On Thu, 02 Mar 2000 14:13:33 +1030
Mark Phillips <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> You are using gnuclient and not loading a whole new copy of Emacs
>> every time aren't you?
> No. What is gnuclient, how does it work, and what package is it
> in?
Gnuclient is a small tools that tells a running ins
On 2000-03-02 14:13:33, Mark Phillips wrote:
>
> > You are using gnuclient and not loading a whole new copy of Emacs
> > every time aren't you?
>
> No. What is gnuclient, how does it work, and what package is it in?
$ man gnuclient|head -9 |tail -2
gnuserv, gnuclient, gnudoit - Server a
> You are using gnuclient and not loading a whole new copy of Emacs
> every time aren't you?
No. What is gnuclient, how does it work, and what package is it in?
Thanks,
Mark.
_/\___/~~\
/~~\_/~~\__/~~\___
On Wed, 1 Mar 2000, Mark Phillips wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> What the world needs is a text editor which has the following:
>
> 1. Designed from the start to run under X, preferably using gnome
> widgets.
>
> 2. Designed to be somewhat compatible with emacs --- where this
> doesn't impinge on utility.
On Wed, 01 Mar 2000 20:18:28 +1030
Mark Phillips <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> In particular I am looking for an emacs replacement for email
> composition. I use emacs in conjunction with exmh which is quite
> nice in terms of editing power. In particular I like the way it
> can reformat paragra
Hi,
What the world needs is a text editor which has the following:
1. Designed from the start to run under X, preferably using gnome
widgets.
2. Designed to be somewhat compatible with emacs --- where this
doesn't impinge on utility.
3. Designed to be quick to start. It should do this by only
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