Looking for a Simple Text Editor
David C. Howland
dch at cci632.UUCP
Sat Aug 27 00:09:54 AEST 1988
In article <4912 at fluke.COM> pwl at tc.fluke.COM (Paul Lutt) writes:
>I have been asked by one of our users to try to obtain a "simple to
>learn and use" visual text editor. He considers vi and emacs to be
>much too complicated for the casual user. He also considers the PC-
>based WordPerfect to be too complicated.
One the the engineers here wrote an "easy-mode" for GNUemacs. Instead
of taking functionally out of emacs easy-mode hides it. To get back to
full Emacs one types C-cC-c.
Easy-mode uses soft keys and a display menu. On the menu are simple
functions such as find-file and save-buffer.
This is an example display menu. (much prettier than this and reverse video).
______________________ ______________________________ _______________________
|find| save |switch | | grep| next | shell|compare | | other |two | next|
|file| buffer|buffer | | | error| |window | | window|windows| menu|
---------------------- ------------------------------ -----------------------
The terminal we use in house has two lines at the top of the terminal
that are not accessible to emacs normally. On these two lines are the
display menu.
By typing "next menu" (last entry on the example line above) pops up
the next menu and binds the soft keys to the currently displayed menu.
Shifted next menu takes you back one menu. The menus are circular so
hitting next menu will eventuality take you back to the menu you are
currently on.
To add functionality to easy-mode requires a table change to allow
the new function and to add/update the menus.
Easy-mode is soooo easy even a ....... could figure it out!
Goal in life:
The eradication of vi! :-)
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