I’m trying out Obsidian for taking notes, and this made me laugh.

  • Kogasa@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    Vim is designed to edit code

    To edit text files. It doesn’t matter if it’s code, configuration files, or plaintext. There are no interpreters, no compilers, no debuggers, nothing designed to support any particular framework or language or workflow. All of that is possible to add through the extensibility features.

    Vim is a highly configurable text editor built to make creating and changing any kind of text very efficient.

    Vim is an advanced text editor that seeks to provide the power of the de-facto Unix editor ‘Vi’, with a more complete feature set.

    Vim is a highly configurable text editor built to enable efficient text editing.

    https://vim.org/

    Vim is a text editor which includes almost all the commands from the Unix program “Vi” and a lot of new ones. It is very useful for editing programs and other plain text.

    https://vimhelp.org/intro.txt.html#intro.txt

    It has scripts for the sake of those scripts enabling integrated developer features.

    Those features aren’t enabled nor integrated. They’re added to Vim at its extensibility points. Baseline vim doesn’t have them.

    • nogrub@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      i don’t care if vim is an text editor or ide but i just wanted to ask if they even had debugger back when vim was created ?