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by belfalas 1635 days ago
Folks with disabilities would not be considered in the snowflake category. If a team member needs a certain setup then you have to support them, of course.

Snowflake behavior is being the person who just can't use the terminal if it isn't "set -o vi" keys. Or insisting that Caps Lock be mapped to Ctrl/Esc/etc.

2 comments

But if you are used to Caps Lock being mapped to Ctrl/Esc/etc and then suddenly it’s not it is actually pretty jarring. I don’t think that’s special snowflake. The problem is that it’s not absolutely trivial for whoever’s currently using the keyboard to put it in whatever mode they’re used to.

Or that people are sharing a physical keyboard and having this problem at all. You can pair program with more than one keyboard.

'Dealing' with Esc for Vim would fall under RSI prevention in my book. Using Vim almost necessitates some form of easier switching modes; swapping Caps Lock, `jj`, etc. are all considered valid and 'normal' for the general Vim community and to say only one or even none of the options are "okay" in the company, well, unless it was my preference this would be an immediate resignation from me. That or the company better be shelling out and allowing time for employees to configure programmable keyboards they can pop in with their keys hardware configured.
Caps lock has to be mapped to the command key, since my IBM Model M physically doesn’t have a command key.

I guess you can call keyboards snowflakey too, but I don’t see why anyone should dictate what keyboard I use in my own home.