![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() As for Emacs, well, I sort of gave up, but I'm happy I stuck with Vim. Using Vim for the first time scared me-I did not want to mess anything up! But once I got the hang of it, things became much easier and I could appreciate the editor's powerful capabilities. I used Nano sometimes, but I heard awesome things about Vi/Vim and Emacs and really wanted to give them a try (mainly because they looked cool, and I was also curious to see what was so great about them). For students who could use the shell but weren't used to the console-based editor, the popular choice was Nano, which provided good interactive menus and an experience similar to Windows' graphical text editor. Students could use a graphical text editor like Kate, which was installed on the lab computers by default. ![]()
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