i go with vile (vi Like Emacs).  uses the vi modes,
syntax highlighting, auto indenting, win32 and unix,
filesystem browser from inside the editor, buffers,
yada yada.  best of both worlds kinda.
very nice.   

-marco

--- Steve Revilak <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wed, 10 Jan 2001, Joel Gwynn wrote:
> 
> > It does color-coding and auto-indenting.  It has a
> menu so you don't have
> > to learn all those Ctrl and Esc keystrokes, but if
> you learn the ones you
> > need (I get by with about 10), you'll be at home
> in a telnet session.
> > Don't be afraid.
> 
> I'm also an emacs junkie :)  To me, many of the Ctrl
> and Esc sequences
> are second nature, but they can definitely be arcane
> to learn.  One
> thing I found helpful was to print out a copy of the
> reference card,
> an keep it next to my keyboard while working. 
> Spending a little time
> with the tutorial (C-h t) will probably help as
> well.
> 
> If you want to do a lot of customization to the
> editor, learing a
> little lisp is probably a necessity.  If you have
> access to version
> 20, there's a front end (M-x customize) that will
> write the lisp code
> into your .emacs, but be prepared to do some manual
> editing if you
> need it to be backward-compatible with earlier
> versions.
> 
> And if you're ever bored, there's always doctor :)
> 
> -- 
> Steve Revilak
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 
> 


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