I don't think a beginner that's just starting to learn a tool is likely to make significant modifications any time soon. I've been using doom for like 10 years and so far I've only needed to make small changes.
And when they try to change anything, they'll search "how to set shortcut in doom Emacs" and immediately get the correct answer. If they search for "how to set shortcut in Emacs" they'll get 50 different methods using 10 different package managers.
And besides that. Learning how to make small modifications to Doom is incomparably easier than building a whole config from scratch. I quit Emacs the first time exactly because of that massive hurdle.
IMO that's not realistic for beginners.
I don't think a beginner that's just starting to learn a tool is likely to make significant modifications any time soon. I've been using doom for like 10 years and so far I've only needed to make small changes.
And when they try to change anything, they'll search "how to set shortcut in doom Emacs" and immediately get the correct answer. If they search for "how to set shortcut in Emacs" they'll get 50 different methods using 10 different package managers.
And besides that. Learning how to make small modifications to Doom is incomparably easier than building a whole config from scratch. I quit Emacs the first time exactly because of that massive hurdle.
I used emacs for at least as long before I started REALLY using emacs. And you do that with elisp.