Brief (text editor)

B.R.I.E.F.

Screenshot of a sample B.R.I.E.F. session
Developer(s) Borland International, originally UnderWare, Inc
Stable release 3.11 / 1992
Operating system DOS, OS/2, Microsoft Windows
Platform x86
Type Text editor

Brief, BRIEF, or B.R.I.E.F., an acronym for Basic Reconfigurable Interactive Editing Facility, was a popular programmer's text editor in the 1980s and early 1990s, clones are available. It was designed and developed by UnderWare Inc, a company founded in Providence, Rhode Island by David Nanian and Michael Strickman, and was published by Solution Systems. UnderWare moved to Boston, Massachusetts in 1985. In 1990, UnderWare sold BRIEF to Solution Systems which released version 3.1.

In 1990 Solutions Systems brought in Eric Perkins as technical architect and team lead to port the OS/2 version of BRIEF to the Windows platform as quickly as possible. The end result was to sell the Solution System assets to the highest bidder. Within 6 months, the team of Eric Perkins, Blake Nelson and Jeff Simpson worked closely with David Nanian and Mike Strickman and ported BRIEF OS/2 to Windows using an MVC architecture. It was this version that was demonstrated at Spring Comdex 1991 to Borland and others, with Borland later purchasing BRIEF and the full suite of software tools from Solutions Systems.

Solution Systems closed permanently after the sale to Borland. BRIEF is no longer sold by Borland.

Features

The original product features contain:

BRIEF for Windows features

Clones

Some Vim and Emacs packages provide Brief functionality. There was more than one program written to provide Brief-like functionality:

Emulators

The Brief keyboard layout became popular and was implemented in or emulated by other editors by providing a remapping of the keyboard shortcuts and editor behaviour.

References

External links