calango@programming.dev to Programmer Humor@programming.dev · 1 day agoI love itprogramming.devimagemessage-square134fedilinkarrow-up1709arrow-down134
arrow-up1675arrow-down1imageI love itprogramming.devcalango@programming.dev to Programmer Humor@programming.dev · 1 day agomessage-square134fedilink
minus-squaremycodesucks@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkarrow-up39·1 day ago“Old tools” does not mean obsolete or bad. It means tested, hardened, and reliable. And crucially, probably runs in a couple megabytes of memory, which you might need if the cost of RAM suddenly quintuples for no reason.
minus-squarejj4211@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkarrow-up7·23 hours agoAI in vim is actually often convenient. :set ai Cool, now it will keep track of my indentation. Now sometimes that gets in the way, and while you can: :set noai Usually it’s best for me to: :set paste And that’s my take on the utility of AI in vim. (that is what you meant right, there isn’t some other AI people are thinking of right?)
minus-squareGiloron@programming.devlinkfedilinkarrow-up1·19 hours agoYep. https://vigor.sourceforge.net/
minus-squarePika@sh.itjust.workslinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up6arrow-down1·edit-21 day agoYou can almost hear the legacy programmers screaming about Haskel and C from here. /j
“Old tools” does not mean obsolete or bad. It means tested, hardened, and reliable. And crucially, probably runs in a couple megabytes of memory, which you might need if the cost of RAM suddenly quintuples for no reason.
B-but don’t you want AI in vi?
AI in vim is actually often convenient.
:set aiCool, now it will keep track of my indentation.
Now sometimes that gets in the way, and while you can:
:set noaiUsually it’s best for me to:
:set pasteAnd that’s my take on the utility of AI in vim. (that is what you meant right, there isn’t some other AI people are thinking of right?)
Yep.
https://vigor.sourceforge.net/
You can almost hear the legacy programmers screaming about Haskel and C from here. /j