john s jacobs anderson <jacobs(a)azstarnet.com> writes:
also, one of the things to do tomorrow is the links sections,
so if you're got (X)Emacs-related content that's not on
www.xemacs.org
and you'd like a pointer to it, please send the URL. a short
description of the content would also save me some time.
None of this my own
===
XEmacs lisp software not currently bundled with XEmacs/available as
official packages
<a href="http://www.fmi.uni-passau.de/~wedler/x-symbol/"> X-Symbol
</a> is
a package by Christoph Wedler>
The main purpose of package x-symbol is to provide some WYSIWYGness in
an area where it greatly enhance the readability of your LaTeX or HTML
source: using "real" characters for "tokens" like \oplus or
™.
It also provides input methods for these characters, both for the
beginner and the expert (some users regard this as the main reason to
use package x-symbol). WYSIWYG super- and subscripts and
images/figures are also supported.
There is an XEmacs 21 installable lisp package available from his site.
<a
href="http://members.tripod.com/gchen2/xemacs/">Gongquan
Chen</a>
has a few nifty enhancements on his site. Including a hack that allows
you to use <em>multiple major modes</em> in one buffer, f.i. to edit
CSS inside an HTML file.
finally, someone from the development group (what do you guys call
yourselves in a collective sense?)
I don't know. I think a few people (including me, Didier, Vinnie, ...) need
to be added to
http://www.xemacs.org/Develop/devTeam.html anyway. May
be I should also submit something for the about XEmacs buffer.
Jan
P.S. You can borrow a screen shot of Gnus from
http://socha.net/Gnus/screenshots/mime.html
(doesn't hurt to have a nice Girl on the site anyway)