Author: Jorge Schilling |
Author: Jörg Schilling |
This editor looks like a combination of VI and Emacs. It uses Termcap. It explains why. |
per the man page: |
Screenshot: Author may be Maintainer. Wikipedia is intended for older editors of historical interest that are no longer available, but have a Wikipedia entry documenting them. If there isn't a Wikipedia entry, but there is another page documenting the editor, call it Information and use that page instead. Omit this entry for current editors. |
Ved (visual editor) is a small and very fast screen-oriented editor that implements a user interface somewhere between vi and emacs. It is powerful and easy to learn, it has no lim- itations on line length and the type of characters that may appear in a file. It has almost no limitations on file size and supports editing of large files (files > 2 GB) if the OS has large file support. |
Download may be used instead of Homepage, like stuff hosted on TextEditors because the Homepage is dead. If downloads may be reached through the Homepage, omit it. |
Manual may be a link to online documentation. This is primarily for older editors no longer commonly available. If the editor has a current homepage though which documentation may be obtained, omit it. |
Editors may be part of more than one Family, so multiple entries are possible. Platform is what the editor runs on, and it usually one or more OSes it's been ported to, though it may be hardware instead, like the ones that run on pocket calculators. License is the legal terms under which an editor is released. It may be freeware, shareware, commercial, public domain or open source, with the specific open source license given if known. |
Screenshot: |
Author: Jörg Schilling Homepage: http://schilytools.sourceforge.net/ved.html Wikipedia: Download: Manual: http://schilytools.sourceforge.net/man/man1/ved.1.html Family: Platform: Unix License:
per the man page:
Ved (visual editor) is a small and very fast screen-oriented
editor that implements a user interface somewhere between vi and emacs. It is powerful and easy to learn, it has no lim- itations on line length and the type of characters that may appear in a file. It has almost no limitations on file size and supports editing of large files (files > 2 GB) if the OS has large file support.
Screenshot: