@sehe a persisting idle thought of mine lately: I think abbreviations would fit a use case of mine, if only I could have them ‘sync’ with the conceal system. Such that I’d type in the abbreviation, and the expansion would only be displayed as the abbreviation despite actually being in the buffer. (Which of course would be more useful if only the conceal system could support replacement beyond a single character.)
@LucDanton I struggle to see the use case. I don't particularly like abbreviations nor conceal. I tried to use both. Conceal looked spiffy with Haskell glyphs, but that's about it. I couldn't really use it.
Maybe I should, again, because I do type std;: a ton of times, and I barely see the difference, so it actually takes a bit of time for me to spot it. The same thing happens with 0 vs 9 though. And that's a bit more problematic because it doesn't lead to type or syntax errors, and 0 is obviously the most common magic number in programming. Maybe I should start using #define ZERO (0) :)
:52206791You too gent
/me worries awkwardly whether that's an appropriate greeting
@sehe I’m repeating a lot of **__Thing__** i.e. a catchy keyword (well… catchier than this) surrounded by markup. But it’s heavy markup that ends up looking like noise. What I had in mind is ‘collapsing’ it to a compact *T* or similar. I suppose inputting it as an abbreviation is more of a bonus.
@sehe Yeah but see the markup is not markup, it’s in the data I’m inputting. Think like storing a <span class=this-is-visually-distracting>this is important</span> in something that is not HTML.
@StackedCrooked Such a strange thing to say in general. Apple made it clear decades ago that having bugs does nothing to stop you from selling products.