Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!wuarchive!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!emory!hubcap!ncrcae!ncrlnk!ncrcam!mreiss From: mreiss@ncrcam.Cambridge.NCR.COM (mreiss) Newsgroups: comp.sys.atari.st.tech Subject: What should I call mg2a with additions Summary: Is anyone still keeping this software Keywords: mg, mouse, MWC editor with errors, Personal Pascal editor Message-ID: <1970@ncrcam.Cambridge.NCR.COM> Date: 2 Aug 90 14:47:30 GMT Reply-To: mreiss@ncrcam.Cambridge.NCR.COM () Organization: NCR, E&M Cambridge, Ohio Lines: 53 O.K. Now that our mouse stuff works, we are almost ready to make this software available. But first, is anyone else interested in it? I don't want to do all the rest of this stuff for nothing. Let me know. What is it? Well, my son and I took mg2a (formerly Micro GNU Emacs) and added. We were tired of having to use three different editors for things so we consolidated. We added support for Personal Pascal. In the case of Personal Pascal, this means that the compiler can call this editor with the error line and column. The editor initializes to that line and column just like the Personal Pascal editor does. But now we have an emacs style editor to use for our editing. Also we have included a "save file and exit to the Pascal compiler" function. We like it for this purpose. We added support for Mark Williams C. Mark Williams C version of an emacs editor that we have works well. It just has some difference with mg and mg seems to be closer to GNU emacs for my taste (your mileage may vary). Besides, we have the source for mg2a. So for MWC, we added the error buffer handling. With this, we can take an error file and use it to start up an editing session of the corresponding c file and use it to move around inside the c file from one error to another. A very hany feature. Finally we added mouse support. I know that there are emacs clones around with mouse support, but I have never found one I can use on the Atari. My son did this part. Good job, Joe. These mouse functions can be used with the Personal Pascal editor or the Mark Williams C editor, or as just a plain old vanilla ascii editor. So that's it. We have it. Joe is using it now, and I will bring it to work and start using it in a day or two. Is anyone else interested in it? If there is enough interest I will figure out how to post it to the binaries and or sources group. If small interest, I will email it to you. If no interest then we keep it for ourselves. Before you decide (if you are still reading my ramblings), you can answer me one question. The other alternative I see is to use full GNU emacs. I have a couple of problems with it. First it is big. Therefore it takes a chunk of hard disk space and it takes a while to load. Second, is it just me or does everyone get the carriage returns (^M) in their buffers. Is there a way to edit Atari standard ascii source (the ones with the ^M in the buffer) without having them get in the way in GNU emacs? I don't want to type them in special and I don't like seeing them on the screen. What do others do? Well that's it. Let me know if you are interested or if you have an answer. mike -- Michael A. Reiss | | mike USENET = Mike.Reiss@Cambridge.NCR.COM |