Film Term:
  1. The cutting and arranging of shots.
  2. In the different stages, or at the completion of editing the edited film itself can be referred to as “the cut” or “the edit.”

Glossary of Film Terms - http://homepage.newschool.edu/~schlemoj/film_courses/glossary_of_film_terms/
reprinted with permission

An informal name for the text editor which came with later versions of MSDOS - officially it is called 'The MS-DOS Editor', but everybody in the entire world calls it 'edit' or 'DOS edit'. It uses the same environment as QBASIC and requires the presence of qbasic.com to run; the blue screen and ASCII border is familiar to millions of PC users from the early 1990s until 1998-ish, by which time Windows had finally removed the need to fiddle about with config.sys and autoexec.bat files (for most users (most of the time)). If you used POVray or were a programmer, Edit was your friend.

Although version 1.0 has a copyright date of 1987; I believe that this is retrospective, and that it was first included with DOS V5.0 as late as 1991 - before which EDLIN was the standard DOS editor. It will work with versions of DOS back to 2.0.

Edit is, IMHO, superior to Windows Notepad - the interface is friendlier (the default text colours are a soothing light grey on dark blue, and the look'n'feel were similar to Borland's 'Turbo' range of programming languages), and it has marginally more '3l33t' status, if anything running under DOS these days could be said to possess cool.

Ed"it (?), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Edited; p. pr. & vb. n. Editing.] [F. 'editer, or L. editus, p. p. of edere to give out, put forth, publish; e out + dare to give. See Date a point of time.]

To superintend the publication of; to revise and prepare for publication; to select, correct, arrange, etc., the matter of, for publication; as, to edit a newspaper.

Philosophical treatises which have never been edited. Enfield.

 

© Webster 1913.

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