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Yeah, I'm a bit put off by the comments there.

Like, yeah. Neovim is faster and smaller than VSCode, by a lot on smaller hardware. And I'm pretty sure I could summon my experiences from 5 years ago or so of really putting effort into my vim setup to have many of the goodies of a modern IDE, like LSP support, search, highlighting and so forth. But sorry, if I do that, I'd have to spend like 8 hours to integrate a new language based on past experiences. Instead of just dumping an extension into a new derived profile in vscode and be done with it. And then we think about teammates who aren't as fluent in vim. Even if my Neovim/Vim setup might be faster or lower input latency at times, it won't give me that day of initial integration back, ever.

And honestly, if I think about slow editors, I think about old Eclipse builds. Maybe with bad plugins, bad Maven versions, or horribly customized to some embedded or enterprise or academic use case. Bonus points if used on shitty corporate hardware. That's a level of slow called "Looking up documentation in a browser ends up being faster than auto complete". Compared to those molochs, VScode is not slow at all if you look out a bit for plugin overload.




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