On Tue, Mar 22, 2016 at 09:50:02AM +0800, Elias Mårtenson wrote: > There was another project that > aimed to provide something similar, using a dedicated application > called aplwrap. What happened to that?
Chris Moller wrote aplwrap. I contributed some improvements and was the last person to work on the project. (Chris was kind enough to share his GitHub login with me when he got busy with other commitments; I haven't heard from Chris since then.) Chris Moller also wrote aplplot, which can be used standalone or from aplwrap. To the best of my knowledge, aplwrap *should* still be viable. I personally stopped using aplwrap when my own apl-pkg project reached the point where I was comfortable working within that environment. In apl-pkg I took the approach of shelling out to an external editor. No particular reason, save that I wasn't particularly interested in writing an editor in APL, which would have gootten pretty complicated had I attempted to emulate some kind of full-screen interface. FWIW, apl-pkg is much more than a wrapper around an external editor. Similar to gnu-apl-mode, apl-pkg provides a number of tools for programming-in-the-large. Before aplwrap and apl-pkg I very much liked gnu-apl-mode. A couple years back -- after having used Emacs for four decades -- I wanted to *finally* learn vi, so I ditched Emacs and switched everything over to vim (and more recently, vis). Referenced Projects: https://github.com/ChrisMoller/aplwrap https://github.com/tiedyeddevil