• GoodEye8@lemm.ee
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    3 days ago

    In lazyvim a vertical line, with no crossings, is still broken, as it is two pipes separated by the line space height.

    My bad. I literally didn’t notice that single pixel between the two lines.

    No, I’m saying it’s trash because it CANNOT do something basic like drawing a continuous vertical line, because it is hamstrung by using the interface of a typewriter. A git branch is just one readily available example of a situation where something extremely basic like drawing a continuous line would make sense.

    So it’s trash because it doesn’t look like how you want it to look like. Got it.

    I can’t cite internal market research that is under NDA. I can point you to basic courses on design and UX, point you to information on concepts like cognitive overload, and point out to you the multiple trillion dollar software companies that got to where they are entirely through paying attention to little UX details that backend nerds previously claimed didn’t matter and were user skill issues.

    Sure. I’d say you would understand me not taking the word of someone who has no problem being confidently wrong, but somehow I doubt you’d understand.

    Bruh, why would you even try and talk out of your ass like this? I am literally using jsCad and VsCode to do my personal 3d printing modelling, and I literally got my start programming using first VS, then VSCode, to build 3d modelling software for Autodesk. Not sure if you’re aware of this but modern websites have this little thing called WebGL that lets them display these little things called jraphics.

    Sorry. I made an invalid assumption because I’ve never had an actual need for anything like that. But hey, I never said VIM needs to do everything VsCode can. In fact I think I’ve been pretty open that you should use whatever tool suits the job and and my argument has been that for software development VIM is just as good as vsCode. The fact that you want to keep your jscad inside VS code is your personal preference, you can just as easily keep in the browser and switch between the terminal an browser. I don’t get your need to die on the smallest of hills to be right but if that’s all you want then go be right. I couldn’t care less.