-
Emacs (/ˈiːmæks/ ),
originally named EMACS (an
acronym for "Editor Macros"), is a
family of text
editors that are
characterized by
their extensibility...
- GNU
Emacs is a text
editor and
suite of free
software tools. Its
development began in 1984 by GNU
Project founder Richard Stallman,
based on the
Emacs editor...
- (nano
before MacOS Ventura 12.3), TextEdit, and Vim. The
Church of
Emacs,
formed by
Emacs and the GNU Project's
creator Richard Stallman, is a
parody religion...
- boot OS 9,
while eMacs slower than 1 GHz do not
officially support 10.5 (requirements are an 867 MHz G4 with 512 MB RAM). The
eMac was
generally well-received...
-
Emacs Lisp is a Lisp
dialect made for
Emacs. It is used for
implementing most of the
editing functionality built into
Emacs, the
remainder being written...
-
Gosling Emacs (often
shortened to "Gosmacs" or "gmacs") is a
discontinued Emacs implementation written in 1981 by
James Gosling in C.
Gosling initially...
- "micro-
emacs",
which has
absolutely nothing to do with GNU
emacs except that some of the key
bindings are similar.
Daniel Lawrence's Micro
EMACS site MicroEMACS...
-
version of GNU
Emacs (presumed to be
version 19). In the late 1980s,
Richard P. Gabriel's
Lucid Inc.
faced a
requirement to ship
Emacs to
support the...
-
cleaner Lisp
dialect than
Emacs Lisp, and that GEL
could evolve to
implement other languages on the same runtime,
namely Emacs Lisp.
After Lord discovered...
-
based on a
unification of
similar licenses used for
early versions of GNU
Emacs (1985), the GNU Debugger, and the GNU C Compiler.
These licenses contained...