Skip to main content
Expanded answer with reference to the difficulty of Emacs and Vim
Source Link
Daniel Pryden
  • 60.8k
  • 2
  • 22
  • 20

It's worth noting that Emacs isn't a text editor or IDE: it's a programming language platform for building a customized text editor or IDE.

Vim is not quite a platform in the same way that Emacs is, but it's still far more of a platform than traditional "out-of-the-box" IDEs like IntelliJ, Eclipse, or Visual Studio.

I have rarely seen a user of Eclipse or Visual Studio that has written code for extending it. However, nearly every serious user of Emacs or Vim ends up writing code to extend their editor eventually.

As a result, questions about these tools are very different. Questions about Eclipse or Visual Studio tend to be "which checkbox do I check in the configuration to get this behavior?" or "which plugin do I install to get this behavior?" Existing sites tend to handle those kinds of questions well.

Additionally, there is arguably less of a need for a Stack Exchange style Q&A platform for a tool that is easier to learn to use. Since Emacs and Vim are among the hardest tools to learn to use, it makes sense that they generate more Q&A activity.

It's worth noting that Emacs isn't a text editor or IDE: it's a programming language platform for building a customized text editor or IDE.

Vim is not quite a platform in the same way that Emacs is, but it's still far more of a platform than traditional "out-of-the-box" IDEs like IntelliJ, Eclipse, or Visual Studio.

I have rarely seen a user of Eclipse or Visual Studio that has written code for extending it. However, nearly every serious user of Emacs or Vim ends up writing code to extend their editor eventually.

It's worth noting that Emacs isn't a text editor or IDE: it's a programming language platform for building a customized text editor or IDE.

Vim is not quite a platform in the same way that Emacs is, but it's still far more of a platform than traditional "out-of-the-box" IDEs like IntelliJ, Eclipse, or Visual Studio.

I have rarely seen a user of Eclipse or Visual Studio that has written code for extending it. However, nearly every serious user of Emacs or Vim ends up writing code to extend their editor eventually.

As a result, questions about these tools are very different. Questions about Eclipse or Visual Studio tend to be "which checkbox do I check in the configuration to get this behavior?" or "which plugin do I install to get this behavior?" Existing sites tend to handle those kinds of questions well.

Additionally, there is arguably less of a need for a Stack Exchange style Q&A platform for a tool that is easier to learn to use. Since Emacs and Vim are among the hardest tools to learn to use, it makes sense that they generate more Q&A activity.

Source Link
Daniel Pryden
  • 60.8k
  • 2
  • 22
  • 20

It's worth noting that Emacs isn't a text editor or IDE: it's a programming language platform for building a customized text editor or IDE.

Vim is not quite a platform in the same way that Emacs is, but it's still far more of a platform than traditional "out-of-the-box" IDEs like IntelliJ, Eclipse, or Visual Studio.

I have rarely seen a user of Eclipse or Visual Studio that has written code for extending it. However, nearly every serious user of Emacs or Vim ends up writing code to extend their editor eventually.