WebHostedEditors run directly off a web page (regardless of technology, though Java and Active-X are probably the most common). Usually get their files from and upload to a web page, whether through a simple POST or using WebDAV.
Try and keep editors in the right family (see CategorizationRules). Emacs enthusiasts seem to want to lump every editor in that family but folks, it just ain't so.
(Er, actually, twee is
adj : affectedly dainty or refined [syn: dainty, mincing, niminy-piminy, prim--DMcCunney)
These are not really text editor families. They are families of software that can produce plain text but are actually meant for something else:
sed is already here as part of the BellLabsEditor? family. And awk is present as AwkLanguage, part of the ScriptLanguage Family. Note that MS edlin can also perform scripted edits in a pipeline. Most folks familiar with edlin from back when managed to miss that ability. tr isn't here, but granted it can be used to transform text. The assumption for most editors here is that they are used interactively by the user, though some, like TECO, and be run in scripts.
--DMcCunney 03/2/21