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by jjice
1023 days ago
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I used to subscribe to this idea too, but I've since tried to leave it behind. I ended up just not using tools that gave me a benefit the majority of the time. Ripgrep is a great example. So much better than grep IMO but not going to be on that remote machine. When I need to, I'll adapt to egrep. Same with vim plugins. I ended up just not using stuff I liked so I wouldn't get used to it. Felt backwards to me. If you spend a ton of time on remote machines you won't get control of, I can absolutely get it though. I think as long as you know the backup and you can adapt, we'll be fine most of the time. Knowing the idioms to get you part of the way there to the convenient functionality is a good enough mental polyfill. |
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In THAT situation the constant pain of differences in behaviour was reduced by selecting a common nonstandard tool. It is really the same argument that you're making: that being able to work roughly the same everywhere has great value.