text editors with elinks or links?

Karen Lewellen klewellen at shellworld.net
Wed Aug 2 12:43:32 EDT 2006


I have to agree, especially given the different ways some programs can be 
installed and configured.  If one is using your own setup perhaps, but if a 
shell in this ase you cannot be certain the man files will contain the 
answer desired.
You may find faster an individual in the same situation, or who has 
encountered the situation previously and has an answer.
I offer as example the solution I was given to actually load the editor in 
the first place.
Karen

On Mon, 31 Jul 2006, propaine wrote:

> Kirk's comments here prompt me to make a general set of observations.  I
> suspect that I'm not alone in the perspective they express, but of course, I
> may indeed be under a dunce cap.
>
> I can't speak for the questioner here, but note that sometimes, sadly, it
> does seem better to ask a question on a list like this and await an answer.
> Man pages seem to vary a hell of a lot in quality.  I often find them terse
> and cryptic, and sometimes barely even a starting point for knowing what to
> do.  The sendmail man page on my system, for example, refers me to an
> installation and user's guide for the kind of information I need about it,
> but says nothing about where the guide is.
>
> Yesterday, I looked at the man page for the Nano editor.  I was reading
> about it in a book on Debian, and was curious to see whether my Fedora
> system had it.  It does.  The manual gives some info, but, at least as far
> as I could tell, doesn't even mention keystrokes for moving around in a
> document--not even the page-up and page-down keys mentioned in the Debian
> book.  I wondered if maybe you're supposed to know Pico already, since it's
> intended to be largely compatible with that editor.  If so, it seems
> an idiotic approach, one of those Linux things that seem intended to
> perpetuate forever the primacy of Windows.
>
> There is more decent documentation on Linux than there was a few years ago,
> when I first tried to understand it.  (Some of it's even quite good!) I
> appreciate that very much.  Still, I'm amazed at, say, my inability to get a
> clear, precise answer to the question about whether replacing Fedora 2 with
> Fedora 5 can be done as an upgrade or requires a full reinstall.  The Fedora
> Web site doesn't seem to say.  The several books on Fedora that I have don't
> seem to say.  My Linux networking teacher, who said he's been in the Unix
> world since Carter was president, couldn't tell me.  From parts of things
> I've read on this list and a thing or two I've heard elsewhere, I gather
> that one can't leapfrog versions that way.  That's the kind of thing that
> should be prominently noted in any documentation about installation or
> upgrades, though.  (Incidentally, I'm not singling out Fedora:  I looked for
> that sort of information about Debian, but so far haven't seen it.) If the
> info's there and I've missed it, it's sure not for lack of willingness to
> search and read!
>
> In short, RTFM, as the saying goes, is a good idea, but sometimes it doesn't
> work--at least for me.  RTFM should lead to UTFM, but often enough it does
> not.  Also, there are times when the M stands for "MISSING INFORMATION."
> Yes, I know that documenting in Linux is largely the work of volunteers, but
> whatever that says about the generosity of the people, it doesn't make the
> stuff more helpful.
>
> If the problem is instead that I'm wearing an impenetrable dunce cap, I of
> course welcome any information that will enable to discard this bit of
> headgear.
>
> Propaine
> From: "Kirk Reiser" <kirk at braille.uwo.ca>
> To: "Speakup is a screen review system for Linux." <speakup at braille.uwo.ca>
> Sent: Monday, July 31, 2006 8:11 AM
> Subject: Re: text editors with elinks or links?
>
>
>> I am sure you can get that information here eventually but wouldn't it
>> be easier to just check your keymap in links?  You have to ask here
>> and then wait for someone to bother to answer when the info is at your
>> finger tips all the time in links or lynx or elinks or whatever
>> application you happen to be using.  In fact, usually the man pages
>> for a particular application will tell you the information much
>> quicker than asking here as well.
>>
>> I don't remember about links the chain but it is F4 in elinks.
>>
>>   Kirk
>>
>> --
>>
>> Kirk Reiser The Computer Braille Facility
>> e-mail: kirk at braille.uwo.ca University of Western Ontario
>> phone: (519) 661-3061
>>
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