> I think it’s a great alternative to the likes of vi and nano
nano no longer ships with macOS either, and hasn’t for a few major versions. You can still see it in /usr/bin/nano, but when you run it or check the manual you’ll see it’s actually pico. A checksum confirms they’re the same.
I remember hearing about Apple removing emacs, but this is the first time I’m hearing of mg. Interesting, and nice that Apple included a little bridge for people used to emacs to do basic editing out of the box.
nano no longer ships with macOS either, and hasn’t for a few major versions. You can still see it in /usr/bin/nano, but when you run it or check the manual you’ll see it’s actually pico. A checksum confirms they’re the same.