Re: opening and saving files remotely

2001-11-03 Thread Joerg Jaspert
Rory O'Connor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > if linux would have a similar feature where I could open and edit files, > say, in gnotepad (or other GTK text editor) and save them remotely in > the same fashion? Use Emacs with tramp. You can open files with /[host]/name and it opens file over ssh/

Re: opening and saving files remotely

2001-11-03 Thread John Hasler
Jens writes: > Linux does not have such a feature. Emacs does: Remote Files You can refer to files on other machines using a special file name syntax: /HOST:FILENAME /[EMAIL PROTECTED]:FILENAME /[EMAIL PROTECTED]:FILENAME When you do this, Emacs uses the FT

Re: opening and saving files remotely

2001-11-03 Thread Jens Müller
Rory O'Connor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Homesite has a nifty feature called FTP/RDS that allows me to open, edit > > and save files on remote servers as if they were local. I'm wondering > if linux would have a similar feature where I could open and edit files, > > say, in gnotepad (or o

Re: opening and saving files remotely

2001-11-03 Thread Geoff Beaumont
On Sat, 2001-11-03 at 07:03, Karsten M. Self wrote: > on Sat, Nov 03, 2001 at 01:00:10AM -0600, Rory O'Connor ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) > wrote: > > > > Homesite has a nifty feature called FTP/RDS that allows me to open, edit > > > > and save files on remote servers as if they were local. I'm wonder

Re: opening and saving files remotely

2001-11-03 Thread Karsten M. Self
on Sat, Nov 03, 2001 at 01:00:10AM -0600, Rory O'Connor ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: > > Homesite has a nifty feature called FTP/RDS that allows me to open, edit > > and save files on remote servers as if they were local. I'm wondering > if linux would have a similar feature where I could open

opening and saving files remotely

2001-11-03 Thread Rory O'Connor
Homesite has a nifty feature called FTP/RDS that allows me to open, edit and save files on remote servers as if they were local. I'm wondering if linux would have a similar feature where I could open and edit files, say, in gnotepad (or other GTK text editor) and save them remotely in the s