* Keymaps and Emacs and libreadline ?
@ 2003-08-19 2:15 It's me FKtPp ;)
2003-08-19 13:04 ` Jesper Harder
0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread
From: It's me FKtPp ;) @ 2003-08-19 2:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
Hi group:
I have GNU Emacs installed in all my computers, and I'd love to do
every thing Emacs's way. But, when I try use libreadline to edit
shell commands. Problem comes boring me :( This was what I
encountered:
I setup-ed libreadline so that I can use Emacs key-binding and
key-sequences to edit shell command lines. It works perfect in
X-terminal, but, when I switch to console mode(not X) the right-alt
key no longer act as a meta key like what left-alt key do :( I
viewed the keymap files and find out:
Keycode 56 = Alt
Keycode 100 = AltGr
What's the meaning of "AltGr"?? Why map right-alt to AltGr? And I
also find out that left-ctrl and right-ctrl both mapped to
control. Why ctrl keys different from alt keys?
How can I configure right-alt do the same work as the left-alt do?
change keymap or change inputrc??
Thank you for ur help !! And sorry for my poor English :P
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: Keymaps and Emacs and libreadline ?
2003-08-19 2:15 Keymaps and Emacs and libreadline ? It's me FKtPp ;)
@ 2003-08-19 13:04 ` Jesper Harder
2003-08-27 9:53 ` It's me FKtPp ;)
0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread
From: Jesper Harder @ 2003-08-19 13:04 UTC (permalink / raw)
"It's me FKtPp ;)" <m_pupil@yahoo.com.cn> writes:
> I setup-ed libreadline so that I can use Emacs key-binding and
> key-sequences to edit shell command lines. It works perfect in
> X-terminal, but, when I switch to console mode(not X) the right-alt
> key no longer act as a meta key like what left-alt key do :( I
> viewed the keymap files and find out:
>
> Keycode 56 = Alt
> Keycode 100 = AltGr
>
> What's the meaning of "AltGr"??
AltGr is used to write characters that might not otherwise be
accessible on the keyboard -- you hold AltGr down and press another
key. Here some examples that work on my keyboard:
AltGr e = €
AltGr r = ®
AltGr c = ©
AltGr d = ð
But exactly what you get by using AltGr (if anything) probably depends
on you locale settings.
> Why map right-alt to AltGr?
On many (European) keyboards the right Alt key is labeled as AltGr.
> How can I configure right-alt do the same work as the left-alt do?
> change keymap or change inputrc??
If you never need AltGr I suppose it's easiest just to map the right
Alt key to Alt rather than AltGr.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: Keymaps and Emacs and libreadline ?
2003-08-19 13:04 ` Jesper Harder
@ 2003-08-27 9:53 ` It's me FKtPp ;)
2003-08-27 16:30 ` Jesper Harder
0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread
From: It's me FKtPp ;) @ 2003-08-27 9:53 UTC (permalink / raw)
Jesper Harder <harder@myrealbox.com> writes:
[...]
> AltGr is used to write characters that might not otherwise be
> accessible on the keyboard -- you hold AltGr down and press another
> key. Here some examples that work on my keyboard:
>
> AltGr e = €
> AltGr r = ®
> AltGr c = ©
> AltGr d = ð
>
> But exactly what you get by using AltGr (if anything) probably depends
> on you locale settings.
Thank you for your explain :-)
>> How can I configure right-alt do the same work as the left-alt do?
>> change keymap or change inputrc??
>
> If you never need AltGr I suppose it's easiest just to map the right
> Alt key to Alt rather than AltGr.
Thank you for your suggestion :-) I use Debian(sid) on my home-computer.
And yes, I'd never use AltGr key. My locale-setting is zh_CN.GBK(I'm
not sure if this locale needs AltGr key ?). And I checked some keymaps
in /usr/share/keymaps/i386/qwerty/ ,But all these files have a line
like "include linux-with-alt-altgr". why ??
--
Lisp Lisp Lisp Lisp Lisp Lisp Lisp Lisp Lisp Lisp
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: Keymaps and Emacs and libreadline ?
2003-08-27 9:53 ` It's me FKtPp ;)
@ 2003-08-27 16:30 ` Jesper Harder
0 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Jesper Harder @ 2003-08-27 16:30 UTC (permalink / raw)
"It's me FKtPp ;)" <m_pupil@yahoo.com.cn> writes:
> Jesper Harder <harder@myrealbox.com> writes:
>
>> If you never need AltGr I suppose it's easiest just to map the right
>> Alt key to Alt rather than AltGr.
>
> Thank you for your suggestion :-) I use Debian(sid) on my home-computer.
> And yes, I'd never use AltGr key. My locale-setting is zh_CN.GBK(I'm
> not sure if this locale needs AltGr key ?). And I checked some keymaps
> in /usr/share/keymaps/i386/qwerty/ ,But all these files have a line
> like "include linux-with-alt-altgr". why ??
Probably because the person who wrote the keymaps thought that
keyboards with an AltGr key was the most common case.
I see there's also an include file called "linux-with-two-alt-keys" on
my system -- if you include that instead, you should get what you
want.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
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2003-08-19 2:15 Keymaps and Emacs and libreadline ? It's me FKtPp ;)
2003-08-19 13:04 ` Jesper Harder
2003-08-27 9:53 ` It's me FKtPp ;)
2003-08-27 16:30 ` Jesper Harder
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