I gotta say vim. The editor by itself is great, but when you start applying the vim-like mindset to your toolbox (ie small, composable tools, vim bindings, keyboard centrism, etc) you really step up. That and window managers. I'm on i3 but really it's a matter of choice
I read this somewhere that if you ever wanted to generate an ASCII file with random text, ask a linux noob to open up vim, type something, save the file and exit without letting him know how :)
It's a bit of a joke, but Emacs has a very good vim emulator called evil-mode which gives you everything you could want from vim, plus all the Emacs stuff.
When you combine that with org-mode and org-evil then you basically have everything a person could ask for out of life, so long as that person is stunted and terrible.
The appeal of vim though is that it comes out of the box or can be easily installed on any server you may be sshing into. I love Emacs, but it doesn't have that. I use Emacs on my machine, but rely on vim anywhere else.
Seek! I like the INDEPENDENT one, including the screwdriver. Design wise the black Y shaped is the most agreeable to my eyeballs! But please, give me a break with that grey bottle-opener-carabiner-wrench ! That's design man!
I started with simple one with 81 keys. Lately we are building with my friend mutant of dactyl manuform. You can check it out here https://github.com/jsallan/flow
This is for typing/it development/etc
With 15 keys here's another philosophy named "layers". You have all keys on different layers. The same as "shift" transform one key into another the same way you map another key to activate next layer of keys. On first layer you have lower key, on the second upper keys, third layer digits, and so on. You can create more than three layers
webflow is one of my favorite software tools. it’s one of the first times i experienced the joy of being able to build stuff on the internet without really knowing anything about programming.
yeah i played around with it a bit, they have a really smooth AI onboarding flow for people to generate templates with a text prompt.
however, i found that webflow’s CMS functionality (which is the most critical thing for me) has many more integrations, making it easier to automate or bulk upload/edit CMS items.
Really interesting! How does the open source version works? it's publish the sites on webflow servers? Or it builds the site files to be published anywhere? Or both options are available when hitting that green "Publish" button?
evil-mode
which gives you everything you could want from vim, plus all the Emacs stuff.org-mode
and org-evil then you basically have everything a person could ask for out of life, so long as that person is stunted and terrible.ssh
ing into. I love Emacs, but it doesn't have that. I use Emacs on my machine, but rely on vim anywhere else.bottle-opener-carabiner-wrench
! That's design man!