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Learning the vi and Vim Editors, 7th Edition
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Learning the vi and Vim Editors, 7th Edition

by Arnold Robbins, Elbert Hannah, Linda Lamb
July 2008
Beginner
492 pages
16h
English
O'Reilly Media, Inc.
Content preview from Learning the vi and Vim Editors, 7th Edition

Authors and History

Paul Fox describes the early vile history this way:

vile’s design goal has always been a little different than that of the other clones. vile has never really attempted to be a “clone” at all, though most people find it close enough. I started it because in 1990 I wanted to be able to edit multiple files in multiple windows, I had been using vi for 10 years already, and the sources to MicroEMACS came floating past my newsreader at a job where I had too much time on my hands. I started by changing the existing keymaps in the obvious way, and ran full-tilt into the “Hey! Where’s ‘insert’ mode?” problem. So I hacked a little more, and hacked a little more, and eventually released in ’91 or ’92. (Starting soon thereafter, major version numbers tracked the year of release: 7.3 was the third release in ’97.)

But my goal has always been to preserve finger-feel (as opposed to the display visuals), and, selfishly, to preserve finger-feel most for the commands I use. ☺ vile has quite an amazing ex mode, that works very well—it just looks really odd, and a couple of commands that are beyond the scope of the current parser are missing. For the same reasons, vile also won’t fully parse existing .exrc files, since I don’t really think that’s so important—it does simple ones, but more sophisticated ones need some tweaking. But when you toss in vile’s built-in command/macro language, you quickly forget you ever cared about .exrc.

Thomas Dickey started working on vile in December ...

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Publisher Resources

ISBN: 9780596529833Errata Page