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vim

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micro + makefiles. It’s very very fast.

VSCodium is OK aswell, has lots of extensions, but a bit slow. I can work with it way better than with IntelliJ products though.

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VS Codium.

It’s VS Code, minus the Microsoft bullshit.

Source code is MIT licensed.

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I really wish the WSL extension wasn’t locked behind VS Code. My workflow is heavily reliant on it which locks me into the proprietary IDE.

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when I install codium (with yay, because I use Arch… btw) there is a package that just makes the plugin store the same as Microsoft’s. I found one that wasn’t working and that was MS pylance, I use pyright now.

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What’s the package called? Am on nix but might look into it later

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Helix. This is the one that could potentially be the successor to vim.

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I love helix, I just wish the development was a bit faster. The main developers are all quite busy and I would love nothing more for them to be able to use some of the open collective money to pay themselves to work on it full time for a bit. I think in a year or two it will be amazing.

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I love helix

Woah woah, not so fast.

Love you too

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how do you have that robot symbol beside you

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I could never be a successor to vim. However micro is a pretty good editor.

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I used to like MonoDevelop maybe 10 years ago, but it’s not around any more. If I remember correctly, it was the only open-source IDE that supported C# and ran on Linux. That was before C# and .NET were open-source and Mono was the only way to run C# apps on Linux. Things are way different now.

The best today is obviously nano. It has syntax highlighting, auto-indentation, and at some point they made it so Ctrl+S saves the file. What more do you need? (cut and paste still use weird shortcuts though)

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micro > nano

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vim > micro > nano

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In file size certainly, yes.

Vim’s size can vary considerably based on how it’s compiled. A minimal build might be a few hundred kilobytes, while a full-featured build with a GUI might be several megabytes. The CLI version is a bit smaller than micro though.

Micro is a relatively newer editor compared to Vim and Nano. Its binary, which includes all its dependencies, is larger than Nano but smaller than a fully-featured Vim. It’s typically around 15-20 MB.

Nano is lightweight and typically comes pre-installed on many Linux distributions. The binary size is usually less than 1 MB.

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