* key mapping convention
@ 2006-11-25 20:39 Christopher Küttner
2006-11-25 21:28 ` Peter Dyballa
2006-11-26 2:03 ` Dieter Wilhelm
0 siblings, 2 replies; 7+ messages in thread
From: Christopher Küttner @ 2006-11-25 20:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
Hi All,
please apologize if this off-topic. Well, I don't think it is ot, since
this problem is generated by Emacs.
I am using the mighty Editor since a few months now and I must make a
decision. Should I tweak the Editor to work like my operating system,
that means using CUA and so on. Or should I tweak the operating system
such that it works like the Editor (eg C-y as "paste" ect)?
I want to decide this once for a lifetime. Which is the way to go?
Which way is better? Where is the origin of the way Emacs does it? Any
thoughts, scientific or religious are welcome.
Thanks,
Christopher
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: key mapping convention
2006-11-25 20:39 key mapping convention Christopher Küttner
@ 2006-11-25 21:28 ` Peter Dyballa
2006-11-26 0:35 ` Perry Smith
2006-11-26 2:03 ` Dieter Wilhelm
1 sibling, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread
From: Peter Dyballa @ 2006-11-25 21:28 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: help-gnu-emacs
Am 25.11.2006 um 21:39 schrieb Christopher Küttner:
> I am using the mighty Editor since a few months now and I must make
> a decision. Should I tweak the Editor to work like my operating
> system, that means using CUA and so on. Or should I tweak the
> operating system such that it works like the Editor (eg C-y as
> "paste" ect)?
Make the OS behave like your editor. OS'es can change, an editor never!
--
Mit friedvollen Grüßen
Pete
In a world without walls and fences, who needs gates and windows?
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: key mapping convention
2006-11-25 21:28 ` Peter Dyballa
@ 2006-11-26 0:35 ` Perry Smith
0 siblings, 0 replies; 7+ messages in thread
From: Perry Smith @ 2006-11-26 0:35 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: Christopher Küttner, help-gnu-emacs
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On Nov 25, 2006, at 3:28 PM, Peter Dyballa wrote:
>
> Am 25.11.2006 um 21:39 schrieb Christopher Küttner:
>
>> I am using the mighty Editor since a few months now and I must
>> make a decision. Should I tweak the Editor to work like my
>> operating system, that means using CUA and so on. Or should I
>> tweak the operating system such that it works like the Editor (eg
>> C-y as "paste" ect)?
>
> Make the OS behave like your editor. OS'es can change, an editor
> never!
I would agree. As a consultant, especially back in the 80's, I
drifted around and was always on a new OS. I simply had to drag my
emacs with me and *poof*, I was productive again -- well... at least
until the pubs opened :-)
Perry Smith ( pedz@easesoftware.com )
Ease Software, Inc. ( http://www.easesoftware.com )
Low cost SATA Disk Systems for IBMs p5, pSeries, and RS/6000 AIX systems
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
* Re: key mapping convention
2006-11-25 20:39 key mapping convention Christopher Küttner
2006-11-25 21:28 ` Peter Dyballa
@ 2006-11-26 2:03 ` Dieter Wilhelm
1 sibling, 0 replies; 7+ messages in thread
From: Dieter Wilhelm @ 2006-11-26 2:03 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: help-gnu-emacs
Christopher Küttner <mail@cklive.de> writes:
> Hi All,
>
...
>
> I am using the mighty Editor since a few months now and I must make a
> decision. Should I tweak the Editor to work like my operating system,
> that means using CUA and so on. Or should I tweak the operating
> system such that it works like the Editor (eg C-y as "paste" ect)?
>
> I want to decide this once for a lifetime. Which is the way to go?
> Which way is better? Where is the origin of the way Emacs does it? Any
> thoughts, scientific or religious are welcome.
>
Religious: Blasphemer, dare you!
Misanthropic: You are the source of the problem!
Philanthropic: Try Emacs' CUA-mode son.
Scientific: If something is never changing, it's dead already.
Personally: Harrumph (see mail header)
--
Best wishes
H. Dieter Wilhelm
Darmstadt, Germany
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
[parent not found: <mailman.1116.1164487331.2155.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org>]
* Re: key mapping convention
[not found] <mailman.1116.1164487331.2155.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org>
@ 2006-11-27 9:56 ` Mathias Dahl
2006-11-27 15:22 ` Drew Adams
0 siblings, 1 reply; 7+ messages in thread
From: Mathias Dahl @ 2006-11-27 9:56 UTC (permalink / raw)
Christopher Küttner <mail@cklive.de> writes:
> I am using the mighty Editor since a few months now and I must make
> a decision. Should I tweak the Editor to work like my operating
> system, that means using CUA and so on. Or should I tweak the
> operating system such that it works like the Editor (eg C-y as
> "paste" ect)?
>
> I want to decide this once for a lifetime. Which is the way to go?
> Which way is better? Where is the origin of the way Emacs does it?
> Any thoughts, scientific or religious are welcome.
When I started using Emacs on Windows I was lucky; I had used Oracle's
Sql*Plus tool a lot and to copy and paste in there C-Insert and
S-Insert was the keys to use. And I happily noticed that while C-c and
C-v did not work as I expected, the C-Insert and S-Insert did. Back
then (1997, using Windows 3.11 or Windows NT 3.51) most other
shortcuts was not as "standard" as they are today so I did not care
thet C-s did not save or that C-o did not open a new file. Everything
that was common to all apps (apart from Sql*Plus and Emacs, and MS-DOS
windows...) was C-v, C-c and C-x.
Back then I put save and open and similar on the F-keys for easy
access, so I never bothered to learn the standard keys in Emacs. But
over the years I learnt the standard keys, if only for situations
where I did not have access to my .emacs file. Today I am happily
using C-x C-s, C-y, M-w etc, in Emacs, but Windows' standard keys in
Windows, and 95 % of the time, my brain handles it well and does not
mess up. In some way it knows where I am and DTRT.
I recently got a friend trying Emacs on Windows. He was very reluctant
at first, he even made a try some year ago and gave up (that time he
decided to learn vanilla Emacs bindings). This year he tried again,
now with a different mindset; he would try to make bindings and other
things he was used to from other editors the same in Emacs, so he
enabled CUA-mode and pc-selection-mode and others, and he now seem to
have gotten over the largest hirdle in Emacs, "that everything is
strange", and has actually started to see the benefits of using it,
all cool features etc.
It's hard to suggest what you should do, I guess it depends on what OS
you use. Under GNU/Linux you will have a better chance getting the OS
work like Emacs, especially if you live inside Bash and similar
tools. Under Windows I find it is hard to do this (yes I know about
that Japanese app that tries to emulate Emacs keybindings all over the
OS).
Good luck!
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 7+ messages in thread
[parent not found: <mailman.1167.1164643128.2155.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org>]
end of thread, other threads:[~2006-11-27 16:03 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 7+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2006-11-25 20:39 key mapping convention Christopher Küttner
2006-11-25 21:28 ` Peter Dyballa
2006-11-26 0:35 ` Perry Smith
2006-11-26 2:03 ` Dieter Wilhelm
[not found] <mailman.1116.1164487331.2155.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org>
2006-11-27 9:56 ` Mathias Dahl
2006-11-27 15:22 ` Drew Adams
[not found] <mailman.1167.1164643128.2155.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org>
2006-11-27 16:03 ` Mathias Dahl
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