On Sun, Nov 25, 2012 at 11:33 PM, Sergio Ruiz <[email protected]> wrote: > A member of this group wants to run Vim on a Window, and SBCL on another > Window. He already tried ConqueTerm, Gnu Screen and Konsole, but all these > solutions have serious drawbacks. I was in the same situation a few months > ago. I needed to run SBCL on a window, while editing source code on another > window. At some point, I remembered the joke about Emacs being an excellent > operating system, but lacking a good editor. Therefore, I decided to provide > a good text editor to that excellent operating system. ... > Be carefull. You must open a term buffer. The trick does not work on shell > buffers. Of course, you can use all Emacs goodies: Org mode for managing > projects, flymake for checking the syntax, dired and ido for fast access > file, etc. I have been running Vim from inside Emacs for three months. I > wonder whether this approach has drawbacks. It must have, because nobody uses > it, as far as I know. Can anybody tell me why it is not widely used?
Thank you for this info. I'm only a beginner on vim and emacs - trying to decide between the two! You say emacs is an excellent operating system. I find emacs hard to grasp as there is just so much of it. To me it goes beyond the philosophy (some call Unix's) - Do one thing and do it well! Emacs has such poor things like it's games and other stuff which aren't as good as alternatives. As an editor it doesn't read in some txt files... that's just to mention one thing.To me it seems like a system that promises much and delivers little. Why does one want to use emacs to run vim inside? You ask "Can anybody tell me why it is not widely used?" - i can't see any reason to use emacs other than an editor. As you mention it , Org i think is a poor application. Reading pdf files... one might as well stay with Evince. I use a text editor for writing; vim and emacs are the only two that provide 'softwrap'. I don't find vim hard to learn but i find emacs sort of 'hard going' for no reason. Emacs 'isn't it's own best friend' as the saying goes - the manual is comprehensive but an exceptionally hard slog. On the emacs mail list there was a post a while back about how emacs could be further improved - remove the unnecessary hard learning curve and a provide a user friendly manual. To me as a learner... the answer to your question is in the above paragraph. james -- You received this message from the "vim_use" maillist. Do not top-post! Type your reply below the text you are replying to. For more information, visit http://www.vim.org/maillist.php
