Best Python editor (under Linux)
holger krekel
pyth at devel.trillke.net
Sat Jan 4 12:07:06 EST 2003
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Sat Jan 4 12:07:06 EST 2003
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Bengt Richter wrote: > On Fri, 03 Jan 2003 19:09:08 -0000, Steve Lamb <grey at despair.dmiyu.org> wrote: > > >On Fri, 03 Jan 2003 19:23:23 +0100, Martin Christensen > ><knightsofspamalot-factotum at gvdnet.dk> wrote: > >> What's more interesting, it looks like the vi camp is starting to chase > >> Emacs, because the things that are being implemented for Vim is exactly what > >> we've been doing all along for Emacs. Ironic, isn't it? > > > > I doubt we'll ever see a newsreader and email client in vim's scripting > >lanuage. BTW, pick one. It has four that I am aware of and three of them are > >discussed here heavilty. Perl, Python and Ruby. As I said before, it is the > >penchant for craming everything and the kitchen sink into the editor which has > >no business being there. > > Maybe a different concept of the "craming" would help. IOW, ISTM letting > "everything and and the kitchen sink" be accessible through an editor interface > interface does not contitute "craming" those things into the editor. > > News readers and email clients have to be written with a lot text manipulation > features that have much in common with primitives used in writing editors, so if > you wanted to write a full-featured and extensible news reader or email client, > what route would you take? > > Suppose there were a Python module called tme.py which you could import and get > all kinds of handy classes for holding chunks of text and methods for manipulating > them, and tapping into file objects as sources and sinks, etc., etc., would you > not tend to use that for your news reader or email client project? > I'll assume you would ;-) me, too :-) > Ok, now suppose tme.py when run as a program started an interactive shell that > presented a nicely featured editor, which happened to have some simple editing > features you wanted for composing email or news posts, etc., so the basic > composition problem was solved. Would you build on this interface? If it would allow to embed e.g. a code-editor-ui into another ui then i would probably build on it. Example: GUI-editing widgets are often allowed to be placed into another widget. side question: is this possible at all with curses and 'vim'? > BTW, FWIW, I cut my editing teeth on TECO, but I tend to use vim (or vi for non-gui) lately, > unless I'm using the builtin for MSVC++6's IDE (which (the IDE) is hard to beat for stepping > through code). I guess I will have to move to emacs for real geek creds though ;-) or you write tme.py :-) holger -- "Why are people killing each other when there is so much fun stuff to be had through friendly cooperation?" (Bengt Richter on c.l.py)
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