As someone on comp.editors said, "I like VIM because, when I ask a question
in [comp.editors], I get a one-line answer. With xemacs, I get a 1Kb lisp
script with bugs in it. ;-)"
On Wed, Feb 28, 2001 at 07:44:42AM -0700,
sinck@ugive.com wrote:
>
> \_ I still fumble around in vi - apparently the days of line editors have
> \_ finally escaped me. I think I probably couldn't use edlin anymore or
> \_ whatever that attrocious thing was that I used on VAX. Give me emacs ;-)
> \_
> \_ With that, I'm clocking out and I'll leave the editor wars to everyone else.
>
> Sancho! My Sword! My Armor!
>
> [Yes! Your Grace.]
>
> Oh, um, sorry. Every now and again, I fire up vi after saying
> term=unknown. Keeps me competent for when things get really bad. :-)
Good idea. That's one of the nicest things about vi: it ALWAYS works.
> On the flip side, emacs rules. I've coded hooks so that when I commit
> a CGI file (either via CVS or RCS) it a) commits b) throws a http log
> message, and c) logs the update to my personal work history database.
> Beat that with a stick.
The same could be accomplished by writing some shell scripts and using "map"
and "au" commands in vim. And with vim, you don't have to learn a whole new
language just to get things working.
"Emacs is a nice OS - but it lacks a good text editor. That's why I am
using Vim."
I think that sums it up. Emacs tries to be an entire OS. It suffers from
the same disease that Microsoft does: Let's add as many features as we can,
so we can have one program that does everything! If I want to read my mail,
I'll use a MUA; if I want to browse the web, I'll use a web browser. I
don't need to do everything from within my text editor.
Having said that, I think the editor war is fairly silly. I have my reasons for
using vi, you have your reasons for using Emacs. What text editor to use is
a personal choice.
--
[ Nathan Saper (natedog@well.com) http://www.well.com/user/natedog/ ]
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