From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Date: Thu, 17 Apr 1997 15:46:02 -0600 From: Rich Cannings cannings@cpsc.ucalgary.ca Subject: porting linux programs and drivers to plan9 Topicbox-Message-UUID: 5666ce30-eac8-11e9-9e20-41e7f4b1d025 Message-ID: <19970417214602.BVweS84yl8czXwMHbaDXFaSDY6qr9PUvDGTnxjCu3JE@z> Pete Fenelon wrote: > As far as applications go -- the team carefully left out lurking horrors > like gcc, make and emacs -- they do not fit into the plan9 philosophy; they > are vast, monolithic, inflexible pieces of code. Yes, they're useful on > systems where there isn't an reasonable alternative, but part of the charm > of Plan9 is that it gets away from the need to run bloatware by providing > lean, intelligent, portable tools. > Plan9 is NOT Unix, and you won't enjoy it if you try to pretend that it is. I see many people share your views on unix software. Without digressing into a unix vs. plan9 spam match, if sam is to plan9 as ed is to unix then what would be the emacs of plan9? (I'm sorry Mr. Pike but I can't believe anyone could write code in sam as fast as in emacs.) how is this for a start: a sam where you can define keystrokes. eg. ctrl-x-f would run ">ls", or whatever you do to put ls in a new file or ctrl-c would run ">make"... and of course working arrow keys! rich cannings@cpsc.ucalgary.ca