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Date:      Sun, 18 Oct 1998 12:03:52 +0930
From:      Greg Lehey <grog@lemis.com>
To:        djv@bedford.net, Josh <alf2@swbell.net>
Cc:        freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: emacs?
Message-ID:  <19981018120352.R435@freebie.lemis.com>
In-Reply-To: <199810171304.JAA10907@castor.chuck>; from Woodchuck on Sat, Oct 17, 1998 at 09:04:04AM -0400
References:  <3623D54C.5045DBA@swbell.net> <199810171304.JAA10907@castor.chuck>

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On Saturday, 17 October 1998 at  9:04:04 -0400, Woodchuck wrote:
> Josh wrote:
>> what is emacs?
>
> emacs is to time as a black hole is to matter.
>
> It is the Tarbaby of editors.
>
> It's what you install when you're fed up with Unix.
>
> Emacs is the demonstration of the old saying  that when all you
> have is a hammer, every problem begins to look like a roast chicken.
>
> Emacs will teach you finger positions that make the Vulcan Death
> Grip look easy.

Emacs isn't an editor, it's a religion.  If you get more than this
answer, you're liable to get two completely different viewpoints: one
group say it's the best thing that ever happened, the others think
it's a symbol of doom.

Once upon a time, Emacs was big, bloated and slow.  Then other
software caught up, and now it's not noticably worse than vi in memory
consumption.  Netscape and most Microsoft software make both look
small and lean.

On the other hand, Emacs is *much* easier to learn than vi.  Use the X
version.

Greg
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