Author and History
The original vi was developed at UCB in the late 1970s by Bill Joy, then a computer science graduate student, and later a founder and vice president of Sun Microsystems.
Prior to nvi, Bill Joy first built ex, by starting with and heavily enhancing the sixth edition ed editor. The first enhancement was open mode, done with Chuck Haley. Between 1976 and 1979, ex evolved into vi. Mark Horton then came to Berkeley, added macros “and other features,”[51] and did much of the labor on vi to make it work on a large number of terminals and Unix systems. By 4.1 BSD (1981), the vi editor already had essentially all of the features we have described in Part I of this book.
Despite all of the changes, vi’s core was (and is) the original Unix ed editor. As such, it was code that could not be freely distributed. By the early 1990s, when they were working on 4.4 BSD, the BSD developers wanted a version of vi that could be freely distributed in source code form.
Keith Bostic of UCB started with elvis 1.8,[52] which was a freely distributable vi clone, and began turning it into a “bug for bug compatible” clone of vi. nvi also complies with the POSIX Command Language and Utilities Standard (IEEE P1003.1) where it makes sense to do so.
Although no longer affiliated with UCB, Keith Bostic continues to distribute nvi. The current version at the time of this writing is nvi 1.79.
nvi is important because it is the “official” Berkeley version of vi. It is part of 4.4 BSD-Lite II, and it ...
Get Learning the vi and Vim Editors, 7th Edition now with the O’Reilly learning platform.
O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.