* Dvorak layout except when modifier key is pressed
@ 2007-11-24 4:35 Vincent C
2007-11-24 7:24 ` Oleg Katsitadze
0 siblings, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread
From: Vincent C @ 2007-11-24 4:35 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: help-gnu-emacs
Is it possible to have dvorak keybindings except when hitting a ctrl
or meta key combinations? (ie: switch back to QWERTY in that case)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Dvorak layout except when modifier key is pressed
2007-11-24 4:35 Vincent C
@ 2007-11-24 7:24 ` Oleg Katsitadze
0 siblings, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: Oleg Katsitadze @ 2007-11-24 7:24 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Vincent C; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs
On Fri, Nov 23, 2007 at 09:35:14PM -0700, Vincent C wrote:
> Is it possible to have dvorak keybindings except when hitting a ctrl
> or meta key combinations? (ie: switch back to QWERTY in that case)
See these:
http://www.matthewweathers.com/year2004/emacs_dvorak.htm
http://www.mwbrooks.com/dvorak/qwerty.el
Unlike the first approach, the second one also works in, e.g.,
ansi-term.
HTH,
Oleg
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Dvorak layout except when modifier key is pressed
[not found] <mailman.4008.1195878924.18990.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org>
@ 2007-11-26 3:59 ` B. T. Raven
2007-11-30 16:53 ` Stefan Monnier
0 siblings, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread
From: B. T. Raven @ 2007-11-26 3:59 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: help-gnu-emacs
Vincent C wrote:
> Is it possible to have dvorak keybindings except when hitting a ctrl
> or meta key combinations? (ie: switch back to QWERTY in that case)
>
>
Bad idea (imho). See Xah Lee's sensible suggestions here (and at associated
links):
http://xahlee.org/emacs/ergonomic_emacs_keybinding.html
I think that if the developers could be persuaded to adopt even a small part
of Xah's suggestions, that would probably go farther to making emacs
palatable to more users than even the imminent conversion to Unicode in
Emacs 23.
At a minimum, find some way to reassign the modifier keys so that they are
laid out (in a direction away from the space bar) in the order Ctrl, Alt,
Windows, AppKey. The latter two can be used for super and hyper modifiers.
I am using the Dvorak layout now and even with my non-Space-Cadet keyboard I
can touch type Alt, Wind, Ctrl with middle, ring, and little fingers
respectively. If/when I upgrade from w98 to 2000, I will immediately convert
to many of Xah's keybindings (all of them if the developers adopt them). The
most important, after the modifier keys, are the cursor movement keychords
with Ctrl:(h,t,n,c for left, down, right, up, with the Dvorak layout).
Ed.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Dvorak layout except when modifier key is pressed
2007-11-26 3:59 ` Dvorak layout except when modifier key is pressed B. T. Raven
@ 2007-11-30 16:53 ` Stefan Monnier
2007-12-25 16:43 ` B. T. Raven
0 siblings, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread
From: Stefan Monnier @ 2007-11-30 16:53 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: help-gnu-emacs
> At a minimum, find some way to reassign the modifier keys so that they are
> laid out (in a direction away from the space bar) in the order Ctrl, Alt,
> Windows, AppKey. The latter two can be used for super and hyper modifiers.
If you expect Emacs to change that, you're deluded: you need to look at
your keyboard config instead.
Stefan
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Dvorak layout except when modifier key is pressed
2007-11-30 16:53 ` Stefan Monnier
@ 2007-12-25 16:43 ` B. T. Raven
2007-12-25 17:01 ` Andreas Eder
0 siblings, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread
From: B. T. Raven @ 2007-12-25 16:43 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: help-gnu-emacs
Stefan Monnier wrote:
>> At a minimum, find some way to reassign the modifier keys so that they are
>> laid out (in a direction away from the space bar) in the order Ctrl, Alt,
>> Windows, AppKey. The latter two can be used for super and hyper modifiers.
>
> If you expect Emacs to change that, you're deluded: you need to look at
> your keyboard config instead.
>
>
> Stefan
I can do this via the Keytweak Program in a msw environment. How do I do the
same thing in Linux? Is there something that redefines the modifier keys at
a system level? (i.e so that they would work as described above even in a
terminal session? It seems that Linux should have the capability to
reconfigure a vanilla keyboard to work in this fashion:
bottom key row -- super alt ctrl <space bar> ctrl alt super hyper
This would go part way toward making modifier sequences more ergonomically
feasible.
Ed
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Dvorak layout except when modifier key is pressed
2007-12-25 16:43 ` B. T. Raven
@ 2007-12-25 17:01 ` Andreas Eder
2007-12-26 1:31 ` B. T. Raven
0 siblings, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread
From: Andreas Eder @ 2007-12-25 17:01 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: help-gnu-emacs
Hi B,
>>>>> "B" == B T Raven <nihil@nihilo.net> writes:
B> I can do this via the Keytweak Program in a msw environment. How do I
B> do the same thing in Linux? Is there something that redefines the
B> modifier keys at a system level? (i.e so that they would work as
B> described above even in a terminal session? It seems that Linux should
B> have the capability to reconfigure a vanilla keyboard to work in this
B> fashion:
B> bottom key row -- super alt ctrl <space bar> ctrl alt super hyper
Have a look at xmodmap. You can tweak your keyboard layout to
whatever you like with it.
'Andreas
--
Wherever I lay my .emacs, there's my $HOME.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Dvorak layout except when modifier key is pressed
2007-12-25 17:01 ` Andreas Eder
@ 2007-12-26 1:31 ` B. T. Raven
2007-12-26 1:52 ` Rupert Swarbrick
` (2 more replies)
0 siblings, 3 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: B. T. Raven @ 2007-12-26 1:31 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: help-gnu-emacs
Andreas Eder wrote:
> Hi B,
>
>>>>>> "B" == B T Raven <nihil@nihilo.net> writes:
>
> B> I can do this via the Keytweak Program in a msw environment. How do I
> B> do the same thing in Linux? Is there something that redefines the
> B> modifier keys at a system level? (i.e so that they would work as
> B> described above even in a terminal session? It seems that Linux should
> B> have the capability to reconfigure a vanilla keyboard to work in this
> B> fashion:
>
> B> bottom key row -- super alt ctrl <space bar> ctrl alt super hyper
>
> Have a look at xmodmap. You can tweak your keyboard layout to
> whatever you like with it.
>
> 'Andreas
Thanks, Andreas. I recently installed Fedora 8 but it has only the basic
Linux functionality. I think there is something called "Developer Spin"
(another DVD) that I need to get the Emacs files.
Ed
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Dvorak layout except when modifier key is pressed
2007-12-26 1:31 ` B. T. Raven
@ 2007-12-26 1:52 ` Rupert Swarbrick
2007-12-26 10:08 ` Peter Dyballa
[not found] ` <mailman.5395.1198663704.18990.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org>
2 siblings, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: Rupert Swarbrick @ 2007-12-26 1:52 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: help-gnu-emacs
On Tue, 25 Dec 2007 19:31:21 -0600, B. T. Raven wrote:
> Andreas Eder wrote:
>> Have a look at xmodmap. You can tweak your keyboard layout to whatever
>> you like with it.
>>
>> 'Andreas
>
> Thanks, Andreas. I recently installed Fedora 8 but it has only the basic
> Linux functionality. I think there is something called "Developer Spin"
> (another DVD) that I need to get the Emacs files.
>
>
> Ed
I think it's almost guaranteed that you have xmodmap - I believe it's a
core X11 app*. Try xmodmap on the command line? Then man xmodmap
(together with some heavy googling: it's a bit hard I found).
Good luck - and I for one would be very interested to know whether you
have any success,
Rupert
* I'm on debian, but I notice for example that gdm indirectly depends on
the package containing it.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Dvorak layout except when modifier key is pressed
2007-12-26 1:31 ` B. T. Raven
2007-12-26 1:52 ` Rupert Swarbrick
@ 2007-12-26 10:08 ` Peter Dyballa
[not found] ` <mailman.5395.1198663704.18990.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org>
2 siblings, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: Peter Dyballa @ 2007-12-26 10:08 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: B. T. Raven; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs
Am 26.12.2007 um 02:31 schrieb B. T. Raven:
> I recently installed Fedora 8 but it has only the basic Linux
> functionality. I think there is something called "Developer
> Spin" (another DVD) that I need to get the Emacs files.
No, no! Xmodmap is a basic utility of X11. If you haven't installed
X11, then of course you have only something basic before you. The
developer packages usually contain C header files and static
libraries. Of course you can count compiler packages to the developer
packages. And sometimes (I think with Fedora always) you also get the
source code for the packages, except they are third party drivers,
for example for the graphics adapter.
Commonly X11 is started (and personalised) with the help of a little
script ~/.xinitrc or ~/.xsession. Templates for these files contain
invocations of xrdb (to load and set X resources), xset (to set the
path to X11 font repositories), and xmodmap, to correct the meaning
of keyboard keys, particularly to set modifier keys like shift,
control, alt, hyper, super, compose. And xmodmap allows you to swap
left and right mouse buttons, which the left hand might like when you
used for the pointing device.
--
Greetings
Pete
Got Mole problems?
Call Avogadro 6.02 x 10^23
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Dvorak layout except when modifier key is pressed
[not found] ` <mailman.5395.1198663704.18990.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org>
@ 2007-12-27 17:45 ` B. T. Raven
2007-12-28 0:27 ` Peter Dyballa
[not found] ` <mailman.5444.1198801648.18990.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org>
0 siblings, 2 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: B. T. Raven @ 2007-12-27 17:45 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: help-gnu-emacs
Peter Dyballa wrote:
>
> Am 26.12.2007 um 02:31 schrieb B. T. Raven:
>
>> I recently installed Fedora 8 but it has only the basic Linux
>> functionality. I think there is something called "Developer Spin"
>> (another DVD) that I need to get the Emacs files.
>
> No, no! Xmodmap is a basic utility of X11. If you haven't installed X11,
> then of course you have only something basic before you. The developer
> packages usually contain C header files and static libraries. Of course
> you can count compiler packages to the developer packages. And sometimes
> (I think with Fedora always) you also get the source code for the
> packages, except they are third party drivers, for example for the
> graphics adapter.
>
> Commonly X11 is started (and personalised) with the help of a little
> script ~/.xinitrc or ~/.xsession. Templates for these files contain
> invocations of xrdb (to load and set X resources), xset (to set the path
> to X11 font repositories), and xmodmap, to correct the meaning of
> keyboard keys, particularly to set modifier keys like shift, control,
> alt, hyper, super, compose. And xmodmap allows you to swap left and
> right mouse buttons, which the left hand might like when you used for
> the pointing device.
>
> --
> Greetings
>
> Pete
>
> Got Mole problems?
> Call Avogadro 6.02 x 10^23
Thanks Rupert and Peter. I do have xmodmap on the Gnu-Linux (Gnulix or
Glunix?) computer but I haven't been able to grok how it works. Keytweak was
a breeze. One of the first things I did was to run xev and press different
keys to get the correct key designations for xmodmap syntax. Most keypresses
generated a short report on the event but "Sleep" put the screen and
keyboard into a coma from which I could recover only by pulling the plug.
Luckily the file system wasn't corrupted and it booted up again without a
problem. Other episodes in the nightmare are 1) install without network
support [ethernet card but no network] 2)DSP winmodem not recognized by
GLnix [martian Linmodem tarball successfully unpacked and compiled with Make
all and make install disappeared somewhere 3) Emacs 22.1 tarball tranferred
from msw machine download on flash drive can be started from terminal but
Gnome doesn't seem to know anything about it. ... etc. etc.
Does any of you know what xmodmap expressions I can put in some file so that
my two users (ec and su or sudo) can have the same keyboard with bottom row
super, alt, ctl, space, ctl, alt, super, hyper?
Are Mod1 thru Mod5 synonyms for these modifiers keys? More importantly, is
this system level stuff off topic here?
Ed
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Dvorak layout except when modifier key is pressed
2007-12-27 17:45 ` B. T. Raven
@ 2007-12-28 0:27 ` Peter Dyballa
[not found] ` <mailman.5444.1198801648.18990.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org>
1 sibling, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: Peter Dyballa @ 2007-12-28 0:27 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: B. T. Raven; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs
Am 27.12.2007 um 18:45 schrieb B. T. Raven:
> Does any of you know what xmodmap expressions I can put in some
> file so that my two users (ec and su or sudo) can have the same
> keyboard with bottom row super, alt, ctl, space, ctl, alt, super,
> hyper?
In shell you can 'man xmodmap', in GNU Emacs you have two more
choices: manual-entry and woman.
>
> Are Mod1 thru Mod5 synonyms for these modifiers keys? More
> importantly, is this system level stuff off topic here?
These are the generic symbols. You can make them being this or that
or something else. To change a previous setting (xmodmap -pm), you
first need to "reset" it:
clear Shift
clear Lock
clear Control
clear Mod1
clear Mod2
clear Mod3
clear Mod4
clear Mod5
then ad(d)just:
add Shift = Shift_L Shift_R
add Lock = Caps_Lock
add Control = Control_L Control_R
add Mod1 = Mode_switch Mode_switch
add Mod2 = Meta_L Meta_R
add Mod3 = Alt_L Alt_R
add Mod4 = Hyper_L Hyper_R
add Mod5 = Super_L Super_R
Generally you can set the "key bindings" like:
keycode 0x35 = n N dead_tilde U203A
keycode 66 = Meta_L
(first line hex value for key code, second example with decimal value)
First column: no modifier
Second column: with Shift modifier
Third column: with Alt modifier
Fourth column: with Shift and Alt modifiers
The names are defined in /usr/X11/include/X11/keysymdef.h.
Multi_key is a nice thing: pressing Multi_key o / could produce ø.
Not sure whether it's still supported ...
--
Mit friedvollen Grüßen
Pete
Eat the rich – the poor are tough and stringy.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Dvorak layout except when modifier key is pressed
[not found] ` <mailman.5444.1198801648.18990.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org>
@ 2007-12-28 3:05 ` B. T. Raven
2007-12-28 10:54 ` Peter Dyballa
0 siblings, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread
From: B. T. Raven @ 2007-12-28 3:05 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: help-gnu-emacs
Peter Dyballa wrote:
>
> Am 27.12.2007 um 18:45 schrieb B. T. Raven:
>
>> Does any of you know what xmodmap expressions I can put in some file
>> so that my two users (ec and su or sudo) can have the same keyboard
>> with bottom row super, alt, ctl, space, ctl, alt, super, hyper?
>
> In shell you can 'man xmodmap', in GNU Emacs you have two more choices:
> manual-entry and woman.
>
>>
>> Are Mod1 thru Mod5 synonyms for these modifiers keys? More
>> importantly, is this system level stuff off topic here?
>
>
> These are the generic symbols. You can make them being this or that or
> something else. To change a previous setting (xmodmap -pm), you first
> need to "reset" it:
>
> clear Shift
> clear Lock !! I think this is the only one I need to clear if the ones below are already appropriately bound. Right?
> clear Control
> clear Mod1
> clear Mod2
> clear Mod3
> clear Mod4
> clear Mod5
Thanks for this. I learned more from your response that from a lot of
googling and reading man and info pages.
>
> then ad(d)just:
>
> add Shift = Shift_L Shift_R
! add Lock = Caps_Lock !! I want this to be Hyper_L . Will this
conflict with your Mod4 assignment below?
> add Control = Control_L Control_R
! add Mod1 = Mode_switch Mode_switch !! This I don't understand
at all. Is it the M$ Menu key?
! add Mod2 = Meta_L Meta_R !! I don't need this since I
don't have a Meta key, right?
> add Mod3 = Alt_L Alt_R
> add Mod4 = Hyper_L Hyper_R
> add Mod5 = Super_L Super_R
>
> Generally you can set the "key bindings" like:
>
> keycode 0x35 = n N dead_tilde U203A
> keycode 66 = Meta_L
This keycode method seems like the easiest way to swap keys since I can get
the keycodes from xev. Are the above "clear" and "add" lines still needed?
In my /etc/X11/Xmodmap file (all commented out) I read:
! keycode and keysym remapping should generally be used only if the X
! server config file has been configured to disable the XKEYBOARD
! extension
Where is the server config file? Is this something I have to worry about or
can I just add these lines to that file? :
clear Lock
!.
!. maybe other expressions
!.
add Lock = Hyper_L !! Is that meaningful?
keycode 66 = Hyper_L !! is this needed even with the above add Lock expression?
keycode 37 = Super_L
keycode 115 = Alt_L !! It says Alt on the keycap.
keycode 64 = Control_L
keycode 113 = Control_R
keycode 116 = Alt_R !! Again that's on keycap. Can't I just say alt-is-meta
or something somewhere?
keycode 117 = Super_R
keycode 109 = Hyper_R
>
> (first line hex value for key code, second example with decimal value)
>
> First column: no modifier
> Second column: with Shift modifier
> Third column: with Alt modifier
> Fourth column: with Shift and Alt modifiers
I read that there can be eight columns but that most apps don't support
beyond four. Does Emacs? Could I globalsetkey something to [(shift control
alt super hyper h)] ? Of course this would be difficult to touch type unless
all keychords that included the shift modifier and at least one other
modifier were made sticky. The whole point of this for me is to be able to
touch type most keychord combinations.
>
> The names are defined in /usr/X11/include/X11/keysymdef.h.
In Fedora 8 this was in /usr/include/X11/keysymdef.h
>
>
> Multi_key is a nice thing: pressing Multi_key o / could produce ø. Not
> sure whether it's still supported ...
I want to do all this sort of thing with Emacs (leim) input methods.
>
> --
> Mit friedvollen Grüßen
>
> Pete
>
> Eat the rich – the poor are tough and stringy.
Thanks again. If you don't have time to answer this I can probably figure it
out with some (a lot) of experimenting but I don't know what's safe and
what's dangerous.
Ed
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Dvorak layout except when modifier key is pressed
2007-12-28 3:05 ` B. T. Raven
@ 2007-12-28 10:54 ` Peter Dyballa
0 siblings, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: Peter Dyballa @ 2007-12-28 10:54 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: B. T. Raven; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs
Am 28.12.2007 um 04:05 schrieb B. T. Raven:
>> then ad(d)just:
>> add Shift = Shift_L Shift_R
>
> ! add Lock = Caps_Lock !! I want this to be Hyper_L .
> Will this conflict with your Mod4 assignment below?
You don't need to follow my examples. I was not trying to solve your
keyboard layout problem, just giving hints. The Lock "function" can
of course be performed by a key that also supplies the Hyper_L
modifier. With funny results.
>
>> add Control = Control_L Control_R
>
> ! add Mod1 = Mode_switch Mode_switch !! This I don't
> understand at all. Is it the M$ Menu key?
If no keycode is mapped to produce the Mode_switch keysymbol, you
can't assign Mode_switch to Mod1 modifier. If you don't want to have
a Mod1 modifier, you don't need to assign it. You can choose any
defined key(symbol) to perform a modifier function.
>
> ! add Mod2 = Meta_L Meta_R !! I don't need this
> since I don't have a Meta key, right?
So leave it cleared! All modifier and control and shift and lock keys
are optional.
>
>> add Mod3 = Alt_L Alt_R
>> add Mod4 = Hyper_L Hyper_R
>> add Mod5 = Super_L Super_R
>> Generally you can set the "key bindings" like:
>> keycode 0x35 = n N
>> dead_tilde U203A
>> keycode 66 = Meta_L
>
> This keycode method seems like the easiest way to swap keys since I
> can get the keycodes from xev.
Or 'xmodmap -pke'?
> Are the above "clear" and "add" lines still needed?
Not all. They were meant as a complete example.
> In my /etc/X11/Xmodmap file (all commented out) I read:
>
>
> ! keycode and keysym remapping should generally be used only if the X
> ! server config file has been configured to disable the XKEYBOARD
> ! extension
>
> Where is the server config file? Is this something I have to worry
> about or can I just add these lines to that file? :
/etc or /etc/X11. The file names will probably contain the
extension .conf. Man <the X server used> will reveal more details.
There are configuration programmes for these files. 'apropos
configure' might reveal the programmes and the files. Mistakes can
prevent X11 to launch, so better make a backup of the file you want
to change!
If you have a package with XKeyCaps in it, install it. XKeyCaps can
be quite helpful in many ways.
>
> clear Lock
> !.
> !. maybe other expressions
> !.
> add Lock = Hyper_L !! Is that meaningful?
No. The Lock key can't be a modifier key, your car not a bike. (But
the key that emits the Lock symbol can be changed to emit Hyper_L
symbol.)
>
> keycode 66 = Hyper_L !! is this needed even with the above add Lock
> expression?
You can set:
my modifier Nº 1 is my right pinky.
As long as there is no keysymbol "right pinky" defined as being
emitted by some key, you can't assign that symbol to a "function"
like Mod<whatsoever>.
>
> keycode 37 = Super_L
> keycode 115 = Alt_L !! It says Alt on the keycap.
So what? Aren't you going to tell your Linux PC that X is U?
> keycode 64 = Control_L
> keycode 113 = Control_R
> keycode 116 = Alt_R !! Again that's on keycap. Can't I just say alt-
> is-meta or something somewhere?
Of course you can set it to Meta, either right side or left side.
You're free to do what you want, since your computer can't read what
its keys are imprinted with. The keycode is something like a "scan
code" that a controller IC sends to the CPU. This same "scan code"
can have in different environments different meanings ("switching
keyboards [encodings/layouts]"). With 'keycode equals keysymbol' you
assign the dumb "scan code" to something meaningful an user (high
level) programme can work with.
>
> I read that there can be eight columns but that most apps don't
> support beyond four. Does Emacs?
I don't know. Make a try: assign on the fly some key some more
keysymbols. For example a, emitting the usual "a symbols," then b and
B, and finally c and C. So you'll easily see what Modx-a or Modx-A
deliver. And it's easy to restore: M-p, some delete, RET.
> Could I globalsetkey something to [(shift control alt super hyper
> h)] ?
Emacs key-bindings are independent of those in X11 or any other
windowing system. GNU Emacs receives the keysymbols, not the
keycodes. It can handle only those keysymbols it receives. What you
tell it to do with the received keysymbols is up to you. So it's
surely possible to leave the keyboard's layout in X as is and change
it to Dvořak only in GNU Emacs.
>
>> Multi_key is a nice thing: pressing Multi_key o / could produce ø.
>> Not sure whether it's still supported ...
>
> I want to do all this sort of thing with Emacs (leim) input methods.
Fedora 8 should be capable to substitute leim. Doing so will enable
you to have the same wealth in all applications. At least with
Unicode Emacs 23.0.60 you don't leim at all.
--
Greetings
Pete
What is this talk of 'release?' Klingons do not make software
'releases.' Our software 'escapes,' leaving a bloody trail of
designers and quality assurance people in its wake.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
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2007-11-26 3:59 ` Dvorak layout except when modifier key is pressed B. T. Raven
2007-11-30 16:53 ` Stefan Monnier
2007-12-25 16:43 ` B. T. Raven
2007-12-25 17:01 ` Andreas Eder
2007-12-26 1:31 ` B. T. Raven
2007-12-26 1:52 ` Rupert Swarbrick
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2007-11-24 4:35 Vincent C
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