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I never said "newbie-friendliness," though I can see how that might have been implied by my last post. I said "user-friendliness", which I think also lends itself to easier uptake from novices. Sorry for the confusion.

I know vim quite well. I still consider it onerous and unpleasant to use, and I find claims of its "power" to be overstated; I have noted before and still think to be true that editing text isn't the hard part of my job. I am definitely suspicious of claims that "it'll still be there in ten years" to be hugely important; my editor might change in ten years, but Cmd-X will still be cut and Cmd-V will still be paste, you know what I mean? The specifics of exactly what text editor I use matter so much less to me than "does it not make me hate using it?".

All of that is an aside, however, and tangential to what I was saying: for me, the visceral reaction to both vim and git is not a pleasant one; I find them to be designed for people whose mental model with regards to computer interaction is alien to mine, and despite being capable with both I find such tools uncomfortable to use. I don't consider either user-friendly (and, I think, to most people), and while I don't begrudge those who prefer those tools, life is simply too short to spend my time squeezing blood out of that particular stone.




  > but Cmd-X will still be cut and Cmd-V will
  > still be paste
Says you. Didn't you hear? We've entered the post-PC era. ;)




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