[Coco] Coco Digest, Vol 49, Issue 24
Gene Heskett
gene.heskett at verizon.net
Tue Aug 7 21:36:27 EDT 2007
On Tuesday 07 August 2007, Paul Fitch wrote:
>> Message: 10
>> Date: Tue, 7 Aug 2007 02:50:39 -0600
>> From: Willard Goosey <goosey at virgo.sdc.org>
>> Subject: [Coco] screen editors
>> To: coco at maltedmedia.com
>> Message-ID: <200708070850.l778odDS002920 at virgo.sdc.org>
>>
>> I usually use uemacs, though it certainly does have buffer size
>> limits.
>>
>> stevie is also a reasonable choice, but be careful with it: It's a vi
>> clone, so it uses <escape> a lot... but doesn't catch the EOF signal
>> OS-9 sends it if you type the wrong esc-key combo.
>>
>> For big stuff I use ds. It's rock solid, and can handle files bigger
>> that its buffer, but uses Wordstar keybinds.
>>
>> There's also scred, in the Dev System. Like TS-EDIT it sort-of
>> pretends to be vi.
>>
>> I've only used the linux version of VED, which probably doesn't have
>> the same look-and-feel of the OS-9 original, since it uses the
>> f1-f7 keys. ;-)
>>
>> Willard
>> --
>> Willard Goosey goosey at sdc.org
>> Socorro, New Mexico, USA
>> "I've never been to Contempt! Isn't that somewhere in New Mexico?"
>> --- Yacko
>
>What is ds?
DynaStar, the text editor package of a group of packages that Frank Hogg
Laboratories sold way back then. There was also a DynaCalc, which I used to
do my taxes with for several years, until WV finally succeeded in building a
re-entrant tax law that when you did it their way, gave you a different
answer everytime you pressed the recalc key. At that point I said screw it
and handed it all over to H&R Block. Both were really excellent pieces of
software in their time. There were at least 2 more packages in that family,
DynaSpell comes to mind and the last one may have been Dyna(Print/Form I
forget which). I never saw either of those two however since at the time I
was working on PrintForm, which worked great till the ink squirters took over
for the daisy wheels and pin pounders (dot matrix) of the day.
--
Cheers, Gene
"There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed Howdershelt (Author)
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