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Home/ Questions/Q 3275194
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T19:07:04+00:00 2026-05-17T19:07:04+00:00

I have been using gvim at work for a year or so, just at

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I have been using gvim at work for a year or so, just at the point where I’m loving it, getting the hang of it and trying to j,k all over Microsoft Outlook. Then my computer died. Now, originally I had installed gvim myself, which at the time was a “no-no” and is now is really a bad idea (what with all the people introducing viruses to the network and whatnot).

We have a software review board to which I was sent when I wanted gvim “legally” installed. I was told that the standard text editor is UltraEdit and they don’t want to support more than one. If I want to use gvim I need to talk management into making it the standard.

I’m kind of at a loss. Obviously, I can tout the cost savings, but I was having a hard time explaining what my fuss was about. If it were another programmer, I’d just force them to use it and they’d figure it out for themselves. But management folk aren’t much interested in not being able to figure out you need to “i” before you can type, er, insert.

I told my manager it was like having a rowboat instead of swimming everywhere. And sometimes you’re motorboating in that thing, but I’m looking for concise, compelling arguments which aren’t based on bad analogies. There are a number of similar-ish questions, but I fear they trend too technical. Any ideas?

And after all your awesome advice wins the day for me, how do I ease former UltraEdit users into becoming gvimmers?

Update:
Thanks for the answers! I accepted one but took from many (don’t know if that matters as question is now closed). Even though it was apparently too open-ended it is helping me plead my case with the powers-that-be.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T19:07:04+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 7:07 pm

    Seems simple enough. Tell them that you are far more proficient with Vim and that you know next to nothing about UltraEdit. Whether this is true is irrelevant – provisioning requests for software aren’t delivered under oath 🙂

    This has two effects:

    • you won’t need the IT staff to support you since you such a guru.
    • you won’t need weeks of ramp-up time trying to figure out how UltraEdit works.

    Managers understand cost/benefit analyses. The cost of letting you use Vim is zero. The cost of making you use UltraEdit is considerably more.

    Likewise Vim’s benefits are high since you’re immediately productive.

    The company where I work actually has two classes of software that they let us use. The first is the stuff they support. The second is stuff that you need to get yourself (off the company distribution site, not from outside, they’re still paranoid about malware and rightly so) and, if you have trouble with it, don’t call them.

    But don’t make the mistake of trying to evangelise Vim. You want to be given a choice, not try to convince everyone else to have their choice taken away.

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