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i cand find mineElvish Pillager wrote:There is no such thing as an computer without a text editor!KING_KONRAD wrote:and i cant i have suse linux 9.3
need a cheat for a game?... than email me at LINK2@37.com!
If you're using linux, you have vi, EMACS, and probably several clones of them.
For I am Turin Turambar - Master of Doom, by doom mastered. On permanent Wesbreak. Will not respond to private messages. Sorry!
And I hate stupid people.
The World of Orbivm
And I hate stupid people.
The World of Orbivm
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thx
im useing suse linux 9.3 and i cant find mine
need a cheat for a game?... than email me at LINK2@37.com!
I you use Gnome or KDE, you'll surely have text editors. I think it's called kedit in kde, but I am not sure. Check if you have it installed on your computer (check your packages. I know those can be found with Suse)
"There are two kind of campaign strategies : the good and the bad ones. The good ones almost always fail because of unforeseen consequences that make the bad ones succeed." -- Napoleon
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i dont have gnome or kde
Last edited by KING_KONRAD on July 20th, 2005, 8:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.
need a cheat for a game?... than email me at LINK2@37.com!
It could also be 'gedit' or 'nedit'
Try typing 'pico' at the command line (or maybe 'nano', but that would be a longshot)
Telling you to type 'vi' would be cruel considering your level of expertise (mastering program locations)
Try typing 'pico' at the command line (or maybe 'nano', but that would be a longshot)
Telling you to type 'vi' would be cruel considering your level of expertise (mastering program locations)
Hope springs eternal.
Wesnoth acronym guide.
Wesnoth acronym guide.
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What user interface do you use? If you are a begginner at Linux, I think you didn't install Wesnoth well. You should have installed at least KDE or GNOME with all their packages, because they are meant for beginners. So you should start Yast and ask him to install these packages.
"There are two kind of campaign strategies : the good and the bad ones. The good ones almost always fail because of unforeseen consequences that make the bad ones succeed." -- Napoleon
I had no idea that names that don't immediately conjure up an image of the program they referred to was complexity. I though it had something to do with, you know... the OS actually being complex. Which Linux is, but not for the reason you said.Assasin wrote:linux sounds complicated. vi, nano, KDE, GNOME, none of those names even sound like a text editing program. For Mac, it's called (you're not going to believe this) TextEdit!! Simple, you see, to understand the purpose of the app.
For I am Turin Turambar - Master of Doom, by doom mastered. On permanent Wesbreak. Will not respond to private messages. Sorry!
And I hate stupid people.
The World of Orbivm
And I hate stupid people.
The World of Orbivm
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Indeed, GNU/Linux is, among other things, about choice. Speaking of which, I have just installed Gentoo ("you're not going to believe this" , but that is the name of a "distribution" of GNU/Linux). And BTW, half of the names you mentioned are not in fact text editing programs as you probably think of them... with choice comes the necessity to learn about the possibilities (or the joy of learning, for insatiably curious people like me).Assasin wrote:linux sounds complicated. vi, nano, KDE, GNOME, none of those names even sound like a text editing program.
On Mac OS X, I use four or five text-editing programs at various times: TextEdit, BBEdit, XCode, Appleworks, and, if you count it, my browser for posting to forums. Not to mention that I use Mail occasionally, which provides yet another text editing interface, similar but not identical to TextEdit. And of course there are text-entry fields somewhere in nearly every GUI application.Assasin wrote:For Mac, it's called (you're not going to believe this) TextEdit!! Simple, you see, to understand the purpose of the app.
Play a Silver Mage in the Wesvoid campaign.
Yeah, well, if you want to be that complicated about it, you forgot Microsoft Word, iChat AV, and DashboardInvisible Philosopher wrote:Indeed, GNU/Linux is, among other things, about choice. Speaking of which, I have just installed Gentoo ("you're not going to believe this" , but that is the name of a "distribution" of GNU/Linux). And BTW, half of the names you mentioned are not in fact text editing programs as you probably think of them... with choice comes the necessity to learn about the possibilities (or the joy of learning, for insatiably curious people like me).Assasin wrote:linux sounds complicated. vi, nano, KDE, GNOME, none of those names even sound like a text editing program.On Mac OS X, I use four or five text-editing programs at various times: TextEdit, BBEdit, XCode, Appleworks, and, if you count it, my browser for posting to forums. Not to mention that I use Mail occasionally, which provides yet another text editing interface, similar but not identical to TextEdit. And of course there are text-entry fields somewhere in nearly every GUI application.Assasin wrote:For Mac, it's called (you're not going to believe this) TextEdit!! Simple, you see, to understand the purpose of the app.
I speak what's on my mind.
Which is why nothing I say makes sense.
Which is why nothing I say makes sense.
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I don't use those, if you care enough to mention it.Assasin wrote:Yeah, well, if you want to be that complicated about it, you forgot Microsoft Word, iChat AV, and Dashboard
Play a Silver Mage in the Wesvoid campaign.
And we can thank the Cocoa APIs for having spell check in any of those that use it, like TextEdit, and Mail, and Safari/OmniWeb.Invisible Philosopher wrote:Indeed, GNU/Linux is, among other things, about choice. Speaking of which, I have just installed Gentoo ("you're not going to believe this" , but that is the name of a "distribution" of GNU/Linux). And BTW, half of the names you mentioned are not in fact text editing programs as you probably think of them... with choice comes the necessity to learn about the possibilities (or the joy of learning, for insatiably curious people like me).Assasin wrote:linux sounds complicated. vi, nano, KDE, GNOME, none of those names even sound like a text editing program.On Mac OS X, I use four or five text-editing programs at various times: TextEdit, BBEdit, XCode, Appleworks, and, if you count it, my browser for posting to forums. Not to mention that I use Mail occasionally, which provides yet another text editing interface, similar but not identical to TextEdit. And of course there are text-entry fields somewhere in nearly every GUI application.Assasin wrote:For Mac, it's called (you're not going to believe this) TextEdit!! Simple, you see, to understand the purpose of the app.
Cocoa is sweet.
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