- Source: MicroEMACS
MicroEMACS is a small, portable Emacs-like text editor originally written by Dave Conroy in 1985, and further developed by Daniel M. Lawrence (1958–2010) and was maintained by him. MicroEMACS has been ported to many operating systems, including CP/M, MS-DOS, Microsoft Windows, VMS, Atari ST, AmigaOS, OS-9, NeXTSTEP, and various Unix-like operating systems.
Variants of MicroEMACS also exist, such as mg, a more GNU Emacs-compatible editor. Many relationships to contemporary editors can also be found in MicroEMACS. The vi clone vile was derived from an older version of MicroEMACS.
University of Washington's simple text editor Pico was based on MicroEMACS 3.6. Pico's featureset and interface would later be emulated in the free software clone GNU nano due to its ambiguous licensing terms.
Linus Torvalds, creator of Linux, has been a user of MicroEMACS since his days as a student at the University of Helsinki.
See also
List of text editors
Comparison of text editors
References
External links
Daniel Lawrence's MicroEMACS site
MicroEMACS 4.0 manual
Daniel Lawrence's MicroEMACS source updated for 64-bit Windows
MicroEMACS binaries site
JASSPA MicroEmacs site
vile (VI Like Emacs) site
Emacs Wiki
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- MicroEMACS
- Mg (text editor)
- Vi (text editor)
- Coherent (operating system)
- Emacs
- List of text editors
- Applix 1616
- Amiga programming languages
- Amiga productivity software