The reason that people use (mac)vim is not necessarily the ‘powerful navigation keys’ etc. For me it’s the ability to deal with large files and the crazy indentation rules people use and I know it’s the same for quite some other users.
The way people work differs from person to person, the idea that someone should always just keep on trying, even if something doesn't feel right, is in my opinion useless. The real moral here is that people should accept that everybody is different and that it’s ‘ok’ for them to be different and how great it is that open-source software such as vim enables them to do so. Something that’s unfortunately always a bit harder for passionate users. (No insult intended!)
I definitely know that _I_ prefer to browse a project with a GUI that works like in the rest of my platform of choice, but I also know I’m very different from the average vim user :)
Agreed - this is pretty much the only reason MacVim lives on my machines. It handles huge files way better than anything else I've tried.
I can use vim. I know it pretty well. But the inescapable fact is that, for me, it's clunky and requires more thinking than just using a mouse and pointing at something, then typing what I want to type. I use it because I haven't found something better (and I'm sure it exists, I just haven't seen it).
The way people work differs from person to person, the idea that someone should always just keep on trying, even if something doesn't feel right, is in my opinion useless. The real moral here is that people should accept that everybody is different and that it’s ‘ok’ for them to be different and how great it is that open-source software such as vim enables them to do so. Something that’s unfortunately always a bit harder for passionate users. (No insult intended!)
I definitely know that _I_ prefer to browse a project with a GUI that works like in the rest of my platform of choice, but I also know I’m very different from the average vim user :)