Here is a message from his family
R.I.P. Bram.
I use VIm every day, I enjoy using it, I am still in awe when discovering stuff, still after 17y!
That’s very sad to hear. Bram had a significant impact on me and how I use my computer. Rust zacht, Bram.
This news hit me hard this morning. Bram’s work has directly benefited my career for decades. He was a good human being who did good things. RIP Bram
RIP ☹️
what an amazing editor he developed on top of vi, he’ll be remembered
:f For the sophisticated users, for the gen pop :q!
Type :f to pay respects.
:f
:f
:f
:f
:f
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RIP and thanks for all the hard work I’ve benefited from over the last decade.
I’ll think of this man while explaining vim to my new hire next week.
He has left his mark in a way that few are able to
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Technically, that is not vim specific, conning from sed and ed, but definitely worked in vim as well as all vi clones
This is why it works so well. It’s also one of the reasons I prefer vi over other text editors. It isn’t always the most logical which commands and keys do what, but I like the consistency.
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I’ve worked in a few places that were full of Linux nerds (including my current job). We totally use sed style replacements and joke about vim escape keys (especially the classic
:q
). So you just need nerdier friends (as in ramped up to 11).deleted by creator
Pretty much any program I use I try to shift over to vim style keys. This guy’s reach went far beyond vim to me.
The hjkl keys came from Bill Joy when he wrote vi. The terminal he was using had arrows printed on those keys because it didn’t have dedicated arrow keys. It was a natural progression to reuse those keys for navigation.
vim was a huge improvement over vi. To where it became the defacto replacement. Some distros even shipped vim as a replacement for vi. That was because the Linux Standard Base required vi to be present.
Still a huge influence. vi was a bit painful to use when coming from vim. Would hjkl have died out if it wasn’t for vim? IDK. I think it would have been relegated to a niche corner of the unix/linux world.
The terminal he was using had arrows printed on those keys because it didn’t have dedicated arrow keys.
That terminal was also responsible for ~ used as home dir in path and ^ as beginning of string in regex.
Wow TIL
RIP, Mr. Bram Moolenaar.
Thank you for the VIM.
Now the time has come for the VIM future.
https://joshtronic.com/2018/08/12/will-vim-die-with-bram-moolenaar/
Or we could all just move to nano and be less frustrated.
Damn people here really hate nano 😂
Na, it’s just that a memorial post is a time to pause the editor wars, if only for a moment, and pay respect.
Nah I’ll pass on that, nano feels dirty.
I’m rarely as frustrated as when something opens with
nano
when I’m expectingVim
.
I mean it was on a response with a link detailing the single threaded nature of vim development… I don’t think it was inappropriate
I started with nano, learnt vim and now using neovim.
I am waiting for neovim 1.0, using vim until there.
Neovim is stable even though it is still using minor version number.
The eco system booms after 0.5 (lua support, lsp and treesitter) and after lazy.nvim.
Dang.
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Rest in peace, Bram Moolenaar! Thank you for your work, I use vim every day.
I loved him in jackass.
Angry upvote