I was a terrible IDE user
This means that I rarely used, or even knew of, more than 5% of the features of each IDE - excluding (maybe) the glorious copy con editor, of course. I can still remember the shock at watching someone else debug code by using a debugger (!!!). Turns out there was one right inside Turbo C all along.
And then came along The Pragmatic Programmer
In college, after the first year the emacs police got off of our backs, and we could use eclipse. Many people did just that. I didn't - I had been forced to endure emacs for too long, and had to pay too many hours to learn the likes of "Ctrl+X 2", that I just didn't want to learn how to do it all over again (I still don't know how to do it in eclipse). This was, of course, a stupid idea. But to rationalize why everyone had red squiggly lines below their errors as they typed and I didn't, I had to learn emacs just bit more in depth. Or at least spend hours talking to the emacs psychiatrist, which eclipse doesn't have. Take that eclipse!
The problem was that I never really liked emacs. It can do horrible thing to your keyboard's CTRL key. And I never liked it's MS-Word philosophy of putting together one huge application (or OS) instead of many small programs which can be bundled together as you see fit. And getting a decent copy outside of unix-land is always an annoyance, even on my Mac, which is a citizen of unix-land, kind-of. I still hate programs that are several mega-bytes overweight. That's why I'm switching to vi.
So far, I really, really like vi. The whole normal mode is great for touch-typing - no more reaching out for the arrow keys (or the CTRL key). It's a nice programming editor, though I still have a lot to learn. My main IDE is still Eclipse, and although its C++ support is sketchy, it will probably take a while before I'm proficient enough in vi to give eclipse up completely.
Above all, I still miss Source Insight, now that I'm on a linux machine. It's probably the best editor for a large code base. It's one of the most ugly editors, but when most of the code is already written, it can't be beat. But now I mostly write new code, so it's not too bad. I'm good with vi.
But I still don't know how you say Ctrl+X 2 in vi...
edit: it's ":split filename"
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