▲ | iLemming 4 days ago | |||||||
Have you even ever watched someone experienced using Emacs or you're making assumptions on your (I suppose limited experience)? The "distraction" framing assumes everyone has the same preferences and working style, I for one find VSCode (and IDEs in general) massively distracting from productively solving many tasks. No, it's not "a skill" issue - I have used InteliJ every single day for almost a decade, diving into some profoundly advanced and non-documented features, and I do open VSCode from time to time. I feel your argument conflates initial learning curve with ongoing productivity, and assumes VSCode's approach is universally optimal rather than just different. | ||||||||
▲ | kamaal 2 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
>>Have you even ever watched someone experienced using Emacs or you're making assumptions on your (I suppose limited experience)? I am one of those experienced Emacs users myself. Wrote more stuff in Emacs and even vim than most devs today will even write code over their careers. Its just vscode now does simply too many things out of the box, you obviously can recreate that in Emacs, but its a pointless exercise. Time consuming, and distracts your from your real job. My job is to write code, not build emacs to write code. I totally stopped using Org-mode, because Google docs do it way better. At some point you have to move on. For some people like that point arrived a little early. | ||||||||
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