[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: new emacs book from larry ayers
From: |
Miles Bader |
Subject: |
Re: new emacs book from larry ayers |
Date: |
21 Aug 2001 12:50:17 +0900 |
Bill Richter <richter@conley.math.nwu.edu> writes:
> Emacs should be *easily* usable by folks who know almost no Emacs.
> It's utterly absolutely absurd for Emacs folks to tell the newbies:
>
> "Until you learn a bunch of Control-this & Meta-that sequences, and
> Emacs Lisp to boot, you're a chucklehead who's not crossing our radar
> screen. Come back when you become a true computer weenie!"
That's not what newbies are told, they're told `use the menus until you
learn to do more.' This is a perfectly reasonable approach, since the
menus are by-and-large (1) straightforward to use, (2) familiar, and
(3) a good way to learn many keybindings.
I realize that you don't like the menus, because they're slow and
clunky, but frankly, you're not a newbie. Most newbies I've observed
_like_ using the menus, and often continue to use them even when they've
learned other ways to do things.
> Anyway, C-w/M-w/C-y is a much worse interface than C-x/C-c/C-v
No it's not. I suppose that you actually mean `less familiar'
when you say `worse,' but please use less pejorative terms.
> which is what folks are already used to.
-Miles
--
Love is a snowmobile racing across the tundra. Suddenly it flips over,
pinning you underneath. At night the ice weasels come. --Nietzsche