Pmacs by Erik Osheim Pmacs is an Emacs-like editor written entirely in Python. It is designed to have maximally correct and powerful support for syntax highlighting, to support various methods of automatically indenting lines, and to be extensible in python. Pmacs is available to you under the GNU GPL version 2. While the general interface of Pmacs is related to Emacs, there was explicitly no attempt to support all Emacs' functions, Emacs' underlying data structures, or even all high-level functionality of Emacs. There is not currently a formalized "public API" for pmacs, although some parts are "more public" than others. The code is somewhat commented, although currently there is only one author. Buyer beware! Requirements: 1. python 2.4 or higher (this may become 2.5 or higher) 2. chardet module (for detecting character encodings) 3. ncurses 4. bash Optional Dependencies: * aespipe [for aes-encrypted buffers] * ispell [for spell-checking] * cvs [for cvs-based commands] * svn [for svn-based commands] * mercurial [for hg-based commands] * perl [for perl syntax-checking] * gcc [for c compilation/syntax-checking] * make [for c compilation] * latex [for LaTeX compilation] * pdflatex [for LaTeX PDF rendering] * disinst [for x86 instruction parsing] Quick Start Guide: 1. Download and unpack the pmacs tarball file. After this, there should be a directory called "pmacs2" somewhere in your filesystem. It doesn't matter where you put this. We'll call the full path to this directory PMACSDIR; in future steps substitute the actual path for this symbol. 2. Create a symlink to PMACSDIR/application.py and put it in a directory listed in your $PATH (~/bin, /usr/local/bin, and /usr/bin are all good candidates). You can name this symlink whatever you want; I use "pmc". 3. Try editing a file, by typing "pmc FILE" where FILE is the path to the file you want to edit. 4. Edit the file! You can type Control-c and then Meta-h to get a list of all the available actions and which key(s) perform them. Type Control-x k to get out of the "help buffer". If you have used emacs, many (but not all) of these key bindings should seem familiar. 5. Some basic key bindings: C-v (or PG_DN) move down a page M-v (or PG_UP) move up a page C-a (or HOME) move to the beginning of the line C-e (or END) move to the end of the line M-< move to the beginning of the buffer M-> move to the end of the buffer M-g goto line number C-s interactive forward search C-r interactive backward search M-% interactive search-and-replace C-] cancel C-/ (or C-x u) undo last change M-/ (or C-x r) redo last undone change C-x C-f open file in a new buffer C-x k close the current buffer C-c M-h open a buffer listing all available key bindings C-c M-? open a buffer listing all available functions M-? get a help with a command by name M-h get information about a key sequence C-x C-s save your changes C-x C-c quit NOTE: the notation used corresponds to the following: C-x hold Control and press x. M-x hold Meta and press x. C-c j hold Control and press c, then press j C-x C-s hold Control and press x, then hold Control and press s 6. Other documentation: a. MODES: this file describes in more detail how modes function, and how to write your own. b. other help commands c. comments in the source code Good luck!