Larry Tesler: A Personal History of Modeless Text Editing and Cut/Copy-Paste (2012)
Posted by aragonite 3 days ago
Comments
Comment by bobbiechen 18 hours ago
Gypsy (that first modeless editor) recently turned 50 years old and I wrote about it here largely from those first-hand accounts: https://digitalseams.com/blog/the-gypsy-document-editor-cele...
And it's not mentioned in this ACM interview but rather this one with the Computer History Museum https://archive.computerhistory.org/resources/access/text/20... that implementing a modeless editor was easier too, since you could use a simple case-switch instead of having a bunch of explicit modules for each mode.
Comment by uxhacker 15 hours ago
Comment by kmoser 13 hours ago
Comment by brudgers 2 days ago
Comment by Duanemclemore 18 hours ago
I have come to modal editors after decades of modeless, I enjoy them - but respect, understand, and appreciate Tesler's efforts, and I always enjoy reading about them.
Comment by cmrdporcupine 17 hours ago
So much of what the Mac was came from what Tesler built into the Lisa project based on his personal convictions on what computing could be.
Jobs got a reputation for "taste" but a lot of the origins of what that looked like in practice were Tesler (and others, obviously) driven.
Comment by jll29 17 hours ago
He was aware of that: in one video, he pointed out that once he managed to hire the top 1-2 people, the other people will come because they'd want to work with the best.
Comment by cmrdporcupine 13 hours ago
Honestly, after he got pushed out of Apple he learned some lessons, but I don't think the actual history there reflects what you're saying.
Comment by exogeny 17 hours ago
Comment by kristianp 14 hours ago
Comment by mghackerlady 15 hours ago