show/hide this revision's text 2 fix spelling

I personally love emacs. Ive I've used vim and a handfull handful of IDE'sIDEs. Vim and emacs both have great communitys communities where people are willing to code up features for just about any language. I dont don't know of any IDE's IDEs that, say, support haskellHaskell. It all depends on whats what's important to you. Both have extension languagesthou , though IMO, emacs lisp is the better of the two. The ability to ignore the mouse is the main thing I like as well. So many IDES IDEs also feature emacs and vim compatibilty modes or extensions. They both have a large time investment, but both are worth it. Sooner or later, you will choice choose which suits you, vim/emacs/IDE, and then stick to improving your skills with it.

show/hide this revision's text 1

I personally love emacs. Ive used vim and a handfull of IDE's. Vim and emacs both have great communitys where people are willing to code up features for just about any language. I dont know of any IDE's that say support haskell. It all depends on whats important to you. Both have extension languages thou IMO emacs lisp is the better of the two. The ability to ignore the mouse is the main thing I like as well. So many IDES also feature emacs and vim compatibilty modes or extensions. They both have a large time investment but both are worth it. Sooner or later you will choice which suits you vim/emacs/IDE and then stick to improving your skills with it.