I use Vim, not neoVim. Combined with Tmux it's great. Any strong arguments in favor of neoVim?
1. Read Dijkstra's material: - learn about contract oriented programming, pre- and post-conditions and invariants 2. Learn about functional programming and lambda calculus 3. Read Joe Armstrong’s dissertation
let's look at requirements first: solid, stable, secure, KISS, small, best of breed applications instead of trying to include everything, vanilla kernel, not a patched one! yes friends, it's Slackware I'm talking about
I use Vim, not neoVim. Combined with Tmux it's great. Any strong arguments in favor of neoVim?
1. Read Dijkstra's material: - learn about contract oriented programming, pre- and post-conditions and invariants 2. Learn about functional programming and lambda calculus 3. Read Joe Armstrong’s dissertation
let's look at requirements first: solid, stable, secure, KISS, small, best of breed applications instead of trying to include everything, vanilla kernel, not a patched one! yes friends, it's Slackware I'm talking about