cellio: (don't panic)
Monica ([personal profile] cellio) wrote2017-05-23 05:21 pm
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for the techies: exiting vim

I once heard a quip that went something like this:

"I used vi for a couple years."
"Yeah, I couldn't figure out how to exit, either."

I admit that the first time I was unwittingly thrown into the vi editor (predecessor to vim), I had to kill the process from another terminal (yes, terminal). So I was amused to see this blog post today: Stack Overflow: Helping One Million Developers Exit Vim.

In the last year, How to exit the Vim editor has made up about .005% of question traffic: that is, one out of every 20,000 visits to Stack Overflow questions. That means during peak traffic hours on weekdays, there are about 80 people per hour that need help getting out of Vim.

The point of the post isn't actually to bash vim, though it humorously acknowledges the widespread problem (and c'mon, you have to do it a little). Mostly they analyze data about who is presumably getting stuck in vim, complete with charts and stuff. Enjoy.

mdlbear: blue fractal bear with text "since 2002" (Default)

[personal profile] mdlbear 2017-05-24 04:17 am (UTC)(link)
I learned emacs after vi (can't say second, since I'd used a dozen or so different editors by then). Only took me a week or two to completely forget vi.
jducoeur: (Default)

[personal profile] jducoeur 2017-05-24 07:34 pm (UTC)(link)
I found that, when I stopped thinking of Emacs as an editor and starting thinking of it as a highly-opinionated operating system, it generally made more sense.

(I was a *hardcore* Emacs hacker back in the day: I wrote what might have been the first major mode for Ada, as part of writing the original Ada '95 IDE. Fun stuff, but you have to love LISP...)