* Find bindings for all modes @ 2014-10-28 17:58 Tim Johnson 2014-10-28 21:53 ` John Mastro 0 siblings, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread From: Tim Johnson @ 2014-10-28 17:58 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Emacs I'm using emacs 24 on Mac OS X, console mode, macports install. When I do something like this C-h c C-j I am told that the binding for C-j is electric-newline-and-maybe-indent in Fundamental mode. But from *scratch* the binding is eval-print-last-sexp in Lisp Interaction mode Is there a way to find out all mode - specific bindings for a given key sequence? Thanks -- Tim tim at tee jay forty nine dot com or akwebsoft dot com http://www.akwebsoft.com, http://www.tj49.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Find bindings for all modes 2014-10-28 17:58 Find bindings for all modes Tim Johnson @ 2014-10-28 21:53 ` John Mastro 2014-10-28 22:00 ` Tim Johnson 0 siblings, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread From: John Mastro @ 2014-10-28 21:53 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Emacs Tim Johnson <tim@akwebsoft.com> wrote: > Is there a way to find out all mode - specific bindings for a given > key sequence? I think it depends on what your intended use is. For instance, you could do something like this: (defun bindings-for (key) (let ((seen nil) (bindings nil)) (dolist (buffer (buffer-list)) (with-current-buffer buffer (unless (memq major-mode seen) (push major-mode seen) (push (cons major-mode (key-binding key)) bindings)))) bindings)) (pp (bindings-for (kbd "C-j"))) This will show you an alist mapping major mode names to the command bound to C-j in some active buffer of that mode. Unfortunately, this is far from perfect. The binding could well be associated with a minor mode rather than a major mode, but it shows the major mode's name anyway. And different `foo-mode' buffers could have different bindings for the same key, but it assumes they're all the same. I don't know a way to get a really definitive look at "what's bound where by whom", but hopefully someone else will chime in. -- john ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Find bindings for all modes 2014-10-28 21:53 ` John Mastro @ 2014-10-28 22:00 ` Tim Johnson 2014-10-28 22:18 ` John Mastro 0 siblings, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread From: Tim Johnson @ 2014-10-28 22:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Emacs * John Mastro <john.b.mastro@gmail.com> [141028 13:54]: > Tim Johnson <tim@akwebsoft.com> wrote: > > Is there a way to find out all mode - specific bindings for a given > > key sequence? > > I think it depends on what your intended use is. For instance, you could > do something like this: I'd like to use C-j as a prefix key. Note: I have limited mobility in my hands and always have the control key to the left of my "A" key. > (defun bindings-for (key) > (let ((seen nil) > (bindings nil)) > (dolist (buffer (buffer-list)) > (with-current-buffer buffer > (unless (memq major-mode seen) > (push major-mode seen) > (push (cons major-mode (key-binding key)) > bindings)))) > bindings)) > > (pp (bindings-for (kbd "C-j"))) This is very handy. Thank You! > This will show you an alist mapping major mode names to the command > bound to C-j in some active buffer of that mode. > > Unfortunately, this is far from perfect. The binding could well be > associated with a minor mode rather than a major mode, but it shows the > major mode's name anyway. And different `foo-mode' buffers could have > different bindings for the same key, but it assumes they're all the > same. > > I don't know a way to get a really definitive look at "what's bound > where by whom", but hopefully someone else will chime in. :) The more the merrier... thanks again -- Tim tim at tee jay forty nine dot com or akwebsoft dot com http://www.akwebsoft.com, http://www.tj49.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Find bindings for all modes 2014-10-28 22:00 ` Tim Johnson @ 2014-10-28 22:18 ` John Mastro 2014-10-29 0:31 ` Tim Johnson 2014-10-29 3:09 ` Robert Thorpe 0 siblings, 2 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: John Mastro @ 2014-10-28 22:18 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Emacs Tim Johnson <tim@akwebsoft.com> wrote: > I'd like to use C-j as a prefix key. > Note: I have limited mobility in my hands and always have the > control key to the left of my "A" key. I wanted to do something similar in order to have a general-purpose prefix key on the right hand side of the keyboard. (I strongly prefer to use opposite hands for the modifier(s) and they keys themselves. So `C-c` or `C-x r` are fine, but I'm not a big fan of e.g. `C-x o`. This is primarily a "preference" thing, although I do think that using opposite hands is more ergonomic than not). What I settled on for now is to steal C-h. I actually use the help commands quite a bit, but I find <f1> to be "good enough" for accessing them. If you don't mind, let us (the list) know what you settle on - I'm always interested to hear about Emacs users' key binding innovations. > This is very handy. Thank You! You're welcome! I'm glad it helped. -- john ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Find bindings for all modes 2014-10-28 22:18 ` John Mastro @ 2014-10-29 0:31 ` Tim Johnson 2014-10-29 3:09 ` Robert Thorpe 1 sibling, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: Tim Johnson @ 2014-10-29 0:31 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Emacs * John Mastro <john.b.mastro@gmail.com> [141028 14:30]: > Tim Johnson <tim@akwebsoft.com> wrote: > > I'd like to use C-j as a prefix key. > > Note: I have limited mobility in my hands and always have the > > control key to the left of my "A" key. > > I wanted to do something similar in order to have a general-purpose > prefix key on the right hand side of the keyboard. (I strongly prefer to > use opposite hands for the modifier(s) and they keys themselves. So > `C-c` or `C-x r` are fine, but I'm not a big fan of e.g. `C-x o`. This > is primarily a "preference" thing, although I do think that using > opposite hands is more ergonomic than not). > > What I settled on for now is to steal C-h. I actually use the help > commands quite a bit, but I find <f1> to be "good enough" for accessing > them. I have done the same to use C-h for backward-delete > If you don't mind, let us (the list) know what you settle on - I'm > always interested to hear about Emacs users' key binding innovations. I've done considerable keybinding in the past, using emacs in gui mode on linux. So I've done considerable rewriting for OS X and terminal environment what follows is untested but should give an idea : ;; Could be a "template" for other rebindings (defun tj-control-j () "Function to call when control-j is rebound" (interactive) (cond ((string-equal mode-name "Lisp Interaction") (eval-print-last-sexp)) (t (electric-newline-and-maybe-indent)))) ;; set up the keymap ; Movement related bindings (global-unset-key "\C-j") (defvar tj-go-map (make-sparse-keymap) "Control-j") (define-prefix-command 'tj-go-map) (global-set-key "\C-j" 'tj-go-map) ;; rebind the original C-j (define-key tj-go-map (kbd "j") 'tj-control-j) No doubt there is going to be some glitches, but the next few days will finish the story ... cheers -- Tim tim at tee jay forty nine dot com or akwebsoft dot com http://www.akwebsoft.com, http://www.tj49.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Find bindings for all modes 2014-10-28 22:18 ` John Mastro 2014-10-29 0:31 ` Tim Johnson @ 2014-10-29 3:09 ` Robert Thorpe 2014-10-29 18:19 ` Tim Johnson 2014-10-29 23:05 ` John Mastro 1 sibling, 2 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: Robert Thorpe @ 2014-10-29 3:09 UTC (permalink / raw) To: John Mastro; +Cc: Help-gnu-emacs John Mastro <john.b.mastro@gmail.com> writes: > Tim Johnson <tim@akwebsoft.com> wrote: >> I'd like to use C-j as a prefix key. >> Note: I have limited mobility in my hands and always have the >> control key to the left of my "A" key. > > I wanted to do something similar in order to have a general-purpose > prefix key on the right hand side of the keyboard. (I strongly prefer to > use opposite hands for the modifier(s) and they keys themselves. So > `C-c` or `C-x r` are fine, but I'm not a big fan of e.g. `C-x o`. I'm not sure I understand John Mastro & Tim Johnson are trying to achieve here. However, there are a few keys that are much less trouble to use: * C-' C-# C-. C-, C-; C-=. Undefined by default. * C--, C-1, C-2,..., M--, M-1, M-2, .... These are duplicates. If you like you can use one set of them and redefine the other. Notice that C-4 & M-4 are almost useless since in most circumstances they do the same thing as C-u. * M-o. This isn't very useful unless you use enriched-mode. * M-s. The existing M-s prefix key doesn't have very much in it. Eventually the Emacs maintainers will put more in no-doubt, but until then you can put a few things in it. * C-c X. This is left as the default user-defined prefix key. Some of these don't work in terminals, I don't know which ones because I don't use terminals. BR, Robert Thorpe ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Find bindings for all modes 2014-10-29 3:09 ` Robert Thorpe @ 2014-10-29 18:19 ` Tim Johnson 2014-10-29 23:05 ` John Mastro 1 sibling, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: Tim Johnson @ 2014-10-29 18:19 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Help-gnu-emacs * Robert Thorpe <rt@robertthorpeconsulting.com> [141029 07:11]: > John Mastro <john.b.mastro@gmail.com> writes: > > > Tim Johnson <tim@akwebsoft.com> wrote: > >> I'd like to use C-j as a prefix key. > >> Note: I have limited mobility in my hands and always have the > >> control key to the left of my "A" key. > > > > I wanted to do something similar in order to have a general-purpose > > prefix key on the right hand side of the keyboard. (I strongly prefer to > > use opposite hands for the modifier(s) and they keys themselves. So > > `C-c` or `C-x r` are fine, but I'm not a big fan of e.g. `C-x o`. > > I'm not sure I understand John Mastro & Tim Johnson are trying to > achieve here. However, there are a few keys that are much less trouble > to use: Robert, I'll note several things first. 1)I am new to terminal mode (need it for ssh connections to my main machine from netbooks) 2)I have a limited knowledge of emacs. 3)I do not work in a team environment 4)I have limited movement in my hands and painful arthritis in my thumbs, thus I seek quick sequences and short reaches. Functionally, my hands are semi-crippled. 5)I use a happy hacker keyboard on my mac, where the control key is in the same place as the caps lock on convention keyboards and I set up all my other computers with caps lock and control swapped. > * C-' C-# C-. C-, C-; C-=. > Undefined by default. These are not available in console mode in my OS and configuration in terminal mode. I used to use C-; as a prefix in gui mode and loved it! > * C--, C-1, C-2,..., M--, M-1, M-2, .... > These are duplicates. If you like you can use one set of them and > redefine the other. Notice that C-4 & M-4 are almost useless since > in most circumstances they do the same thing as C-u. C-digit sequences are not available in my configuration on this OS and terminal mode. > * M-o. Yeah, I could use C-[ o > This isn't very useful unless you use enriched-mode. > > * M-s. Yeah, I could use C-[ s > The existing M-s prefix key doesn't have very much in it. Eventually the > Emacs maintainers will put more in no-doubt, but until then you can put > a few things in it. > * C-c X. > This is left as the default user-defined prefix key. I'm glad you brought that up. From https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/elisp/Key-Binding-Conventions.html I didn't know that C-c x was available in that fashion. Thanks, a do you have URLs or Help for further docs on this? > Some of these don't work in terminals, I don't know which ones because I > don't use terminals. See above ... I will (tentatively) be using C-j, C-l, C-o, C-s, C-t, C-u and C-] as prefix keys for keymaps. The original bindings (I hope) have been resolved. I realize that this is highly unorthodox but see note 4) and note 3) ... Because I'm using keymaps and prefix keys - alterations should be easy. Along with C-c x, I note the C-x j and C-x C-j are undefined in my setup. But, again, see note 4) ... If my hands were in the same shape as the rest of me, it would be a whole different story. Thanks for the tip on C-c x. cheers -- Tim tim at tee jay forty nine dot com or akwebsoft dot com http://www.akwebsoft.com, http://www.tj49.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Find bindings for all modes 2014-10-29 3:09 ` Robert Thorpe 2014-10-29 18:19 ` Tim Johnson @ 2014-10-29 23:05 ` John Mastro 2014-10-30 1:46 ` Tim Johnson 2014-10-30 2:04 ` Robert Thorpe 1 sibling, 2 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: John Mastro @ 2014-10-29 23:05 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org; +Cc: Robert Thorpe Robert Thorpe <rt@robertthorpeconsulting.com> wrote: > I'm not sure I understand John Mastro & Tim Johnson are trying to > achieve here. However, there are a few keys that are much less trouble > to use: Fair warning - this will probably be of interest to approximately noone, but I'll share my thinking anyway :) My goal is to have a general-purpose prefix key on the right hand side of the keyboard, to complement C-c. > * C-' C-# C-. C-, C-; C-=. > Undefined by default. Besides the problem with terminals, there's a sense in which unbound keys are less attractive for my purpose than using C-h. Keys that are unbound by default are an understandably attractive option for mode authors. On the other hand, no mode that I know of rebinds C-h, so I only deal with the issue once. Also, these are all either pinky keys, off the home row, or both. > * C--, C-1, C-2,..., M--, M-1, M-2, .... > These are duplicates. If you like you can use one set of them and > redefine the other. Notice that C-4 & M-4 are almost useless since > in most circumstances they do the same thing as C-u. I like having numeric args on both control and meta. I can see the case for {C,M}-4 (although there are counter-examples) but I find the idea of treating 4 differently a bit ugly. Also, they're off the home row. > * M-o. > This isn't very useful unless you use enriched-mode. Indeed, I use M-o for `ace-window' (an `other-window' replacement). > * M-s. > The existing M-s prefix key doesn't have very much in it. Eventually the > Emacs maintainers will put more in no-doubt, but until then you can put > a few things in it. This is on the left hand side of the keyboard, whereas I want something on the right. As you point out, we already have C-c on the left. > * C-c X. > This is left as the default user-defined prefix key. I use this a lot and am happy with it for many things, though not all. I want a prefix key on the right to complement C-c, not to replace it. > Some of these don't work in terminals, I don't know which ones because I > don't use terminals. I do use terminals regularly, but I still haven't managed to memorize all the differences and at least once a week I manage to surprise myself when something doesn't work. -- john ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Find bindings for all modes 2014-10-29 23:05 ` John Mastro @ 2014-10-30 1:46 ` Tim Johnson 2014-10-30 2:04 ` Robert Thorpe 1 sibling, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: Tim Johnson @ 2014-10-30 1:46 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org * John Mastro <john.b.mastro@gmail.com> [141029 15:08]: > Robert Thorpe <rt@robertthorpeconsulting.com> wrote: > > I'm not sure I understand John Mastro & Tim Johnson are trying to > > achieve here. However, there are a few keys that are much less trouble > > to use: > > Fair warning - this will probably be of interest to approximately noone, > but I'll share my thinking anyway :) > > My goal is to have a general-purpose prefix key on the right hand side > of the keyboard, to complement C-c. C-c ; is available But, see https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/elisp/Key-Binding-Conventions.html and the following statement there : "Sequences consisting of C-c followed by {, }, <, >, : or ; are also reserved for major modes." But that would work really well for me ... Other comments are welcome. -- Tim tim at tee jay forty nine dot com or akwebsoft dot com http://www.akwebsoft.com, http://www.tj49.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Find bindings for all modes 2014-10-29 23:05 ` John Mastro 2014-10-30 1:46 ` Tim Johnson @ 2014-10-30 2:04 ` Robert Thorpe 2014-10-30 18:25 ` Tim Johnson 1 sibling, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread From: Robert Thorpe @ 2014-10-30 2:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Tim Johnson, John Mastro; +Cc: Help-gnu-emacs Tim Johnson <tim@akwebsoft.com> writes: > 1)I am new to terminal mode (need it for ssh connections to my main > machine from netbooks) > 2)I have a limited knowledge of emacs. > 3)I do not work in a team environment > 4)I have limited movement in my hands and painful arthritis in my > thumbs, thus I seek quick sequences and short reaches. > Functionally, my hands are semi-crippled. > 5)I use a happy hacker keyboard on my mac, where the control key is > in the same place as the caps lock on convention keyboards and I > set up all my other computers with caps lock and control swapped. John Mastro <john.b.mastro@gmail.com> writes: > My goal is to have a general-purpose prefix key on the right hand side > of the keyboard, to complement C-c. I think I understand both of your requirements better now. I'll reply to you both at once if you don't mind. I'd begin by asking: why do you want terminal mode? The normal purpose of terminals these days is SSHing into remote computers. Tim, why do you need terminal mode if you don't work in a team environment? It's not really very useful otherwise. If you have several computers of your own then you can network them better using VNC, Samba, scp, Rsync and/or other programs. SSH and Telnet are the basics of networking used connection are very slow or if the sysadmin prohibits anything else. If you want the look of terminal mode you can approximate that with themes. There are advantages to redefining basic keys like C-j, C-l, C-o, etc as prefix keys. But, it's tricky, it's not like normal key bindings. Lots of Emacs modes assume those keys are unchanged. For example, list-buffer binds C-o to Buffer-menu-switch-other-window. If you rebind C-o globally and you want Buffer-menu-switch-other-window then you're going to have to bind it to something else in buffer menus. The same goes for many other modes. If you read through the archives of this list you'll see people often get bitten by this. If you've a good bit of experience with elisp then that helps. AFAIK Emmanuel Berg, who often comments here, has done this. Tim, have you tried god-mode or evil? They may be more useful for dealing with limited hand mobility. Tim Johnson <tim@akwebsoft.com> writes: > I didn't know that C-c x was available in that fashion. Thanks, a > do you have URLs or Help for further docs on this? Using C-c X type keys is easy. You can do something like: (global-set-key (kbd "C-c a") 'previous-buffer) Or, you can use local-set-key. See: (info "(emacs) Rebinding") John Mastro <john.b.mastro@gmail.com> writes: > Keys that are unbound by default are an understandably attractive > option for mode authors. On the other hand, no mode that I know of > rebinds C-h, so I only deal with the issue once. Also, these are all > either pinky keys, off the home row, or both. Mode authors should be using C-c C-X, that's the prefix keymap they're supposed to use. I haven't seen any that use C-'#.,;= , but I don't use many non-built-in modes. It's probably easier to make external modes behave than it is to deal with the many internal ones that assume things about keymaps. That said, John's redefining of C-h is probably ok, not many modes tinker with that. Tim's plan to change C-j, C-l, C-o, etc is more difficult, almost every mode changes those. BR, Robert Thorpe ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Find bindings for all modes 2014-10-30 2:04 ` Robert Thorpe @ 2014-10-30 18:25 ` Tim Johnson 2014-11-01 21:00 ` Robert Thorpe 0 siblings, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread From: Tim Johnson @ 2014-10-30 18:25 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Help-gnu-emacs * Robert Thorpe <rt@robertthorpeconsulting.com> [141029 18:23]: > I'd begin by asking: why do you want terminal mode? The normal purpose > of terminals these days is SSHing into remote computers. Tim, why do > you need terminal mode if you don't work in a team environment? It is a given that I will be using SSH and terminal mode in both the host and the clients. > There are advantages to redefining basic keys like C-j, C-l, C-o, etc as > prefix keys. But, it's tricky, it's not like normal key bindings. Lots > of Emacs modes assume those keys are unchanged. For example, > list-buffer binds C-o to Buffer-menu-switch-other-window. If you rebind > C-o globally and you want Buffer-menu-switch-other-window then you're > going to have to bind it to something else in buffer menus. The same > goes for many other modes. If you read through the archives of this > list you'll see people often get bitten by this. If you've a good bit > of experience with elisp then that helps. AFAIK Emmanuel Berg, who > often comments here, has done this. The current keymaps have been used for years in gui mode. The new prefixes are : C-j, C-u and C-]. And there *have* been problems which have been worked out ... > Tim, have you tried god-mode or evil? They may be more useful for > dealing with limited hand mobility. Say what? :) Never heard of them. I will be googling them as soon as I finish this message. Feel free to elaborate if you have the time and inclination. <....> > Using C-c X type keys is easy. You can do something like: > (global-set-key (kbd "C-c a") 'previous-buffer) > Or, you can use local-set-key. See: > (info "(emacs) Rebinding") Thanks for the tip on 'info. I am currently rewriting my binding code so that I can set a global variable that will enable the C-j, C-l etc binding OR C-c j, C-c l etc. Let way I can compare effects on my hands. <...> > Tim's plan to change C-j, C-l, C-o, etc is > more difficult, almost every mode changes those. Indeed. You're absolutely correct, although I have already worked out many of those issues. The tradeoff is that with using control-C (see https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/elisp/Key-Binding-Conventions.html and the following statement "Don't define C-c letter as a key in Lisp programs. Sequences consisting of C-c and a letter (either upper or lower case) are reserved for users; they are the only sequences reserved for users") I would have to reach down more with my index finger but I wouldn't have to worry about collisions and I would have the potential of shorter sequences with more keymaps. We've wandered far from the original question, but I have learned much. Robert, thanks for your concise explanations and for being so patient with my unorthodox approach. regards -- Tim tim at tee jay forty nine dot com or akwebsoft dot com http://www.akwebsoft.com, http://www.tj49.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Find bindings for all modes 2014-10-30 18:25 ` Tim Johnson @ 2014-11-01 21:00 ` Robert Thorpe 2014-11-04 0:04 ` Tim Johnson 0 siblings, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread From: Robert Thorpe @ 2014-11-01 21:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Tim Johnson; +Cc: Help-gnu-emacs Tim Johnson <tim@akwebsoft.com> writes: >> Tim, have you tried god-mode or evil? They may be more useful for >> dealing with limited hand mobility. > Say what? :) Never heard of them. I will be googling them as soon > as I finish this message. Feel free to elaborate if you have the Evil mode is Vi emulation. It brings with it Vi's modal keybindings. So, there's a command mode and an insert mode. God mode does the same thing but it's based on Emacs' default keybinding. So, you press the "command" mode key (normally ESC) and every key acts like C-key. So ESC f f e j o is the same as C-f C-f C-e C-j C-o. Some people believe that these modes are better than chord keys for people with hand problem. I don't use either of them though. BR, Robert Thorpe ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Find bindings for all modes 2014-11-01 21:00 ` Robert Thorpe @ 2014-11-04 0:04 ` Tim Johnson 0 siblings, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: Tim Johnson @ 2014-11-04 0:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Help-gnu-emacs * Robert Thorpe <rt@robertthorpeconsulting.com> [141101 13:06]: > Tim Johnson <tim@akwebsoft.com> writes: > >> Tim, have you tried god-mode or evil? They may be more useful for > >> dealing with limited hand mobility. > > Say what? :) Never heard of them. I will be googling them as soon > > as I finish this message. Feel free to elaborate if you have the > > Evil mode is Vi emulation. It brings with it Vi's modal keybindings. > So, there's a command mode and an insert mode. > > God mode does the same thing but it's based on Emacs' default keybinding. > So, you press the "command" mode key (normally ESC) and every key acts like > C-key. So ESC f f e j o is the same as C-f C-f C-e C-j C-o. I have looked them up, I had known about viper and as a long-time vim user, they are both of some interest to me. thanks -- Tim tim at tee jay forty nine dot com or akwebsoft dot com http://www.akwebsoft.com, http://www.tj49.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2014-11-04 0:04 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 13+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2014-10-28 17:58 Find bindings for all modes Tim Johnson 2014-10-28 21:53 ` John Mastro 2014-10-28 22:00 ` Tim Johnson 2014-10-28 22:18 ` John Mastro 2014-10-29 0:31 ` Tim Johnson 2014-10-29 3:09 ` Robert Thorpe 2014-10-29 18:19 ` Tim Johnson 2014-10-29 23:05 ` John Mastro 2014-10-30 1:46 ` Tim Johnson 2014-10-30 2:04 ` Robert Thorpe 2014-10-30 18:25 ` Tim Johnson 2014-11-01 21:00 ` Robert Thorpe 2014-11-04 0:04 ` Tim Johnson
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