On Wednesday 13 September 2006 23:23, Bob Beck wrote: > ... [various other misinformed half truths] ...
Not so, maybe you did not read it... > > * Out of date vi, harder to navigate and use, poor visual feedback. > > vi is completely current. I believe you are thinking of "vim" which > a bunch of linux distros install, and stupidly, alias to vi - it's not > the same thing. It is in ports, and you can install it on openbsd > quite well. Quite a number of developers who are in all other ways I > consider perfectly sane and normal individuals even use it. Ah, yes of course. Right you are! That link to vim can be misleading. > vi has 25 years of history behind it. When I'm a sysadmin and type > vi, I want vi with all it's ususal idiosyncracies so that it's > basically the same no matter what system I'm using, OpenBSD, Solaris, > AIX, HP/UX, RiscOS, etc. etc. etc. (except Dead Rat Linux derivatives That's probably as good an answer I can get why many use it. But, I prefer the occational ease of use when vim is available. Especially since it does not create any problem for me skipping between different vi/vim. I've not found it anything but a boon when I'm being a sysadmin. My reference to coding with vi/vim means usually working on scripts, and config files. In those scenarios I'll use what get's the job done the easiest, unless it's a security risk like telnet. The core part of the OBSD community is pretty hardcore which is good. But as one can see in the threads there are a lot of other users including even windows people who have never heard of vi before trying out some Unice. I don't get very emotional about either one and try to keep things simple. I'm curious to see how many not equally hard core users prefer vi over vim when having a choice. -- Steve Szmidt "To enjoy the right of political self-government, men must be capable of personal self-government - the virtue of self-control. A people without decency cannot be secure in its liberty. From the Declaration Principles