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.