> > - The menubar and toolbar can be removed via an option setting (two
> > flags in 'guioptions'). Not so for the menubar on any "modern" terminal
> > emulator.
>
> ...xcfe4-terminal and gnome-terminal can hide the menubar, for example.

With shymenu[1], the menu bar is shown only when pressing alt + some
accelerator key. You thus get the extra screen estate without losing
the menu bar's functionality.

One argument pro gvim is that you can easily switch between different
settings. I often switch between a view with a small font plus scroll
bars (for displaying several windows side by side) and a second view
with a larger font minus scroll bar and minus window title bar (for
writing). gvim is one of the best editors for working on a terminal
but I wouldn't want to miss the gui if I have a choice.


[1] http://www.vim.org/scripts/script.php?script_id=2437

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