For what it's worth, I'm a diehard vi user and have been for many years, 
but Emacs' latest Vim-emulation (called evil-mode) is really very, very 
good. So good that Emacs is fighting to be my favourite version of Vi yet.

You'll be walking a lonely road, but if you want Emacs *and* Vim, it's 
actually possible these days...

Kris


On Saturday, 2 February 2013 10:09:00 UTC, Ersin Er wrote:
>
> Hi all,
>
> Just as Colin Yates announced in the thread "emacs - how to wean me off 
> the family of Java IDEs" I am in the process of moving to emacs or vim for 
> active development with Clojure.
>
> My question is a bit different: I am already an experienced vim user. I 
> have been using vim mostly for editing shell scripts, config files etc. but 
> not for active development. I am also not a vim expert such as one who can 
> write at the speed of thought! (So this is a signal that I am not that much 
> bound to vim and I can make a switch.)
>
> As far as I can see I need to type a little more in emacs for getting 
> stuff done than I do with vim. Despite this disadvantage(?) does emacs 
> really shine for begin an environment? On the other hand, vim-foreplay also 
> looks promising at vim's side.
>
> I don't want to restart an editor flame war here but I really need advice.
>
> Thanks.
>
> -- 
> Ersin Er 
>

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