![]() Can't really speak for emacs here though, as I've never learned more than the basics of it yet, it seems like a completely different beast. If you want refactoring, or many other features vim isn't the best tool for the job, although you can always hack whatever in if you needed it. ![]() Than this is also compared to vim, which is in my opinion the best editor, but it's just the best at that. Overall not sure what's better, it seems people compare tools such as intellij, which is aimed at a specific language (I'm only referring to java here, I know it has many other languages supported and tools built off of it), with other tools such as atom/vscode which are aimed at being almost a weaker in some aspects IDE allowing for it to be used for all work. ![]() Atom/vscode seem like an attempt to make omni-IDE's for every language. I personally love it, it can do nearly anything related to editing. But I've always found vim to be just that an editor. I'm pretty new compared to most people, only have been writing code for about 4 years, with emacs and vim having been around much longer than I've even been alive. Or worse yet, even realize they can beyond a sort of intellectual acknowledgement of the possibility.Īt that point, they might as well be using Atom, ST, or another GUI editor. They might make tweaks in the future, but they might never dig deeper to really customize it. With a configuration that's so tightly written (not sure if that's the best way to put it), I kind of felt like I was setting them up to use vim, but not be vim users. They have some fairly well-defined conventions of their own, and while that allows some pretty neat stuff, it struck me as limiting for the beginner. I was recently talking to a friend who was thinking of switching to vim, and to be honest, I was a bit unsure about recommending one of those configurations when asked for a good default. Spacemacs/SpaceVim/SpaceNeovim are some impressive default experiences, but they achieve that through large, complex config files that make it difficult for beginners to parse. Pretty much everything can be customized or tweaked, but it's mostly on you to explicitly do so. That's the tradeoff with editors like emacs and vim, unfortunately. Kind of the nuclear option, and largely a result of a failure to adequately comment my dotfiles. ![]() I've recently started to rebuild them to try and simplify things, cut out the unused but "neat" stuff I added over time, etc. I had a lot of junk in my config files from when I started learning vim seriously, a lot of which I never really used. what was the tag I was using with that sort of wording before?_ _Just found this as a group related to the previous bookmark of the other closed FB group.Have you considered splitting up your vim config into multiple files, particularly for the conditional stuff? It doesn't cut down on the size of configurations as a whole but it does make it a bit easier to approach. Grab all you can from these and look into them later._ _hm, ad_intelligence is a new tag. ![]() The $797 one is for an agency, basically the same, but "agency" so 10 logins, feature of ad-watch update notifications, and feature of advertiser contact csv - not something i can offer at first, unless their stuff is pretty simple and just a whois crawl into a csv - will _Another site in the same-ish space of paid software for ad intelligence. Their pricing is way too cheap - $47 (tho this one is so simple and basically worthless, just there to make you get the main $97 one. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |