this post was submitted on 06 Nov 2025
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Programming

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I’ve tried vim on and off during college but never really had the time to fully get working with it. As it turns out the stress of two degrees is not conducive to “fun activities”. Now that I have a real job ™️, I’ve decided to finally try and use it this week full stop and I genuinely feel like a programming chad. There’s still a lot I’ll need to learn and probably overtime I’ll discover some inefficiency in how I’m using it now but it really does just feel good. I understand the hype now.

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[–] FizzyOrange@programming.dev 2 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I completely agree. Also almost all of the fancy editing you can do with Vim can be done just with multiple cursors, and it's less annoying because you do it incrementally (rather than typing a long sequence of commands and then seeing the result), and you much less to memorise.

[–] mr_satan@lemmy.zip 2 points 1 week ago

The main barrier for me is discoverablity of features. I don't know what I can and can't do in an IDE. That's where context menus shine, pair that with some documentation and settings exploration. Now we have a system to surface features and capabilities through natural usage.