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Re: A femtolisp based emacs clone
From: |
Ben Bacarisse |
Subject: |
Re: A femtolisp based emacs clone |
Date: |
Thu, 25 Aug 2016 22:22:08 +0100 |
"James K. Lowden" <jklowden@speakeasy.net> writes:
<snip>
> Imagine if "emacs --daemon" opened a TCP port instead of a unix domain
> socket.
It can, can't it? It may be that the protocol does not work well in the
situation you discuss below, and it might not offer the right level of
security, but it may be worth a try.
> You start emacsclient on whatever gadget you have. Maybe
> it's a Windows box; maybe it's an iPad. Maybe there's a javascript
> implementation, and it runs in the browser. You connect to your
> editor daemon, deal with your document. Save, exit, disconnect. If
> Amtrak finds a dead spot, you're summarily disconnected, but when you
> resume, the client -- just like HTTP -- learns from the server what the
> current display looks like, rebuilds it, and you start again.
<snip>
--
Ben.
- Re: A femtolisp based emacs clone, (continued)
- Re: A femtolisp based emacs clone, Gene, 2016/08/22
- Re: A femtolisp based emacs clone, Rusi, 2016/08/22
- Re: A femtolisp based emacs clone, edu500ac, 2016/08/22
- Re: A femtolisp based emacs clone, Thien-Thi Nguyen, 2016/08/22
- Re: A femtolisp based emacs clone, James K. Lowden, 2016/08/23
- Re: A femtolisp based emacs clone, Yuri Khan, 2016/08/24
- Re: A femtolisp based emacs clone, edu500ac, 2016/08/24
- Re: A femtolisp based emacs clone, Stefan Monnier, 2016/08/25
- Re: A femtolisp based emacs clone, Michael Albinus, 2016/08/26
- Re: A femtolisp based emacs clone, Stefan Monnier, 2016/08/26
- Re: A femtolisp based emacs clone,
Ben Bacarisse <=