IDEs With VIM Text Editing Capability?
An anonymous reader writes "I am currently looking to move from text editing with vim to a full fledged IDE with gdb integration, integrated command line, etc. Extending VIM with these capabilities is a mortal sin, so I am looking for a linux based GUI IDE. I do not want to give up the efficient text editing capabilities of VIM though. How do I have my cake and eat it too?"
Netbeans with the Vi Vim for netbeans plugin.
Netbeans is FOSS, runs on Windows, Linux and OS X. It handles Java, C/C++, PHP, Python, Ruby, Groovy and does a bunch of other stuff.
There is the viPlugin for Eclipse as well - I just happen to like Netbeans better.
The ActiveState folks list VI key bindings as a feature for their Komodo and Komodo Edit products. These are closed source though Komodo Edit is free as in beer. It is cross platform - covering the win/lin/mac world.
I'm sure there are other options but those are the largest projects I know of that do what you want.
It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
I know it's not out yet, but the katepart (the editor widget) already has a VI mode that supports most of the original commands and modal editing. Worth giving a try: the betas are getting better and better...
Umm vim supports plugins, and there is of course a GDB one.
Also there is an integrated command line called :! :%!whatever to replace it with output
or if you want to get more fancy you can open multiple buffers and
Vim easily integrates with the shell. You just have to know how to use both.
http://www.gnu.org/fun/jokes/ed.msg.html
if I want line 200 I type in 199j from the top..
Try 200G instead - works from anywhere in the file.
C-x C-s C-x k