All in all, groff is lightweight, and handy.
And I even wrote a simple IDE for it.
groffstudio
groff.tuxproject.de
(FreeBSD ports and patches would be highly praised. ..)
All in all, groff is lightweight, and handy.
And I even wrote a simple IDE for it.
[…]
TexLive is not TeX.groff ~25Mb at most
TeXLive (full) > 4Gb
Agree.TexLive is not TeX.
It is inflated with contributed packages one never needs.
TeX is very small, sure much less than 25Mb.
Size of groff's core: 131kb
Memory... that forgotten tool (the pun!). Thank you very much, friend, for you comprehensive answer. I now know what TeX/LaTex is, and I'm interested in it.until you remember them
?"we so great" page
Another interesting tool.AsciiDoctor
That's like so many things that you don't finish, just abandon at some point.He said that a reporter is going to polish their story until just before deadline
Another cool tool.TeXworks
Yes!edit in nvi)
Yes!I still use (n)vi
I'm learning ex/vi as deeply as I can (little by little) and it's fascinating how powerful the little program is.
I'm writing a novel, and yesterday I wrote for the first time using vi. Afterward I pasted the resulting fragment in MS Word, because my novel includes a complex index that you cannot create even with LibreOffice, but the writing experience was very satisfying. I'm using a "big" font on the terminal and the color combination that I prefer, which is dark grey over white, but the rest is vanilla ex/vi (with some options enabled, like line numbers and "showmode"). No mouse involved.
When I'm an expert in ex/vi, I'll think about using vim or neovim (or maybe I won't), but I'm enjoying very much the experience of learning the original in all its mighty.