Hi there! Looks like you linked to a Lemmy community using a URL instead of its name, which doesn't work well for people on different instances. Try fixing it like this: !neovim@sopuli.xyz, !neovim@programming.dev
they are different communities.
The first one is a link to lemmy.world federated to neovim@sopuli and the second is a direct link to neovim on programming.dev
Thanks for the reply. It seems disadvantageous that there are multiple lemmy communities for Neovim as it creates more fragmentation and confusion.
Generally the hope is that people naturally converge on one community and then the other would die out. Or maybe resurge if for some reason people don't like the first
Yup, they're different. No different content though just two communities set up for the exact same thing. I don't think it's a great idea personally as neither seem too active compared to both combined but it's what the community wants.
There's a few more than that too, but these are the most active
Considering it has more (and likely more active) moderators, I'd personally strongly advocate migration over to !neovim@programming.dev. The reason I made this one was because I'm even more passionate about this editor than anything I edit with it and had just grown impatient at no one prepping up a community for it. There's value in being a member of both if one instance suffers outage, but I agree posting in more than one place hurts the community. Maybe I should make a pinned post about it, asking for input.
Yeah. I feel the same. Although the idea of federation and ActivityPub protocal is very nice, I think it'll be better for a single community, either official or a comunity cooperated one.
Neovim
Neovim is a modal text editor forked off of Vim in 2014. Being modal means that you do not simply type text on screen, but the behavior and functionality of the editor changes entirely depending on the mode.
The most common and most used mode, the "normal mode" for Neovim is to essentially turn your keyboard in to hotkeys with which you can navigate and manipulate text. Several modes exist, but two other most common ones are "insert mode" where you type in text directly as if it was a traditional text editor, and "visual mode" where you select text.
Neovim seeks to enable further community participation in its development and to make drastic changes without turning it in to something that is "not Vim". Neovim also seeks to enable embedding the editor within GUI applications.
The Neovim logo by Jason Long is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.