> people have different workflows because different people like to approach problems differently.
But the way you like to approach problems is heavily influenced by your history of solving them, what tools were available at the time, what you chose to adopt, and how often you revise that toolset.
It's not elitist to say that people tend to use what they've always used, which was my point: "how do people cope without LSP/LLMs?" tends to be "the way they've always coped" — efficiently or otherwise.
And it tends to track with when you began programming or using specific tools. A vim user who adopted vim in the '90s is more likely to have a light config than those who adopted it more recently, where I see heavy plugin and plugin manager use, LSP integration, pre-configured distros, and Lua-based configs.
But the way you like to approach problems is heavily influenced by your history of solving them, what tools were available at the time, what you chose to adopt, and how often you revise that toolset.
It's not elitist to say that people tend to use what they've always used, which was my point: "how do people cope without LSP/LLMs?" tends to be "the way they've always coped" — efficiently or otherwise.
And it tends to track with when you began programming or using specific tools. A vim user who adopted vim in the '90s is more likely to have a light config than those who adopted it more recently, where I see heavy plugin and plugin manager use, LSP integration, pre-configured distros, and Lua-based configs.