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Date:      Sun, 27 Dec 1998 17:37:38 -0800 (PST)
From:      Tony Bucciao <master_incubus@yahoo.com>
To:        Evgeny Roubinchtein <eroubinc@u.washington.edu>, "K. Marsh" <durang@u.washington.edu>
Cc:        "q's" <freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG>
Subject:   Re: environment for programming- Context Colored 
Message-ID:  <19981228013738.2709.rocketmail@send1e.yahoomail.com>

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Hi,

Now here is an option:  Lemmy...

It is a WIN95 based editor which emulates the vi editor...I believe
you can color coat your scripting with this program.  Once you are
done with writing the program in Lemmy transfer it to your bsd box.

I don't have the url for lemmy on me right now...sorry.

Hope this helps,
Tony


---Evgeny Roubinchtein <eroubinc@u.washington.edu> wrote:
>
> 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...
> 


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