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First and foremost, because they asked for them. They built a community that could support a separate site and went through our process for getting such a site built.

Second, these tools are sufficiently complicated to require highly specialized knowledge. If you are at all used to standard desktop GUI tropes, then Visual Studio, VS Code, Notepad++, etc are things that you can do basic stuff in. You know where to find menu options, you have some idea how to do standard operations like copy and pastpaste, etc.

Emacs and Vim aren't like that. Vim is infamously obtuse for the novice user. Emacs is practically a development platform. Both tools require a fairly high degree of knowledge before you can achieve minimal functionality. And both tools have an exceptional degree of depth.

Nobody makes a game that executes in Visual Studio. Well, I suppose a plugin could, but you don't see that happen with any regularity.

This is also why we have a website for TeX, but not for Microsoft Word or Libre Office Writer. Yeah, they "technically" do "the same thing" to a first order approximation, but you're really talking about the difference between shooting a bullet and throwing it.

Third, on a smaller note, there are a lot of emotions around Emacs and Vim that don't really exist for other tools. Questions regarding some complexity of one of them can occasionally attract comments from passionate users of the other tool. That's a lot less likely to happen if they live on their own site.

First and foremost, because they asked for them. They built a community that could support a separate site and went through our process for getting such a site built.

Second, these tools are sufficiently complicated to require highly specialized knowledge. If you are at all used to standard desktop GUI tropes, then Visual Studio, VS Code, Notepad++, etc are things that you can do basic stuff in. You know where to find menu options, you have some idea how to do standard operations like copy and past, etc.

Emacs and Vim aren't like that. Vim is infamously obtuse for the novice user. Emacs is practically a development platform. Both tools require a fairly high degree of knowledge before you can achieve minimal functionality. And both tools have an exceptional degree of depth.

Nobody makes a game that executes in Visual Studio. Well, I suppose a plugin could, but you don't see that happen with any regularity.

This is also why we have a website for TeX, but not for Microsoft Word or Libre Office Writer. Yeah, they "technically" do "the same thing" to a first order approximation, but you're really talking about the difference between shooting a bullet and throwing it.

Third, on a smaller note, there are a lot of emotions around Emacs and Vim that don't really exist for other tools. Questions regarding some complexity of one of them can occasionally attract comments from passionate users of the other tool. That's a lot less likely to happen if they live on their own site.

First and foremost, because they asked for them. They built a community that could support a separate site and went through our process for getting such a site built.

Second, these tools are sufficiently complicated to require highly specialized knowledge. If you are at all used to standard desktop GUI tropes, then Visual Studio, VS Code, Notepad++, etc are things that you can do basic stuff in. You know where to find menu options, you have some idea how to do standard operations like copy and paste, etc.

Emacs and Vim aren't like that. Vim is infamously obtuse for the novice user. Emacs is practically a development platform. Both tools require a fairly high degree of knowledge before you can achieve minimal functionality. And both tools have an exceptional degree of depth.

Nobody makes a game that executes in Visual Studio. Well, I suppose a plugin could, but you don't see that happen with any regularity.

This is also why we have a website for TeX, but not for Microsoft Word or Libre Office Writer. Yeah, they "technically" do "the same thing" to a first order approximation, but you're really talking about the difference between shooting a bullet and throwing it.

Third, on a smaller note, there are a lot of emotions around Emacs and Vim that don't really exist for other tools. Questions regarding some complexity of one of them can occasionally attract comments from passionate users of the other tool. That's a lot less likely to happen if they live on their own site.

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Nicol Bolas
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First and foremost, because they asked for them. They built a community that could support a separate site and went through our process for getting such a site built.

Second, these tools are sufficiently complicated to require highly specialized knowledge. If you are at all used to standard desktop GUI tropes, then Visual Studio, VS Code, Notepad++, etc are things that you can do basic stuff in. You know where to find menu options, you have some idea how to do standard operations like copy and past, etc.

Emacs and Vim aren't like that. Vim is infamously obtuse for the novice user. Emacs is practically a development platform. Both tools require a fairly high degree of knowledge before you can achieve minimal functionality. And both tools have an exceptional degree of depth.

Nobody makes a game that executes in Visual Studio. Well, I suppose a plugin could, but you don't see that happen with any regularity.

This is also why we have a website for TeX, but not for Microsoft Word or Libre Office Writer. Yeah, they "technically" do "the same thing" to a first order approximation, but you're really talking about the difference between shooting a bullet and throwing it.

Third, on a smaller note, there are a lot of emotions around Emacs and Vim that don't really exist for other tools. Questions regarding some complexity of one of them can occasionally attract comments from passionate users of the other tool. That's a lot less likely to happen if they live on their own site.