Rms did Not like. Sigh On Thu, Aug 3, 2023 at 8:44 PM Clem Cole wrote: > http://wiki.c2.com/?TecoEditor > > Cantrell’s teco was pretty fast and used a lot less resources than any of > the Unix EMACS invocations. Gosling / CMU EMACS showed up in 81 on the Vax > and is where mocklisp came from. Zimmerman EMACS may have been earlier at > MIT but Steve sold it to CCA so it was not nearly as widespread. Noel may > know more. We got a license from CCA in ‘84 and shipped it on the Masscomp > systems. > > Rms did like a number things gosling did and start to rewrite it. (The > defaults were different from ITS was one of his issues). He released his > version around 85. FWIW: There is still some bad blood wrt to that whole > path best I can tell. > > I think there were a couple of others. > > > On Thu, Aug 3, 2023 at 8:04 PM Will Senn wrote: > >> As a longtime user and lover of ed/ex/vi, I don't know much about emacs, >> but lately I've been using it more (as it seems like any self-respecting >> lisper, has to at least have a passing acquaintance with it). I recently >> went off and got MACLISP running in ITS. As part of that exploration, I >> used EMACS, but not just any old emacs, emacs in it's first incarnation as >> a set of TECO macros. To me, it just seemed like EMACS. I won't bore you >> with the details - imagine lots of control and escape sequences, many of >> which are the same today as then. This was late 70's stuff. >> >> My question for the group is - when did emacs arrive in unix and was it a >> full fledged text editor when it came or was it sitting on top of some >> other subssystem in unix? Was TECO ever on unix? >> >> >> Will >> > -- > Sent from a handheld expect more typos than usual > -- Sent from a handheld expect more typos than usual