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From: | Lennart Borgman (gmail) |
Subject: | Re: National Language Support Functions |
Date: | Fri, 29 Dec 2006 22:48:43 +0100 |
User-agent: | Thunderbird 1.5.0.9 (Windows/20061207) |
Juanma Barranquero wrote:
On 12/29/06, Lennart Borgman (gmail) <address@hidden> wrote:- But on the other hand I have noticed that most users dowloading from my site prefer the patched version.That is not saying much, IMO. If you put package X on a site, and Y, described as "X with all bells and whistles for Windows", is not hard to see why people would download Y even before knowing whether X is good enough for them.
That is not really what I do with the patches. I try to describe in full enough details for everyone to decide for themselves:
http://ourcomments.org/Emacs/EmacsW32.html#unpatched
Most users of Emacs are programmers; a pointer to the place to download the tools would surely be enough. But that's not what I was talking about. There's no need to patch Emacs for that.
Actually I was looking for a good tool writing web pages too when I started using Emacs. I was so tired of all different tools with their different shortcomings, time to learn, time to install etc.
I had an idea: maybe Emacs could be made to a powerful enough tool for web pages so that non programmers can use it too? Installation, friendliness of the GUI etc. That is still what I am trying to do. On my way I stumble on a lot of things in Emacs. That is not very bad. That was what I wanted to test.
BTW, after the release I hope we can include nxml-mode. It is very powerful, well written -- and hard to understand code. I wonder if rng can be used further in Emacs. I do not know the limitations of such approaches, but with a language like XML it seems very good. I thought about using it for CSS but gave up. I did not understand the structure of the code or potential syntax problems well enough to fight it.
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