From: Erik Johnson Date: Tue, 13 Apr 93 18:03:08 CDT To: djgpp AT sun DOT soe DOT clarkson DOT edu Subject: Re: What editor or integrated environment you use with DJGPP? From: cs8023 AT mbox DOT ee DOT ncu DOT edu DOT tw Message-Id: <9304132021 DOT AA16238 AT mbox DOT ee DOT ncu DOT edu DOT tw> To: djgpp AT sun DOT soe DOT clarkson DOT edu Subject: What editor or integrated environment you use with DJGPP? Status: R Hi, all programmers: I am very interesting about your favorite editor to cooperate with DJGPP Please give me some suggests, I prefer WordStar like (of course, Borland C++ like) rather than emacs or vi or other strange style like Brief. Certainly, you can encourage me to use non-Wordstar like editor if they really have good facilities (tell me about them.) thanks for your reply, tony -- >> Anthony Lee, << << Institute of CSEE, National Central Univ | ARPA: cs8023 AT mbox DOT ee DOT ncu DOT edu DOT tw>> >> Chungli, Taoyuan, Taiwan,# Free China | oper2 AT ncuee DOT ncu DOT edu DOT tw << << Republic of China (ROC) # Chinese Taipei| oper2 AT ncuee2 DOT ncu DOT edu DOT tw >> I use a shareware editor called BINGO 3.0. BINGO 3.0 Features: - Very quick - Uses virtual memory - Shell out with only a 3k footprint - Highly configurable (I have it set up similar to micro-emacs) - Has its own interpreted language Problems: - Tabs are simulated with spaces * Even though I have programmed the editor to simulate tabs, the lack for true hardtabs is a real pain. With my setup, pressing F9 executes a make for my project and runs the application if the make didn't have any errors. Since the editor has only a 3k footprint in conventional memory, GCC compiles quickly, and my application has plenty of memory, while leaving my edit session in extended memory. I picked up Bingo from a Simtel mirror in the editors directory 'B300.ZIP' or something similar. p.s. I believe that the distribution includes config file to emulate WordStar. Erik R Johnson erik AT microware DOT com