Having worked with Lisp in the path, I didn't get that "interactive"
feel with VimClojure. I didn't really enjoy using Nailgun either. That
being said, VimClojure is certainly a great plugin. I also have been
wanting to get used to the keybindings for emacs because of my daily
work. I have to use Visual Studio 2008 daily and it has emacs
keybindings built-in. I don't really want to have to pay $99 for ViEmu
and VsVim is only for Visual Studio 2010. Anyway, it isn't that
VimClojure was bad, emacs is just the best fit for me right now.

On May 27, 5:31 am, Wolodja Wentland <babi...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Thu, May 26, 2011 at 20:37 -0700, J.R. Garcia wrote:
> > I compiled a new version of emacs from source and started it up.
> > clojure-jack-in just worked flawlessly. This is stupid simple! Thanks
> > for your hard work! It's much appreciated for emacs newcomers like me
> > (I'm a vim user)!
>
> I am curious: Why don't you use the excellent vimclojure plugin for vim?
>
> If you decide to do so, I would also recommend the paredit implementation in
> the slimv plugin.
> --
>   .''`.     Wolodja Wentland    <babi...@gmail.com>
>  : :'  :
>  `. `'`     4096R/CAF14EFC
>    `-       081C B7CD FF04 2BA9 94EA  36B2 8B7F 7D30 CAF1 4EFC
>
>  signature.asc
> < 1KViewDownload

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