The package allows annotators to correct POS assignment errors by. Bash in my opinion).Are there other tools similar to Vim, that maybe even cover other application areas? Doesn't have to be terminal-based. in GNU Emacs Lisp, which is embedded within the GNU Emacs editor (Lewis et al. Then a few rare ones are extremely powerful, but so old and poorly designed that I don't think they make the cut (e.g. 4.9 Case Conversion in Lisp 4.10 The Case Table 5 Lists 5.1 Lists and Cons Cells 5.2 Predicates on Lists 5.3 Accessing Elements of Lists 5.4 Building Cons Cells and Lists 5.5 Modifying List Variables 5.6 Modifying Existing List Structure 5.6.1 Altering List Elements with setcar 5.6.2 Altering the CDR of a List 5.6.
I think what these tools have in common is that they all have a strong core idea (Vim: modal, TiddlyWiki: a quine of tiddlers, Emacs: elisp) that provides insane feature breadth at relatively low cost to learnability.Other software is usually on a spectrum of low feature count (most tools in the UNIX philosophy) to low understandability (IDEs, most other text editors, all OSes). I do not plan to write a tutorial on how to write advices in Emacs-Lisp, but here’s a 3-second primer: To add an advice (advice-add original-fnTiddlyWiki loses some points on hackability because it's web technology and fairly sandboxed. The final product offers an easy to use Emacs configuration for Emacs newcomers and lots of additional power for.
Prelude alters a lot of the default settings, bundles a plethora of additional packages and adds its own core library to the mix. I'm looking for software that is powerful, understandable, hackable, extensible, reliable, future-proof (few breaking updates) and feature-rich.The two tools I've found so far that come close to this are TiddlyWiki (notetaking) and Vim/Emacs (same text editor niche). Prelude is an Emacs distribution that aims to enhance the default Emacs experience.