On Mon, Feb 04, 2013 at 10:56 +0200, Ersin Er wrote:
> Thank you all for your valuable comments!
>
> For now I've decided to invest more in my OS X Terminal, tmux and vim setup.
You might be interested in
https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/vimclojure where everything
vim + clojure
Thank you all for your valuable comments!
For now I've decided to invest more in my *OS X Terminal*, *tmux* and
*vim*setup.
On Sun, Feb 3, 2013 at 2:13 AM, Gregory Graham wrote:
> I first learned vi (the predecessor to vim) working on a senior project in
> college in the early 1980s, and then
I first learned vi (the predecessor to vim) working on a senior project in
college in the early 1980s, and then learned Gosling emacs at my first job
in the late 1980s. Since then, I have gone back and forth between the two
for various reasons, and I'm about equally comfortable in each of them.
I've been using vim pretty exclusively for the last 5 years or so, but in
the last few weeks I've been using emacs with evil mode and I couldn't be
happier. It's a beautiful thing to have emacs extreme extensibility with
vim's vastly superior keybindings. I have my config here if you're
inter
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
actu
If you knew neither, I'm convinced emacs would be the right answer. You'll
have more peers to using both that can help you work through problems. You
can edit the environment using a language that is similar to clojure...
There are many small reasons like that.
But, you're desire to stay in vim (w
On Sat, Feb 02, 2013 at 12:09 +0200, Ersin Er wrote:
> 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 experie
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 editin