|
|
|
|
|
by giovannibajo1
4197 days ago
|
|
I agree that Emacs has many nice features that come with 30 years of development, but I also thing that those features have a bias towards older paradigms/languages of programming, and thus the advantages reduce a lot and/or there are deficiencies if you move into newer technology stacks. Morevoer, even if Emacs is a LISP machine, it doesn't give it any super-power that can't be replicated in other editors; I mean, it of course gives it flexibility to use it as a mail reader, that's true, but within the editor itself, there's nothing game-changing. I showed features that are either very close, or a bit worse, or a bit better, made with an editor which is not a LISP machine. I think we can agree that anything that you mentioned can be implemented in Sublime as a plugin; if it's not there out of the box, point taken that the ecosystem is more mature, but it doesn't show an inherent gap that can't be filled, it only shows where development effort is being focused on. For Sublime, surely it's not C/C++. |
|