Hi Havoc,
> > And there is no way to separate ESC and C-[ ?
> > I mean, who uses C-[ to get an ESC??
>
> Text terminals do. But there's a way around it - from the Emacs manual's
> discussion of keybindings (which you may find interesting, btw):
Hm, I couldn't find this in the manual. Maybe that
On 2 Oct 1998, Andy Spiegl wrote:
> And there is no way to separate ESC and C-[ ?
> I mean, who uses C-[ to get an ESC??
>
Text terminals do. But there's a way around it - from the Emacs manual's
discussion of keybindings (which you may find interesting, btw):
, , , , and started out as na
> C-[ is the same as ESC, I think. So that's your problem.
And there is no way to separate ESC and C-[ ?
I mean, who uses C-[ to get an ESC??
> Maybe if you redefine ESC, but you probably don't want to do that.
I don't think so. :-)
> Do you have an alt or meta or compose key you could use? You c
Havoc Pennington wrote:
> On 2 Oct 1998, Andy Spiegl wrote:
> > I am working with an US-keyboard, but typing German texts in XEmacs.
> > So I tried to teach XEmacs (v19.11) to give me the umlauts if I press
> > the corresponding keys together with CTRL. This works fine for all
> > keys except fo
On 2 Oct 1998, Andy Spiegl wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am working with an US-keyboard, but typing German texts in XEmacs.
> So I tried to teach XEmacs (v19.11) to give me the umlauts if I press
> the corresponding keys together with CTRL. This works fine for all
> keys except for u-umlaut which would end
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