GNOME done well?!
- The Beatles
- Fear me for I am root
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Well, after playing around with it, I must say I like pico/nano. Very simple and easy to use - I like how it actually shows you the possible commands, instead of expecting you to automagically figure everything out.
If you go down to the woods today, you better not go alone
It's a lovely day in the woods today, but safer to stay at home
BECAUSE EVIL FREEN IS KILLING ALL THE TEDDY BEARS AT THEIR PICNIC
It's a lovely day in the woods today, but safer to stay at home
BECAUSE EVIL FREEN IS KILLING ALL THE TEDDY BEARS AT THEIR PICNIC
I'm actually using pico for my config file hand-editing now. It's nice that it actually tells you the commands needed to do simple actions.
Technically, I think I have nano. But, it's pretty much the same thing anyway.
Technically, I think I have nano. But, it's pretty much the same thing anyway.
If you go down to the woods today, you better not go alone
It's a lovely day in the woods today, but safer to stay at home
BECAUSE EVIL FREEN IS KILLING ALL THE TEDDY BEARS AT THEIR PICNIC
It's a lovely day in the woods today, but safer to stay at home
BECAUSE EVIL FREEN IS KILLING ALL THE TEDDY BEARS AT THEIR PICNIC
- The Beatles
- Fear me for I am root
- Posts: 6285
- Joined: Tue May 24, 2005 8:12 pm
Not quite. Pico is more stable for esoteric terminal situations...
http://www.washington.edu/pine/getpine/linux.html
http://www.washington.edu/pine/getpine/linux.html
:wq
- The Beatles
- Fear me for I am root
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- Joined: Tue May 24, 2005 8:12 pm
I just linked you to the .deb file.....
[edit] By the way, if there's some software you need and it isn't a .deb, you're not going to try to compile it? You quite sure you just said that? What about Windows apps you might use, those are never going to be in a .deb package...
[edit2] The .deb file on that page is for the full pine distribution (which includes pico, pilot, etc.)
Individual binaries are here:
http://www.washington.edu/pine/getpine/unix.html
[edit] By the way, if there's some software you need and it isn't a .deb, you're not going to try to compile it? You quite sure you just said that? What about Windows apps you might use, those are never going to be in a .deb package...
[edit2] The .deb file on that page is for the full pine distribution (which includes pico, pilot, etc.)
Individual binaries are here:
http://www.washington.edu/pine/getpine/unix.html
:wq
Heh, I meant from Ubuntu itself. I already have a limited number of "external" debian packages installed, and I've used a spiffy tool called "alien" to convert rpm->deb.
Anyway, I have nano installed and it's fine. Besides, I'd have to uninstall it to install "proper" pico, because nano uses /usr/bin/pico (It wouldn't matter if I deleted that file, since the deb packages would still conflict). I like nano, so I see no real need to change to pico.
In reply to your edit: I tend not to try to compile things, because it invariably ends up failing horribly. It's only my last resort, if .deb and .rpm->alien fail.
I never CAN get the right dev packages installed.
'sides, I don't use Windows apps on Linux. The only one I would use, Flash MX 2004, doesn't QUITE run on WINE properly.
And, from Wikipedia, apparently the only big difference between nano and pico is the relative "freedom" of them. I enjoy it, so I'll take whichever one is easier to get. They ARE pretty much the same thing, anyway.
Anyway, I have nano installed and it's fine. Besides, I'd have to uninstall it to install "proper" pico, because nano uses /usr/bin/pico (It wouldn't matter if I deleted that file, since the deb packages would still conflict). I like nano, so I see no real need to change to pico.
In reply to your edit: I tend not to try to compile things, because it invariably ends up failing horribly. It's only my last resort, if .deb and .rpm->alien fail.
I never CAN get the right dev packages installed.
'sides, I don't use Windows apps on Linux. The only one I would use, Flash MX 2004, doesn't QUITE run on WINE properly.
And, from Wikipedia, apparently the only big difference between nano and pico is the relative "freedom" of them. I enjoy it, so I'll take whichever one is easier to get. They ARE pretty much the same thing, anyway.
If you go down to the woods today, you better not go alone
It's a lovely day in the woods today, but safer to stay at home
BECAUSE EVIL FREEN IS KILLING ALL THE TEDDY BEARS AT THEIR PICNIC
It's a lovely day in the woods today, but safer to stay at home
BECAUSE EVIL FREEN IS KILLING ALL THE TEDDY BEARS AT THEIR PICNIC
- The Beatles
- Fear me for I am root
- Posts: 6285
- Joined: Tue May 24, 2005 8:12 pm
I tried it on Arch -- briefly, didn't have much time. It does seem innovative. I'll have to see about "useful". 
Righto about compiling. I had the same issues with Mandrake. Arch is a breeze though, at a best guess, it must install development files along with normal packages. But I honestly don't know the reason. Arch is a great distro all around.
If Wikipedia says that, it's quite a bit off the mark. As I see it, the 3 differences are:
1. Nano is much more featureful. Coloring, regular expressions, limited mouse support, etc.
2. Pico never leaves extra characters on the screen when you go up/down -- nano does, in xterm and linux console too. But not too often, so it's hard to track down.
3. Nano is GPL; Pico is distributed such that you can modify the source for your own needs, but may not redistribute changes, if I recall rightly.
Righto about compiling. I had the same issues with Mandrake. Arch is a breeze though, at a best guess, it must install development files along with normal packages. But I honestly don't know the reason. Arch is a great distro all around.
If Wikipedia says that, it's quite a bit off the mark. As I see it, the 3 differences are:
1. Nano is much more featureful. Coloring, regular expressions, limited mouse support, etc.
2. Pico never leaves extra characters on the screen when you go up/down -- nano does, in xterm and linux console too. But not too often, so it's hard to track down.
3. Nano is GPL; Pico is distributed such that you can modify the source for your own needs, but may not redistribute changes, if I recall rightly.
:wq
Actually, that sounds about right with nano. 
Enlightment isn't really easy to use (yet), but it looks great and is VERY responsive.
I have both pico and nano now. nano has /usr/bin/nano and /usr/bin/pico - pico has /usr/bin/realpico.
I'd assume Gentoo is slightly easier for source compiling too.
Hey, I never did get around to try Vector or Arch...
Enlightment isn't really easy to use (yet), but it looks great and is VERY responsive.
I have both pico and nano now. nano has /usr/bin/nano and /usr/bin/pico - pico has /usr/bin/realpico.
I'd assume Gentoo is slightly easier for source compiling too.
Hey, I never did get around to try Vector or Arch...
If you go down to the woods today, you better not go alone
It's a lovely day in the woods today, but safer to stay at home
BECAUSE EVIL FREEN IS KILLING ALL THE TEDDY BEARS AT THEIR PICNIC
It's a lovely day in the woods today, but safer to stay at home
BECAUSE EVIL FREEN IS KILLING ALL THE TEDDY BEARS AT THEIR PICNIC
- The Beatles
- Fear me for I am root
- Posts: 6285
- Joined: Tue May 24, 2005 8:12 pm
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