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c186282 <c186282@nnada.net> wrote:On 3/4/25 2:06 AM, rbowman wrote:I like nedit. It’s the closest I can find to mainframe editors. When IOn Mon, 3 Mar 2025 22:06:07 -0500, c186282 wrote:
On 3/3/25 2:19 PM, rbowman wrote:On Mon, 3 Mar 2025 15:24:04 +0000, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 03/03/2025 10:05, Niklas Karlsson wrote:Some would probably get on your case for being profligate with
vertical space... but honestly, it doesn't much matter with the
kind of screen real estate we have these days. I do agree that
your style has readability benefits.
Yes. Back in the day when I debugged with 80 column dot matrix
printouts, it got messy.
To day with collapsible blocks on a gui it's a lot easier
I still prefer statements that don't exceed 80 columns.
Wise. Not only doesn't fit a standard terminal but it's harder to get
the gist if the line runs off the screen. Run into this editing with
nano kinda often alas.
It's for Python but I agree with most of PEP 8. Black or ruff do a
nice job of reformatting .py files if I get sloppy.
I use nano very rarely. One of the first things I do on any machine is
install Vim, preferable gVim. I rarely use the menus or graphic
features of gVim but I like not losing the terminal.
I use nano all the damned time - 'C' or Python or Bash.
Wrote an (ASM) screen editor much like it for the orig IBM-PC since I
just despised EDLIN.
I *delete*/rename the Linux line editors so they can't accidentally
pop up. Really.
Some of the simple GUI editors are perfectly good now, but I still
find myself in terminal, with nano, a lot of the time. Some of my
boxes are SSH Only ...
get a round tuit I’d like to code a Rexx interface for it.
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