Also Emacs hasn't shipped with OSX for a long time. You've got vi on there though
And ed don't forget:
cerebus@shu:~/Desktop$ ed EdgeToPulse.v
277
1p
module EdgeToPulse (input edgeLine, input clk, output reg pulseLine);
Sick sick sick individual. If ever the world collapses and all we're left with is line printers you'll be the king of humanity though
Bwahahaha!
mnem
I'll make sure to be the bastard with all the working ribbons then.
Dot Matrix printers?
Ah, the screech of a DecWriter as it prints your program's listing. And kids nowadays moan about fans whining.
In answer to your question,
@Specmaster, a proper line printer is to a common dot-matrix as Bigfoot is to your grand-dad's Power Wagon. They date back to the 50s and print the whole line at a time; each column is a printwheel which rotates into position and then the whole line is struck at once. Dot-matrix was developed more in the 60s & 70s. Of course, they are still around today in certain harsh environments and where multicopy/multipart printing is a necessity.
When I was a teenager I rescued a prehistoric Florida Digital commercial dot-matrix printer from beside a dumpster behind a Police Station... and I soon discovered why it came bolted into a huge MDF Box/Enclosure with 2" of eggcrate foam all around it except for the 1/4" Lucite cover.
This thing was a wide-carriage 9-wire bottom-feed commercial printer (this thing was that old; I guess they hadn't started calling them 9-pin or 24-pin printers yet), and rated at a mind-numbing 1200CPS; the printhead was a ginormous finned heat-sink as big as a dwagon's paw, and it was designed to be serviceable.
When I got the thing it wouldn't initialize; the blink code showed printhead fault. I took it apart and found every coil and the wires (a hardened bit of piano wire sintered to a metal slug inside each solenoid coil) of a modular design such that they could be individually repaired or replaced. One of the coil/slugs had gotten bound up and a bit rusted due to something sticky spilled inside; likely soda or sugared coffee from the smell. Dismantling the coil and cleaning everything made it work freely, and the manual even showed how to align the coils after service.
But hoo-doggy, when that thing ran... it made a racket like a fucking air ratchet going back & forth, and it ate fanfold paper like a black hole. You simply could not be in a room with the damned thing outside that enclosure, I tell you what; it would drive you batshit crazy.
*mnemories...*