67 points

This is why I don’t use vim. Can’t spend all that mental energy on keybindings when I could spend it far more productively on KDE configuration options.

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8 points

Ha! Ouch. Too true. Also, wezterm. I’ve been changing my config everyday for days now.

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6 points

You could either spend hundreds of hours being a slower programmer in order to learn something that squeezes a diminishing returns save on time. Or you can be a fast programmer now, albeit marginally slower than one that knows vim.

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14 points
*

Any amount of time I’ve saved using neovim has easily been offset by the amount of time I’ve spent configuring it. Wouldn’t change it though. It’s just fun to use, and there’s something nice about using an editor that I configured from the ground up. You can also just use a neovim distribution if you don’t care to set it up yourself.

The keybindings aren’t hard though, and I would say that learning vim keybindings has had a net positive impact on my efficiency overall. They become second nature more quickly than you would think. Most actions are muscle memory at this point. Maybe a week of frustration, then you’ll be back up to speed. Then you get faster and more fluid from there.

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2 points

Maybe I’m just lazy, I’ve only invested 10-15 hours total into my config.

Once I got it working, I’ve never bothered to really even touch it. (I probably should, it’s most likely months of out of date…just like my NixOS config…)

Next time I make changes will probably be when I update to 0.10 for inlay hints and set that up along with attempting to fix that error message that randomly pops up every time I start Neovim.

Also probably not the typical Neovim config experience, but I’ve configured it enough to get of my way, now I just want to write code.

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40 points
*

You guys are all insane, and need to find a more productive use of your time and energy.

Queues up another ranked game of League of Legends

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7 points

Y’all just waste your time obsessing over dumb shit turns on tv and binges shows for 5 hours

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8 points
*

What do you mean spend mental energy on keybindings? Sure it will take you a couple times to do them to remenber them but after that you will just know them without having to think about them.

I don’t know if it took me more than a couple hours to learn enough keybindings to be more productive than in vscode, and later on I just learned more as I need them and am now able to use them without thinking about it.

I used to spend more time searching for the button to click with a mouse and remembering in what menu it was than it took me to learn and use vim keybindings.

But this is all diff from person to person.

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15 points

Emacs for life, baby

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3 points

Um akshually emacs is bad becuz it does follow the unix philosophy

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6 points

But gnu’s not unix…

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3 points

Exactly

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8 points

Hope your pinkies are ok

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1 point

pinkies? well everyone has to press enter

but Caps-Lock is rare occasion key

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3 points

I use capslock for ctrl

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2 points

My enter key is on my dactyl manuforms thumb cluster

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3 points

You’re not supposed to C with your pinkie…

http://xahlee.info/kbd/how_to_press_control_key.html

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1 point

Huh. That’s neat. Can’t say whether it works, as I Ctrl with my thumb using a thumb cluster on my Dactyl Manuform

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1 point

C-x C-Y/Z

For me with this position even C-D/E would be uncomfortable. So how to go about that?

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1 point

Evil mode for the win

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1 point

Yeah, evil mode worked pretty well when I tried it. But then I kept hitting things that just made me want to go back to neovim.

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1 point

The only thing better than vim keybindings for programming is vim keybindings for org mode (I know neovim has some org mode stuff but it isn’t the same as full blown org mode in emacs).

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I feel like it’s more of a muscle memory rather than remembering each keybindings.

Just like my old phone’s pattern lock. I forgot what the hell I drew there, but when I picked it up, my thumb just put that in.

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5 points
*

What a waste of muscle memory space

J/k but not really

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141 points

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16 points

I prefer this version.

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54 points

Last night Spotify decided to dredge up “November Rain” by GnR and I realized that I still have neurons devoted to a perfect memory of the lead flute part of a rock power ballad that I listen to once every 5 years. I don’t even play the flute.

And that flute part is the reason I’ve never quite gotten the hang of buffers in Vim.

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21 points

Just throw out your name. You never call yourself by it, and they have these nifty little cards they give you to remind you of who you are and what you look like!

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