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On Thu, May 21, 2009 at 2:03 AM, Tom Metro <tmetro-blu-5a1Jt6qxUNc at public.gmane.org> wrote: > Any recommendations for a Linux GUI text editor that will automatically > save unnamed buffers? > > In other words, you can do "File | New", type some text, have a system > crash, reboot, and recover the typed text. > > There are plenty of editors that will autosave a named buffer, but > almost none that will also do it for an unnamed buffer. (I've used a > couple of Windows-only editors that have this feature. You'd think crash > recovery would be an expected standard feature on all GUI apps., but > sadly it isn't.) > > ?-Tom Have you tried Quanta? "Qantas never crash" - Dustin Hoffman in Rainman http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kJZQkslDBjM Ooops, that's Qantas the airline (but I love that scene). Quanta, the editor, certainly has crashed. Add to that it's suffering from very slow development to get onto the KDE4 bandwagon. Still, it has an auto-save feature. I wasn't able to check if it does it on an unnamed buffer - but I'm 90% sure that it does. caveat: one of the great features of Quanta is that it allows transparent network operations through KIO slaves. That means you can edit files on your server using file->open->fish://user-hcDgGtZH8xNBDgjK7y7TUQ at public.gmane.org/path/to/file In that scenario, I know I've lost contents on a crash - or at least had to go looking for them on the local disk because quanta didn't look in it's remote file cache the same way it looks in it's local file cache. ~ Greg -- Greg Rundlett Web Developer - Initiative in Innovative Computing http://iic.harvard.edu camb 617-384-5872 nbpt 978-225-8302 m. 978-764-4424 -skype/aim/irc/twitter freephile http://profiles.aim.com/freephile
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