• agumonkey@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    99% of can emacs do are to be answered by a firm yes, and an additional “it’s built-in since 198*”

    • terminal_prognosis@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      That was so much my experience working with enthusiastic vim fanboys - they kept telling me “look at how awesome vim is, it can now do this!”, and I’d say, “er, yes, Emacs has always had that, I’ve been doing that since 1992”.

      They literally never came up with something unique to vim, but that never shook in their firm belief that vim was absolutely the best most powerful editor and Emacs was a joke.

      • agumonkey@alien.topB
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        1 year ago

        well vim has always started with minimal core

        but when subtext popped, there were some stuff, I forgot what, but a few ergonomics ideas (like projectile, multiple-cursors, maybe nicer fuzzy search) that weren’t present in emacs. took a few months for someone to make it happen … and that was it.

        emacs can absorb most ideas, unless it’s something that would break the whole architecture

      • lmarcantonio@alien.topB
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        1 year ago

        evil is the recommended vi emulation these days. You could say emacs has *at least* three vi emulation modes.

          • ragnese@alien.topB
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            1 year ago

            I bet that folks that prefer vi to Vim

            Those exist? That’s like hipster^2 (I say this as someone who can’t even type a damn email without my Vi(m) reflexes kicking in).

    • dargscisyhp@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      I’ve always wondered how many emacs questions are related to multithreading, and now I know. 1%