Richard,

I dont think it is feasible to support emacs keybindings on a custom editor, they are deeply related to emacs workflow. It is easier to support GNU nano (aka pico) keys, they are easy and simple

Cheers

Enviado de meu iPhone

Em 27/09/2009, às 13:25, Richard Gaskin <ambassa...@fourthworld.com> escreveu:

A long time ago Andre Garzia wrote:

> On 12/7/07, Richard Gaskin wrote:
...
>> What's your favorite JavaScript editor?
...
> It pays to learn emacs or vi, since you'll probably be using ssh to
> the server and thats is probably what you'll have in there.

Since it started as a fork of MC's open source editor, my custom text editor originally had support for emacs key bindings. But recently I was cleaning up the code and opted to remove that support, since I've not come across anyone (except Scott Raney <g>) who's used emacs in the last decade.

How often do you use emacs?

Do others here use it?

How essential would you consider the option of supporting emacs key bindings in a 21st century text editor?

--
Richard Gaskin
Fourth World
Rev training and consulting: http://www.fourthworld.com
Webzine for Rev developers: http://www.revjournal.com
revJournal blog: http://revjournal.com/blog.irv
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