This is the Georgia Tech 'se' screen editor, originally written in
Ratfor as an extension of the Software Tool editor. It was ported to
Unix by Dan Forsyth and to termcap/terminfo by me.
Dan Cort brought it into the 21st century. It's not related to 's'
or any other previous screen editor.
Arnold
"Thomas Paulsen" <thomas.paulsen(a)firemail.de> wrote:
Hi,
there are s variants of se out there. Only one known to me
git://github.com/screen-editor/se.git
https://github.com/screen-editor/se
Von: Lawrence Stewart <stewart(a)serissa.com>
Datum: 29.03.2022 02:31:14
An: TUHS(a)tuhs.org
Betreff: [TUHS] Old screen editors
At the Stanford Information Systems Lab while I was there 1976-81, we had
a series of PDP-11s. The first one I remember was an 11/34 running V6 and
later V7. It was later upgraded to, I think a /45 and finally a /70.
At first everyone used ed, then Prof. John Gill hacked it to add a command,
I think ‘%’ that was the equivalent of .-10,.+10p which on our 9600 baud
Hazeltine’s was a glimpse of the future.
At some point we got ex/vi, but before that we got the “Rand Editor” re,
which was a perfectly
functional screen editor, if you squinted a bit.
Does anyone here know the place of re in the history?
Later, Gill went off for a sabbatical at Yorktown Heights and came back to
complain about having
to use SOS on the mainframe. He reported, however, that global search and
replace was very fast.
-L
Also a few years later I got Dave Conroy’s version of microemacs. I complained
about the key bindings and he told me to use the “change configuration” command,
or cc.