Editing EmacsFamily
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''Emacs family editors derive from the design of Richard M. Stallman's Editing <nowiki>MACroS</nowiki>, a package of macros written in the [[TECO]](Text Editor and COrrector) language that ran on the ITS (Incompatible Timesharing System) at MIT in the '70s. Emacs was subsequently implemented in the C language by James Gosling and by Stallman himself, and spawned a family of editors that shared the design philosophy.'' ---- == Emacs Family Editors: == ---- * '''[[About Emacs]]''' * '''Emacs Implementations:''' http://www.finseth.com/emacs.html * '''Emacs Family Tree:''' http://www.jwz.org/doc/emacs-timeline.html * '''[[Emacs Cheat Sheets]]:''' A collection of quick references to Emacs commands * '''[http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/emacs-paper.html EMACS: The Extensible, Customizable Display Editor]''' by '''''Richard M. Stallman''''' '''1981''' * '''[http://www.multicians.org/mepap.html Multics Emacs: The History, Design and Implementation]''' by '''''Bernard S. Greenberg''''' '''1979''' ''' ---- * '''The Originals''' * [[Editing MACroS]] - RMS's original emacs, written in TECO under ITS * [[GnuEmacs]] - Richard M. Stallman's version of Emacs in C ---- * [[9ne]] - A web based code editor, modeled on emacs * [[AAEMACS]] - Freeware DOS port of Gnu Emacs using CWSDPMI memory extender * [[ADEPT]] - Enhanced system editor on later Wang VS systems, based on emacs * [[AMIS]] - Open source Swedish Emacs implementation for DEC systems in Pascal * [[Anthonys Editor]] An Emacs style editor illustrating buffer gap design * [[Atto]] Smallest functional Emacs in less than 2000 lines of C (derived from Anthonys Editor) * [[Aquamacs]] - Mac-style Emacs for Mac OS X * [[BarrysEmacs]] - An Emacs editor not based on Gnu code * [[Carbon Emacs]] - A Mac OS/X friendly Gnu Emacs distribution * [[Chets Editor]] - A portable Emacs editor based on MicroEmacs * [[cider]] - Open source IDE for writing in clojure built on Emacs * [[Climacs]] - An Emacs implementation in Common Lisp * [[Conroy MicroEmacs]] - Walter Bright's version of Dave Conroy's original MicroEmacs * [[Demacs]] - Open source MS-DOS port of Gnu Emacs 18.55 from Japan * [[Deuce]] - Emacs-like editor written in Dylan * [[Easymacs]] - Making Gnu Emacs easy for newbies * [[EditKit]] - public domain, small editor for Linux extends edx with other keymappings * [[EDMACS]] - Editor based on MIT ITS Emacs, written in TECO for DEC systems running RSTS-E * [[Edwin]] - An Emacs-like editor included in MIT/GNU scheme's distribution * [[elle]] - Elle Looks Like Emacs, open source emacs style editor for Minix * [[EINE]] - Eine Is Not Emacs, an Emacs editor for Lisp machines * [[Emacs HP49G]] - Partial Emacs implementation for the HP49g calculator * [[Emacs NeXTstep]] - Gnu Emacs for NeXTstep * [[emacs-w64]] - Third-party build of Gnu Emacs for 64bit Windows * [[EmACT]] - Emacs clone for MS-DOS, Windows, and PocketPC based on Conroy MicroEMACS * [[epoch]] - A fork of Gnu Emacs 18.x to add graphics support * [[ErgoEmacs]] - Emacs customized to use a command set similar to Notepad * [[Ermacs]] - Emacs implemented in Erlang * [[Ersatz Emacs]] - Open source minimal Emacs clone based on MicroEmacs 3.6 * [[evi]] - Macro definitions to make [[VI]] emulate emacs * [[fe]] - Open source folding editor with emacs key bindings. Successor to [[Origami]]. * [[FINE]] - FINE Is Not EMACS, An EMACS-like editor for TOPS-10 * [[Fred]] - Commercial Mac OS/X emacs in Common Lisp * [[Freemacs]] - A tiny (20K!) version of Emacs for MS-DOS, using a macro language called Mint * [[Freyja]] - EMACS like editor for MS-DOS and HP palmtops * [[GNOME]] - Generally NOt the Micro Emacs, a small Microemacs spinoff * [[GoslingEmacs]] - The first implementation of Emacs in C, by James Gosling, inventor of Java * [[GnuEmacs WinCE]] - Port of Emacs 20.7 to Windows CE * [[Hemlock]] - An Emacs editor implemented in Common Lisp * [[InfoDock]] - Open source IDE built on Xemacs * [[JASSPA MicroEmacs]] - JASSPA fork of Lawrence MicroEmacs 3.8 * [[JED]] - John E Davis editor * [[JEmacs]] - An implementation of Emacs in Java, Scheme, and ELisp * [[Jove]] - Jonathan's Own Version of Emacs - another small emacs variant * [[LiCE]] - a lisp editor like Emacs * [[LucidEmacs]] - (or LEmacs) which grew into [[XEmacs]] * [[LugaruEpsilon]] - A commercial Emacs implementation * [[ME2]] - Mutt Editor II, an Emacs variant with a hybrid macro language * [[ME3]] - Mutt Editor III, an Emacs variant with a hybrid macro language, third version * [[Meadow]] - Multi-lingual enhancement for Gnu Emacs under Windows * [[MG]] - Formerly MicroGnuEmacs, a derivative of MicroEmacs. * [[MicroEmacs]] - An Emacs clone originally written by Dave Conroy, then extended by Daniel Lawrence. * [[MightEMacs]] - A fast and full-featured Emacs editor with short key bindings and a C-like scripting language. * [[mince]] - Mince Is Not Complete Emacs (CP/M, MSDOS) * [[Nemacs]] - Nihongo Emacs, Japanese language version of Emacs * [[Ng]] - Japanese port of MG for Win32 and other platforms * [[Nitemacs]] - Open source Emacs-like lightweight editor * [[NotGnu]] - Another GnuEmacs clone for smaller machines than your (historical) workstation. * [[Oemacs]] - Open source MS-DOS port of Gnu Emacs, successor to [[Demacs]] * [[PalEdit]] - Freeware text editor for HP Palmtop with Emacs key assignments * [[pEmacs]] - Open source emacs implementation derived from [[Ersatz Emacs]] * [[Peppy]] - Open source Emacs style editor based on Python and Scintilla * [[Portable Hemlock]] - An Emacs implementation derived from CMUCL * [[Prelude]] - Distribution trying to improve the default Emacs experience * [[Pymacs]] - Gnu Emacs extensions to use Python as a scripting language * [[Qemacs]] - Small but powerful open source UNIX editor from Fabrice Bellard * [[Spacemacs]] - Open source Emacs fork combining features of Emacs and Vim * [[SXemacs]] - Enhanced Emacs editor based on [[XEmacs]] * [[TeXmacs]] - Gnu Emacs with support for the TeX typesetting language * [[TkEmacs]] - Open source Emacs widget for Tcl-Tk * [[TintWare]] - An Emacs clone using Tint as the extension language * [[TM]] - Tiny (4K) open source MS-DOS editor emulating Emacs, with incremental search and unlimited undo * [[XEmacs]] - A fork of Gnu Emacs, originally called Lucid emacs * [[xyzzy]] - Japanese Emacs variant, which has common lisp as macro language * [[YR-Emacs]] - Open source emacs editor based on Conroy MicroEmacs * [[z80emacs]] - A port of [[MicroEMACS]] 3.6 to CP/M * [[z]] - The Yale and Tulane Z Programmer's Editors for DEC Tops 20, VMS, Unix, Linux * [[Zile]] - Zile is lossy Emacs * [[Zmacs]] - Editor based on Emacs supplied with the TI Explorer Lisp Machine * [[ZWEI]] - "Zwei Was Eine, Initially", another Lisp machine emacs version * [[zz]] - Open source fork of [Zile] using Lua engine '''Editors which can emulate Emacs''' * [[E3]] - Open source editor by Albrecht Kliene, for Windows, DOS, Unix and others, emulating WordStar, vi, emacs, pico, and others * [[MultiEdit]] * [[z]] - The Yale and Tulane Z Programmer's Editors for DEC Tops 20, VMS, Unix, Linux * [[Zeus]] '''Emacs packages - Add-ons to extend/modify Emacs''' * [[CEDET]] - Open source Collection of Emacs Development Environment Tools * [[zemacs]] - Lisp extensions for Gnu Emacs to improve the interface and extend the editor
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