On Tue, 26 Jul 2005 12:20 , james@dis-dot-dat.net sent: >must...resist..trying....to...convert... > >Gah, sod it. Here goes: > >Emacs might be awkward at first. Just like walking might be awkward >when you're used to crawling. That doesn't justify going to work on >your hands and knees. > >People get past the learning curve and use Emacs because once they do, >they find that they can do things more quickly and easily than they >can in anything else. Some things are just impossible to do in >Windows-like editors without a lot of hard work - replace-regexp is my >favourite example, and has saved me hours of work. Add to that the >syntax highlighting, indentation awareness, cooperation with make, >latex, javac, whatever, region comment/uncomment, etc., etc., and you >will begin to see why learning Emacs is worth it. > >Vi people will say the same kind of things about Vi, but of course, >they only like Vi because they haven't got used to Emacs yet. > >And there is one more thing that I love about Emacs that will probably >be seen as a problem by others: I don't know all of it. That's right, >I enjoy my ignorance. I learn new things all the time, and my >"editing experience" is enriched. Please excuse that lapse into >marketing speak. > >Notice I have stayed away from calling Emacs the One True Editor. >This isn't because it's not, but because that kind of talk tends to >scare people away. > >Emacs is the only religion I need. > Aaaaaaaaarrrrrrrrggggghhhhhh! Not again. Oh well, I might as well throw down too. I started on UNIX with vi (and in response to a way earlier thread, not all of us started on Windoze - my first system was IBM OS-360, then on to various others, then UNIX). When I first used vi I was blown away by the power of the thing. Later I discovered Emacs. I switched. I still use vi if I want to do something small very quickly (I hate waiting for Xemacs start up). If I'm doing serious coding I use Xemacs just because it is much, much more powerful. So, the old saw about people staying with what they know isn't always true. I just try to use the right tool for the job. Oh, I also use ed and sed ;-) Jan