Epsilon features powerful built-in Emacs-style and Brief-style command sets, incredible performance, convenient built-in help, and a 60-day money back guarantee.
You can now set C mode to use different indentation on very long continuation lines, using the new variables c-align-contin-max-width and c-align-contin-max-offset.
When the next-error command parses a compiler error message, but can't work out the correct directory for the file it names, you can now set Epsilon to look through those you've already loaded, using the new process-next-error-options variable.
During incremental searching, keys bound to the delete-character command, like Del or Ctrl-D, now delete the highlighted match and exit the search. The new search-delete-match variable controls this.
The R command in dired to refresh the current listing now scrolls the window, if it would otherwise be empty (commonly, when an external program has just deleted many files).
Epsilon for Mac OS X now loads any X11 resource file named ~/.Xresources when it's started from its icon, since this may not happen automatically on Macs.
Setting the process-echo variable to zero to suppress echoing now works under Unix.
WIDGETMAN Uhh...if it's "like" emacs, but it's $250...why not just use emacs? Or even, why not just use one of the excellent free or laregly inexpensive editors out there. I recommend TextMate, it is much better than anything aspiring to be a highly overpriced emacs clone. (Version 13.0.1)