im changing my dev environment to linux
what text editor do you use on linux anons?
Im changing my dev environment to linux
emacs with vim bindings
Acme
vim. emacs or visual studio code if you hate yourself
lurk more, you should know this newfag
vim with MS word bindings
emacs
nano
vim with gedit bindings
emacs with spacemacs
Leafpad
Kakoune.
Spacemacs for development and Vim for quick editing
neovim with vi bindings
Go with nano, everything else is too bloated
emacs or vi when I cba waiting 3seconds
kakoune
vim with nano bindings
Vim or the relevant JetBrains IDE with vim bindings, depends what I'm working on
Notepad++
Windows notepad via wine
Kate.
Visual Studio code
t. not a NEET
ed is the standard text editor
install wine and run microsoft notepad
I use emacs but pick the right tool for the job.
I used to really like Atom, but it runs on electron which won't even compile on gentoo
Kate's good.
Emacs without any of that gay vim shit
VS Code because I plan on having children.
emacs and develop your own conifg, don't use any of that evil or spacemacs shit
I'm working to get into emacs, any suggestions for a noob?
If I like it I'll switch from dwm to exwm.
learn dired, orgmode and elisp after you are familiar with emacs basics.
Also prepare for invasion! Sooner or later the emacs ecosystem WILL replace your whole env
+1
VS Code because I have a job.
>prepare for invasion
Honestly that's what I'm hoping for, I've got to like vim for quick edits but I want something comfy and extensible to just leave open 24/7, hence my interest in emacs
vs code for full projects
sublime for quick editing
if you have to code using a remote terminal you're definitely doing it wrong
there is an extra benefit: as every program will run inside emacs and emacs is good at managing windows, you can forget about WMs. It does not matter anymore.
Welcome to the collective, resistance is futile
>Welcome to the collective, resistance is futile
*cringe*
nano/vim
Emacs. Specifically a customised doom-emacs.
fucking zoomer
>zoomer/boomer meme
*cringe intensifies*
Emacs makes all computing simple
Visual Studio Code
vim if you are sane.
/thread
I've recently adopted VSCode.
I had it installed but rarely used it. I had to write documentation and ASCIIDoc and VSCode has a nice plugin for it.
Also now that I've used it more, I find it also helps to solve merge conflict with git.
I also have Neovim, but since I use a non-qwerty keymap, the shortcut are all messed up.
I'm learning vim as a text editor and using Intellij as my IDE.
Does vim bindings actually help in IntelliJ?
Because there is so much stuff going on with the mouse that when I tried using vim keybindings it actually was slowing me down. I'm not a vim expert though so I was wondering if productivity will increase in the long run.
I write code with pen and paper and use a scanner to get a jpeg, which I then open with ristretto. My ristretto has ed bindings.
Vim bindings are great only for editing. Having to move your mouse to a new line you want to edit that you would otherwise have to hold the up arrow for 5 seconds, when in Vim you can just hit 2-3 keys and be where you need to be.
how many key shortcuts do you faggots need? save, compile, switch tabs, diff and that's basically it.
Do you even have a job or are you spending all day sitting on mommy's basement?
Vim.
too fucking slow
just roll your own with evil mode
vscode. just use whatever you used on windows.
emacs -nw
IDE of choice with vim emulator. Don't fall for the basic text editor meme. It's 2019 use software that makes life easier.
The best text editor is sam, unironically
KWrite for GUI mode, mcedit or nano for console.
you can totally extend it too since it supports piping and redirection, that's pretty cool and i wish vi clones had that.
I use barebones gedit, not hotkeys or anything
I use kakoune
Gedit
Komodo edit
nano is bloat use ed its the standard text editor
Google doc in Gnu Icecat.
VSCodium, same as vscode, without telemetry. nano is fine for the rest user
fpbp
Based.
Also sam.
Vim. I have a vimrc and ~/.vim directory that have been honed to exactly what I need and nothing I don't over the better part of a decade. I can clone them to a new machine and get shit done whether that machine is Linux, BSD, Illumos, MacOS, Haiku, or even Android with the Termux app.
Vim, the red 9 of editors.
Red pill me on using emacs over vscode in 2019. I've used in emacs in the past and quite liked it. But I don't think it's better than vs code for backend development. It certainly is better for scripting though.
Emacs has been used for server software development since the 1970s. If anything, vscode is the one that has to justify itself.
Check out nano
Leafpad when in x-windows, nano in the console.
Notepad under WINE
>to just leave open 24/7
look into daemon mode, then you can just bind a key to spawn a new frame
if you have to ask, swallow some aol discs.