Replying to 8438a0ec...

Bram was by far the most prolific contributor to Vim (70x commits compared to 2nd prolific contributor).

https://github.com/vim/vim/graphs/contributors?from=2004-06-13&to=2023-08-05&type=c

With his departure, I wonder if this means the end of #Vim as we know it, with #Neovim taking over as the successor.

What do you think?

nostr:npub13dyy3r0j8duxhwduyxhw9yjkkf7eu2hw44nn3k0cuuzu9ldp2qqqllmtfc I think #neovim has been the successor for a long time already and things won't change for me at all. Almost all in my bubble use neovim over plain vim and have been for years.

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nostr:npub1hg2hvzx6sxxrwkk5a90eskxm9qu00lw26faq8yvdukfv7295uz6sv8k372 nostr:npub18dwq5tk6h4z0knlw8h697n8lpsxw92qutyvulgrk5wrz75jgq9csqrhmfk nostr:npub10aapch2g4grt6p9496js2xscnhqr85n7yzx07t4v9auqw3uzwktq86fzyl

Another opinion I would like to discuss is: with #lua, a mature, turing complete language, with a rich ecosystem, #neovim bet on being much more extensible and composable. It seems to me it is a direction similar to the one #Emacs took. To me, it's a very good news.

I just wonder if I'm the only one seeing this like that.