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authorWayne Cuddy <wcuddy@useunix.net>2018-10-15 07:11:07 +0100
committerWilly Sudiarto Raharjo <willysr@slackbuilds.org>2018-10-21 06:47:00 +0700
commit0c696ceb4b4270e0f9108506f0634ff55277ffe3 (patch)
tree0686c0efd9bfe1544c81a2aa1c410761fe8a4290 /development/xvile/README
parent374a85ba468048cada8042ad97fb363a3281c612 (diff)
development/xvile: Updated for version 9.8s.
Signed-off-by: David Spencer <idlemoor@slackbuilds.org>
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Vile retains the "finger-feel", if you will, of vi, while adding the
-multiple buffer and multiple window features of emacs and other editors.
+multiple buffer and multiple window features of emacs and other editors.
It is definitely not a vi clone, in that some substantial stuff is
missing, and the screen doesn't look quite the same. The things that
you tend to type over and over probably work. Things done less
frequently, like configuring a startup file, are somewhat (or very,
depending on how ambitious you are) different. But what matters most is
that one's "muscle memory" does the right thing to the text in front of
-you, and that is what vile tries to do for vi users.
+you, and that is what vile tries to do for vi users.