I added you as a co-author of this article. As your profile shows under the article now it should be a good time to fill in the blanks in your profile...
I'm not questioning your powers of observation; I'm merely remarking upon the paradox of asking a masked man who he is (V).
I'm so serious that you can't even imagine it!
I wrote only things that I'm using - vim not one of them. Never was.
However as any bronze member can edit this article, you more than welcome to add you tools (open new category if you need).
(In case you are not bronze yet I will be happy to add a tool for you, just send me the name, link and other info you think important)
I'm not questioning your powers of observation; I'm merely remarking upon the paradox of asking a masked man who he is (V).
Just figured out what a "bronze member" was after reading your reply. If I read it correctly I'm a bronze member. It is not important to me. I just like to read good articles and get new ideas.
So this site is like a wikipedia where people edit other peoples articles?! I had treated this site more as an interesting place to read good articles. As such I have it in my RSS feed. If the articles evolve over time then an RSS feed won't really work. I'm at a loss as to how best handle this site to get the most information out of it...
Vi for me is editor, ide, and everything. Though at times I've used ed, XEDIT, E, edit, SlickEdit, vim, notepad++, and editors built into IDEs. Emac people swear their editor is best but I find the functionality is also in vim. Notepad++ and Sublime are also good but why reinvent the wheel? So I stick with vi since it is everywhere and does everything.
If you play around with this site you will see that there is much more in it than good articles. The site indeed full of good articles, but you also has more interactive forums to ask and answer(!) specific problems. And we also have some very interesting ( ) persons here. You can find them in the lounge...
I'm not questioning your powers of observation; I'm merely remarking upon the paradox of asking a masked man who he is (V).