Yes and even some plugins to make it even more emacsy, like a kill ring and a rip-off (although a pale one) of "ace-jump-mode" (itself inspired from a vi(m) feature).
Sadly Emacs is just so much more than the sum of its keybindings and the kill ring.
Honestly there isn't a single "text editor" that comes anywhere near close what one million of elisp code are doing. The only ones that comes close are the thousands of $$$ fancy Lisp editors which aren't for mere-mortals.
So, yes, "IntelliJ the IDE" rocks and it can mimicks Emacs shortcuts but, no, "IntelliJ the text editor" doesn't come anywhere close to Emacs :-/
Just like Light Table shall never come anywhere close to what Emacs can do. Just like Eclipse won't either, etc.
No IIRC there was at least one person interested in porting eclim (a client / server allowing to use vim as Eclipse's text editor) and emacs-eclim (same but for Emacs) to IntelliJ.
It makes a lot of sense and I'm pretty sure it's going to be the ultimate IDE at one point: and IDE as powerful as IntelliJ but allowing to "plug in" your text editor of choice (vim, emacs, Sublime Text 2, etc.).
Sadly Emacs is just so much more than the sum of its keybindings and the kill ring.
Honestly there isn't a single "text editor" that comes anywhere near close what one million of elisp code are doing. The only ones that comes close are the thousands of $$$ fancy Lisp editors which aren't for mere-mortals.
So, yes, "IntelliJ the IDE" rocks and it can mimicks Emacs shortcuts but, no, "IntelliJ the text editor" doesn't come anywhere close to Emacs :-/
Just like Light Table shall never come anywhere close to what Emacs can do. Just like Eclipse won't either, etc.
No IIRC there was at least one person interested in porting eclim (a client / server allowing to use vim as Eclipse's text editor) and emacs-eclim (same but for Emacs) to IntelliJ.
It makes a lot of sense and I'm pretty sure it's going to be the ultimate IDE at one point: and IDE as powerful as IntelliJ but allowing to "plug in" your text editor of choice (vim, emacs, Sublime Text 2, etc.).