796

What practical, objective differences are there between Emacs and Vim? For example, what can be done using one but not the other (or done more easily with one than the other)? What should I know in order to choose one to learn?

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  • 6
    If you use a Mac (OSX), then you will find that many basic emacs cursor movement commands work pretty much everywhere. (For example they work here where I am typing this comment into the web page.) So for Mac users, there is a system-wide benefit to learning at least the following subset of emacs: ^A ^B ^D ^E ^F ^K ^L ^N ^O ^P ^T ^V ^Y
    – Matt
    Mar 2, 2014 at 11:46
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    @JamesAnderson: in my experience it's the opposite. Been using vim for 2.5 years, then switched to emacs. The emacs people mostly just don't care... "whatever works for you". Here is what ,salespitch says in #emacs <fsbot> We aren't gonna lie. Emacs sucks. Some of us tolerate it, but we can't tell you if YOU'LL be able to. Try it and make up your own mind.
    – Silex
    Apr 14, 2014 at 7:53
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    Emacs is definitely a great operating system, but lacking only a decent editor. Mar 30, 2018 at 20:55
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    @JimmyM.G.Lim No, it uses the current pager on the system. If you run PAGER=cat man then man will display text directly to the screen.
    – S.S. Anne
    May 20, 2019 at 22:13
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    @JimmyM.G.Lim the default PAGER is less, usually, whose keys are vim-inspired. That’s not man. It’s less. Oct 11, 2019 at 12:35

30 Answers 30

590

(the text below is my opinion, it should not be taken as fact or an insult)

With Emacs you are expected to have it open 24/7 and live inside the program, almost everything you do can be done from there. You write your own extensions, use it for note-taking, organization, games, programming, shell access, file access, listening to music, web browsing. It takes weeks and weeks till you will be happy with it and then you will learn new stuff all the time. You will be annoyed when you don't have access to it and constantly change your config. You won't be able to use other peoples emacs versions easily and it won't just be installed. It uses Lisp, which is great. You can make it into anything you want it to be. (anything, at all)

With Vim, it's almost always pre-installed. It's fast. You open up a file do a quick edit and then quit. You can work with the basic setup if you are on someone else's machine. It's not quite so editable, but it's still far better than most text editors. It recognizes that most of the time you are reading/editing not typing and makes that portion faster. You don't suffer from emacs pinkie. It's not so infuriating. It's easier to learn.

Even though I use Emacs all day every day (and love it) unless you intend to spend a lot of time in the program you choose I would pick vim

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    W.r.t not having it available: I suggest putting your .emacs and .emacs.d in a source control repo, and so getting your perfect Emacs setup is simply a matter of a checkout. Aug 16, 2010 at 23:49
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    Both emacs and vim can suffer from what is described above: both can be configured to the point where they are unrecognizable compared to their vanilla forms. Also, I second the use of a vcs. Apr 2, 2014 at 0:09
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    What systems do you work on, @Radu? I've never seen a real-life system in the 2010s that had real vi instead of vim aliased to that. Feb 19, 2015 at 11:48
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    Maybe Vim is easier to learn than Emacs, but it's incredibly confusing the first time you start it up if you have no previous experience with it! I had to use google to be able to close it down, and still had to try several times to get it right. Jun 30, 2015 at 21:39
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    Never underestimate the "pre-installed" perk of VIM: it's almost always available wherever you go, and its usable with little/no customization. I use it all the time when sshing to other machines. This is why I learned it first—that, and because my friends knew VIM and could help me. (Don't underestimate friends' support either!)
    – jvriesem
    Aug 25, 2015 at 19:13
168

Vim is not a shell. And it does not communicate well with subprocesses. This is nearly by design, whereas in Emacs, these elements are included by design. This means that some stuff, like embedding a debugger or an interpreter (yielding a sort of IDE), is difficult in Vim.

Also, Emacs shortcuts are mainly accessed through modifiers, and obviously the Vim interface is famously modal, giving access to an absurd amount of direct keys for manipulation.

Emacs used to be the only editor of the two that was programmable, and while Vim has a lot of weird levels to its programmability, with the addition of Python and Ruby bindings (and more, I forget), Vim is also programmable in most ways you'd care for.

I use Vim, and I'm fairly happy with it.

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    Small update: Vim supports way better communication with sub-processes since version 8.0 and 8.1 even introduced terminal buffers, so it is getting a bit closer to emacs in thar regard. Aug 16, 2018 at 6:48
134

Vim:

  • better as a simple editor (fewer keys required for simple tasks)
  • more active scripting community - internal language: vimscript
  • one central repository of scripts, plugins, color schemes, ...
  • also extensible in python, ruby
  • can be made portable (emacs has some problems with that)

Emacs:

  • non modal by default (most of today's editors have taken this approach). Though there is evil-mode which emulates vim behavior.
  • more powerful language for extending it (elisp is a full blown language, and in emacs you can practically redefine everything; while in vim you cannot redefine build in functions of the editor. On the downside, vimscript is relatively similar to today's dynamic languages while elisp doesn't resemble pretty much anything)
  • more extendible
  • excellent support for GNU tools (the bunch of them)

Personally, I prefer vim - it is small, does what it's supposed to do, and when I wish a full blown IDE I open VS. Emacs's approach of being an editor which wants to be an IDE (or should I say, an OS), but is not quite, is IMHO, outdated. In the old days having a email client, ftp client, tetris, ... whatnot in one package (emacs) made some sense ... nowadays, it doesn't anymore.

Both are however a topic of religious discussions among the programmer and superuser community users, and in that respect, both are excellent for starting flame wars if put in contact (in the same sentence / question).

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    "better as an editor" is pretty vague. I'd be interested in seeing reasons why.
    – Allen
    Sep 16, 2009 at 0:38
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    @Allen - What is vague in it ? I rarely meet users of both vim and emacs, who have a problem with that statement. Even hardcore emacs users usually accept it as a fact. Have you used both editors ? I believe it is relatively obvious that vim has an advantage in the aspect of text editing features.
    – Rook
    Sep 16, 2009 at 0:58
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    I am incredulous that anyone would accept that as a fact. As a long time user of both emacs and plain VI, I have used vim a few times - but "better as an editor" has to go to emacs in my mind if for no other reason than a far wider selection of major and minor modes to help you as you type. Sep 16, 2009 at 1:42
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    Vim is better as an editor because manipulating text requires less movement of your hands and fingers than emacs, at least that is my experience. Sep 16, 2009 at 1:53
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    But that aside, effectively vim is better suited for editing: line numbers, visual mode, manipulation wint1.kaist.ac.kr/files/attach/images/59/450/… . FCOL, I had trouble getting emacs just to scroll one line at a time.
    – Rook
    Sep 16, 2009 at 2:58
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If you are looking for an objective analysis of both the editors, look at their origins and the philosophy behind their respective designs. Think, which one would suit you better and learn it (and learn it and learn it, because it takes time before you being to discover its true utility as against any IDE). An Introduction to Display Editing with Vi was written by Bill Joy and Mark Horton and he explains why he choose modal design and rationale for various key strokes ( it helps me to remember that CTRL-W +W (will switch to next Window and it will same for CTRL W+ CTRL W, just in case you held the CTRL key for a longer duration.

Here is a link to Emacs timeline and has the reference to Multics Emacs paper. Hereis RMS paper on Emacs, where I see the stress is on a programmable text editor (even way back in 1981 and before).

I have not read the emacs papers, but have read Bill Joy's vi paper a couple of times. Both are old, but still you will get the philosophy and you might choose to use the current tool (vim 7.x or emacs 25?)

Edit: I forgot to mention that it takes patience and imagination to read both these papers as it takes you back in time while reading it. But it is worth.

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  1. Vim was always faster to start up than Emacs. I'm saying that on any machine, out-of-the-box installs of Vim will start up faster than out-of-the-box installs of Emacs. And I tend to think that after a moderate amount of customisation of either one, Vim will still start up faster than Emacs.

  2. After that, the other practical difference was Emacs' modes. They make your life tremendously easier when editing XML, C/C++/Java/whatever, LaTeX, and most popular languages you can think of. They make you want to keep the editor open for long sessions and work.

All in all, I'll say that Vim pulls you to it for short, fast editing tasks; while Emacs encourages you to dive in for long sessions.

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    I don't think modes makes life easier, in the contrary. And Larry Tesler thinks the same. Apr 16, 2014 at 19:06
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    How do Emacs's modes help with coding? (I'm new to it...)
    – jvriesem
    Aug 25, 2015 at 19:11
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    Long time ago I switched from vi to emacs for four reasons: (a) one click to get to the next compiler error, (b) gdb integration, (c) grep and find-grep. Is it possible to do these things in vim now?
    – uuu777
    May 26, 2017 at 17:57
  • "Vim was always faster to start up than Emacs" -- if you keep an emacs server running, tarting emacs-client is very fast. I have scripts for that, that I replicate (using git) on all my machines. (I *do * also use vim, actually; it always depends on where I am, and what the task is)
    – Jay
    Jan 7, 2019 at 16:29
  • "Vim was always faster to start up than Emacs" -- also, with use-package and its :defer option, my Emacs opens almost immediately. I even gave up using emacsclient.
    – Jay
    May 14, 2020 at 19:24
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VI is always available and will run on the most crippled, single user mode, broken graphics, no keymap, slow link machine - so it's worth knowing how to edit simple files in it just for sysadmin tasks.

Emacs is a complete user interface in an editor. The idea is that you fire up Emacs when you start the machine and never leave it. It's possible to have thousands of sessions present.

Whether learning the capabilities of Emacs are worth it compared to using a GUI editor/IDE and using something like python/awk/etc for extra tasks is up to you.

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    I know VI for just those reasons - but these days I would say it's pretty unlikely you'd encounter a UNIX system without at least a basic EMACS installation, and it can make a poor shell environment more tolerable. Sep 16, 2009 at 1:49
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    Or, jam busybox into an initrd and debug a broken storage driver for the boot device, so early in the init process that all you have is the initial ram disk, and yet you still have an editor -- vi.
    – smcameron
    Sep 16, 2009 at 4:02
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    After a while with vi, your fingers know the movements - but you can't remember what the actual keys are! Sep 16, 2009 at 17:17
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    I thought it was ed that was "always available and will run on the most crippled, single user mode, broken graphics, no keymap, slow link machine." Wait, what year is this? (Sigh -- ed, I'll never forget you.)
    – belacqua
    Mar 9, 2011 at 17:52
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    @Kendall: Current ubuntu linux does not come with emacs installed.
    – intuited
    Mar 30, 2011 at 18:53
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I'm a full-blown Emacs fan-boy, but I knew VI long before I knew Emacs. That said, I make all of my people learn VI because it's always available, everywhere. Can't go wrong with either one of them.

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    This is my experience as well... Emacs or uEmacs was never available. My first editor was uEmacs (on Amiga) but since I learnt vim it was just too convenient to have around.
    – Marius
    Oct 31, 2013 at 13:05
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    This is basically my experience too. Vi is everywhere and generally installed as the default $EDITOR on unix systems, so you have to know it if you are working with unix. That said, I use emacs for text editing every day and I love it.
    – Fergie
    Dec 15, 2016 at 9:20
  • If someone would make me learn vim, I'd quit. Oct 7, 2022 at 18:14
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Seems an answer has been selected already, but the big difference to me has always been the modal vs. non-modal. Vim is modal, which means that it makes optimizations based on a specific set of usage modes. At least that's how I've always looked at it. This makes using Vim a different experience because instead of having a work area that you type code in, you really are telling an environment to act on the text. This is why people say things like with Vim you really are learning a language. The :wq and :s/foo/bar is all part of a shell like environment that edits and reads text.

Emacs on the other hand is much closer to most editors/word processors/etc. you see today. You have a workspace that has a highly programmable interface. That is why you see things like email, irc, shells, etc. As a programmer it is easy to think in terms of saying "take the line number I'm on and do something with the information". The desire to leave the editor becomes less because instead of having to quit, open some other app/language and do things on some text, you have Emacs where you can do these things within the scope of your editor.

The two ideas are not necessarily contrasting, but it is simply that they reveal two different focuses. Personally I use Emacs, but I've seen folks who know Vim really well and can honestly say it doesn't matter which you choose. I tried Vim first but Emacs ended up sticking for me. It is true that no matter what you choose, you should be at least somewhat proficient in Vim as it really is always available.

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I started with vi, went to emacs, then to vim. I've been thinking of trying out Emacs to see what's changed in the last five years. (Speaking of IDE's, I had gotten into eclipse for a while, but I prefer my terminal window connecting my mac to my (husband's) linux box).

The cut and paste thing has been bothering me lately. Cut and paste in Vim takes more steps than in Emacs, IIRC. And pasting from say a browser to a terminal window is irritating unless you do something fancy that I don't feel like doing, so I put up with the weird indentation. I think, editing multiple files in emacs was easier. At least jumping from one file to the next if you have them both up on the screen.

I haven't played with the fancy features of either vi or emacs, as I just like to get to the business of coding. All I need is the pretty colors and proper tab to space conversion (especially important with python).

I think it all depends on if you want to use :wq or Ctrl-x Ctrl-s (IIRC) to save a file if you don't care about the fancy stuff.

@mgb was correct. I've been in the bare minimum linux to fix something just a month or two ago in a Debian distro. vi was the only editor available.

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    This still isn't one and done, but it is much easier than adjusting all the settings that mess up terminal pastes. Use :set paste, then paste your text and when you're done :set nopaste will go back to normal mode. There is also the :set pastetoggle=<F2> command that will toggle this using your chosen key combo.
    – hbar
    Aug 18, 2010 at 9:45
  • In indent mode, you can do ^R^P+ to paste from the clipboard and keep current indentation. ^R^O+ will drop indentation. ^R+ will insert it as though you'd typed it. :help i_^R^P for more info.
    – intuited
    Mar 30, 2011 at 19:26
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    I can't imagine cut/paste being any easier than yyp. Also, see here to cut and paste to and from different windows stackoverflow.com/a/8757876/654789
    – puk
    Feb 26, 2012 at 11:46
  • @puk - Ctrl-k (yank) / Ctr-y (put) is just as easy in emacs. In Emacs you also have multiple registers (a-z) you can save either text or the current position into... Jun 13, 2014 at 16:10
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    vim has multiple registers as well Mar 26, 2017 at 18:28
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There is a huge difference on a day-to-day level - Vim (or any vi variant) is inherently modal (you go into command modes where you cannot edit) and Emacs (along with most other editors) are not.

Sure, using menus and such you don't have to actually enter command mode in Vim - at first. But to use even a tiny fraction of the power of Vim you will. That is at the heart of the Vim/Emacs debate.

Personally, I also think Emacs is far more extensible. You can find Elisp packages for many things.

I am curious, though, why you are thinking to learn one of these over a more traditional IDE. What is it you want to learn one of these for?

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    I just want to learn it to see if it stands up to its hype, to be honest. I've seen how flexible both of them are, and I've seen experts do some pretty crazy stuff in them, and I want to see if it's worth the learning curve. Plus, my IDE doesn't support Lisp. :) Sep 15, 2009 at 23:45
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    Hmm. The problem is that there is so much of Emacs... but the thing I still leave an IDE for to use emacs is complex series of repetitive tasks, which I automate using macro recording. For example you can take a current word or expression, copy that into a "buffer" (think cut / paste only you can have more than one), then go into another file, type some text partly using the copied value and then another previously copied value as well, advance the cursor, save the position and return to the first buffer again... then repeat the process for the next line of the original file. Sep 16, 2009 at 1:46
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    I have used Macros heavily in both vi and Emacs. What you are missing is the fact that Emacs has a far wider selection of methods to access while using macros, and the fact that you can use cut buffers everywhere - even in the middle of search terms for example. Please tell me how you would write a macro that would select one word of an expression based on a regex, take the found term, search another document on that term and then do replacements around it? Sep 16, 2009 at 17:45
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    @kendall-helmstetter-gelner - that is possible with vimscript, or the languages vim has bindings for (like ruby/vim/tcl/perl). You have access to all of vim's functions and editor buffers from the scripting languages.
    – segy
    Sep 18, 2009 at 19:08
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    That's impressive but to do the same in Emacs requires only using the keystrokes I already know to form a complex macro, instead of having to write it out by hand. It's easy for anyone that knows emacs to make a macro that does that task but I would say there are not a lot of VI users that could construct the macro you laid out without a fair amount of research. Mar 30, 2011 at 20:53
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There is a lot of things that have been said about both editors, but I just have my 5 pence to add. Both editors are wonderful and you cannot go wrong with either of them.

I am a vi/vim user for about 15 years now. I've tried converting to emacs several times but every time was rather discovering that vim actually can do the missing thing out of the box without the need to write a lisp extension or install something.

For me the main difference in the editors that vim makes you use the environment/OS, while emacs tries to encapsulate it or replace it. For instance you can add a date in you text by :r!date in vim, or calendar with :r!cal 1 2014, or even replace the contents of you buffer with the hex version of the contents. Eg. :%!xxd, edit hex and then get back with :%!xxd -r, and many more other uses, like builtin grep, sed, etc.

Another example is use with jq and gron. Eg. paste json blob to the editor and then run for tranformation:

:r!curl -s http://interesting/api/v1/get/stuff
:%!gron | grep 'interesting' | gron -u

OR

:%!jq .path.to.stuff

Each of the piped commands above can be run separately via :%!<command>, where % means all document, but can also be run on selection, selected lines, etc. Here gron output can be used as jq path.

You also get the EX batch editing functionality, eg. Replacing certain words, reformatting the code, converting dos->unix newline characters, run a macro on say 100 files at a time. It is easily done with ex. I am not sure if emacs has something similar.

In other words IMHO vim goes closer to the unix philosophy. It generally simpler and smaller, but if you know your OS and your tools, you wont likely need more than it(VIM) has to offer. I never do.

Besides vi is defacto standard on any unix/linux system, why learn to use 2 tools that do the same thing. Of course some systems offer mg or something similar, but definitely not all of them. Unix + Vi <3.

Well, just my 5 pence.

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    "Vim goes closer to the unix philosophy." -- You are speaking here of the philosophy regarding the tools available from your shell. The shell itself, however, is a big agglomeration of built-ins, history, globbing, process control, programmability, and so on. Emacs clearly lies closer to the philosophy of unix shells: provide a highly customizable environment within which tools can be used together, and make it easy for the user to extend the set of tools with their own code snippets as they work. I think we can see that both emacs and vim are strongly rooted in the unix tradition.
    – Matt
    Mar 3, 2014 at 12:21
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    Thanks for your comment. It was by no means my intention to start an editor war here neither was it to offend emacs users. I just find it easier and more portable to invoke the actual commands from shell (or from within the editor) as opposed to writing complex extensions to encapsulate the functionality in the emacs, which tends to make the environment bloated over time. These extensions however depends on the user preference and can be done but by no means enforced by either of the editors. So agree with you regarding the emacs and vi(m) place in UNIX tradition.
    – Alex
    Mar 4, 2014 at 9:56
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    Just to continue the non-war, I hope it was clear that I did not disagree with your analogy "vim is more like a unix tool". It simply occurred to me that this intuition could be extended with "and emacs is more like a unix shell". :-)
    – Matt
    Mar 4, 2014 at 22:01
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    @Matt: I like the analogy. Amen to that. ;)
    – Alex
    Mar 7, 2014 at 11:39
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    You can do everything you mention, and a lot more, in emacs (hexl-mode for example goes right to editing the file in hex with an ascii preview to the side). I know VI pretty well also, but creating macros is a lot easier and more flexible in Emacs, and it can simply do way more than even most modern VIM implementations. That's the reason to know it, because emacs is in most places and can offer a real text editing boost. Jun 13, 2014 at 16:08
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I would like to put here a quote from the book "The Art of UNIX Programming":

Many people who regularly use both vi and Emacs tend to use them for different things, and find it valuable to know both.

In general, vi is best for small jobs – quick replies to mail, simple tweaks to system configuration, and the like. It is especially useful when you’re using a new system (or a remote one over a network) and don’t have your Emacs customization files handy.

Emacs comes into its own for extended editing sessions in which you have to handle complex tasks, modify multiple files, and use results from other programs during the session. For programmers using X on their console (which is typical on modern Unixes), it’s normal to start up Emacs shortly after login time in a large window and leave it running forever, possibly visiting dozens of files and even running programs in multiple Emacs subwindows.

What I really want to highlight here is the: «Many people find it valuable to know both

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  • This is probably outdated . I think those days Emacs's inbuilt ability to have Browser , SSH , Music Player and slow systems which stopped firing up other apps made it to believe it was better off to open one app and stick with it ?
    – Nishant
    Jun 29, 2014 at 7:47
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    Great news is: it is not outdated! You can use Browser, Music Player etc outside Emacs but what Emacs really brings is the same good interface to all these functions and the one way (Elisp) to extend them. Jul 1, 2014 at 10:31
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    According to me TAUP's perspective of Emacs is outdated because , those days Emacs was an advantage to have one as it was a single app running that could do multiple things at a time - like irc , music , remote edit etc . However today you have excellent applications for each of these purpose and memory is not an issue as before too ... Imagine reading Gmail in Emacs - I mean Gmail interface really has awesome keybindings in built , customizing that into an Emacs Email Client is going to take considerable time and might not be as good as the original Gmail Interface etc .
    – Nishant
    Jul 1, 2014 at 15:59
  • It is not outdated! :) Jul 1, 2014 at 20:24
  • > However today you have excellent applications for each of these purpose Yes, but you have all these applications with very different interfaces, configs, user experience etc etc etc... But Emacs is the One Tool! For example, I very like Emacs key bindings, I use them in the shell in the browser. And it is very good that at least some things are the same within applications... Jul 1, 2014 at 20:28
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For me pros of emacs are,

  • tramp-mode allows you to edit remote files over ssh. just like local files.
  • tramp-mode + dired = full featured sftp client
  • support for every language you will ever need.
  • built in terminal emulator(term-mode) so i can keep coding without switching between applications.
  • extensibility anything you don't like you can change using lisp.
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    FWIW: vim pretty much has the first 3 (though with different names. "tramp-mode" is "netrw" in vim). #4 is generally considered a bug, not a feature by vim users. #5 is true in vim if you replace "elisp" (the worst lisp dialect ever, my Emacs-loving friends tell me) with python/mzscheme/perl/ruby/tcl/vimscript. Aug 17, 2010 at 5:26
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    can you comment as to why #4 a bug? Jan 29, 2011 at 5:58
  • 2
    Check out the Conque addon for an embedded shell in vim.
    – intuited
    Mar 30, 2011 at 19:27
  • I actually wonder why no one has made a variation of emacs yet, where elisp is being replaced by e.g. ecl (a real common lisp).
    – BitTickler
    May 3, 2021 at 2:08
  • @BitTickler you might want to check Lem
    – Mariano M.
    Jan 11 at 18:55
9

For me, emacs has better development tools(not only tags based tools).

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Benefits of Emacs

  • Emacs has both non-modal interface (by default) and modal one (e.g. it can emulate vim and vi through Evil, Viper, or Vimpulse).

  • One of the most ported computer programs. It runs in text mode and under graphical user interfaces on a wide variety of operating systems, including most Unix-like systems (Linux, the various BSDs, Solaris, AIX, IRIX, macOSetc.), MS-DOS, Microsoft Windows, AmigaOS, and OpenVMS. Unix systems, both free and proprietary, frequently provide Emacs bundled with the operating system.

  • Emacs server architecture allows multiple clients to attach to the same Emacs instance and share the buffer list, kill ring, undo history and other state.

  • Pervasive online help system with keybindings, functions and commands documented on the fly.

  • Extensible and customizable Lisp programming language variant (Emacs Lisp), with features that include:

  • A powerful and extensible file manager (dired), integrated debugger, and a large set of development and other tools.

  • Having every command be an Emacs Lisp function enables commands to DWIM (Do What I Mean) by programmatically responding to past actions and document state. For example, a switch-or-split-window command could switch to another window if one exists, or create one if needed. This cuts down on the number of keystrokes and commands a user must remember.

  • "An OS inside an OS". Emacs Lisp enables Emacs to be programmed far beyond editing features. Even a base install contains several dozen applications, including two web browsers, news readers, several mail agents, four IRC clients, a version of ELIZA, and a variety of games. All of these applications are available anywhere Emacs runs, with the same user interface and functionality. Starting with version 24, Emacs includes a package manager, making it easy to install additional applications including alternate web browsers, EMMS (Emacs Multimedia System), and more. Also available are numerous packages for programming, including some targeted at specific language/library combinations or coding styles.

Benefits of vi-like editors

  • Edit commands are composable
  • Vi has a modal interface (which Emacs can emulate)
  • Historically, vi loads faster than Emacs.
  • While deeply associated with UNIX tradition, it runs on all systems that can implement the standard C library, including UNIX, Linux, AmigaOS, DOS, Windows, Mac, BeOS, OpenVMS, IRIX, AIX, HP-UX, BSD and POSIX-compliant systems.
  • Extensible and customizable through Vim script or APIs for interpreted languages such as Python, Ruby, Perl, and Lua
  • Ubiquitous. Essentially all Unix and Unix-like systems come with vi (or a variant) built-in. Vi (and ex, but not vim) is specified in the POSIX standard.
  • System rescue environments, embedded systems (notably those with busybox) and other constrained environments often include vi, but not emacs.

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Editor_war

8

The biggest difference for me in choosing to use emacs over vim was the built in gdb support in emacs. Vim doesn't have this included in it's default distribution and the project there for integrating gdb and vim was nearly impossible to get working with MacVim

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    I used Vim for editing, and Xcode for debugging, it's less than ideal but doable.. Sep 16, 2009 at 1:56
7

Now you do not even need to think about the difference between these two because of Spacemacs. It is a community-driven Emacs distribution.

As it said,

The best editor is neither Emacs nor vim, It's Emacs and Vim.

Spacemacs combines the best from both Emacs and Vim, which make your life and job much easier.

See screenshot below,


(source: spacemacs.org)

3
  • 3
    This is cheating... It's emacs with some funky configs ;) Quite a lot of configs actually
    – Alex
    Apr 27, 2016 at 16:51
  • 4
    This is great - when it works. When it doesn't - if you don't know elisp and emacs already or you can't find the core contributors in gitter chat - you're usually stuck and out of luck. (sometimes deleting your melpa directory in .emacs can fix things, though...) Oct 11, 2016 at 14:58
  • 1
    Though it has a lot more stuff than I need, I'm really satisfied with Spacemacs. I have my dotfiles on github so I can setup new machines easily/fast, and since I use evil (vim keybindings) I have enough skills to get by when I have to work on machines where I can't install my spacemacs config.
    – anr78
    Aug 3, 2017 at 21:25
5

Its like apples and oranges. Both have different design and philosphy. Vim is a Text Editor while Emacs is a Lisp Interpreter that does Text Editing.

I use Vim because its fast, sleak, and really good at manipulating texts. It has a composable natural key binding that can make your development tasks really harmonic. Vim is based on the simple *nix philiosphy of doing one thing really well - i.e Text Manipulation.

Extending Vim using bash/zsh and tmux is usually easy and allows you learn a lot of things. IMHO this is a good learning curve. The key thing is to learn how to integrate these things to get a larger working application. With Vim you'll need to learn integration because it doesn't naturally integrate unless you tell it how to. Another worthwhile extension which I use is Tig . Its an ncurses based Git frontend . I just have a binding that opens Tig silently and then I do all the Git stuff there.

Its up to the end user to decide what works best. That Emacs and Vim has stood the test of time is proof of their worthiness. Eventually a good programmer needs nothing more than a pen and a paper to be creative. Good algorithms don't need editors to back them. So try them both and see what makes you more productive. And learn design patterns from both these softwares as there are plenty to learn and discover!

4

Emacs has viper-mode, so in some real sense, it provides a superset of features (excepting those described in What Vim features are missing in Emacs with Viper and Vimpulse?).

vi (and VIM IIRC) is lighter weight (it can edit files in place), but offers fewer features (subprocess communication, extension language).

0
3

Emacs is really more of a do everything program, and vi(m) is really just an editor. If you are editing text, they are both fine, but I prefer emacs, simply because I have to shift one off the home row to move around, and keep typing the wrong things in command mode. I you don't have that problem, vi(m) may be the editor for you.

2

A jaundiced point of view:

vi (not vim) is a professional necessity. You always have some form of vi easily available, no matter what the environment. You can be in vi when in emacs, you can be in vi to build bash commands in unix-land.

Even Microsquish has to support vi (although they do a good job of hiding it) because of gov't and corporate compliance with published standards.

In my opinion, if you are in a hands-on job in a busy environment--not a hothouse flower confined to one fancy rig in a development environment, or in academia--knowing a lot about a fancy editor is a job handicap. Don't learn all the fancy tricks in vim or emacs, and don't develop a bunch of macros to make the editing environment bend to your will. It's an enormous time sink that gets in your way when you attend to different machines that you probably can't justify in a factory environment.

Read Bill Joy's paper--it is a very competent, perhaps even beautiful, engineering exercise in editing plain text very, very fast. Parito's rule applies here: 80% of the fruit is in 20% of the baskets. Editing plain text very very fast is the crux of editing competence--all else is optional--and sometimes hurtful.

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  • 4
    Which paper are you talking about? Can you at least give a name, if not a link?
    – darkfeline
    Mar 3, 2014 at 2:55
  • 2
    "Even MS has to support vi." Can you back this up? May 3, 2014 at 0:54
  • 1
    At one point - I am sure, people also said that syntax highlighting is "just a distraction"... and those squigglies under syntax errors "hogs down the editor" and whatever else people usually say about anything which makes programming less tedious. If you work on something slightly more complex than "hello world", there is more information you need at your finger tips than you can keep in mind. So any help is welcome (e.g. source file view, go to definition features, bookmarking, ...). Programming is exactly not just editing some lines of text.
    – BitTickler
    May 3, 2021 at 2:30
2

I was user of vim first, then I switched to emacs, then to vim, now I'm experimenting with emacs again.

  • Both are great editors.
  • Both are very extensible today
  • Both have great plugins and community

As developers we type a lot, and, at last for me, moving around in buffers and files are the biggest repetitive tasks, so I want a editor where I CAN MOVE FAST!

The motivation for experimenting with emacs again is that I fell it Ctrl leaded keybinds faster than vim, and easier to reason about.

In vim you have modes, you have insertion mode, visual mode, normal mode, what happens when you press something depends on the mode that you are, is a stateful aproach to editing. You move, enter in insert mode, edit, get out of insert mode and move again. I frequently lose my self if I miss a ESC press or something like this.

In emacs there is no mode, basically you press Ctrl with your pink and type the keystroke, like C-x C-f, C-x C-s, C-x C-c. There are keybinds where you need to release ctrl key, I hate this ones and always replace them by ones with control pressed.

I think that emacs approach is faster to think and type, but vim has another strength, to. Its commands are composable, they usually has a format . For example, to delete a line you can use dd, to delete a word dw. Plugins make use of that felling, with vim-surround plugin you can delete quotes with ds" (delete surround "), delete up to next / dt/. Delete up to previous /: dT/ and so on. So as long as you learn the moving things start to get very interesting.

Summing up, today I fell that emacs keybinds are faster for macro editing and vim commands are more powerfull for microediting

I've been using vim for the last five years so I edit thinking mainly about words, lines, surrounding, blocks, etc. Delete this line, remove quotes, replace quotes, delete word in cursor, I'm trying to findout the emacs moves for that

As a final quote I would say that, I care more about fzf than about emacs or vim, I would love to have a editor that is completely fzf based

1

In your question, you haven't mentioned that you want it to program in Lisp! But as you have been commenting your answers, I have understood that you actually want a LISP programming interface.

For that precise task, simply forget about Vi. Emacs integration with LISP is wonderful! You should use SLIME. You will then have wonderful integration with the REPL, being able to eval functions, buffers or files directly into a running interpreter in an emacs buffer and much more...

1
  • 1
    Yes, I am aware of this, but me looking for a decent Lisp editor wasn't my reason for asking this question--it was just an example. Thanks for the response though! Apr 24, 2011 at 8:33
0

If you move around a lot from site to site or your job involves loging on to production systems then vim is the way to go.

All *nix machines will have vi installed by default.

Most sysdamins prefer ksh as the default shell. ksh uses vi (or emacs) command keystrokes to search history and edit the command line.

If you dont know vi well you are severely handicapped when you log into a unix box with a standard configuraton.

For this reason alone I would recommend vim as your normal every day editor. I have seen emacs fans tear there hair out trying to amend config files on a bare bones unix server.

1
  • 1
    For bash try using set -o vi in your .bashrc, instead of set -o emacs, which is used by default. I never used ksh, but it might be the same.
    – sjas
    Aug 31, 2013 at 13:11
0

vim is a handy editor, you simple type vim filename to open the file, edit, save and close.

emacs is an "operating system" pretend to be an editor, you can eval code to change its behavior, and extend it as you like. A mode to receive/send email on emacs is like an email software on operating system.

When doing simple editing, for example, modify a config file, I use vim.

Otherwise, I never leave emacs.

0

I think the main difference is the design target. VIM is for UNIX as a working editor. Emacs is for GNU and lisp hackers, so it has some mixed design element.

I use vim on my workstation, while I love emacs too.

0

I am an Emacs fan but encourage other developers to learn VI because:

  1. you can use VI to edit the emacs makefiles.
  2. VI includes ed commands and every UNIX user should know ed and sed.

I've noticed several comments about VIM starting faster than emacs. If you really care about that, run emacs in server mode and alias 'emacs' to 'emacsclient'. The client is super fast since all it does is tap the server on the shoulder and tell it which file you want to edit. On MacOSX, emacsclient is only 33K while emacs is 287M.

I'm not sure any of this is necessary on modern hardware. On my MacBook Pro (2013 Retina), emacs loads almost instantaneously when I run it from the shell. I detect no pause at all. When I run Emacs.app (the GUI version) it might take all of 3 seconds.

Most complaints I hear about emacs seem to come from people misinformed about emacs. Having used both vi and emacs since 1982, I definitely remember a time when emacs loaded much slower than vi and used most of the physical memory in my early UNIX boxes, but that is no longer the case and has not been for at least 15-20 years.

One complaint I will concede is "emacs pinkie". This never bothered me at all when I was younger. Now that I'm 58, my pinkie does get a bit sore from repeatedly accessing the Control key for emacs chording. This is especially true on the MacBook Pro keyboard where Control is moved one position to the right to make room for the "fn" key. It's not nearly as annoying when Control is the bottom left key.

4
  • You can also "dump" emacs, which basically means taking a snapshot of the compiled elisp extensions you desire. Emacs starts much faster this way, but it takes a bit of time to determine which extensions you want to include. Jun 14, 2018 at 22:08
  • Plus you can play "Towers Of Hanoi" in emacs. How cool is that? :) Jun 14, 2018 at 22:09
  • Re: "emacs pinkie". On some older keyboards, e.g., Sun Type 3/4, which the HHKB Professional is based on, the Control is placed where Caps Lock normally is. I don't have the emacs experience that you have, however, I very quickly got used to having Control on the home row. So much so that I made that change on all my keyboards (MacBook Pro too). The HHKB has some further improvements, e.g., Backspace just above Enter, and Esc next to 1. Jun 21, 2018 at 6:07
  • 1
    @PhilHarbison could elaborate on "dump"?
    – A_P
    Feb 19, 2019 at 21:15
0

I have worked with spacemacs for about 2 years and neovim for about a year now in a production/research environment. Spacemacs is emacs with couple of nice extra features like layers etc. And neovim is a fork of vim again with some extra features.

I am quite unsatisfied with both of them in terms of experience. And I am still on the look out for a long term solution for my text editing needs.

Here is a simple comparison:

  • Neovim, vim, emacs, spacemacs, etc all of those editors consume less ressources compared to most of the editors out there.

  • Neovim/vim is slightly faster than emacs, noticably faster than spacemacs.

  • In terms of editing experience. I can easily say that emacs packages feel superior. I think that's because they blend in better with the core of emacs.

  • Vimscript is nice and there are certainly great projects in the vim ecosystem as well. The good thing is they are better documented than most emacs projects I have seen so far.

  • Both can be glitchy depending on the package you are using. Spacemacs tend to freeze, and neovim tend to display scary error messages, so pick your poison there.

  • Modal editing in vim, is not an intuitive concept, but once you get used to it, you want it anywere. Both of the editor provide that.

3
  • 1
    "Modal editing (...) once you get used to it, you want it anywere" -- that's interesting. I spent years using Emacs with evil mode, and used to modal editing, and now went back to non-modal... It just feels better. I think this depends not only on the person, but also on context/time in life/whatever. Taste, I suppose. :)
    – Jay
    May 14, 2020 at 19:49
  • 1
    @Jay I guess, but don't you miss, stuff like column selection, and jumping around with ":XX" ?
    – Kaan E.
    May 15, 2020 at 0:14
  • Not really... I use Emacs' rectangle selection sometimes, and instead of :xx I do "M-g g XX" - a few more keystrokes, but I seldom do need to go right to a line. Usually, an Emacs application (debugger, etc) will send me to the right line.
    – Jay
    May 15, 2020 at 10:49
-1

Keystroke execution::: vi editing retains each permutation of typed keys. This creates a path in the decision tree which unambiguously identifies any command , whereas Emacs commands are a combination of typed keys executed immediately, which leaves the user with the choice of whether or not to use a command.

Memory usage and customizability::: vi is a smaller and faster program, with a more limited capacity for customization, whereas, Emacs takes longer to start up and requires more memory. However, it is highly customizable and includes a large number of features, as it is essentially an execution environment for a Lisp program designed for text-editing.

-13

Firstly Vi (original realization) not used today. That you say is some Vim derivation.

To extend Vim functionality you must recompile Vim, Emacs not.

Emacs has Vim in self (viper-mode).

Emacs usually need manually installation, Vim typically preinstalled on all Unix like OS (but if you have ssh access to host tramp-mode win Vim :).

If you try Vim you hate Emacs, so start from Emacs first.

Also read http://www.dina.dk/~abraham/religion/vi-tutorial.html (link go down so use this)

Anwer search in hxxp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Editor_war

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    You do not need to recompile vim to extend it. You don't even need to quit vim. Sep 16, 2009 at 6:48
  • 1
    Have vimscript/Python/Ruby/etc access to all Vim internal structures? If editor codebase help make extention or complexity of extention on one level of complexity of EDITOR?
    – gavenkoa
    Sep 16, 2009 at 7:18
  • 1
    Much of Vim scripts like intelectual MACROS. To extend Vim you need plugins ((
    – gavenkoa
    Sep 16, 2009 at 7:22
  • 1
    Vi is not used?!?! What? Is nvi considered to be original? Or a 'traditional vi'? A lot of systems like FreeBSD, ArchLinix bundle the traditional vi or nvi and I am thankful for that. Some systems like Debian go with vim which is in compatible mode by default (feels almost like traditional vi)
    – Alex
    Oct 25, 2013 at 8:20
  • 1
    @gavenkoa, I absolutely agree with Alex, you've obviously never tried a system requiring manual installation like Gentoo, some BSDs or Arch Linux. Also, «If you try Vim you hate Emacs, so start from Emacs first.» would make me try VIM first, and you as well, if you think a little. That reminds me of people saying not to try functional programming first. I'm sad I didn't try it sooner...
    – JMCF125
    Dec 29, 2013 at 22:21

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