Home
| Calendar
| Mail Lists
| List Archives
| Desktop SIG
| Hardware Hacking SIG
Wiki | Flickr | PicasaWeb | Video | Maps & Directions | Installfests | Keysignings Linux Cafe | Meeting Notes | Linux Links | Bling | About BLU |
Now you are getting into the religous aspects. I was trying to avoid this type of comentary in my original response. I believe that both VI and Emacs have significant uses. Shel On Sat, Feb 06, 1999 at 09:16:21PM -0500, Jerry Feldman wrote: > There is only 1 editor. All the rest are commentaries. It is called emacs > and it comes with Red Hat, Debian and most other distributions. It fully > supports x windows. There is also an X front end called Xemacs. Emacs is > fully extensible, and has many language sensitive modes including C, > C++, SH, Perl, and others. You can use it for email. It also knows about > RCS, and you can compile from it. > > On 6 Feb 99, at 13:32, Brad Noyes <linux_maitre at hotmail.com> wrote: > > > Has anyone encountered a decent C, or C++ editor? I've been using > > CodeWorrier at school. That's an editor that runs on a MAC. I was > > looking for something similar to that for linux. I don't like using VI > > when i edit code. I'm running Red Hat 5.1 if that is of any importance. > > +----------------------------------------------+ > Gerald Feldman <gaf at mediaone.net> > Boston Computer Solutions and Consulting > ICQ#156300 -- +----------------------------------------+-----------------------+ | Sheldon M. Dubrowin | GTE Internetworking | | Network Engineer | 40 Sylvan Road | | GTE Internetworking, | Waltham, Ma 02154 | | Powered by BBN | (617) 873-5430 | | QoS and VPN Engineering | dubrowin at bbn.com | +----------------------------------------+-----------------------+
BLU is a member of BostonUserGroups | |
We also thank MIT for the use of their facilities. |