Linux command line based Word Processors?
I am on the hunt for software options that may have gotten drowned out in my google searches by emacs, vim, and wordgrinder to use as a word processor in a Raspbian Terminal environment.
The goal has been to have a 'minimal distraction' writing environment running on a lightweight raspberry pi configured with little else. A little portable laptop that I can't easily "wander away from what I'm doing" because it never gets configured for things like checking email or browsing the web.
[And working on this project totally hasn't been used as procrastination from actually writing...]
Key Requirements:
- Must run natively in a linux command line environment. [System will not boot into a GUI/Windowed environment.]
- Must not rely on any closed encoding for file storage, not worried about extra markup/down added to the files, but ideally would want to be able to extract my information with a standard text editor.
- Plays nicely with a portrait monitor.
Nice to haves:
- Robust Spell Check with easy to configure custom dictionaries. [Different projects will draw on different technical jargon, sci-fi/fantasy, etc, and I would rather not cross pollute projects.]
- File Switching/Grouping controls for jumping between docs and maintaining organization of 'open stuff', while being able to move the whole process into the background as a single instance.
- Wiki-Like data organization for keeping track of notes.
Existing software opinions:
vim/emacs tends to feel like it has too much fluff in the UI to work through, or I end up tinkering with configs more than writing.
wordgrinder has a few quirks so far, with one of the biggest being lack of tab, and keeping data entry awkwardly in the 'middle' of the screen. [Which kind of negates the use of a portrait monitor when the software insists on not using much of it, given that the majority of my writing is appending to file rather than editing.]
Thanks for any leads.
This post was sourced from https://writers.stackexchange.com/q/46857. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
1 answer
Strengths:
It handles text files.
It runs natively in Linux, and it has a prettier interface compared to vim.
It can also do spell checking after installing 'spell'.
It has a GNU licence
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