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Early text editors were line oriented and typically were used from
dumb printing terminals. A typical editor that operates in this mode
is Ed . The editor is powerful and efficient, using a
very small amount of computer resources, and worked well with the
display equipment of the time. vi offers the user a visual
alternative with a significantly expanded command set compared with
ed.
vi as we know it today started as the line editor
ex . In fact ex is seen as a special editing mode of
vi, although actually the converse is true. The visual component
of ex can be initiated from the command line by using the
vi command, or from within ex.
The ex/vi editor was developed at the University of
California at Berkeley by
William Joy . It was originally supplied as an
unsupported utility until its official inclusion in the release of
AT&T System 5 Unix. It has steadily become more popular, even with
the challenges of more modern full screen editors.
Due to the popularity of vi there exists many clone variants and
versions can be found for most operation systems. It is not the
intention of this chapter to include all the commands available under
vi or its variants. Many clones have expanded and changed the
original behaviour of vi. Most clones do not support all the
original commands of vi.
If you have a good working knowledge of ed then
vi offers a smaller learning curve to master. Even if you have no
intention of using vi as your regular editor, a basic knowledge
of vi can only be an asset.
Converted on:
Mon Apr 1 08:59:56 EST 1996
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