<
text, tool> (Originally "Lucid Emacs") A text editor for the
X Window System, based on
GNU Emacs version 19, produced
by a collaboration of
Lucid, Inc.,
SunPro (a division of
Sun Microsystems, Inc.), and the
University of Illinois.
Lucid chose to build part of
Energize, their
C/
C++
development environment on top of GNU Emacs. Though their
product is commercial, the work on GNU Emacs is {free
software}, and is useful without having to purchase the
product. They needed a version of Emacs with mouse-sensitive
regions, multiple fonts, the ability to mark sections of a
buffer as read-only, the ability to detect which parts of a
buffer has been modified, and many other features.
The existing version of
Epoch was not sufficient; it did not
allow arbitrary
pixmaps and
icons in buffers, "undo" did
not restore changes to regions, regions did not overlap and
merge their attributes. Lucid spent some time in 1990 working
on Epoch but later decided that their efforts would be better
spent improving Emacs 19 instead.
Lucid did not have time to get their changes accepted by the
FSF so they released Lucid Emacs as a forked branch of
Emacs. Roughly a year after Lucid Emacs 19.0 was released, a
beta version of the FSF branch of Emacs 19 was released.
Lucid continued to develop and support Lucid Emacs, merging in
bug fixes and new features from the FSF branch as appropriate.
A compatibility package was planned to allow Epoch 4 code to
run in Lemacs with little or no change. (As of 19.8, Lucid
Emacs ran a descendant of the Epoch redisplay engine.)
[
Update?]
(2000-05-16)