38 lines
1.8 KiB
Markdown
38 lines
1.8 KiB
Markdown
---
|
|
title: "NixVim"
|
|
date: "2024-01-15T02:53:23+01:00"
|
|
author: "$HUMANOID"
|
|
tags: ["nix", "linux", "vim"]
|
|
description: "Some thoughts on Vim, NeoVim and NixVim"
|
|
draft: true
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
# Vim and Editors in General
|
|
|
|
So I've been using Vim for nearly as long as I've been using Linux. I still
|
|
vaguely remember awkwardly working `vimtutor` for the first time. Before I
|
|
touched Vim, I didn't really have any strong preference for an editor on Linux.
|
|
I'd just come from Windows where I'd used Notepad++ to edit small text files and
|
|
Visual Studio and JetBrains Rider for my college work at the time -- mainly C#
|
|
in conjunction with Unity. Sure, these editors got the job done, but they
|
|
weren't... Elegant. Visual Studio and Rider are monstrous pieces of software
|
|
with several kitchen sinks. And I'm sure Notepad++ has some really cool features
|
|
that I've never touched, but then it didn't really feel inviting to me and thus
|
|
I never dug deeper. When moving to Linux, I mainly used Gedit to edit the odd
|
|
ini file. This got rather tedious when needing root privileges to edit, say an
|
|
`sshd_config` file. Sure, you can open Gedit using `sudo`, but that makes the
|
|
terminal window from which you start it useless as long as Gedit is running. On
|
|
top of that, it being a GTK application means that it spews a lot of output to
|
|
`STDOUT`. At this point -- not wanting to dig into Vim yet -- I found out Nano
|
|
is a thing. I never liked it. It's always felt something like a clunky
|
|
on-graphical Windows Notepad of Linux.
|
|
|
|
So after a little while I decided to bite the bullet and start up `vimtutor`.
|
|
As mentioned before, it was awkward at first. But I could also see the power
|
|
that the anatomy of Vim allows the user to wield and decided to commit at least
|
|
the basics to muscle memory.
|
|
|
|
# Plugins and NeoVim
|
|
|
|
From here it would only be a matter of time.
|