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Author Message
25 new of 156 responses total.
tpryan
response 61 of 156: Mark Unseen   Jan 25 23:17 UTC 1999

        I've been hair-raising for the past 7 weeks.  Jan 26th is the
hair harvest.
mcnally
response 62 of 156: Mark Unseen   Jan 26 01:22 UTC 1999

  Don't tell me it'll be gone tomorrow..  
danr
response 63 of 156: Mark Unseen   Jan 26 01:22 UTC 1999

Sounds like too much fun for me.
davel
response 64 of 156: Mark Unseen   Jan 26 13:56 UTC 1999

s/fairwell/farewell/   (I presume)?

Not that there's any special reason for me to be there, but there's a parents'
meeting at school tonight.  (And another one Thursday.  Busy week.)
senna
response 65 of 156: Mark Unseen   Jan 26 16:44 UTC 1999

What?  No Jesse THE BODY Ventura?
valerie
response 66 of 156: Mark Unseen   Jan 27 06:00 UTC 1999

This response has been erased.

aruba
response 67 of 156: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 20:25 UTC 1999

I'd like to announce that I am now beginning to enter the last batch of items
for this edition of the Grex auction.  I plan on entering about 2 per day
for the next couple of weeks.  Brand new items start at number 129, so please
come by and check them out, and check out the December items that haven't sold
yet, too.  They are numbered between 77 and 128.
fairy
response 68 of 156: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 23:11 UTC 1999

um ...im announcing that spring will be here early cause of the silly
groundhog
valerie
response 69 of 156: Mark Unseen   Feb 4 01:49 UTC 1999

This response has been erased.

remmers
response 70 of 156: Mark Unseen   Feb 4 02:07 UTC 1999

Emacs rules. Your mileage may vary.
mcnally
response 71 of 156: Mark Unseen   Feb 4 02:32 UTC 1999

  indeed..
valerie
response 72 of 156: Mark Unseen   Feb 4 02:42 UTC 1999

This response has been erased.

devnull
response 73 of 156: Mark Unseen   Feb 4 02:54 UTC 1999

Chances are emacs 20 works better on grex than it was working for more
than a year on the gnu project's main mail server...

(There was a bug that I knew how to fix in our emacs 20.2 installation,
and never got around to it until after 20.3 came out.  emacs was having
trouble figuring out how to deal with certain directory names; I forget
the details.)
other
response 74 of 156: Mark Unseen   Feb 4 07:14 UTC 1999

after all this time, i'm still wondering what emacs is, and why there's an
option for emacs mouse in versaterm...
omni
response 75 of 156: Mark Unseen   Feb 4 08:23 UTC 1999

  VI is the only editor God ever wrote. All others were authored by Satan.

  Use vi, or burn in hell.

  Not that I'm religious about vi or anything. ;)
remmers
response 76 of 156: Mark Unseen   Feb 4 13:25 UTC 1999

Just gave the new emacs a test run, and it appears to work fine.
janc
response 77 of 156: Mark Unseen   Feb 4 17:26 UTC 1999

Emacs is an editor so powerful and complex that if your computer has
Emacs on it, you no longer need the rest of the computer.
omni
response 78 of 156: Mark Unseen   Feb 4 19:00 UTC 1999

 Oh no, I think I've started yet another war.
jshafer
response 79 of 156: Mark Unseen   Feb 4 20:23 UTC 1999

resp:77 - Jan, that one's going in my fortunes database...  
(Assuming you have no objections?)
janc
response 80 of 156: Mark Unseen   Feb 5 00:19 UTC 1999

Welcome to it.  I use vi.  It knows when to stop.
devnull
response 81 of 156: Mark Unseen   Feb 5 00:33 UTC 1999

One of the nice things about vi is that you can spend a weekend learning
everything there is to know about vi.

emacs, on the other hand, is so complex that I don't think any one human
being knows all of its commands.

The fact that vi is easier to completely understand does not imply that
it is superior to emacs, however.
void
response 82 of 156: Mark Unseen   Feb 5 02:36 UTC 1999

   i prefer pico.

  <void stands in the heretics' corner. ;>
davel
response 83 of 156: Mark Unseen   Feb 5 02:45 UTC 1999

I'm sure there are applications for which emacs is suitable.  I once thought
I had one, but I couldn't figure out how to use emacs for it.  Even with a
manual.  I was lucky to escape from emacs without completely destroying my
file.

If I recall, you *can't* learn emacs.  It's too configurable.  Sit down at
someone else's emacs, configured for that person, and anything and everything
may not work the same.
cmcgee
response 84 of 156: Mark Unseen   Feb 5 03:47 UTC 1999

TWice today I've had a great deal of trouble with bbs.  The first time, it was
running the whole screenful of information as one line at the bottom of my
screen, typing over each line as it started the next.  It took about 4 tries to
get it to give me a regular screen. Just now, the word wrap isn't working, and
I have to manually put in a carriage return t or else the buffer fills up with
text.  

And I'm working on the third attempt to get into the conferences, at least  one
attempt is suspended with control z in the background, while I tried twice more
to get it to let me see the responses.

And this screen full of typing looks like it is pretty badly mangeld as far
as formatting goes.

I reset my terminal type and screen size three times this afternoon, trying
to get PicoSpan to give me the right stuff.
mcnally
response 85 of 156: Mark Unseen   Feb 5 06:44 UTC 1999

  Over the years my position on emacs has softened.  Out of necessity I will
  use it as the front end for gdb and for simple code-editing tasks between
  compiles.  When I really want to edit, though, I can't imagine choosing
  emacs over vi..
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