Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!wuarchive!sdd.hp.com!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!decwrl!sgi!shinobu!odin!odin.corp.sgi.com!portuesi From: portuesi@tweezers.esd.sgi.com (Michael Portuesi) Newsgroups: comp.sys.sgi Subject: Re: Cut and Paste function for Jot Message-ID: Date: 14 Nov 90 11:59:38 GMT References: <9011140738.AA16914@karron.med.nyu.edu> Sender: news@odin.corp.sgi.com (Net News) Reply-To: portuesi@sgi.com (Michael Portuesi) Organization: Silicon Graphics, Inc., Mtn. View, CA Lines: 40 In-Reply-To: karron@KARRON.MED.NYU.EDU's message of 14 Nov 90 07:38:33 GMT >>>>> On 14 Nov 90 07:38:33 GMT, karron@KARRON.MED.NYU.EDU said: > There has been some discussion of what some people would like to see > in Jot. High on some folk's wish list was a cut and paste function for Jot. > Well, it is in there if you know how to tease it out. The following was > discovered by trial and error. You Jot guys should have revealed this first! > This should be more obvious in the menus. [procedure description omitted...] Well, jot has always had a cut and paste function on its menus. What you just described was a way to do search and replace using the Search feature combined with the Paste command. As for suggestions for other enhancements to Jot, it's currently being rewritten for the next major software release. I'm not the person performing the overhaul, and I don't know what enhancements (if any) might appear, but we do read the suggestions which appear here and we'll consider any enhancements that you'd care to suggest. When suggesting an enhancement, please keep in mind that Jot was intended to be a simple, functional editor for "the rest of us", i.e. people who won't deal with the huge, complex command set of an editor such as emacs or vi. We'd like to add essential features to Jot, but we want to avoid "creeping featuritis" and keep it's small and simple philosophy. m. -- __ \/ Michael Portuesi Silicon Graphics, Inc. portuesi@sgi.com "Adroit wives seize on conversational leads toward topics on which their husbands talk well. If it's apropos, they ask to hear that story he told well the night before--or has told well many times. Never mind how often the wife has heard it: the fun lies in seeing the husband win applause." --Nina Fischer, "How to Help Your Husband Get Ahead" part of the Amy Vanderbilt Success Program for Women