@QPaysTaxes I don't care about the reasons. I'm repeating myself way too much. Please don't speak in another language. Thanks. You want to speak in another language then go ahead, just know that it's rude to some people.
@QPaysTaxes Ok, maybe I was a little too jumpy. I'm sorry. I've talked italian here before and I'm pretty sure everybody talked some other language at some point in time. It's no big deal.
@rightfold I'm not sure it's completely impossible to achieve hapiness under these circumstances. But hey, you've got better excuses ready than I do :)
The argument of monospace versus proportional is settled only given a set of constraints and preferences that are dependent on the individual and circumstance :/
I prefer monospace when I need to count in any way, or if the output will be monospaced. I prefer proportional when I'm reading because it makes it easier to glance through (because my mind recognizes word shapes better)
firstly, I think that the vast majority of text editors are basically equally useful and I particularly think that vi/vim is a crock of shit, but more generally, you're making a fairly blind assumption that there's a large proportion of programmers who agree with you
and secondly, before programmers can like innovation, first they actually need useful innovation, and you're making a blind assumption that new useful innovation in the field of text editors is readily forthcoming and just nobody wants it
and thirdly, for a tool that programmers rely upon heavily every second of every day, innovation is pretty expensive, and it doesn't necessarily have any correlation whatsoever as to whether or not programmers want to innovate.
to be fair, the input/output devices that make up (most) computers haven't changed enough in the last 30 years to warrant massive changes in needs. That said, touch screens are definitely becoming ubiquitous enough to warrant their own input support.
@Puppy Users of C++; confirmation bias if there ever was any, and the language is technically not the same one developed in the early 80s.
Isn't the only reason to have ~ () because otherwise the skipper is/might get inherited/propagated/whatever you call it? I thought that was a pretty obvious connection, seeing you are writing this stuff a.t.m.
@sehe for now I'm going to keep it simple and small, leaving sugar for optional later stuff
# A skipper is added. ~ A B1 B2 ... will parse the Bs as usual, but skips any
# occurrences of A at any point in the Bs. At most one skipper can be active,
# in nested skippers on the deepest one is active. You can disable a skipper
# in a nested rule by using an empty A, e.g.: ~ () [a-z]*.