From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 To: 9fans@cse.psu.edu From: Jonadab the Unsightly One Message-ID: Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii References: <20011029212843.8C760199F3@mail.cse.psu.edu>, Subject: Re: [9fans] What makes Plan 9 unique? Date: Tue, 6 Nov 2001 10:22:28 +0000 Topicbox-Message-UUID: 15945af6-eaca-11e9-9e20-41e7f4b1d025 Someone writes: > Jonadab the Unsightly One writes: > > dhog@plan9.bell-labs.com (David Gordon Hogan) writes: > > > Like when I go to edit a mistyped word in a web page edit box, > > > and as soon as I've moused over the first character, the > > > selection expands to the entire word. The neighbours must > > > wonder why I'm swearing so much. > > > > Clearly you are using an inferior editor. Do not lay this at the > > feet of the operating system. You could download and install a > > perfectly good editor, and then you would not have this problem. > > > > Windows has its _own_ problems. It does not need to have the > > flaws of other software attributed to it as well. > > Woah! High flame alert on all counts; asbestos underwear: engaged. No, it's true: Windows has some inherent problems. I say this as a Windows user. It does not need the flaws of inferior text editors laid at its feet. There are perfectly good editors available for Windows; you don't have to use the ones that come with. A flaw in a "web page edit box" in Windows does not constitute a flaw in Windows. Problems with the "Neighborhood" implementation of smb, bizarre behavior when there are non-FAT logical partitons, a dynamic library implementation that breeds version conflicts, lack of any protection against wild pointers in one process scribbling over another process, these are flaws in Windows. A web page edit box that doesn't do the right thing, that's a flaw in the editor in question. > Really, you're not going to make friends posting > pro-emacs stuff to 9fans. Really? What editor do y'all use? What are its strengths? What does it do better than, for example, Emacs? (Apart from taking less disk space and less RAM, of course.) I always like to check out alternatives... But the OP was talking about a Windows system, so an editor specific to plan9 wouldn't be an option in that case, unless there's a Windows port. But there are lots of different editors freely available, so there's no sense using one you don't like. I don't. I deleted Notepad from my Windows system years ago, because I need an editor with the power to do pretty much anything. (Yes, I know it's bloated. But since it substitutes adequately for at least half a dozen applications, that's somewhat justified.) -- Jonadab, avid multibooter looking for a new OS to try out.