it behooves you to learn a general-purpose editor. Emacs is one such
Emacs is, so far as I'm aware, the only really truly general-purpose editor.
Be that as it may, I tend to agree with wazoox that from
the POD
it is not obvious how to actually use this Sepia, or even what
facilities it provides beyond those of cperl-mode and eshell.
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I know the basics of emacs, but I prefer first nedit, and second vim. However, I'd still like to know : how do you use Sepia from within emacs? | [reply] |
The README has some information, but basically, you need to put *.el from the distribution in emacs' load-path, then do
M-x load-library RET sepia RET
M-x sepia-init RET
M-x sepia-rebuild RET
As for what it does beyond eshell and cperl-mode, the main features are tab-completion of functions and variables, an interactive prompt, and cross-referencing (to find definitions, callers, callees, etc.). | [reply] [d/l] |
That's great. It would be quite easy to adapt this to any scriptable editor (like Vim or Nedit).
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