- Joined
- Dec 17, 2019
Honestly, out of all the video editors on Windows I find Premiere Pro to work the best funnily enough. Resolve is okay-ish, but I did have issues trying to render clips with it. Vegas Pro has an annoying export system where if you want to render something non-standard you have to make a new preset, and Premiere Pro just works. And no matter which FOSS editor I tried to use, they all sucked even more, so no wonder people prefer Resolve on Linux. No I haven't tried using Blender for video editing.Vegas Pro on Windows
Vim has a natural learning curve, that once you overcome, you'll instinctively try to do Vim keybinds in software that doesn't use them since your brain will adjust to the Vim way of things. I even installed Vimium in my browser and developed the muscle memory for navigating websites with that. Nano is good as it's basically the Notepad/EDIT of Linux, something that edits text and is easy to use. Vim is good if you're willing to learn a new muscle memory, and then with practice and a bit of reading of Practical Vim you'll find it's text editing workflow indispensable. The dot command alone is a complete game changer. It's not that it makes you more productive, it's that with the right knowledge and mindset you'll be doing text edits faster.vim makes me more productive
There's a reason Emacs people use evil. Even they can't deny the mnemonic keybind system is superior for text editing than the Escape Meta Alt Control Shift clusterfuck.