I've also had trouble understanding why people choose vim as their editor, even though I was using it from time to time, until I've finally "got it". I think most explanations of "why?" fails, because they fail to show couple crucial points. To explain those points, first you need to understand that in vim you are manipulating text primarily being in command mode. Ie by default your key presses are commands, and do not usually insert any text, unless those commands (like append, insert, change) switch to insert mode. This lets you navigate and edit your text easily without ever touching your mouse or moving your hands away from "editing pose".
Now the crucial points are:
- Vim commands are divided into nouns, verbs and modifiers.
- Editing is performed by combining them.
And this is what gives vim the power. To ilustrate the point, here are some most used commands:
- Nouns: word, sentence, block, quotes and braces.
- Verbs: cchange, insert, visual, delete
- Modifiers: inside, around, till
And to ilustrate how you can mix them:
- Want to change a word? cw
- Same, but cursor in the middle of the word? caw
- Change text inside quotes? ci", also change quotes? ca"
- Delete function body? di{
- Delete up till first comma? dt,
- Delete up till second comma? d2t,
- Jump to first comma? t,
- Select word? viw
Also notice how all commands nicely translate into natural language:
- delete word
- change inside {
In vim if you learn a new verb, noun or modifier, you can easily mix and match with what you already know. So basically learning just one thing, you learn how to do a lot of different things.
Another great thing is that vim remembers what commands you have used, and you can repeat the sequence just by pressing .. For this post I've had to surround a lot of letters with <kbd> tag. But I've did that only once, and then just went over each letter and pressed ..
And that's basically the thing you "need to get" to understand the power of vim and become advanced user overnight.
P.S. if you don't like vim because it's console based and want a modern text editor, then I suggest looking into Sublime Text editor, which is a great editor and also supports vim mode.
P.S.2. I also recommend to map Esc key to jj and kk, which makes things a lot easier.