I use emacs every day; I know there's some sort of graphics in the splash screen, but I've never looked into how to do it. If I need a GUI, I know where to find one.
What shocked me was when I started seeing italics and boldface in LaTeX and HTML modes.
No shit? My heavy emacs days were, indeed, over ten years ago -- I was a deep guru once, but that was probably around 1992. (When I wrote a major mode to serve as the front end for our Ada IDE.)
I've been using it continuously ever since, but not particularly hard: just basic text editing, so I wasn't paying a lot of attention to the functionality. So I hadn't noticed the graphics until my download of the current version today, whapping me upside the head with a logo at startup and buttons along the top...
To be honest, though, the graphics support in emacs is still pretty utilitarian. There's a lot less graphical "glitz" than there is "if emacs support for this feature didn't handle graphics, I would need to find some other program that does."
There's a bit of that, but for me the key would be e-mail. It's a thoroughly "text-y" application, but not being able to handle inline pictures would be a problem for me at this point.
The "operating system in disguise" idea is an increasingly minority view these days, primarily because Emacs is single-threaded. It does a lot of things, but the ones that aren't text-oriented are generally implemented by calling out to an external program -- in a separate task if appropriate.
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Emacs (not just Lucid/Xemacs) has had graphics for, oh, 5-10 years.
Every day
What shocked me was when I started seeing italics and boldface in LaTeX and HTML modes.
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For a moment there I thought it was possible that there was something emacs hadn't had all along, and the foundations of my world trembled.
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Gnu Emacs, by contrast, is 22 years old.
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I've been using it continuously ever since, but not particularly hard: just basic text editing, so I wasn't paying a lot of attention to the functionality. So I hadn't noticed the graphics until my download of the current version today, whapping me upside the head with a logo at startup and buttons along the top...
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There's a nifty emacs timeline here, though it doesn't have features, even major ones.
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The "operating system in disguise" idea is an increasingly minority view these days, primarily because Emacs is single-threaded. It does a lot of things, but the ones that aren't text-oriented are generally implemented by calling out to an external program -- in a separate task if appropriate.
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