• tiredofsametab
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    528 months ago

    As someone who’s been a software developer for over a decade and in IT even longer, I still don’t use vi/vim for anything other than when crontabs have it set as the editor.

      • PureTryOut
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        268 months ago

        export EDITOR=nano.

        But (neo)vim is amazing so there is no need to do that.

        • @SpaceNoodle
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          178 months ago

          I transfer all my files over to a Windows machine and edit them in Notepad

        • @[email protected]
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          8 months ago

          Based nano user

          From my .zshrc (typing this on mobile so cope if it’s wrong)

          case "$OSTYPE" in
            linux*)
              export EDITOR=nano
            ;;
            freebsd*)
              export EDITOR=ee
            ;;
          
      • tiredofsametab
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        28 months ago

        You can set your default editor (maybe in .bashrc or .bash_profile? I forget), but I’m far too lazy.

    • @[email protected]
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      48 months ago

      Honestly if you don’t use vim motions in your ide of choice, you’re missing out big time. Being able to do things like “Delete everything inside these parentheses”. di( or “wrap this line and the two lines below r in a pair of {}” ys2j{ , or “swap this parameter with the next one” cxia]a. with a single shortcut is game changing.

      Even just being able to repeat an action a number of times is ridiculously useful. I use relative line numbers, so I can see how many lines away a target is and just go “I need to move down 17 lines” and hit 17j.

      Absolutely insane how much quicker it is too do stuff with vim motions than ctrl-shift-arrows and the like

      • tiredofsametab
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        138 months ago

        That’s really neat, but I don’t think I do that often enough to really make the performance hit of learning a whole new thing and memorizing keyboard shortcuts and commands worth it. I don’t find myself refactoring code a ton, especially after moving to a more TDD-like model.

        • @[email protected]
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          98 months ago

          It’s less about refactoring and more about navigation of your code while editing. Ever wanted to delete a single word? daw deletes the word your cursor is currently in. How about "copy everything up to (but not including) the nearest “D” on the current line? yfD.

          The whole point is that editing code in the middle of writing it, not just refactoring it, is immensely faster.

      • oce 🐆
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        68 months ago

        Absolutely insane how much quicker it is too do stuff with vim motions than ctrl-shift-arrows and the like

        Those tasks are a very small part of work time, so most people don’t feel the need to optimize it.

      • @trxxruraxvr
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        17 months ago

        Only if you use a qwerty keyboard, otherwise it’s just annoying as shit