Do you mean that you can run emacs in (MS) Windows. If so, could you please tell me where to find the windows version.
Cheers Rich [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > I think my recommendation as far as xemacs vs emacs goes is that, for > a new emacs user, xemacs offers that one advantage of GUIs -- little > pull down menus that help you use the editor before you learn all the > esoteric keystrokes. Once you've taken advantage of that for a bit > using xemacs -nw (no windows) on a terminal is just fine. > > I've never tried to learn vi. I admit, if you just want to create a > file of a couple lines in your administration of your box, starting > x/emacs may seem like overkill. I always use > > $ echo "whatever needs\nto go here" > into.the.new.file > > I think the best part about emacs is that you can run it on windows -- > and using it to navigate the file structure, delete, rename, and move > files is simply a *joy* (well, compared to being stuck in windows in > the first place). > > My only current complaint about emacs is more a complaint about > screen. I'm going nuts not being able to use ^a to get to the > beginning of a line..... If anyone uses emacs with screen, i'd love a > chance to see your .screenrc. > > Cheerios, > > judith > > -- > Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null