- Psa: the reason Microsoft makes these tools linux friendly is because the know thats where the developers are at and they want them to stay familiar with their tools. - It also lowers the amount of fuss developers make when work forced them to use powershell etc because at least they can remote control and script from linux. - As long as they are free and open source, I don’t care. 
 
- Well, it’s made by Microsoft so I would stay away from it, even if it’s FOSS, it’s still entitled to enshitification, so… - sees that it’s made with Rust - I’ll probably use it on a daily basis! - You may try this: - firejail --net=none microsoftedit somecode.idk
 
- I don’t like M$, but this is my new number one recommendation for new programmers. It gets them to stay within the command line, while having the normal shortcuts they’re used to from using a computer already. - I love Vim, but it’s a chore to learn when you’re also learning programming on top. Emacs is even worse, it tricks you by being a non-modal GUI, but your keyboard shortcuts all do something new and slightly insane now. - Although micro already exists for this. - Does Micro have normal keyboard shortcuts instead of the weird ones from nano ? - Yes, CTRL+Z undos, CTRL+S saves etc 
- yeah as a nano main micro is much different in keybinds I’d recommend to anyone who used nano beforehand 
 
 
- deleted by creator 
 
- install snap to run MS edit … more likely I’d install ms-dos 3.22 and run the original edit in there. - There is legitimately no reason to use snap for this. - Especially when this utility is a single fucking 217 KILOBYTE standalone binary. - Just download it from github and toss it in ~/.local/share/bin - I’m more impressed that ms didn’t write this as a 150MB binary than anything else. 
 
 
- … Surprised it took them this long to get a tui editor in Windows. I would have assumed they had at least something somewhere. 
- This seems to be a non-MS alternative: 
- I’m trying to imagine the user that both needs a text editor in the command line, yet is uncomfortable outside a gui. - I write scripts all day, but closing a program without clicking the little ‘x’ is scary and weird. 
- I’ve just given this a quick try in Windows (sorry, didn’t want to infect Linux with MS stuff) and… it’s pretty good. - I might install it in Linux although I’ll probably still use nano. 
- Works on MacOS too!! 
- why is this better in any way then neovim 









