![]() | This article has multiple issues. Please help
improve it or discuss these issues on the
talk page. (
Learn how and when to remove these template messages)
|
Original author(s) | Russ Nelson |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Jim Hall |
Stable release | 1.6H
/ October 19, 2008 |
Operating system | MS-DOS, FreeDOS |
Type | Text editor |
License | GPL-1.0-only |
Website |
www |
Freemacs is a small, programmable computer text editor for MS-DOS with some degree of compatibility with GNU Emacs. [1] Written by Russ Nelson and later maintained by Jim Hall, [2] Freemacs is currently distributed under the GPL-1.0-only license in the FreeDOS project. [2]
Freemacs' executable binary, in the current 1.6 version, is only ~21k in size. Most features are implemented in MINT (Mint Is Not Trac), [1] whose role is akin to that of Emacs Lisp as used by other implementations of Emacs.
The most recent version of Freemacs is 1.6H, released in 2008. [3] Version 1.6G was released in 1999. [4]
![]() | This article has multiple issues. Please help
improve it or discuss these issues on the
talk page. (
Learn how and when to remove these template messages)
|
Original author(s) | Russ Nelson |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Jim Hall |
Stable release | 1.6H
/ October 19, 2008 |
Operating system | MS-DOS, FreeDOS |
Type | Text editor |
License | GPL-1.0-only |
Website |
www |
Freemacs is a small, programmable computer text editor for MS-DOS with some degree of compatibility with GNU Emacs. [1] Written by Russ Nelson and later maintained by Jim Hall, [2] Freemacs is currently distributed under the GPL-1.0-only license in the FreeDOS project. [2]
Freemacs' executable binary, in the current 1.6 version, is only ~21k in size. Most features are implemented in MINT (Mint Is Not Trac), [1] whose role is akin to that of Emacs Lisp as used by other implementations of Emacs.
The most recent version of Freemacs is 1.6H, released in 2008. [3] Version 1.6G was released in 1999. [4]