| > because they believe it splits the Vim community and takes people power away from Vim development I don't understand this point, and I tried to parse it and still don't. (I understand that you are just relaying it). If vim maintainers don't want neovim to exist, they should have accepted the merges earlier. If they disagree with the merges (which I think they did), then that power doesn't belong in Vim anyways. edit: this reminds me of this conversation from years ago https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=14245705 Check DSMan195276's comments. And finally before I derail, I want to bring stuff back to the focus: RIP Braam. |
It's a very simple point to understand: whether the merges are good or not, the presence of a fork still "splits the Vim community and takes people power away from Vim development".
And if they're bad (which is the way they see it), they do it for no good reason too.
That's regardless of people "having the right to fork". Yes they do. But also yes, if they exercize that right, they do split a community and divert interest from a project to 2 projects.