The Traditional Vi (2007)

exvi 55 points 47 comments June 23, 2026
ex-vi.sourceforge.net · View on Hacker News

Discussion Highlights (11 comments)

GaryBluto

Tangentially related, I wish more websites and blogs looked like this now. It's elegant and modern but simple.

fragmede

:x is a vim feature, so this wouldn't support it, so you'll have to use :wq instead.

haunter

Github mirror + some bugfixes https://github.com/n-t-roff/heirloom-ex-vi/

senthil_rajasek

A 2007 article from sourceforge.net and it's not even throwback Thursday. "Gunnar Ritter <gunnarr@acm.org> 2007-11-29"

jbverschoor

vim with mouse frustrates the hell out of me. Just give me basic vi, or a complete editor

mghackerlady

I wish elvis was still around. I don't want everything vim has but I like syntax highlighting and other conveniences

JdeBP

I was just talking about a fun and largely forgotten feature of Joy+Horton vi elsewhere. * https://mastodonapp.uk/@JdeBP/116793159030149624 You can see it here in Ritter vi on lines 83 et seq. of ex_vis.h . vi actually has three flavours of its 'open' mode, for cursor addressable video terminals, non-cursor addressable video terminals, and actual paper terminals. There's an as-yet unfilled niche for the retrocomputeristas with genuine ADM-3s or (as someone pointed out) TI Silent 703s and suchlike to do a YouTube video showing Joy+Horton vi in its 3 open modes.

mikejulietbravo

text editors 5ever

imglorp

As an undergrad around 1984 I stumbled on some AT&T 3B2's in the computer lab and started to play. Knowing nothing of Unix (would have been ~ SVR3.x), I asked for help and the TA said something like "read the fine manual" as was customary. So I started off with "man something" and off we went, ending up at "man 1 vi", the glorious, pure original, none of this vim stuff... Of course when I got onto the BSD VAX, someone set me straight and it was Emacs from there on..

whartung

I learned vi back in the day and have never really graduated to vim. My favorite features are the ranges on the commands (like substitute or delete), piping the buffer into the bottomless utility of the classic UNIX command line, and the . do again command. About the only vim feature I use today is being able to navigate while entering text, but even after all this time, that is not automatic to me. I have used syntax coloring a couple of times, I find it particularly useful for XML, especially XML with chunks of XML commented out.

Fwirt

I started writing a more fleshed out vi compatibility mode for TextAdept earlier this year. As someone who understood the basics after going through :vimtutor multiple times but always struggled with the more "advanced" commands, there's no better way to actually grok vi than to just try to recreate it. It's pretty amazing how much Bill Joy managed to pack in. Of course, if you're implementing POSIX vi, there are quite a few features that have aged poorly, like roff/troff macros and line-editing, but there are also quite a few commands that I had never paid attention to (like _) that have subtle behaviors that sped up my editing even more. The hardest part about becoming proficient in vi is committing commands to muscle memory so you don't habitually fall back on hjkl.

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