From Editor war – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This made me laugh, so I had to share:
Frequently, at some point in the discussion, someone will point out that ed is the standard text editor.
Richard Stallman appearing as St IGNU−cius, a saint in the Church of Emacs.The Church of Emacs, formed by Richard Stallman, is a joke, and while it refers to vi as the “editor of the beast” (vi-vi-vi being 6-6-6 in Roman numerals), it does not oppose the use of vi; rather, it calls proprietary software an anathema. (“Using a free version of vi is not a sin but a penance.”) It has its own newsgroup, alt.religion.emacs, that has posts purporting to support this parody religion.
Stallman has jokingly declared himself to be St IGNU−cius, a saint in the Church of Emacs.
Supporters of vi have created an opposing Cult of vi, argued by the more hardline Emacs users to be an attempt to “ape their betters”.
Regarding vi’s modal nature, some Emacs users joke that vi has two modes – “beep repeatedly” and “break everything”. vi users enjoy joking that Emacs’s key-sequences induce carpal tunnel syndrome, or mentioning one of many satirical expansions of the acronym EMACS, such as “Escape Meta Alt Control Shift” (a jab at Emacs’s reliance on modifier keys).
Others have posited that this acronym in fact means “Eight Megabytes And Constantly Swapping” (in a time when that was a great amount of memory) or “EMACS Makes Any Computer Slow” (a recursive acronym like those Stallman uses), in reference to Emacs’s high system resource requirements.As a poke at Emacs’ creeping featurism, vi advocates will describe Emacs as “a great operating system, lacking only a decent editor”.
A game among UNIX users either to test the depth of an Emacs user’s understanding of the editor or to poke fun of the complexity of Emacs involved predicting what would happen if a user held down a modifier key (such as Control or Alt) and typed his own name.











