For me vim is one of those things that just works. It’s ever present, reliable, and dependable. The simplicity of it mirrors the unix way and my usage of it is so closely wrapped in screen,
/tmux, bash, gnu-coreutils, and a few terminals over the years that any change is going to have me asking ‘why?’ essentially. So a command line flag allows familiarity of existing tooling to really sing, and I suspect offers far more compatibility than the suggested fix too given the length of the windows addendum to the guide
And totally agreed about out in, I use Arch btw. And I’m not in a hurry to switch to nvim either, I tried and switched back pretty quickly. Pathogen is still an amazing plugin system, leveraging my git and bash knowledge to boot
Well, sure, if the appeal of vim for you is that it “just works” on every platform you use, then there’s no advantage to adopting neovim. That’s no reason to complain that neovim isn’t meeting your needs, though.
For me vim is one of those things that just works. It’s ever present, reliable, and dependable. The simplicity of it mirrors the unix way and my usage of it is so closely wrapped in screen, /tmux, bash, gnu-coreutils, and a few terminals over the years that any change is going to have me asking ‘why?’ essentially. So a command line flag allows familiarity of existing tooling to really sing, and I suspect offers far more compatibility than the suggested fix too given the length of the windows addendum to the guide
And totally agreed about out in, I use Arch btw. And I’m not in a hurry to switch to nvim either, I tried and switched back pretty quickly. Pathogen is still an amazing plugin system, leveraging my git and bash knowledge to boot
Well, sure, if the appeal of vim for you is that it “just works” on every platform you use, then there’s no advantage to adopting neovim. That’s no reason to complain that neovim isn’t meeting your needs, though.
It’s more advice than a complaint. I run on one setup. Linux terminals. And neovim has to beat that for me to switch