Now imagine similar augmentations for copy/pasting, deleting, and everything else you can do in Word but can't with pen and paper (including at the meta-level: there's a one-keystroke "repeat the last command I gave, whatever that is"). That's what modern editors give you. [8/N]
And, again, I'm interested that the best setups (for me, and I guess also for @jasoncummings86) are these stitched-together hybrids. Vim and Emacs have a large set of out-of-the-box commands, but in OS-like contexts where all sorts of customization etc. is possible. [3/N]
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(There's a old Emacs joke: it's "a very good operating system lacking only a decent text editor.") But now computers are so powerful that people are making new, awesome IDEs that can do almost literally unbelievable things. [4/N]
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...but they're also so powerful that these IDEs can have options that tack on all those out-of-the-box commands just as a single setting (and those IDEs are themselves infinitely configurable). And for me / many others, _that's_ the sweet spot. [5/N]
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