Wow, nice achievement! It's funny to see the amount of community effort around vscode to make it behave like vim.
I've never got to like oil.vim. Tried, but it doesn't stick.
I guess, partly because it doesn't solve a real problem for me: commandline (bash, zsh) with gnutools is good enough.
But mostly because doing stuff to files, for me, is more about the actions (commands, events) and less about the end result. With oil, it feels a bit like I describe the state I want in a text file (in a DSL) but my head keeps translating that from the actions I'd need to take. Probably just 30+ years of commandline thinking worn into my brain too deep.
Wow, nice achievement! It's funny to see the amount of community effort around vscode to make it behave like vim.
I've never got to like oil.vim. Tried, but it doesn't stick.
I guess, partly because it doesn't solve a real problem for me: commandline (bash, zsh) with gnutools is good enough.
But mostly because doing stuff to files, for me, is more about the actions (commands, events) and less about the end result. With oil, it feels a bit like I describe the state I want in a text file (in a DSL) but my head keeps translating that from the actions I'd need to take. Probably just 30+ years of commandline thinking worn into my brain too deep.