Should I learn how to use this?

Should I learn how to use this?

of course. It will make everything easier.

Org Mode is the most insane shit ever.

Yes

Yes. It's pretty good.

sure, its worth it, but vim is better :)

by learning emacs lisp

no, don't waste time
learn vim instead

>does more than vim and has evil mode
>vim's still better
Yeah, nah.

vim is more than just the keybinds, it fits in with the environment

Emacs doesn't have to fit in, it is the environment.

Yes, you MUST.

It depends.
As a **text editor** it's less efficient than vi and vim but as a base for an **IDE** it's miles better.

Learning Emacs transfers over to mg though, which is basically Emac's vi.

Honestly, at this point if you don't know it I'd say don't bother. You'd be better off learning how to better use a "workplace-sanctioned" IDE. In terms of programming, they're pretty much at par with a customized emacs install, you probably already know and use other programs for the non-programming parts of emacs, and the memory requirements aren't a big deal anymore now that programmers consider 16 GB RAM standard for their home computers and might have 32GB+ on their workstations on the job.

If you're already invested in the emacs ecosystem and know it well, it's hard to justify giving up, but if you aren't already in it then don't bother.

Emacs + EVIL

Shit is like concaine once you get hooked. The thing even supports WebKit.

emacs fits into *nix just as well as vim

prove me wrong

>and the memory requirements aren't a big deal anymore now that programmers consider 16 GB RAM standard for their home computers and might have 32GB+ on their workstations on the job.

The problem is that they also consider the same of average home users.

It's not POSIX standard

checked
neither is vim technically

That's true, but vi is. Emacs doesn't have that, as far as I'm aware

Might as well

Learn a bit of vim as well

Keep focused on productivity, not dickwaving

either way, just being a part of the standard isn't much. it's a "base" of software, it's meant to be minimal

>Works on my machine