[Martin Gregorie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>] | | As for documentation, lets look at vi. Not a great editor, but every | *nix variation has it installed and any fool can learn to use it in | about 2 hours flat and it does at least have good pattern matching.
there's also the "info" system in Emacs, which not only covers Emacs itself, but usually also a lot of documentation available for Emacs extensions and other programs. again, this predates a lot of things that people are used to today, so just because it seems (and sometimes is) a bit more fiddly, it must necessarily be inferior. the most common theme when people have to choose between products is that they are not really comparing what it is like to use the products like they were intended -- they are merely underlining that X is not Y. for instance, Linux has come a long way in addressing the needs of desktop users, yet some people refuse to use Linux because it doesn't behave *exactly* like Windows (as if that was a worthwhile goal) and they are too lazy or don't think they can manage, to learn a new system. -Bjørn -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list