Well I was spending too much time with configuration, and (this is the main reason I guess) configuration was very often broken, because plugins have changed too often, so I was continuously fixing the plugins, which was time-consuming and annoying. To be fair that was when lua support slowly stabilized, I think the situation got a little bit better, but even more so for helix (I’m using helix now for 2 years I think).
And also helix is fast, very fast (this was also a reason: instant feedback), you really feel, that everything there is done in the core implementation (no plugin system yet unfortunately, but I have almost everything I need currently with helix, unlimited undo + persistent session would be cool, but otherwise I’m happy).
Also after using it a little bit more, the kakoune inspired visual/selection first makes more sense IMO, it’s feels more intuitive (“darn, I miscalculated 3fs, so I’ll just press v and go to the next s manually”, or multiple cursors as selections, you see exactly what you’re doing, no cgn or stuff like that)
Helix editor was my gateway drug to neovim. May be helpful to others as well
Funny, I switched from neovim (after a decade of use) to helix…
What made you make the switch?
Well I was spending too much time with configuration, and (this is the main reason I guess) configuration was very often broken, because plugins have changed too often, so I was continuously fixing the plugins, which was time-consuming and annoying. To be fair that was when lua support slowly stabilized, I think the situation got a little bit better, but even more so for helix (I’m using helix now for 2 years I think).
And also helix is fast, very fast (this was also a reason: instant feedback), you really feel, that everything there is done in the core implementation (no plugin system yet unfortunately, but I have almost everything I need currently with helix, unlimited undo + persistent session would be cool, but otherwise I’m happy).
Also after using it a little bit more, the kakoune inspired visual/selection first makes more sense IMO, it’s feels more intuitive (“darn, I miscalculated 3fs, so I’ll just press v and go to the next s manually”, or multiple cursors as selections, you see exactly what you’re doing, no
cgn
or stuff like that)