What about the thought that stuff like vi is often the default way to do these things, it becomes your standard procedure, even if for code editing you've always used other types of editors?
I feel like this scenario could play out because folks may not switch off of the approximate default behavior.
Experienced PHP and C programmer based in Norway, with a history of game and web development. CTO at Blue Scarab Entertainment, previously at Servebolt.com, IMVU, Smarterphone, and Funcom.
What if the situation in which we edit these files is one where we're on an ssh connection in a console window where vim is the most powerful choice that isn't a desktop application? And then that becomes default behavior for config files, like you suggest.
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What about the thought that stuff like
vi
is often the default way to do these things, it becomes your standard procedure, even if for code editing you've always used other types of editors?I feel like this scenario could play out because folks may not switch off of the approximate default behavior.
What if the situation in which we edit these files is one where we're on an ssh connection in a console window where vim is the most powerful choice that isn't a desktop application? And then that becomes default behavior for config files, like you suggest.