Ed Kostas wrote:
> 3- It seems that there is a Vi clone that does everything these lawyers want. It is fast in dealing with large Latex sources, it has an org-mode that works like emacs, etc. etc. It is called Evil. Third question: What am I loosing if I work with Evil?
>
>
A little googling yields this: https://gitorious.org/evil/pages/Home
Which describes Evil as "an *e*xtensible *vi* *l*ayer for Emacs 
<http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/>. It emulates the main features of 
Vim <http://www.vim.org/>, and provides facilities for writing custom 
extensions."
In other words, it makes emacs look like vim.  So all the features 
they're using now - including the analysis routines written in lisp; 
through a simpler interface.
But a larger question here:  Why are they even considering moving to 
Vim?  They seem to be using a lot of critical emacs features 
(particularly those based on lisp) - how would they be able to do their 
work without those features?  If they're looking for a simpler 
interface, then maybe Evil would help, but then there are a few nice 
GUIs for emacs that might make more sense.
Miles Fidelman
-- 
In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice.
In practice, there is.   .... Yogi Berra
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Thursday, November 28, 2013
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