Friendly Text Editor /fte/

>Hints for Preparing DocumentsMost documents go through several versions (always more than you expected) before they are finally finished. Accordingly, you should do whatever possible to make the job of changing them easy.
>First, when you do the purely mechanical operations of typing, type so subsequent editing will be easy. Start each sentence on a new line. Make lines short, and break lines at natural places, such as after commas and semicolons, rather than randomly. Since most people change documents by rewriting phrases and adding, deleting and rearranging sentences, these precautions simplify any editing you have to do later.
>— Brian W. Kernighan

For all of you who mostly use text editors to write.

Attached: Brian Kernighan.jpg (600x400, 50K)

>a lot of Jow Forums uses these type of editors
Jow Forums is filled with drooling retards using Atom or Visual Studio Code.

how about you just start using vim and learn more command as you go. You don't need this tutorial faggotry. You can write the commands on a paper and paste it somewhere you can easily see while using vim.

you know you can just select them, press capital I then insert whatever you want at the beginning right? You don't anything special to comment out a block of code.

:help user-manual
:help index
>essential to know of imo.

The best editor is not Emacs or Vim, it's Emacs with Vim

Use Evil

nice, saved

Nano is love, Nano is life.

You mean vile?

Using nano is idiotic, it is the notepad of linux.