Moolenaar.net
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Vim - Vi IMproved Vim web pages Vim download Vim the book Vim book errata
Vim is a professional text editor. It can be used to edit plain ASCII in a highly productive way. Although it is aimed at programmers, it can be used for many purposes.
Vim behaves like the standard Unix editor Vi, and adds many useful extensions. It is included in all major Linux distributions. Vim runs on many different operating systems, including MS-Windows, OS/2, many kinds of Unix, Amiga, VMS and Macintosh.
Advantages:Bram Moolenaar is the main author of Vim. Many other people help improving Vim by sending patches, doing ports and giving comments.
If you like Vim, consider sponsoring Vim.
There are several books available for Vim.
You can find more information about them
here.
Errata for the "The Vim book by Steve Oualline" book are
here.
Is Vim any good? Well, it has been voted "the best editor" and got several awards.
Readers of Linux Journal voted Vim to be their favorite Text Editor, in 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004 and 2005! You can find the results in the November issues and on-line for 2005, |
Vim has been selected as finalist in the editors category of the LinuxWorld
Editors' Choice Awards for 1999. Picture of the crystal award and the associated sign. |
The award was collected at the LinuxWorld conference by Wichert Akkerman, who makes the Debian version of Vim. A few weeks later we met in Utrecht with a bunch of Debian guys, where Wichert handed out the award for Vim and a few others for Debian. Here is a picture of the meeting, with the awards (Paul Slootman took the picture, therefore he's not on it).
At the Linuxworld expo in New York, February 2000, Vim was nominated for the slashdot Beanie Award in the category "Open source text editors". Other contestants were Emacs, Xemacs, Joe and Pico. Vim won! Info on the Beanie Awards The $2000 price has been donated to ICCF Holland, to help the orphans in Uganda. Info on ICCF Holland. |
On April 6, 2018, in Krakow, Poland, I have done a presentation called
This presentation is about the work done between Vim 8.0 and 8.1, mainly the Terminal window and terminal debugger. Also about the impactful changes done for each release.
The presentation can be viewed in PDF form
On February 13, 2007, in Mountain View, CA, USA, I have done a presentation called
You can download the presentation in PDF with notes (640 Kbyte). The DOI is: 10.13140/2.1.2204.9929
You can watch the video on
Youtube.
The presentation is about 45 minutes, with the Q&A it is about 80 minutes.
If you can't get this video to work, you can also download the
DIVX file.
Warning: this is 507 Mbyte!.
The article was re-published in Hacker Monthly Issue #33, February 2013. [the website has disappeared].
Translations: Russian by Coupofy, another one in Russian, Spanish and Indonesian
Here is one of the places where you can find the books mentioned:
Releasing version 8.0 and getting close to the 25th birthday inspired the writing of this article. It contains links to relevant info and can be used to convince a friend to start using Vim.
An interview with Bram Moolenaar in the Dutch weekly magazine Computable. This is in Dutch only. It was published 2002 March 15.
I wrote this article for the very first issue of the Free Software Magazine in China. You can now read it on-line. It's about the design of Vim, the future of open-source and charityware.
I have been interviewed by Juraj Bednar. This will be published in the Slovak computer magazine PCRevue. You can find the text here.
There is an interview with effervescence about Vim, with Sven Guckes and me. You can find it here.
This was handed out at the Linuxworld expo, February 2000 in New York.
On February 9 2002, I have given a presentation on Vim 6.0 for the NLLGG (Netherlands Linux users group). The slides are available here (540 Kbyte, only in Staroffice format!)
On October 10 2000, at the linux2000.nl conference in Ede, Holland, I have done a presentation called
On November 9 2000, at the NLUUG autumn conference in Ede, Holland, I have done a presentation called
You can download:
the paper in plain text (14 Kbyte).
the paper in MS-Word (43 Kbyte).
the paper in compressed PostScript (47 Kbyte).
the paper in PDF (24 Kbyte).
Aaron Müller made a German translation.
the presentation in Powerpoint (156 Kbyte).
the presentation in compressed PostScript (228 Kbyte).
the presentation in PDF (205 Kbyte).
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