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phaazon.net | ||
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coen.needell.org
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| | | | Vim, "the ubiquitous text editor", has been with us since the 1980s, with new programmers discovering its arcane power every day. It was originally developed for the Atari ST under the name "Stevie" (ST Editor for VI Enthusiasts), and was later ported to Unix and OS/2 (a precursor to Windows). Originally, vim was simply an Atari port of vi1:, which in turn was the visual mode for the command line text editor ex2. It continued to use the name "Stevie" until 1993, when the name was changed to Vi iMproved (... | |
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sookocheff.com
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| | | | I first learned Vim in university and, since then, it has been a welcome companion for the majority of my software engineering career. Working with Python and Go programs felt natural with Vim and I was always felt productive. Yet Java was always a different beast. Whenever an opportunity to work with Java came up, I would inevitably try Vim for a while, but fall back to IntelliJ and the IdeaVim plugin to take advantage of the rich language features a full-featured IDE can give you. | |
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cosine.blue
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| | | | A Vim converts commentary on Kakoune, the selection-oriented editor focused on interactivity and incremental resultsor mawwws experiment for a better code editor. | |
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michaelscodingspot.com
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| | Michael Shpilt's Blog on .NET software development, C#, performance, debugging, and programming productivity |