Date: Sun, 27 Dec 1998 15:20:15 -0800 (PST) From: Evgeny Roubinchtein <eroubinc@u.washington.edu> To: "K. Marsh" <durang@u.washington.edu> Cc: "q's" <freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG> Subject: Re: environment for programming- Context Colored Message-ID: <Pine.A41.4.05.9812271509410.115616-100000@dante09.u.washington.edu> In-Reply-To: <Pine.A41.4.05.9812271231080.97338-100000@goodall1.u.washington.edu>
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On Sun, 27 Dec 1998, K. Marsh wrote: (can't help you on the first question, sorry :-) >Do vi, emacs, others have similar features? GNU emacs has font-lock mode, just like xemacs does, if you like to have it everywhere, the info file that comes with GNU emacs, suggests you use: (global-font-lock-mode t) (setq font-lock-maximum-decoration t) in your .emacs. It also suggests: (setq font-lock-support-mode 'lazy-lock-mode) to make it faster on large files. To my knowledge, nvi -- the "vi" you get with freebsd -- doesn't have color higlighting, but (x)vile, elvis, and vim all do. Both xvile and vim are in ports/editors -- vim5 has syntax highlighting, I don't think vim4 does. VIM is a really neat vi superset, by the way. -- Evgeny Roubinchtein, eroubinc@u.washington.edu ................... Logic: The art of being wrong with confidence... To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message
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