- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
For all of you, who want to start neovim, or just started (nyself included) than kickstart.nvim is a great start: https://github.com/nvim-lua/kickstart.nvim
And use
vimtutor
I tend to recommend people use the vim plugin for whatever editor or IDE they currently use, with a key combo to enable and disable it. That way there are no big surprises and it still works the way you’re used to - Just with different keyboard controls. And if there’s something you can’t figure out an easy way to do with vim, write down a note somewhere of that thing to research how to do that later.
Seems like a solid approach. I went full send pure nvim for 3 weeks to get over the hump. No config changes or plugins.
This is what i did, started using vim motions in pycharm. I use nvm for small edits, but plan to make it my daily driver soon.
I’ve used nvim as my primary IDE for almost a year at this point and it has revolutionized my workflows in such a crazy way. It feels like I’m editing code at the speed of thought, with the combination of text objects and vim-surround
Helix editor was my gateway drug to neovim. May be helpful to others as well
Funny, I switched from neovim (after a decade of use) to helix…
What made you make the switch?
Well I was spending too much time with configuration, and (this is the main reason I guess) configuration was very often broken, because plugins have changed too often, so I was continuously fixing the plugins, which was time-consuming and annoying. To be fair that was when lua support slowly stabilized, I think the situation got a little bit better, but even more so for helix (I’m using helix now for 2 years I think).
And also helix is fast, very fast (this was also a reason: instant feedback), you really feel, that everything there is done in the core implementation (no plugin system yet unfortunately, but I have almost everything I need currently with helix, unlimited undo + persistent session would be cool, but otherwise I’m happy).
Also after using it a little bit more, the kakoune inspired visual/selection first makes more sense IMO, it’s feels more intuitive (“darn, I miscalculated 3fs, so I’ll just press v and go to the next s manually”, or multiple cursors as selections, you see exactly what you’re doing, no
cgn
or stuff like that)
Started learning vim and used neovim since pre-lsp era (i think before 0.5). Drew’s books are eyes opening and I never had to struggle like the writer.
Then neovim with lua support came out. I dragged my feets to migrate my nvim.init to init.lua.
Tried a few time but never completed the migration. I completed the migration using the LazyVim (like the community aspect of astrovim).
Neovim is pretty fucking amazing
Sure is!