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Vim

Vim

Overview

What is Vim?

Vim is an open source configurable text editor.

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Recent Reviews

TrustRadius Insights

Vim has become the go-to text editor for users across various domains. With its quick and efficient editing capabilities, many users …
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Worth the learning curve

9 out of 10
November 12, 2019
Incentivized
Many developers at my company use Vim as their main text editor. Besides the individual benefits of working alone with Vim, the fact that …
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Vim Review

9 out of 10
June 12, 2019
Incentivized
I use it every day as a code editor as I mostly love to work from a terminal rather than jumping to other code editors. It's not used …
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Reviewer Pros & Cons

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Pricing

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What is Vim?

Vim is an open source configurable text editor.

Entry-level set up fee?

  • No setup fee

Offerings

  • Free Trial
  • Free/Freemium Version
  • Premium Consulting/Integration Services

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Alternatives Pricing

What is Sublime Text?

Sublime Text is a highly customizable text editing solution featuring advanced API, Goto functions, and other features, from Sublime HQ in Sydney.

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Product Details

What is Vim?

Vim Technical Details

Operating SystemsUnspecified
Mobile ApplicationNo

Frequently Asked Questions

Vim is an open source configurable text editor.

Reviewers rate Support Rating highest, with a score of 6.

The most common users of Vim are from Enterprises (1,001+ employees).
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Comparisons

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Reviews and Ratings

(28)

Community Insights

TrustRadius Insights are summaries of user sentiment data from TrustRadius reviews and, when necessary, 3rd-party data sources. Have feedback on this content? Let us know!

Vim has become the go-to text editor for users across various domains. With its quick and efficient editing capabilities, many users consider Vim their primary text editor and daily driver. Non-technical users find value in Vim's ability to reformat spreadsheet-style data into multiple lines with a non-standard delimiter, while developers rely on it for making quick edits to files like .bash_profile or editing text directly on Linux-based servers. Although its prevalence has decreased with the adoption of continuous deployment, Vim remains an indispensable tool for configuration management and development teams when debugging deployed software on servers. Additionally, Vim is widely used as a convenient editor in remote Linux servers where a full development environment may not be available. The streamlined text entry and manipulation capabilities of Vim make it the preferred choice for many programmers and network engineers when editing text files. Despite the learning curve, some users consider Vim their dream editor due to its potential for efficient text editing and coding speed. Moreover, Vim enables shared development workflows such as pair programming by providing a consistent Tmux/Vim setup on shared development machines.

Attribute Ratings

Reviews

(1-9 of 9)
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Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
VIM is used as an editor all over the whole organization, mostly used as a convenient editor in remote Linux servers. Usually, a full development environment does not exist in those servers. Vim, which is bundled in most of the Linux distributions, comes as a handy tool in those environments. Some people, including me, use it as the main editor, even the main development environment.
Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
Vim is something that many of our programmers and network engineers use to edit text files. Some of us are using it because it's the default text editor for many of our systems; I use it because it is my preference. The product is mostly used because it can speed up the process of coding or editing text in comparison to Notepad or other text editors.
November 12, 2019

Worth the learning curve

Score 9 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
Many developers at my company use Vim as their main text editor. Besides the individual benefits of working alone with Vim, the fact that many of us are familiar with it enables workflows where we have shared development machines running a consistent Tmux/Vim setup that developers can collaborate on for pair programming by SSH'ing in, even if one or both developers is working remotely. This would not be practical using a graphical text editor.
Score 9 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
Vim is used as the default text editor for our Linux-based servers (Vi alias' to Vim as well). It is used only within the I.T. department, and only when text editing (or viewing text files) directly on servers is required. The reliance on Vim has been reduced in recent years due to the push to a more disciplined continuous deployment paradigm in which changes are only ever made locally on developer's machines and then committed to a source control repository. However, it retains its presence within the configuration management team, and even development teams, when debugging deployed software on servers.
Score 8 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
Vim is my dream editor if I could ever get in touch with it fully. Most of the other developers and analysts here don't touch it as it has a steep learning curve. But the potential for such streamlined text entry and manipulation is amazing. Vim can be so close to thinking that the interface can disappear.
Greg Garnhart | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 6 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
Vim, from what I can tell, is used by most developers. That said, Vim is almost certainly not a developer's first choice, but instead is used for convenience when needed. Though I use it occasionally, it is usually used for quick edits of my .bash_profile or things like that--not necessarily editing full length programs.
Jake Tolbert | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
We use Vim a couple of different ways. First and foremost, as a data scientist, it's my primary text editor and daily driver. Nothing else I've tried lets me edit text so quickly, particularly text I've already written. Moving lines around takes only a few keystrokes and doing a search/replace type tasks is amazingly flexible.

Many of our non-technical users use Vim as well, though--we have a few jobs that require spreadsheet style data to be reformatted into multiple lines with a non-standard delimiter. I wrote a small function in Vim and assigned it to F6 then distributed that do nontechnical users in their .vimrc. Now, if they need to reformat text, they just paste the text in, hit F6 and copy/paste it where it needs to go.
June 12, 2019

Vim Review

Score 9 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Incentivized
I use it every day as a code editor as I mostly love to work from a terminal rather than jumping to other code editors. It's not used across all the departments, it's based on personal preference.
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