I don't think so, Vim is not at all beginner friendly, the shortcuts are handy and make sense but you can't expect a newbie to use Vim straight away and feel comfortable where as with VS Code and Sublime one day is enough to get going.
Coding for 20 years | Working for startups for 10 years | Team leader and mentor | More information about me: https://thevaluable.dev/page/about/
Twitter: @Cneude_Matthieu
I never said that a "newbie" would be able to use Vim in one day, I said that it doesn't require "a learning curve and a willingness to immerse yourself in a whole new feature-set".
Coding for 20 years | Working for startups for 10 years | Team leader and mentor | More information about me: https://thevaluable.dev/page/about/
Twitter: @Cneude_Matthieu
Cause you like VS Code, you can just use the 'Vscodevim' extension. Pretty popular and it works for me. You can even create your own shortcuts like assigning 'jj' to 'Esc'
I don't think so, Vim is not at all beginner friendly, the shortcuts are handy and make sense but you can't expect a newbie to use Vim straight away and feel comfortable where as with VS Code and Sublime one day is enough to get going.
I never said that a "newbie" would be able to use Vim in one day, I said that it doesn't require "a learning curve and a willingness to immerse yourself in a whole new feature-set".
Idk but I feel that way 😅, maybe being used to Windows and GUI my whole life and I kind of feel intimidated by these kinds of software and stuff.
I spent most of my time on Windows... I was feeling the same about Vim till I tried it seriously ;)
I am also learning Linux currently and would try out Vim for sure.
Cause you like VS Code, you can just use the 'Vscodevim' extension. Pretty popular and it works for me. You can even create your own shortcuts like assigning 'jj' to 'Esc'
Yes I saw the extension, but I am want to learn Vim slowly as it's very efficient and productive.