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My favourite Gui based are Gedit (simple) and Emacs (complex). For command line, there is vim and nano that are good.
EMac was created in 2002.
Depends on what's installed: oowriter gedit abiword lyx kate nano vim emacs
There are many places where one can find information on using Emacs on Windows. One can find information on using Emacs on Windows at popular on the web sources such as GNU and Emacs Wiki.
apt-get install emacs
When using GNU Emacs, one can use various shortcut commands within the program. M-, is the command one would use to find the next tag whose name matches the last pattern.
Since Emacs is an programmable editor it would be difficult to find paid project based work based solely on Emacs alone.
Anything can be made into a command on a Linux system. The steps are easy. First, using any text editor (vim, emacs, etc.) create a text file. Put anything you want to do in this file. Save the file. Make sure the file you just created has read and execute permissions (chmod). That's it! Now you have a command that you can execute in Linux.
type in emacs -batch -l dunnet
There are several ways to read a text file. You can use one of several text editors, including vi, vim, emacs, joe, and nano. You can also parse it through the cat command like this: cat nameoffile.txt | less
James gosling
well, you may think shao khan is but its Ermac it says it on Emacs ending