• 🦄🦄🦄@feddit.org
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    2 days ago

    Have been a professional software engineer for 8 years now. Have yet to find a reason to use vim for anything (other than availability of course, but if nano isn’t installed for some godforsaken reason I have other problems lol).

    • toynbee@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      I’ve been in various forms of coding and administration for around fifteen years now. Despite trying lots of editors, I have yet to find a reason to use anything but vim.

      I do like obsidian for note taking.

      edit: Removed typo.

    • CubitOom@infosec.pub
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      2 days ago

      I used to think this way. Until I found that with emacs you can edit any file on an SSH enabled computer remotely. Meaning that not only are you no longer constrained by what the computer has installed. But you can use your personality configured editor while editing that file. It’s called tramp.

      BTW, with Emacs you can use vim key bindings evil-mode, so don’t stress about that.

      • folkrav@lemmy.ca
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        2 days ago

        Tramp is more featured, but if all one cares about is being able to edit remote files using a local editor, vim can edit remote files with scp too: scp://user@server[:port]//remote/file.txt

        I tried tramp-mode at some point, but I seem to remember some gotchas with LSP and pretty bleh latency, which didn’t make it all that useful to me… But I admittedly didn’t spend much time in emacs land.

    • Bo7a@lemmy.ca
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      2 days ago

      Fair. But to a sysadmin or devops engineer availability is pretty important.