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Some plaintext editors, such as Emacs and vi, originally relied on double-spacing to recognize sentence boundaries. By default, Emacs will not break a line at a single space preceded by a period, but this behavior is configurable (with the option sentence-end-double-space). More than one space will be preserved, but no additional space will be ...
For a period of time XEmacs even had some terminal-specific features, such as coloring, that GNU Emacs lacked. The software community generally refers to GNU Emacs, XEmacs (and a number of other similar editors) collectively or individually as emacsen (by analogy with oxen) or as emacs, since they both take their inspiration from the original ...
GNU Emacs runs on a wide variety of operating systems, including DOS, Windows, [47] [48] [49] and most Unix-like operating systems, such as Linux, the various BSDs, Solaris, AIX, HP-UX and macOS. [50] [51] [52] Many Unix-like systems include Emacs by default. [53] In 2023 an official port for Android was released. [54]
Spacemacs is a configuration framework for GNU Emacs. [6] It can take advantage of all of GNU Emacs' features, including both graphical and command-line user interfaces, and being executable under X Window System and within a Unix shell terminal. [7] It is free and open-source software (FOSS) released under the GPL-3.0-or-later license. [3] [4] [5]
Meadow at Emacs Wiki Meadow is an open source programming project to port the popular GNU Emacs text editor for UNIX -based operating systems to Microsoft Windows with some added functions. The name comes from the phrase " M ultilingual enhancement to GNU E macs with AD vantages O ver W indows".
Epsilon, [46] an Emacs clone by Lugaru Software. Versions for DOS, Windows, Linux, FreeBSD, Mac OS X and OS/2 are bundled in the release. It uses a non-Lisp extension language with C syntax and used a very early concurrent command shell buffer implementation under the single-tasking MS-DOS. PceEmacs is the Emacs-based editor for SWI-Prolog.
If you’re stuck on today’s Wordle answer, we’re here to help—but beware of spoilers for Wordle 1305 ahead. Let's start with a few hints.
Programming languages that support arbitrary precision computations, either built-in, or in the standard library of the language: Ada: the upcoming Ada 202x revision adds the Ada.Numerics.Big_Numbers.Big_Integers and Ada.Numerics.Big_Numbers.Big_Reals packages to the standard library, providing arbitrary precision integers and real numbers.