This entirely depends on the distribution maintainers. Usually it will be either Nano or vi/vim.
There is no the text editor in Linux. There are dozens of possible text editors available for Linux, such as:edviVimEmacsJOENanoJEDKateGeditMousepadLeafpadjEditXeditGeanyNEditJuffEdJOVE
Sure it can, and its the default browser of ubuntu-linux
vi is the default editor in Linux operating systems. It can be used not just to write programs, but to write any type of text files. Refer the following link for complete set of commands. http://www.cs.colostate.edu/helpdocs/vi.HTML
It depends on the editor.
The one editor that is absolutely certain to be available on every Linux and Unix distribution is 'vi'. The 'vi' editor is not only the world's greatest editor, it is absolutely ubiquitous in the Unix and Linux world. There are other editors on many Linux systems including many graphical editors, but none hold a candle to 'vi', at least in my humble opinion.NOTE: The 'vi' editor was written by Bill Joy.
vi text editor is a standard text editor found in almost every flavor of Linux, it is the most preferred text editor by most Linux professionals, other text editors include nano and pico are also decent substitutes for the vi editor
Default
There is no such thing. The "default shell" is a decision made by the distributor.
There are no default passwords. Passwords are specified by the administrator at installation.
These are Unix and Linux text editor programs.
2.4.7
Ubuntu - GNOME Kubuntu - KDE Xubuntu - Xfce Puppy Linux - JWM Damn Small Linux - JWM, Fluxbox Fedora - GNOME (default) OpenSUSE - KDE (default) Debian - GNOME, KDE, Xfce Red Hat Enterprise Linux - GNOME Linux Mint - GNOME Xandros - KDE PCLinuxOS - KDE