---
vim: et ts=2 sts=2 sw=2
title: slcon6 talk: acme changed my live
keywords: [vim, ui, pipe, unix, plan9, acme]
author: Marc Chantreux <eiro@phear.org>
---
Acme is the editor of choice in plan9. I don't use it but when trying it, I realized that vim is much more than an editor: it's an open window to my whole digital world: A perfect multipurpose UI. Let me show you ... (see the conference site or the the video of the talk).
you can clone this repo from
https://github.com/eiro/talk-acme-changed-my-life
slides are here. also the slides from the workshop i run with michael (editing xml/html with vim) are here
you can install and learn about slides.vim to navigate slide by slide with PgUp/PgDown but it's not needed if you just want to reproduce the examples. edit the file and run the examples (tip: you can use "q:" instead of q so you can copy/paste commands).
the smart-columns
example needs the smart-columns binary. sorry about that.
to test the process manager example, you can link it as a package
(:h packages
for more informations).
mkdir ~/.vim/pack/whatever/start/
ln -s kill.vim !$
don't hesitate if you want some help. also feedbacks and patches are really welcome.
happy viming. marc
Not enough to pretend I actually do: Emacs, like vim, is really powerfull and probably needs years to be mastered. I traveled this journey with vim to a point it will be hard to any other editor to compete.
- I really love the modal edition
- I like the vim affordance to cooperate with other tools instead of
being extended with large elisp codebae. Nowadays, most of my vim macros are
just thin wrappers (using
!motion
as filter,:r!
or:w !
) to shell commands I can reuse in other contexts (from my CLI or from larger scripts).
As examples:
- I wrote common-arguments-wrappers as a way to be more productive with vim but now use them from the CLI as well.
- I started using ctags with vim but this command is useful in other situations.
However, I'll be more than happy to show my usecases to an experimented emacs user so I can learn about the emacs way but I guess I will not switch anyway.
many. including the plan9 ones obviously. I really would like to know more about vis because SRE are awesome.