On Tuesday, August 23, 2011, Toby Speight wrote:
> If you feel you must run as root, and you want to use a mouse with emacs
> in XTerm, then xterm-mouse-mode may help:
If you feel you must run Emacs as root, you probably want "sudoedit"
instead.
--
-PJ
I am now officially pleased with sux, enabling me to use X programs as
root despite http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=633652 .
Thanks everybody. Have a song,
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gLtzQXTHiqk&list=PL38C412C876528CCB
--
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On Tue, Aug 23, 2011 at 09:00:25AM +0100, Toby Speight spake thus:
> > "r" == rdiezmail-emacs writes:
> r> The console mode has been a shock. There is no mouse at all. I
> r> cannot navigate the menus as usual, menu-bar-open is weird and
> r> unfriendly. But, worst of all, some key combina
Bastien ROUCARIES (23/08/2011):
> And for middle ages dog (not oldtimer) they are the ssh -X root@localhost
> trick
or: sudo XAUTHORITY=~/.Xauthority wireshark
Mraw,
KiBi.
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On Tue, Aug 23, 2011 at 3:14 AM, wrote:
>> "KR" == Kenyon Ralph writes:
> KR> I use emacs under X to administer my Debian systems. I don't run it as
> KR> root though. I use emacs TRAMP to use sudo to edit files as root on
> KR> the local machine. On remote machines I do the same but in an s
> "r" == rdiezmail-emacs writes:
r> The console mode has been a shock. There is no mouse at all. I
r> cannot navigate the menus as usual, menu-bar-open is weird and
r> unfriendly. But, worst of all, some key combinations do not work
r> well.
0> In article <87ty99otg1@jidanni.org>,
0>
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