interesting experiment.
Octavian Rasnita
orasnita at home.ro
Sun May 19 22:05:05 EDT 2002
No, I was talking exactly about that thing.
I need to make CGI programs that are portable to more OS's. That's why I
need a good text editor.
I don't need a word processor, for formatting documents, printing, etc. I
need it only for a simple ascii text.
I've seen more messages telling that there are a lot of good text editors,
but I haven't seen any example.
So I am using pico now.
Teddy,
orasnita at home.ro
----- Original Message -----
From: "Janina Sajka" <janina at afb.net>
To: <speakup at braille.uwo.ca>
Sent: Sunday, May 19, 2002 8:32 AM
Subject: Re: interesting experiment.
Hey, Toby:
Yeah, I understand about the line termination differences among
the various OS's. But, do you really think he was talking about
ASCII files having different end of line designators? Somehow I
doubt it.
On Sun, 19 May 2002, Toby Fisher wrote:
> On Sat, 18 May 2002, Janina Sajka wrote:
>
> >
> > > Is there a text editor, that has macro features, Regular expressions,
the
> > > ability to save in Windows/Mac/Unix format, etc?
> >
> > What is Mac format? I've never heard of that. And what is Windows
> > format?
>
> Just taking a guess here.
>
> As you probably know, DOS/Windows uses a cr lf combination for a newline
> character. Ok now bare with me on the next bit cos I always get confused
> here. Linux/unix ohnly uses an lf character. Well, the Mac uses a cr
> character. Macs have a hard enough time dealing with cr lf combinations,
> I know, I know, that's cos they're broken, but there it is. Also, the
> hfs file syst em is kind of weird, that's why access to it is still marked
> as experimental in the Linux kernel, though it's been around since I think
> 2.2 or even late 2.0 days.
>
> Then again, he could just be talking about MS Office/Claris Works.
>
> > > Is there powerful text editing, formatting,
> scripting?
> Of course > there is. Far more powerful than in Windows or Mac. There are
> > probably too many to mention, actually. Linux/Unix has the
> > proprietary world beat hands down on this one.
>
> Oooo yeh, I mean, my Slackware distriburtion comes with at least 4 for the
> console, and I think there are some more optional ones as well.
>
> > You certainly don't need them to communicate with anyone, or to
> > print out lovely reports, or design lovely e-content for on line
> > publishing, etc.
>
> As a matter of interest, where would you recommend as a good place to
> start my education into latex? I mean, which part of the docs? *smile*
>
>
> <snip>
>
> Cheers.
>
>
--
Janina Sajka, Director
Technology Research and Development
Governmental Relations Group
American Foundation for the Blind (AFB)
Email: janina at afb.net Phone: (202) 408-8175
Chair, Accessibility SIG
Open Electronic Book Forum (OEBF)
http://www.openebook.org
_______________________________________________
Speakup mailing list
Speakup at braille.uwo.ca
http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup
More information about the Speakup
mailing list