Where is ez word processor?

Where is ez word processor?

Post by William B. Hau » Wed, 08 May 1996 04:00:00



can anyone tell me where i can find the wysiwyg word processor ez?  a
friend of mine told me about it.  he didn't remember where he got it and
he doesn't have the sources.

so, has anyone heard of it?  i looked at sunsite but couldn't find it
there.  any suggestions would be appreciated.

TIA
bill

--
        --    --      Bill Hauck: Computer Geek at Large

           \                  OS: Slackware 3.0, Linux 1.2.13
            \          Windowing: XFree86 1.3.2b
           _/          
        \     /       Current Project: autonomous, mobile robot
         -----  

 
 
 

Where is ez word processor?

Post by Anttinen Roo » Wed, 08 May 1996 04:00:00



Quote:> can anyone tell me where i can find the wysiwyg word processor ez?  a
> friend of mine told me about it.  he didn't remember where he got it and
> he doesn't have the sources.
> so, has anyone heard of it?  i looked at sunsite but couldn't find it
> there.  any suggestions would be appreciated.

It's part of AUIS (Andrew User Interfase System), which could be found at
sunsite under /pub/Linux/X11/andrew

If ez is all you need, take the wp package.

--

___________________________________________________________________________

      p u h : 9 0   8 1 2   7 5 6 7  /  9 4 9   4 4 5   5 6 5
      a t k i . h e l b p . f i : 8 0 8 0 / ~ a n t t i n e r
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Helsinki Business Polytechnic - Institute of information technology

 
 
 

Where is ez word processor?

Post by r-laval.. » Wed, 08 May 1996 04:00:00



>can anyone tell me where i can find the wysiwyg word processor ez?  a
>friend of mine told me about it.  he didn't remember where he got it and
>he doesn't have the sources.
>so, has anyone heard of it?  i looked at sunsite but couldn't find it
>there.  any suggestions would be appreciated.
>TIA
>bill
>--
>    --    --      Bill Hauck: Computer Geek at Large

>           \                      OS: Slackware 3.0, Linux 1.2.13
>            \              Windowing: XFree86 1.3.2b
>       _/          
>        \     /       Current Project: autonomous, mobile robot
>     -----  

Ez is part of the Andrews system, however, memory does not serve me
where I found it.  I suppose you could search the sunsite archives or
go to Yahoo and poke around.

Rolnad

 
 
 

Where is ez word processor?

Post by Ralph L. Meye » Wed, 08 May 1996 04:00:00


URL for EZ - part of the Andrew package - from which you can ftp
the files is:

ftp://ftp.andrew.cmu.edu/pub/AUIS/bin-dist/linux

Pay attention to the upper and lower casing... I think this is a UNIX
machine.
This location has two sub-directories, one for the a.out format
and one for the ELF format, depending on your kernel and filesystem.
(Earlier Linuxes used the a.out format.  The latest versions use ELF.)
Note that at this location you'll find the entire Andrew package which
consists of EZ, the text editor, Bush file manager, Mail package, and
Macro and ATK development packages.  You have to have EZ to use any of
the others. You can get the whole package here.  The sunsite mirrors have
pretty complete bits too, but not the whole.  Its about a 14Mb chunk for
the entire pkg with everything in tarred-gzipped form.
Have fun!

 
 
 

1. TeX as a word processor (was Linux word processor?)

| It's somewhat silly, not completely. In some cases, you just can't do
| the job without TeX. At one firm where I'm doing some consulting work,
| I was approached by the accountant - a Polish lady - about how she can
| obtain the all of the special characters and accents for writing
| letters to family and friends overseas. Microsoft Word doesn't offer a
| satisfactory solution at all, whereas TeX can do everything. Word
| requires that you change the character set (which isn't always big
| enough to hold all the necessary combination), whereas TeX can
| synthesize all kinds of accents and stick them onto any character you
| want. For instance, she requires the cedilla accent (the little
| squiggle that the French use in the word Francais under the 'c') to be
| used with a whole bunch of capital letters, such as E. In TeX, you
| just type "\c E", and there it is.

Sorry to intervene in a possibly unmentionable way, but WordPerfect
allows a lot of scope in this respect (having not only the cedilla
but also the true ogonek or "Polish Hook", and many other diacritics).
There are various ways to combine an accent with a character. You can
either do this by key-strokes for occasional use, or write a macro
(which could be stored as a "Keyboard macro" if you decided, for instance,
to set up a special Polish keybaoard). Plus, you have about a 50 percent
chance to see your composed character on the screen.

If it's a choice between Word and TeX for this kind of thing, I would
choose WordPerfect (if you'll pardon the logic).

However, if it's a choice between WordPerfect and TeX, I'd choose troff
(if you know your way round the ms macros, you can set up anything your
printer can print). You could type Kazimir's example as \(,E for example,
once you had defined ",E" as a character object.

Don't ask me about Word.


2. Firewalling 2 Subnets...

3. Configuration smail + MX records

4. Word Processor Religious Wars and EZ

5. Which WM lends itself well to skinning?

6. EZ - as a Word Processor

7. DVD drive support on Linux?

8. APPLIX: wordcount.am 1.1 - Word count macro for Words

9. Which Linux word processor should I try that I can compare to MS Word

10. Which Linux Word Processor has Best MS Word Emulation?

11. Word Procs: ez