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Re: basic question: going back to dired
From: |
Michael Ekstrand |
Subject: |
Re: basic question: going back to dired |
Date: |
Fri, 01 Aug 2008 06:40:48 -0500 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/23.0.60 (gnu/linux) |
Nikolaj Schumacher <n_schumacher@web.de> writes:
> Michael Ekstrand <michael@elehack.net> wrote:
>
>> It is not a tab. If you have "tabs" going in Emacs (which XEmacs seems
>> to support in some fashion), or are in some other editor with tabs, they
>> are equivalent Emacs' "windows", not buffers. You could view the same
>> buffer in multiple tabs. What then?
>
> I don't think you're right here. Looking at Firefox, for instance, tabs
> there don't correspond to Emacs windows at all. Each Firefox window has
> a tab-bar that switch between several tabs, just as each Emacs window
> can switch between several buffers.
It depends on how tabs are implemented and conceived of. If that is how
they are done, you may be right.
When Vim added tabs, however, each frame (of which you could only have
one, actually) could have tabs, and each tab had a set of windows, and
each window could view a buffer. Tabs behaved more like Emacs frames do
when on a terminal, except that there was a horizontal listing of them
at the top of the screen.
- Michael
--
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