I don’t know about OP but personally I run nvim on 3 systems (4 if you count termux on my phone) and it’s very nice being able to test out a config and plugin updates on my personal systems before pulling down the changes on my work laptop so I know everything just works™
I don’t actually use LazyVim, but I do use the Lazy plugin manager
@jim_stark@ericjmorey personally, I’m using my neovim config on personal Mac, work Windows laptop, WSL on windows and few other Linux machines (both personal and work related). It’s at least 5 devices, each with different OS. If neovim would work differently on each of them and the environment wasn’t reproducible, I’d give up with neovim
LazyVim is what kept me using NeoVim. It made reproducing a usable setup much simpler.
Just curious why is “reproducing the setup” important to you? You need to install it on a lot of systems?
I don’t know about OP but personally I run nvim on 3 systems (4 if you count termux on my phone) and it’s very nice being able to test out a config and plugin updates on my personal systems before pulling down the changes on my work laptop so I know everything just works™
I don’t actually use LazyVim, but I do use the Lazy plugin manager
Changing, upgrading hardware or OSs makes reproducibility a highly valuable feature of an IDE.
@jim_stark @ericjmorey personally, I’m using my neovim config on personal Mac, work Windows laptop, WSL on windows and few other Linux machines (both personal and work related). It’s at least 5 devices, each with different OS. If neovim would work differently on each of them and the environment wasn’t reproducible, I’d give up with neovim
I share my dotfiles repo between my MacBook and Linux pc so anything that goes in there is run on both operating systems.
Yep, that’s a good reason. I guess dot files should also be downloaded from github just like extensions. Makes this stuff a lot easier.