freebsd-skq/usr.bin/ee
1997-04-04 15:09:42 +00:00
..
nls Revert $FreeBSD$ to $Id$ 1997-02-22 19:58:13 +00:00
Artistic
ee.1
ee.c
ee.i18n.guide
ee.msg
Makefile Fixed missing ${COPY} in install rule. 1997-04-04 15:09:42 +00:00
new_curse.c
new_curse.h
README

          THIS MATERIAL IS PROVIDED "AS IS".  THERE ARE NO WARRANTIES OF 
          ANY KIND WITH REGARD TO THIS MATERIAL, INCLUDING, BUT NOT 
          LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND 
          FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  Neither Hewlett-Packard nor 
          Hugh Mahon shall be liable for errors contained herein, nor for 
          incidental or consequential damages in connection with the 
          furnishing, performance or use of this material.  Neither 
          Hewlett-Packard nor Hugh Mahon assumes any responsibility for 
          the use or reliability of this software or documentation.  This 
          software and documentation is totally UNSUPPORTED.  There is no 
          support contract available.  Hewlett-Packard has done NO 
          Quality Assurance on ANY of the program or documentation.  You 
          may find the quality of the materials inferior to supported 
          materials. 

      This software may be distributed under the terms of Larry Wall's 
      Artistic license, a copy of which is included in this distribution. 
      (see doc/Artistic).

      This notice must be included with this software and any 
      derivatives. 

      Any modifications to this software by anyone but the original author 
      must be so noted. 


The editor 'ee' (easy editor) is intended to be a simple, easy to use 
terminal-based screen oriented editor that requires no instruction to 
use.  Its primary use would be for people who are new to computers, or who 
use computers only for things like e-mail.

ee's simplified interface is highlighted by the use of pop-up menus which 
make it possible for users to carry out tasks without the need to 
remember commands.  An information window at the top of the screen shows 
the user the operations available with control-keys.

ee allows users to use full eight-bit characters.  If the host system has 
the capabilities, ee can use message catalogs, which would allow users to 
translate the message catalog into other languages which use eight-bit 
characters.  See the file ee.i18n.guide for more details.

ee relies on the virtual memory abilities of the platform it is running on 
and does not have its own memory management capabilities.

I am releasing ee because I hate to see new users and non-computer types 
get frustrated by vi, and would like to see more intuitive interfaces for 
basic tools (both character-based and graphical) become more pervasive.
Terminal capabilities and communication speeds have evolved considerably 
since the time in which vi's interface was created, allowing much more 
intuitive interfaces to be used.  Since character-based I/O won't be 
completely replaced by graphical user interfaces for at least a few more 
years, I'd like to do what I can to make using computers with less 
glamorous interfaces as easy to use as possible.  If terminal interfaces 
are still used in ten years, I hope neophytes won't still be stuck with 
only vi.  

For a text editor to be easy to use requires a certain set of abilities.  In 
order for ee to work, a terminal must have the ability to position the cursor 
on the screen, and should have arrow keys that send unique sequences 
(multiple characters, the first character is an "escape", octal code 
'\033').  All of this information needs to be in a database called "terminfo" 
(System V implementations) or "termcap" (usually used for BSD systems).  In 
case the arrow keys do not transmit unique sequences, motion operations are 
mapped to control keys as well, but this at least partially defeats the 
purpose.  The curses package is used to handle the I/O which deals with the 
terminal's capabilities.  

While ee is based on curses, I have included here the source code to 
new_curse, a subset of curses developed for use with ee.  'curses' often  
will have a defect that reduces the usefulness of the editor relying upon 
it.  This is unused by the FreeBSD version of ee (the existing ncurses
library works just fine) but is included in the doc subdirectory for
reference purposes should anyone wish to port ee to a platform for
which the existing curses libraries are insufficient.

The files doc/new_curse.[ch] contain a subset of the 'curses' library
used by applications to handle screen output.  Unfortunately, curses 
varies from system to system, so I developed new_curse to provide 
consistent behavior across systems.  It works on both SystemV and BSD 
systems, and while it can sometimes be slower than other curses packages, 
it will get the information on the screen painted correctly more often 
than vendor supplied curses.  Again, FreeBSD does not have this problem
but you may find it useful on other platforms.

If you experience problems with data being displayed improperly, check 
your terminal configuration, especially if you're using a terminal 
emulator, and make sure that you are using the right terminfo entry 
before rummaging through code.  Terminfo entries often contain 
inaccuracies, or incomplete information, or may not totally match the 
terminal or emulator the terminal information is being used with.  
Complaints that ee isn't working quite right often end up being something 
else (like the terminal emulator being used).  

Both ee and new_curse were developed using K&R C (also known as "classic 
C"), but it can also be compiled with ANSI C.  You should be able to 
build ee by simply typing "make".

ee is the result of several conflicting design goals.  While I know that it 
solves the problems of some users, I also have no doubt that some will decry 
its lack of more features.  I will settle for knowing that ee does fulfill 
the needs of a minority (but still large number) of users.  The goals of ee 
are: 

        1. To be so easy to use as to require no instruction.
        2. To be easy to compile and, if necessary, port to new platforms 
           by people with relatively little knowledge of C and UNIX.
        3. To have a minimum number of files to be dealt with, for compile 
           and installation.
        4. To have enough functionality to be useful to a large number of 
           people.

Hugh Mahon              |___|     
h_mahon@fc.hp.com       |   |     
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