On 5/23/25 16:29, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Fri, May 23, 2025 at 15:02:56 +0200, Detlef Vollmann wrote:
And I have to correct myself: it's not starting firefox that causes
the loss of the key bindings, but a specific web site.
It's my internet banking site, and it only happens after I l
On Fri, May 23, 2025 at 15:02:56 +0200, Detlef Vollmann wrote:
> And I have to correct myself: it's not starting firefox that causes
> the loss of the key bindings, but a specific web site.
> It's my internet banking site, and it only happens after I login,
> so I can
On 5/23/25 13:53, Greg Wooledge wrote:
Now if I start firefox, fvwm looses these bindings (I have no
idea what function they have in firefox).
Even when I close firefox fvwm doesn't recognize them anymore :-(
Some experimenting suggests that fvwm actually looses all key bindings.
If it helps any I have
# Now some keyboard shortcuts.
# Arrow Keys
# press arrow + control anywhere, and scroll by 1 page
Key LeftA C Scroll -100 0
Key Right A C Scroll +100 +0
Key Up A C Scroll +0 -100
Key DownA
se *specific* key combinations.
> Now if I start firefox, fvwm looses these bindings (I have no
> idea what function they have in firefox).
> Even when I close firefox fvwm doesn't recognize them anymore :-(
> Some experimenting suggests that fvwm actually looses all key bindings.
oFunc RestartFunction
+ "I" Key LeftA SM Scroll -100 +0
doesn't seem to help.
Some experimenting suggests that fvwm actually looses all key bindings.
Does anybody know how to reactivate the key bindings?
Detlef
Carl Johnson wrote:
> Joel Roth writes:
> > my xmodmap commands for remapping
> > the CAPS key to behave as CTRL (in .xinitrc) work in my
> > usual system, but have no effect on this newly installed
> > system. Both systems are running an up-to-date sid,
> > and I've copied over my .bashrc.
> >
Joel Roth wrote:
> # remap CAPSLOCK to be CTRL
>
> rxvt -e screen -D -r
> xmodmap -e 'keycode 66 = Control_L'
> xmodmap -e 'clear Lock'
> xmodmap -e 'add Control = Control_L'
> xset b off# this suppresses beep
> setxkbmap -option terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp # this works
Le 06.03.2014 23:34, Joel Roth a écrit :
Hi list,
I've dusted off an old, fanless computer with an Epia
(Via) main board, and installed sid.
One thing I notice is that my xmodmap commands for remapping
the CAPS key to behave as CTRL (in .xinitrc) work in my
usual system, but have no effect on
On Jo, 06 mar 14, 12:34:02, Joel Roth wrote:
> Hi list,
>
> I've dusted off an old, fanless computer with an Epia
> (Via) main board, and installed sid.
>
> One thing I notice is that my xmodmap commands for remapping
> the CAPS key to behave as CTRL (in .xinitrc) work in my
> usual system, but h
Joel Roth writes:
> Hi list,
>
> I've dusted off an old, fanless computer with an Epia
> (Via) main board, and installed sid.
>
> One thing I notice is that my xmodmap commands for remapping
> the CAPS key to behave as CTRL (in .xinitrc) work in my
> usual system, but have no effect on this newly
Hi list,
I've dusted off an old, fanless computer with an Epia
(Via) main board, and installed sid.
One thing I notice is that my xmodmap commands for remapping
the CAPS key to behave as CTRL (in .xinitrc) work in my
usual system, but have no effect on this newly installed
system. Both systems ar
Thanks very much, I'll give that a shot.
Cheers,
Daniel.
On Fri, Apr 17, 2009 at 10:08:39AM +0100, David Jardine wrote:
> On Fri, Apr 17, 2009 at 12:00:19PM +1000, Daniel Dalton wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > I'm looking at doing some remaps on my system with the keymap. After
> > reading man dumpkeys,
On Fri, Apr 17, 2009 at 12:00:19PM +1000, Daniel Dalton wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm looking at doing some remaps on my system with the keymap. After
> reading man dumpkeys, man keymaps and man loadkeys, briefely, I was just
> wondering if someone could tell me where the default keymap is stored so
> I ca
Hi,
I'm looking at doing some remaps on my system with the keymap. After
reading man dumpkeys, man keymaps and man loadkeys, briefely, I was just
wondering if someone could tell me where the default keymap is stored so
I can back it up! And then edit it?
Thx
Daniel.
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Francois Cerbelle wrote:
Le Wed, Dec 15, 2004 at 04:52:13PM +0100, Francisco Borges ecrit :
» On Tue, Dec 14, 2004 at 09:47PM -0500, Roberto Sanchez wrote:
Francisco Borges wrote:
Acroread "control" based key bindings (e.g. C-q or C-w) do not work on
my sarge box.
Do you happen to have
Le Wed, Dec 15, 2004 at 04:52:13PM +0100, Francisco Borges ecrit :
> » On Tue, Dec 14, 2004 at 09:47PM -0500, Roberto Sanchez wrote:
> > Francisco Borges wrote:
> > >Acroread "control" based key bindings (e.g. C-q or C-w) do not work on
> > >my sarge box.
>
» On Tue, Dec 14, 2004 at 09:47PM -0500, Roberto Sanchez wrote:
> Francisco Borges wrote:
> >Acroread "control" based key bindings (e.g. C-q or C-w) do not work on
> >my sarge box.
>
> Do you happen to have NumLock on? If so, try turning it off and
> see if tha
Francisco Borges wrote:
Acroread "control" based key bindings (e.g. C-q or C-w) do not work on
my sarge box.
Things like page down, work normally. All other apps respond properly to
C-w or C-q.
Does anybody have *any* idea of how to solve or diagnose the problem??
I've already tr
Acroread "control" based key bindings (e.g. C-q or C-w) do not work on
my sarge box.
Things like page down, work normally. All other apps respond properly to
C-w or C-q.
Does anybody have *any* idea of how to solve or diagnose the problem??
I've already tried moving away
Hello,
How do I get the key binding to work properly in an xterm?
If I try to use emacs or zile the keys don't work properly.
CTL-SHIFT-@ should allow to start marking lines for copy/paste
but they don't do anything in an xterm. They do work from
the console however?
lance
--
On Sun, 16 Nov 2003 at 06:49 GMT, ScruLoose penned:
>
> I need to start keeping a list of little tweaks I'm making all over
> the system, so I'll be able to roll them out on later installs...
>
I keep various config files in cvs. Makes it really easy to sync up
accounts on multiple systems. Of
On Fri, Nov 14, 2003 at 11:10:25AM +0100, Florian Ernst wrote:
> Hello 'ScruLoose'!
Howdy, Flo!
> On Thu, Nov 13, 2003 at 07:13:31PM -0500, ScruLoose wrote:
> >I wonder whether the .muttrc is flexible enough to support something
> >like looking for known "list" addresses when you hit r, and givin
On Fri, Nov 14, 2003 at 11:10:25AM +0100, Florian Ernst wrote:
> How about adding
> macro index r
> macro pager r
> to you .muttrc?
>
> It will just act as usual when only a reply seems possible and
> automatically do a list-reply otherwise. It even beeps once in this
> case ;)
This is beautifu
Hello 'ScruLoose'!
On Thu, Nov 13, 2003 at 07:13:31PM -0500, ScruLoose wrote:
I wonder whether the .muttrc is flexible enough to support something
like looking for known "list" addresses when you hit r, and giving you
an "are you sure?" prompt...
Somehow I doubt the .muttrc file is up to that job,
On Tue, Nov 11, 2003 at 05:03:35PM +, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 11, 2003 at 10:42:09AM -0500, ScruLoose wrote:
>
> > Wouldn't it be easier to use mutt's builtin support for mailing lists?
> >
> > Add the line
> > subscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >
> > somewhere in your .muttrc,
On Tue, Nov 11, 2003 at 05:03:35PM +, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
> I do use mutt's built-in support for mailing lists. However, like many
> people it seems (especially on debian-user); I occasionally hit 'r' to
> reply to a list-post rather than L, and I don't have a copy of what I
> wrote to post
On Tue, Nov 11, 2003 at 10:42:09AM -0500, ScruLoose wrote:
> Wouldn't it be easier to use mutt's builtin support for mailing lists?
>
> Add the line
> subscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> somewhere in your .muttrc, and then use L for "reply-to-list"...
I do use mutt's built-in support for maili
On Tue, Nov 11, 2003 at 12:58:29PM +, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
> I wrote the following configuration items for mutt, in an attempt to end
> the accidentally-replied-to-poster-rather-than-mailing-list problem:
>
> folder-hook debian 'bind index r list-reply'
> folder-hook debian 'b
I wrote the following configuration items for mutt, in an attempt to end
the accidentally-replied-to-poster-rather-than-mailing-list problem:
folder-hook debian 'bind index r list-reply'
folder-hook debian 'bind pager r list-reply'
folder-hook !debian 'bind index r reply'
"Charlie Reiman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> -Original Message-
>> From: Bob Hilliard [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>> Sent: Friday, February 14, 2003 12:15 PM
>> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> Subject: Emacs Key Bindings
>>
>>
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Bob Hilliard [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Friday, February 14, 2003 12:15 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Emacs Key Bindings
>
>
> I like to indent the first line of each paragraph. By default,
> emacs (in text
I like to indent the first line of each paragraph. By default,
emacs (in text mode) considers only blank lines and page delimiters as
paragraph delimiters, and binds the TAB key to "indent-relative". To
change this, I have the following lines in .emacs:
(setq default-major-mode 'paragraph-i
* Robert Land ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> I had a try what you had suggested but it
> confused my .xsession settings. Actually I'm
> very bad in "X" too and cannot quite follow
> what you intended.
> Why should mutt's behaviour change when
> putting your line into .Xresources?
> Mutt has it's ow
ifier: alt
>
> Cheers,
>
> Euan
> * Robert Land ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> > Does the latest mutt release enable the emacs
> > key bindings Meta+b and Meta+f to jump wordwise
> > forth and back?
> >
> > If so, would someone kindly paste the function
&g
atest mutt release enable the emacs
> key bindings Meta+b and Meta+f to jump wordwise
> forth and back?
>
> If so, would someone kindly paste the function
> name and the key for "meta" so I may have a try
> in Muttrc. The docs that came with mutt-0.9.deb
> do no
Does the latest mutt release enable the emacs
key bindings Meta+b and Meta+f to jump wordwise
forth and back?
If so, would someone kindly paste the function
name and the key for "meta" so I may have a try
in Muttrc. The docs that came with mutt-0.9.deb
do not seem to contain any he
On Wed, Dec 18, 2002 at 05:51:33PM -0200, andrej hocevar wrote:
> Is there a way to map the, say, F1 key to some command like poff
> or whatever else?
I use enlightenment to change my keyboard functionality in X, and xmodmap
to change the kebindings (I use the dvorak keyboard layout). The xmodma
Is there a way to map the, say, F1 key to some command like poff
or whatever else?
And how can I change the behaviour of key bindings like C-s? I've
added something to my .inputrc but it only affects combinations
that have had no function before, like M-s. Can I add function keys
to
On Sun, Dec 30, 2001 at 04:51:06PM -0800, Charles Baker wrote:
>
> Yes, I checked in WPrefs and all is set as expected. I
> even went so far as to use the capture feature to make
> sure it had alt+n for all my workspaces. No luck.
Odd. I just upgraded my wmaker to 0.80.0 and have no problems.
--- Marc Wilson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sun, Dec 30, 2001 at 02:20:02PM -0800, Charles
> Baker wrote:
> > Did an apt-get upgrade today and got WindowMaker
> 0.80.
> > Now none of the Windowmaker keybindings seem to be
> > working,
>
> Since they're all configurable, have you checked to
>
On Sun, Dec 30, 2001 at 02:20:02PM -0800, Charles Baker wrote:
> Did an apt-get upgrade today and got WindowMaker 0.80.
> Now none of the Windowmaker keybindings seem to be
> working,
Since they're all configurable, have you checked to see if they are still
set as you expect them to be?
--
Marc
Did an apt-get upgrade today and got WindowMaker 0.80.
Now none of the Windowmaker keybindings seem to be
working, for instance alt-n where n=1..10 to switch
between workspaces, or F12 to bring up the application
menu. Anyone else experiencing this? Any work arounds
or particular places to look?
=
Dear users
I have asked the following to the KDE user mailing too. I have
updgraded to KDE2 (which is very good) and found that there are
global keybinding in KDE that prohibit the use of the ALT key in
emacs and bash. This is very inconvenient.
I have gone into global keybinding of the KDE
Hey, is there anyone out there currently using tsiag and who might know
how to bind its commands to other forms who's willing to give a novice a
tip or two? (it seems set up somewhat similarly to emacs, but I haven't
used that yet either, so that doesn't help much :)
(as an example of what I'm loo
Could someone please tell me where I can find the binding that attaches the
pause/break key to xscreensaver. I would like to change it to xlock.
Thanks,
Syd
Hi.
I've posted this before, but maybe some of you missed it... Anyway, my
problem is that I am missing some very useful key bindings all of a sudden.
Some of these include contol-alt-delete, control-k, control-f, control-w, and
a number of others. Other bindings such as control-x and cont
On Mon, Jan 12, 1998 at 09:19:38PM +0200, Heikki Vatiainen wrote:
> That can happen if you happen to press NumLock key and it gets set.
Wow.. good call, I guess that was it but I'd never noticed:-) That
will save me some frustration every now and then, thanks:-)
--
David Welton
That can happen if you happen to press NumLock key and it gets set.
// Heikki
--
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Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .
David Welton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Occasionaly, I seem to lose the key bindings under fvwm2, such as alt
> arrow to move between areas of a desktop. I really can't pinpoint
> this to any specific event, nor am I able to remedy the situation
> without completely qu
Occasionaly, I seem to lose the key bindings under fvwm2, such as alt
arrow to move between areas of a desktop. I really can't pinpoint
this to any specific event, nor am I able to remedy the situation
without completely quitting X and restarting (restart fvwm and
xrefresh dont' se
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