I've always liked Vim, even though I was never conversant enough with its entire feature-set to call myself comfortable.
With that said, I do now stick to VS Code. Maybe I am too naive in enjoying a largely hassle-free (and cheap: 'free' cheap) development experience to worry about ifs and buts.
Someone posted about their gripes with VS Code's licensing model. I struggled to identify.
I am simply too busy enjoying VS Code and churning out code, to worry about contrived issues. And I ask forgiveness if I seem rude and/ or ignorant.
I've always liked Vim, even though I was never conversant enough with its entire feature-set to call myself comfortable.
With that said, I do now stick to VS Code. Maybe I am too naive in enjoying a largely hassle-free (and cheap: 'free' cheap) development experience to worry about ifs and buts.
Someone posted about their gripes with VS Code's licensing model. I struggled to identify.
I am simply too busy enjoying VS Code and churning out code, to worry about contrived issues. And I ask forgiveness if I seem rude and/ or ignorant.
No, that's a totally valid view point. I just don't trust large corporations 😁