From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: krewat@kilonet.net (Arthur Krewat) Date: Wed, 15 Nov 2017 15:25:32 -0500 Subject: [TUHS] TECO was: Re: basic tools / Universal Unix In-Reply-To: References: <20171030141645.6F81C18C0E7@mercury.lcs.mit.edu> <20171115021648.GL6265@mcvoy.com> <6b4ef803-489b-00f5-4a87-14ab907090f8@gmail.com> <108d318d-3879-e056-8b63-f333f85e5516@kilonet.net> <8b1ce7d5-d626-b523-d134-60efd61a0386@kilonet.net> <1f60403b-fc74-35e7-18b9-a33d0d6ef2fb@kilonet.net> Message-ID: It's always interesting how parallel development happens with certain things. I certainly had no exposure to EMACS at the time I came up with the idea, nor the rest of this community you describe. I'm not sure I like vim's coloring, actually. I find myself having to search for a nonexistent string just to get rid of it's highlighting of a search string. On 11/15/2017 3:19 PM, Clem Cole wrote: > > > On Wed, Nov 15, 2017 at 2:52 PM, Arthur Krewat > wrote: > > > When did EMACS start coloring things? > > > ​I'm fairly sure, Gosling EMACS could do color by '83 when we had it > on the Masscomp systems.​  Cantrell's Teco was a year or two later > always support color in some manner, because was a graphics guy at > Masscomp (and DEC before that). > > I'm dating this by, the fact I had left Berkeley by then.   PC or one > of the HW folks  had written a set of EMACS macro's to emulate VMS's > EDT for the ex-DEC HW guys which used color.   The MIT contingent was > all EMACS, but we switched to Zimmerman's EMACS when we hired Steve I > want to say in 84 or 85. I remember there was some heartache because > Zimmerman EMACS was very close to ITS EMACS and preferred by the > ex-MIT folks (unlike Gosling EMACS).   But the color stuff for EDT > broke and there was complaining from the HW folks.  [Andy Tannenbaum, > Eric Ginger and I were the die hard ed/vi folks - which in those days > was BW - to this day even with vim, I still rarely use colors with > that editor]. > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: