> found a number who said that one should use vim for
> programming but emacs for other kinds of writing. So I had a
> look at emacs out of curiosity but couldn't see any real
> advantage for me in learning it. Am I missing something here?
> Is anyone else still using vim for writing lengthy texts?
Me :)
Yes, there's a decently sized contingent of [La]TeX users on the 
vim ML, but they mostly appear to answer questions about 
Vim+[La]TeX integration plugins or use, and then they go silent. 
  Which is how the list works in general -- ask a question and 
usually the right people pick up on it and answer; instead of 
having people write unsolicited diatribes on their favorite 
topics whether [La]TeX, scripting, Ex commands, or 
Unicode/BOM/character-encodings stuff (though I've gotta admit 
that just about everything I know regarding U/BOM/ce, I've 
learned from Tony's elucidating replies that occasionally go off 
on pedantic dissertations -- thanks, Tony!).
I think Vim's primary users are "people who want to edit text 
more efficiently".  A large subset of those lazy people (self 
included) are programmers, but do include [La]TeX users, system 
administrators, people who email a lot and use Vim as an external 
editor...and the list goes on.  I tinkered with Emacs but grew 
frustrated with (1) using it over remote SSH/telnet/RS-232 
connections that didn't always reliably send things like alt/meta 
or arrow keys; (2) at the time, on my underpowered 486 DX/100, 
Emacs was a dog; and (3) it was harder to be productive out of 
the box without amassing a customized config file that I then had 
to tote around and keep in sync across machines.  Tim O'Reilly 
had a good post[1] about this around the time I made the 
full-time jump to Vim.
So now I use Vim like I used to use qedit in DOS to write all my 
papers, project documentation, code, and other text-format 
content.  Except, well, email and text-boxes on web pages (though 
there are TB/FF plugins for that)
-tim
[1]
http://oreilly.com/pub/a/oreilly/ask_tim/1999/unix_editor.html
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