Venkat Iyer I prefer emacs anytime. Fervent Tcl-Tk disciple. v e n k s i at y a h o o dot c o m ---- vi is also a modal based editor. It's connection to Tcl is that there are several vi-like editors which provide an embedded Tcl interpreter, which can be programmed to manipulate the text. Others support Tcl syntax highlighting, etc. Some of these are: * [Elvis] supports Tcl syntax highlighting * [vile] supports Tcl syntax highlighting * [vim] supports Tcl syntax highlighting and supports embedding Tcl in the editor * [nvi] supports an embedded Tcl interpreter * tcltags generates vi [symbol tags] files, for locating symbols in files being edited. ---- [SS]: Are there editors written in tcl with vi key bindings? [ctext] may provide syntax highlighting. The point isn't just that the editor is written in TCL, but the fact that such an editor can be made scriptable in a much more prevasive way than [vim] can. I'm a [vim] user, but I must I'm not comfortable with its scripting capabilities. ---- [Category Person] | [Category Application] |