The comment does well in providing context and arguments.

Lets go back to the closest thing we have for requirements for this editor…Default CLI Editor - Feature Exploration!. This discussion was based on the current state of windows and was not concerned with UNIX.

Being a simple text editor, it should not hallucinate, it should not add text one did not type, it should not change the text that was typed. If the user typed a tab character, it was because the user wanted a tab character. If you want four spaces then type four spaces.

edit should by default work like the original namesake and not hallucinate or add characters that were not typed or make assumptions.

Where do you draw the line on “smart” features? Tab should not add indent spaces? Encoding or newline mechanisms? Determining EOF newline?

  • @Kissaki@programming.devOP
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    66 days ago

    Given the announcement of edit replacing the old 32-bit MS-DOS edit.com with minimal footprint, I was surprised Microsoft considered multi-platform to even be in-scope.

    I guess, given it’s Rust, it was simple to say “sure, why not”. But this ticket shows that you automatically have to discuss and handle multi-platform questions that arise.

  • @aubeynarf@lemmynsfw.com
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    56 days ago

    The things the author mentioned drive me nuts about visual studio…. Especially trivial completions, like brace pairing, their thirst to add these newb-crutches leads me to backspacing and retyping over and over again, trying to figure out what the editor did that I didn’t even notice and how to undo it. For something that is literally a 20ms muscle memory action for any experienced programmer.

    • @Kissaki@programming.devOP
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      6 days ago

      Most of those can be disabled in Visual Studio, though, right?

      I think I may have disabled some of those kinds of conveniences/automatisms.

    • @Kissaki@programming.devOP
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      5 days ago

      Metapad is a small, fast and completely free text editor for Windows (95/98/NT/XP/Vista/7) with similar features to Microsoft Notepad but with many extra (and rather useful) features. It was designed to completely replace Notepad since it includes all of Notepad’s features and much, much more.

      Oh, that’s cool, in only 200 kB! It’s a GUI app, though.

  • @arisunz@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    16 days ago

    Honestly, pleasantly surprised that this piece of software exists. I didn’t think that Microsoft’s policy of “shove ‘AI’ into as many places as possible” was compatible with things such as having a functional text editor.

    /s