• @Adda
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    6
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    2 years ago

    I have recently switched from Vim (Neovim) to Doom Emacs and similarly to switching from my previous editor to Vim, I cannot now imagine going back. Furthermore, I fail to comprehend how I was able to function before having Doom Emacs in my life. If you want to experiment with Emacs, I would suggest getting Doom Emacs, working with it like with classic Vim within half an hour or so and then slowly learning anything new as a bonus as you go. And I can say, it is an amazing piece of SW.

    • @ksynwa
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      42 years ago

      I went the other way. Doom Emacs to neovim.

      • @Adda
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        32 years ago

        That is interesting, indeed. May I ask why did you take this route? Why to switch to Neovim when already using Emacs with integrated Vim? Plugins etc.?

        • @ksynwa
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          62 years ago

          I am shit at lisp and never bothered to learn it despite using emacs for four years. With Doom Emacs, I was finding it difficult to deviate from the default config for this reason. I wasn’t using emacs to the fullest and wasn’t too married to it. I stay in the terminal all the time so I started using neovim instead once it hit 0.5.0.

          • @Adda
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            2 years ago

            Fair enough. I can understand that. It is true that configuring Emacs is a bit harder and one has to really learn quite a few of the language basics to do practically anything. Glad this works better for you. Have fun.

    • @DerPapa69
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      22 years ago

      Don’t tempt me :D

      I guess I’ll give it a try…