Ted, an easy rich text processor
Ted is a text processor running under X Windows on Unix/Linux systems. Ted was
developed as a standard easy word processor, having the role of Wordpad on
MS-Windows. Since then, Ted has evolved to a real word processor that still
has the same easy appearance as the original. The possibility to type a
letter, a note or a report on a Unix/Linux machine is clearly missing. Only
too often, you have to turn to MS-Windows machine to write a letter or a
document. Ted was made to make it possible to edit rich text documents on
Unix/Linux in a wysiwyg way. RTF files from Ted are fully compatible with
MS-Word. Additionally, Ted also is an RTF to PostScript and an RTF to Acrobat
PDF converter.
Compatibility with popular MS-Windows applications played an important role in
the design of Ted. Every document produced by Ted fully compatible with
MS-Word without any loss of formatting or information. Compatibility in the
other direction is more difficult to achieve. Ted supports many of the
formatting features of the Microsoft applications. Other formatting
instructions and meta information are ignored.1 By ignoring unsupported
formatting Ted tries to get the complete text of a document on screen or to
the printer. Ted can be used to read formatted e-mail sent from a Windows
machine to Unix, to print an RTF document, or to convert it to Acrobat PDF
format.
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Wysiwyg rich text editing. You can use all fonts for which you have an .afm
file and that are available as an X11 font. Ted is delivered with .afm files
for the Adobe fonts that are available on Motif systems and in all
postscript printers: Times, Helvetica, Courier and Symbol. Other fonts can
be added with the normal X11 procedure. Font properties like bold and italic
are supported; so is underlining and are subscripts and superscripts.
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Ted uses Microsoft RTF as its native file format. Microsoft Word and Wordpad
can read files produced by Ted. Usually Ted can read .rtf files from
Microsoft Word and Wordpad. As Ted does not support all features of Word,
some formatting information might be lost.
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In line bitmap and windows metafile pictures.
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PostScript printing of the document and its illustrations. Saved PostScript
files contain pdfmarks that are converted to hyperlinks when they are
converted to Acrobat PDF.
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Spelling checking in twelve Latin languages.
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Directly mailing documents from Ted. Mail in HTML format is a multipart
message that contains all images hyperlinks and footnotes.
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Cut/Copy/Paste, also with other applications.
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Find/Replace.
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Ruler: Paragraph indentation, Indentation of first line, Tabs. Copy/Paste
Ruler.
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Page breaks.
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Page headers and footers. Page numbers in page headers and page footers.
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Tables: Insert Table, Row, Column. Changing the column width of tables with
their ruler.
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Symbols and accented characters are fully supported.
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Hyperlinks and bookmarks.
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Footnotes and endnotes.
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Colored backgrounds and table borders.
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Saving a document in HTML format.
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Probably the best illustration of what you can do with Ted is its
documentation that has been made with Ted.
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No undo, can bearly use seriously
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Extremely limited table support.
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When saving my .rft to .txt, all the table layout are lost
Ted /usr/local/Ted/TedDocument-en_US.rtf &