The code view to the left is Xmonad, (a coding software that can tile windows, and is written in Haskell,. The "/howl" command that is shows near the bottom is for the "Howl Editor", which can read Lua files (like the ones the game uses).
(NOTE: These are all based on research, and not prior knowledge, so my info may be a slight bit off.)
The VPN master/transient keys, genuinely no clue, just looks like gibberish.
EDIT: The bottom of the VPN keys shows "d3 4d b3 3f" in repeating order. Don't know if that means anything to anyone.
Do this:
htop
.It's the core problem of Electron: you're running a separate instance of Chrome, so you're getting all the resource usage of a full instance of Chrome.
Also cough begin plug https://howl.io cough end plug
> I have given Vim a shot, and yes a keyboard only interface has its advantages for productivity, but honestly is there any other reason to justify the ludicrous learning curve?
What about Howl?
Ah, sorry for not realizing that from your post. I didn't do too much searching, and I will continue to look for you because this is something that I am interested in now as well; but I did find this. It's developed by a single person who got tired with using the two editing components that you mentioned, however it is still only in Alpha 0.4 and I'm sure it has many bugs. There is a link to the Github where you can download the source and build it yourself in the article I linked.
I'm sorry I couldn't be more help, but most editors just use Scintilla, GTKSourceView or they have written their own and never released it as a standalone editing engine. It does give me an idea to start one of these as a side project though, I feel it would be a very interesting problem to tackle.
Let me know if there is anything else I can help with or if you find an alternative yourself as I would be very interested to know about it. Like I said, I will continue my search as well and will update you if I find anything.
Best Regards,
Kevin
I use to love Enlightenment but then realized their code base is not as great as they market it. That might be part of the reason why it never gained massive popularity.
At some point I switched to Vim, which solved all my needs and keeps being adequate tool. Some time after switching to Vim I discovered Howl, which seems to be great editor but is not as popular for some reason.
Not sure what features you're looking for but Howl is nice and written in and extendable with Lua. I use vim though which meets your potato requirement and can do some cool stuff with plugins.