There are certainly teco implementations for Unix, although I don't know if it was ever anyone's default editor anywhere. Indeed, there are multiple implementations: I switched from a C teco implementation to pyteco in the Rubin Science Platform JupyterLab implementation (its utility is of course dubious, but this is part of both my nefarious plan to make Jupyter not merely mean "Julia, Python, and R", but to use that "e" -- and reassociate it with the "t" -- by making it mean "Julia, Python, Teco, and R", and also to include an easter egg for a fellow project member who is a teco fan).
The first Emacs I used was GNU emacs at already version...16 or something? In 1989, on ... I don't remember what the main system I used at the UT Austin Chaos Lab was, actually; we had an SGI Iris, but that wasn't the machine I did my editing on. But by 1989 it was certainly well-available and established.
As a longtime user and
lover of ed/ex/vi, I don't know much about emacs, but lately I've
been using it more (as it seems like any self-respecting lisper,
has to at least have a passing acquaintance with it). I recently
went off and got MACLISP running in ITS. As part of that
exploration, I used EMACS, but not just any old emacs, emacs in
it's first incarnation as a set of TECO macros. To me, it just
seemed like EMACS. I won't bore you with the details - imagine
lots of control and escape sequences, many of which are the same
today as then. This was late 70's stuff.
My question for the group is - when did emacs arrive in unix and
was it a full fledged text editor when it came or was it sitting
on top of some other subssystem in unix? Was TECO ever on unix?
Will