On Mon, 2003-06-30 at 11:19, Anders Borch wrote: > Guillaume Marcais wrote: > > On Mon, 2003-06-30 at 08:19, Dominik Werder wrote: > > > >>Hello, > >> > >>I'm developing at the moment on a windows machine with textpad, the best > >>editor I've ever seen :) > >>But now I'll switch on a linux desktop for a project and would like to know > >>if there is something like textpad for linux. > >>I know that vi and emacs are very often used, but I miss the really cool > >>sidebar where textpad lists all open files. You just (single-)click on it > >>and then you can continue editing at the position where you've stopped. > >>I'm sure thats also possible on linux but I don't know how... > >> > > > > > > xemacs has tabs for opened files, plus all the usual emacs glory :) > > gnu emacs has a speedbar (a side bar) which can show a list of open > files (or other neat things like a list of functions - in some modes). > > I wasn't trying to fuel the gnu emacs vs xemacs fire, and I'm sure > xemacs supports the speedbar too :) > I didn't either, and I actually use emacs for my daily business. I didn't know about the speedbar of emacs. How do you get it? Guillaume. > /Anders > > -- > dc -e > 4dd*od3*dddn1-89danrn10-dan3+ann6*dan*2*an13dn1+dn2-dn3+5*ddan2/9+an13nap > >