail client for many years. Then I had to fix a bunch of hosed SCO UNIX boxen and the only text editor they had was vi. So I learned vi.
No matter what box I'm on, it has vi (even as a mask of BusyBox).
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people who have gone from neo/VI/m to Emacs or wise verse - what made you swap? what made you then either stay or revert?
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people who have gone from neo/VI/m to Emacs or wise verse - what made you swap? what made you then either stay or revert?
@hell while it was a very brief stint with Emacs many years ago (around the turn of the century), I got frustrated by ① the lack of power in a default install leading to annoyances with copying configs around to various machines, and ② the lack of ubiquity…I could sit down at any Unix-like machine and type `vi` (and at the time `ed`) and be editing immediately, but if I typed `emacs`, sometimes it was there, oftentimes not, and rarely configured the same way. So after some brief poking at Emacs I ended up in the ed/vi/vim camp due to its omnipresence.
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people who have gone from neo/VI/m to Emacs or wise verse - what made you swap? what made you then either stay or revert?
@hell@defcon.social i left the "editor wars" 20 years ago. the only winning move is to not play.
i use micro if i get a choice in the matter btw. but any editor will do when shit's on fire, and it usually is. -
From my first steps in #Unix land, I learned #Vim and became fluent.
Decades later, when a boring job left me surveilled, without internet access, and with lots of waiting, I needed a way to look busy, and chose to learn #Emacs from the tutorial. I could take it easy and there was not much else to distract me.
I would not say I left #Vim for #Emacs; the fluency never really left, and I am comfortable in either. But I do primarily use Emacs today: power and support.
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@hell emacs or die
@noplasticshower a true warrior!
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@hell Emacs is the devil. Vim for life!
(More reasonably, I learned vi very early in my career on SCO Unix and once it became muscle memory, Emacs didn’t have a chance. Also, vi is usually either already installed or easily available on even the tiniest of *nix systems, which keeps me in practice to this day.)
@ZippyWonderdust my sports team is better than your sports team!
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@hell The grass is always greener
@octorine oof too soon
-distrohopper -
people who have gone from neo/VI/m to Emacs or wise verse - what made you swap? what made you then either stay or revert?
@hell I use both, but I use Emacs mostly. vim is mostly for editing files quickly in and out. I haven't learnt how to resolve merge conflicts in Emacs so vimdiff is still my go-to. I don't need neovim, vim is sufficient.
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people who have gone from neo/VI/m to Emacs or wise verse - what made you swap? what made you then either stay or revert?
vi is lightweight and fits neatly into every embedded computing environment. Vi is encoded into our genetics of every living cell.
