Sam (text editor)

Sam

A screenshot of Sam
Original author(s) Rob Pike
Developer(s) Bell Labs
Initial release early 1980s
Written in C
Operating system Unix, Plan 9, Win32
Available in English
Type Text editor
License Lucent Public License

Sam is a multi-file text editor based on structural regular expressions. It was originally designed in the early 1980s at Bell Labs by Rob Pike with the help of Ken Thompson and other Unix developers for the Blit windowing terminal running on Unix; it was later ported to other systems. Sam follows a classical modular Unix aesthetic. It is internally simple, its power leveraged by the composability of a small command language and extensibility through shell integration.

Design and features

Sam is designed as two synchronous programs: a command interpreter and a mouse-oriented bitmap windowing interface. The interpreter's command set is modeled after the UNIX editor ed and may be used to operate the editor from a standard text terminal. By default, however, Sam presents its own graphical user interface (GUI) window, samterm, which additionally allows point-and-click operations through Smalltalk-80-style pop-up context menus. This two-process structure allowed sam to access files on networked host systems through remote execution of the file-access process while running the windowing interface locally, thereby bypassing latency over slow connections.

Samterm presents windows to files being edited and to a persistent command window which accepts input as sam commands. Most common editing operations are quickly and naturally accomplished with the point-and-click interface, which also functions inside the command window. This latter fact allows commands to be edited (and resubmitted) just as any other text, a function inherited from the DMD 5620 terminal interface.

Command Syntax

Sam's command syntax is formally similar to ed's or ex's, containing (structural-) regular expression based conditional and loop functions and scope addressing, even sharing some of ed's syntax for such functions. But while ed's commands are line-oriented, sam's are selection-oriented. Selections are contiguous strings of text (which may span multiple lines), and are specified either with the mouse (by sweeping it over a region of text) or by a pattern match. Sam's commands take such selections as basic—more or less as other Unix tools treat lines; thus, multi-line and sub-line patterns are as naturally handled by Sam as whole-line patterns are by ed, vi, AWK, Perl, etc. This is implemented through a model called structural regular expressions, which can recursively apply regular-expression matching to obtain other (sub)selections within a given selection. In this way, sam's command set can be applied to substrings that are identified by arbitrarily complex context.

Sam extends its basic text-editing command set to handling of multiple files, providing similar pattern-based conditional and loop commands for filename specification. Any sequence of text-editing commands may be applied as a unit to each such specification.

Infinite Undos

Sam was one of the first text editors to support "infinite" undo to revert any number of editing errors. This feature, combined with Sam's facility to easily edit its own commands and, fundamentally, its small, orthogonal command set (containing only 33 commands), represent the program's bias toward a low learning threshold over other more expressive "power editors."

Endorsers

Sam is the preferred text editor of several eminent programmers. It was the first full screen editor Ken Thompson liked.[1] Sam is the text editor used by Bjarne Stroustrup[2] and Brian Kernighan.[3] Others, like Dennis Ritchie, had moved on to use acme instead.

The latest incarnation of sam was written as part of the Plan 9 operating system, but there are Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X and X Window System ports available.

Notes

  1. https://interviews.slashdot.org/story/04/10/18/1153211/rob-pike-responds
  2. Rzeszótko, Jarosław (2006-10-16). Stiff asks, great programmers answer. (Interview). Stifflog. Archived from the original on October 5, 2011. Retrieved 2008-11-01.
  3. Kernighan, Brian (July 2000). An Interview with Brian Kernighan. Interview with Budiu, Mihai. Retrieved 2008-11-01.

See also

References

External links

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