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GNU Emacs has command line options to specify either a file to load and execute, or an Emacs Lisp function may be passed in from the command line. Emacs will start up, execute the passed-in file or function, print the results, then exit. [35] The shebang line #!/usr/bin/emacs --script allows the creation of standalone scripts in Emacs Lisp. [36]
The first widely distributed version of GNU Emacs was version 15.34, released later in 1985. Early versions of GNU Emacs were numbered as 1.x.x, with the initial digit denoting the version of the C core. The 1 was dropped after version 1.12, as it was thought that the major number would never change, and thus the numbering skipped from 1 to 13 ...
MicroEMACS is a small, portable Emacs-like text editor originally written by Dave Conroy in 1985, and further developed by Daniel M. Lawrence (1958–2010 [2] [3]) and was maintained by him. MicroEMACS has been ported to many operating systems , including CP/M , [ 4 ] MS-DOS , Microsoft Windows , VMS , Atari ST , AmigaOS , OS-9 , NeXTSTEP , and ...
This work is in the public domain in the United States because it is a work prepared by an officer or employee of the United States Government as part of that person’s official duties under the terms of Title 17, Chapter 1, Section 105 of the US Code.
Free Source Code Control System (SCCS) Jörg Schilling [nb 3] Active Local Lock [nb 4] CDDL – proprietary [nb 5] Unix-like, macOS: Free CDDL-licensed versions or paid in some UNIX distributions. StarTeam: Borland (Micro Focus) Active Client–server: Merge or lock Proprietary: Windows and Cross-platform via Java based client Paid Subversion (SVN)
LPT— Line Print Terminal; LRU—Least Recently Used; LSB—Least Significant Bit; LSB—Linux Standard Base; LSI—Large-Scale Integration; LTE—Long Term Evolution; LTL—Linear Temporal Logic; LTR—Left-to-Right; LUG—Linux User Group; LUN—Logical Unit Number; LV—Logical Volume; LVD—Low Voltage Differential; LVM—Logical Volume ...
"XEmacs developers strive to keep their code compatible with GNU Emacs, especially on the Lisp level." [20] As XEmacs development has slowed, XEmacs has incorporated much code from GNU Emacs, [21] while GNU Emacs has implemented many formerly XEmacs-only features. This has led some users to proclaim XEmacs' death, advocating that its developers ...
[11] [12] MariaDB and PHP allow for the user to select at build time whether to link with GNU Readline or with libedit. [13] [14] linenoise is a tiny C library that provides line editing functions. [15] Haskeline is a BSD-3-Clause licensed readline-like library for Haskell.