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What's funny to me is that when I clicked "next" and another "HTML design..." email popped up I thought, "That's it, I'm going to mention emacs." Although I am still an emacs neophyte, it certainly does do everything. I find it easier to use vi for most quick editing things, but that is because I'm so new to emacs. James Rich wrote: >On Tue., 27 Nov 2001, Martin Rowe wrote: > >>If you'd like to try a genuinely free editor, I'd recommend looking at >>Vim - http://www.vim.org which is what I use in Linux, but the Win32 port >> > >I can't resist any longer. I'm throwing emacs into the fray. I never >really could get into vi too much. Emacs does everything that NotePad is >claimed to do plus some. Heck, emacs does *everything* (if you write a >lisp extension for it). It is even fairly intuitive when run in X >(console version a little less so). So there! > >p.s. this is not a vi/emacs battle post - just another option. There are >so many useful tools out there that it is easy to miss some that are truly >useful. > >James Rich >james@eaerich.com > -- Chris Rehm javadisciple@earthlink.net And thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart... ...Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. There is none other commandment greater than these. Mark 12:30-31
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