The death of Bram Moolenaar, Vim founder and benevolent dictator for life (BDFL), in 2023 sent a shock through the community, and raised concern about the future of the project. At VimConf 2024 in November, current Vim maintainer Christian Brabandt delivered a keynote on “the new Vim project" that detailed how the community has reorganized itself to continue maintaining Vim and what the future looks like.

  • @[email protected]
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    -311 hours ago

    Yea I mean it depends obviously on the use case. But the defaults in Helix properly reached this millennium compared to vim, where you first need to get through guides in order to understand how to properly set it up.

    • @[email protected]
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      311 hours ago

      Helix has better defaults for sure and I get why people might prefer it but I have a very hard time imagining it being a better choice than vim in every situation even with a lot more development.

      Also, if you work with programming for example your editor is going to be one of your main tools and I think that “reading guides” is an acceptable amount of effort to put in to learning such a tool. Vim has a higher barrier of entry than it needs to (this can to some extent be explained with backwards compatability) but with Helix you still have to put some time in to understanding the editing model anyway.

      • @[email protected]
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        17 hours ago

        but with Helix you still have to put some time in to understanding the editing model anyway.

        With Vim you have that as well.

        • @[email protected]
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          12 hours ago

          Sure, what I’m saying is that they’re both editors that you need to invest time in. A bit less so with helix since it has better defaults so you don’t need to spend as much time configuring it, but I don’t think that makes a huge difference.