On Sun, Feb 01, 2015 at 06:39:12PM +0100, [email protected] wrote:
> My god the idiocy of what you are writing, and you have no clue
> either.  I don't even have time to read the thing  because I am on a
> fucking terminal that times out every 30 seconds because the local
> internet has decided to play passmeon with itself.

    it's incredible that you're actually  writing  mails  that  are 500+
lines, and when someone takes time to answer you  to  half  of  what you
said, you're considering it's too long  and  not  worth  reading. That's
some kind of hypocrisis. However your local Internet sucks.

    Though you made me laugh with your first remark,  when  you  tell me
how idiotic is what I wrote. Indeed, that's so stupid to  actually learn
something and improve yourself.

> I saw you wrote something about "making progress".  Well if your life
> journey is about learning to use Vim, good luck with it.

    My life journey is not about learning to use Vim, but about learning
everyday new stuff. It happens that I'm always learning  more  about Vim
along the way, as much as I'm  discovering  new  tools,  new  ideas, new
languages and many other new stuff that makes me progress everyday  as a
thinking human being.

> I have better things to do with my time than to dedicate it to
> learning a tool instead of using the tool or any other tool for actual
> life purposes.

    You said you're a programmer, and I hope I'll never get to work with
you, as given what you say you're too  intellectually  lazy  to actually
try to learn something new or make any  progress.  And  I'm  not talking
about Vim, but Vim is one example amongs many other  hints  you  gave. I
guess you're not even interested in learning other  languages  than what
you already know? Because what's the  point?  It's  not  like  you could
become a better programmer than what you already are!

    When I happened to be teaching at people learning  programmation, my
first advice was to try a few editors or IDEs  out  to  make  their mind
about it, and discover, learn  as  much  as  they  can  of  that editor.
Because the more you know your editor,  and  your  dev  environment, the
more efficient you'll be at the other tasks you'll do.

    But I guess there's no point talking with  you,  as  you  won't move
from your trollesque  point  of  saying  the  tool  is  bad  when you're
actually too lazy to understand how and why it's been designed  that way
with a learning curve. If that tool was indeed that bad, do you think it
would still have such a wealthy community after 24 years,  and  39 years
for Vi?

    Sure the manual is heavy and also needs to be learned, but  isn't it
positive that almost every  single  feature  of  vim  is  documented? No
manual can be perfect, and it's always hard to find the  good questions,
but whatever you want the answer is in there!

    Anyway, I don't know why I'm again writing lengthy  stuff  you won't
read, as it looks like you're only there to stay  on  your  point saying
that a tool you admit not knowing well,  and  that  you're  too  lazy to
learn is necessarily not designed correctly because it's not working the
way you're expecting it to.

By the way, that's the definition of a troll.

And you broke my trollometer!

-- 
Guyzmo,
waiting for the murphy point

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