Vim has been the editor of choice for power-developers for decades, but it's always had an ethos of being hard to learn and harder to configure. No More! The LazyVim distribution has crafted a delightful and powerful out-of-the-box experience that is on par with any modern IDE. Configuration is either unnecessary or simple. That takes care of the "configuration" problem, but in order to use LazyVim effectively, you must first know how to use LazyVim. This book was written for developers who want to ramp up on modal editing with Neovim. It is approachable and digestible, but most of all, it is comprehensive. It collects tips and tricks gained from over two decades of using Vim, and is written with the gentle humour Dusty Phillips brings to all his work.
5 stars, it did it's job. I think it was a well polished review of everything you should know about LazyVim in regards to Vim and Neovim. Wish there was a chapter that talked about the main differences and how to work with plugins with vim and Neovim to get a chance to explore the differences. I am reading the user manual and the plugin configurations are a lot different than what I'm seeing in LazyVim. I'll learn it in the future but I'll stick to LazyVim configs at the moment and just stick to the basic. I was really surprised there was a AI, Testing, and debugging chapters, so kudos to that. Good read, easy to follow along and code. The plugins introduced were pretty useful too.