* Why use CTL-x CTL-c to quit instead of CTL-x CTL-q? @ 2021-04-06 2:49 Hongyi Zhao 2021-04-06 7:59 ` Jean Louis 2021-04-06 12:34 ` Skip Montanaro 0 siblings, 2 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: Hongyi Zhao @ 2021-04-06 2:49 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs Obviously, from a mnemonic perspective, CTL-x CTL-q is more intuitive than CTL-x CTL-c. Regards -- Assoc. Prof. Hongyi Zhao <hongyi.zhao@gmail.com> Theory and Simulation of Materials Hebei Polytechnic University of Science and Technology engineering NO. 552 North Gangtie Road, Xingtai, China ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Why use CTL-x CTL-c to quit instead of CTL-x CTL-q? 2021-04-06 2:49 Why use CTL-x CTL-c to quit instead of CTL-x CTL-q? Hongyi Zhao @ 2021-04-06 7:59 ` Jean Louis 2021-04-06 12:34 ` Skip Montanaro 1 sibling, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: Jean Louis @ 2021-04-06 7:59 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Hongyi Zhao; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs * Hongyi Zhao <hongyi.zhao@gmail.com> [2021-04-06 05:50]: > Obviously, from a mnemonic perspective, CTL-x CTL-q is more intuitive > than CTL-x CTL-c. To customize it personally, user may do following: (global-set-key (kbd "C-x C-q") 'save-buffers-kill-terminal) That is probably related to computer history. At some point of time one could quit many applications with ESC or ESCAPE, that one is more logical to me, today ESC does not work as expected. In Emacs Escape has different meaning, but I almost never use it. I may guess that logic comes from Control-C on terminal to abort action, and that Emacs adopted CTRL-C with the prefix. More about Control-C: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Control-C Thus the meaning comes from computer history. Quote: "Control+C ("C for Cancel")[3] was part of various Digital Equipment operating systems, including TOPS-10 and TOPS-20. Its popularity as an abort command was adopted by other systems including Unix." Meanings of "cancel" and "quit" are different, though similar. My dictionary Wordnet does not tell me they are synonyms, I would say they are. When program is funning furiously on terminal we often "cancel" it with CTRL-C, but don't quit like saying "Good bye" to program, we cancel the execution abruptly. From that logic probably it was adopted in Emacs. Author RMS and few experienced users of that time would know it. -- Jean Take action in Free Software Foundation campaigns: https://www.fsf.org/campaigns Sign an open letter in support of Richard M. Stallman https://rms-support-letter.github.io/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Why use CTL-x CTL-c to quit instead of CTL-x CTL-q? 2021-04-06 2:49 Why use CTL-x CTL-c to quit instead of CTL-x CTL-q? Hongyi Zhao 2021-04-06 7:59 ` Jean Louis @ 2021-04-06 12:34 ` Skip Montanaro 2021-04-06 14:53 ` Skip Montanaro 2021-04-06 15:15 ` Philip Kaludercic 1 sibling, 2 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: Skip Montanaro @ 2021-04-06 12:34 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Hongyi Zhao; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs > Obviously, from a mnemonic perspective, CTL-x CTL-q is more intuitive than CTL-x CTL-c. Jean already provided a precise reply to your question. I've seen several questions about the Emacs interface over the past year or so. Indulge an old crank for a couple minutes. I will offer a more general reply on why I think the Emacs keybindings are the way they are. Emacs availability predates Windows and Unix by a fair bit. It predates common graphical user interface technology by more than that. In fact, Emacs was popular enough by the time Windows and Unix were around that other implementations of Emacs existed before that, both as spin-offs of the GNU Emacs codebase as well as complete rewrites. The Wikipedia page about Emacs provides useful background: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emacs GNU Emacs first appeared in 1976 or thereabouts (and not on Unix). Technically, Unix had already moved through several versions by that point, but it was still captive to Bell Labs. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unix In contrast, Microsoft Windows didn't appear for another ten years or so as a response to the success of the commercialization of graphical user interfaces by Apple's Macintosh. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_Windows ISTR Stallman was resistant to a port of Emacs to the Mac before the release of Mac OS X, largely because of his stance on closed-source software. I believe he was resistant to a Windows port for a long time too. It was a different story after the release of Mac OS X, since it was a Unix-based system under the covers. I don't think Stallman could have resisted the port at that point. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macintosh_operating_systems By the time that Emacs was available on Windows and Macs, we are talking well beyond the mid-80s. I don't know when a Windows port became available, but Mac OS X wasn't released to the public until 2001. I'm not sure when it was ported to Windows, but likely not before version 19.24. See the release history table here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Emacs#Release_history So, Emacs's roots lie in the pre-Unix/Windows/Mac history of computing. Nearly as important, they lie in the pre-GUI history of computing. By the time Windows, Unix and Macs were around, the Emacs user interface was quite stable. While users can (and do) do pretty much anything they want w.r.t. key bindings, I don't think changing the defaults as the winds of computing changed would have been the right thing to do. There is value in a certain amount of consistency, even if it isn't "perfect." Skip P.S. Do vi/vim users wonder why its key bindings don't correspond more strongly to common Windows, Mac or Unix/Linux interface standards? I rarely need to use vim, but if they changed the quit command (:q or :q!) I'd be completely lost. How would I ever get back to the shell prompt? Oh, right, C-z followed by kill(1). ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Why use CTL-x CTL-c to quit instead of CTL-x CTL-q? 2021-04-06 12:34 ` Skip Montanaro @ 2021-04-06 14:53 ` Skip Montanaro 2021-04-06 15:40 ` Stefan Monnier 2021-04-06 16:17 ` Gregory Heytings 2021-04-06 15:15 ` Philip Kaludercic 1 sibling, 2 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: Skip Montanaro @ 2021-04-06 14:53 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Hongyi Zhao; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs I wrote: > GNU Emacs first appeared in 1976 or thereabouts (and not on Unix). Stefan corrected me off-list. It wasn't GNU Emacs, but its predecessor on ITS. In fact, Wikipedia indicates that Richard Stallman didn't start on GNU Emacs until 1984, in response to the not-open-source Gosling Emacs. Skip ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Why use CTL-x CTL-c to quit instead of CTL-x CTL-q? 2021-04-06 14:53 ` Skip Montanaro @ 2021-04-06 15:40 ` Stefan Monnier 2021-04-06 16:17 ` Gregory Heytings 1 sibling, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2021-04-06 15:40 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs >> GNU Emacs first appeared in 1976 or thereabouts (and not on Unix). > Stefan corrected me off-list. It wasn't GNU Emacs, but its predecessor > on ITS. In fact, Wikipedia indicates that Richard Stallman didn't > start on GNU Emacs until 1984, in response to the not-open-source > Gosling Emacs. Actually, AFAIK (that's before my time) he started GNU Emacs because he wanted something like Multics Emacs to be available everywhere (and the use of Lisp as the only implementation language was a hurdle in this respect). He didn't want something like Gosling Emacs either (because that one was using C as the only implementation language since its extension language was not good enough). So he took Gosling Emacs's code as a base (which he mistakenly thought he could use) to make GNU Emacs (an implementation that combined a "mostly Lisp implementation" with a "needs only a C compiler" requirement). Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Why use CTL-x CTL-c to quit instead of CTL-x CTL-q? 2021-04-06 14:53 ` Skip Montanaro 2021-04-06 15:40 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2021-04-06 16:17 ` Gregory Heytings 1 sibling, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: Gregory Heytings @ 2021-04-06 16:17 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Skip Montanaro; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs, Hongyi Zhao >> GNU Emacs first appeared in 1976 or thereabouts (and not on Unix). > > Stefan corrected me off-list. It wasn't GNU Emacs, but its predecessor > on ITS. In fact, Wikipedia indicates that Richard Stallman didn't start > on GNU Emacs until 1984, in response to the not-open-source Gosling > Emacs. > To link this with the OP's question, note that C-x C-c in ITS Emacs did not "quit Emacs" as C-x C-c now does, it was a "suspend" operation. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Why use CTL-x CTL-c to quit instead of CTL-x CTL-q? 2021-04-06 12:34 ` Skip Montanaro 2021-04-06 14:53 ` Skip Montanaro @ 2021-04-06 15:15 ` Philip Kaludercic 2021-04-06 20:52 ` Jean Louis 1 sibling, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread From: Philip Kaludercic @ 2021-04-06 15:15 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Skip Montanaro; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs, Hongyi Zhao Skip Montanaro <skip.montanaro@gmail.com> writes: > P.S. Do vi/vim users wonder why its key bindings don't correspond more > strongly to common Windows, Mac or Unix/Linux interface standards? I > rarely need to use vim, but if they changed the quit command (:q or > :q!) I'd be completely lost. How would I ever get back to the shell > prompt? Oh, right, C-z followed by kill(1). I don't think so, as vi(m) is culturally more about the keys than the software. People use vi(m) for vi(m), while many use Emacs for {org, magit, whatever} and find Emacs to be an obstacle. Or that is at least how I make sense of it. -- Philip K. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Why use CTL-x CTL-c to quit instead of CTL-x CTL-q? 2021-04-06 15:15 ` Philip Kaludercic @ 2021-04-06 20:52 ` Jean Louis 2021-04-06 21:00 ` Jean Louis 2021-04-07 21:02 ` Francis Belliveau 0 siblings, 2 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: Jean Louis @ 2021-04-06 20:52 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Philip Kaludercic, g; +Cc: Skip Montanaro, help-gnu-emacs, Hongyi Zhao * Philip Kaludercic <philipk@posteo.net> [2021-04-06 18:16]: > Skip Montanaro <skip.montanaro@gmail.com> writes: > > > P.S. Do vi/vim users wonder why its key bindings don't correspond more > > strongly to common Windows, Mac or Unix/Linux interface standards? I > > rarely need to use vim, but if they changed the quit command (:q or > > :q!) I'd be completely lost. How would I ever get back to the shell > > prompt? Oh, right, C-z followed by kill(1). > > I don't think so, as vi(m) is culturally more about the keys than the > software. People use vi(m) for vi(m), while many use Emacs for {org, magit, > whatever} and find Emacs to be an obstacle. Or that is at least how I I expect on every system to have vi available just because Emacs is not available. That is where trouble starts. Sometimes use to edit remote files within M-x shell. If I remember well "vi" stands for "victim": vi tutorial for beginners: http://web-old.archive.org/web/20120528000356/http://www.dina.kvl.dk/~abraham/religion/vi-tutorial.html Editors 101 Menace: http://web-old.archive.org/web/20120208080648/http://www.dina.kvl.dk/~abraham/religion/editors-101.html Quote: ====== All vi commands have nice mnemonics. The mnemonic for leaving vi is: <ESC>ape this <COLON> thing, // The colon-thing is a nickname for vi. <Q>uit and do <NOT> // C slang for `!'. Here used in the meaning `never'. <RET>urn. -- Jean Take action in Free Software Foundation campaigns: https://www.fsf.org/campaigns Sign an open letter in support of Richard M. Stallman https://rms-support-letter.github.io/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Why use CTL-x CTL-c to quit instead of CTL-x CTL-q? 2021-04-06 20:52 ` Jean Louis @ 2021-04-06 21:00 ` Jean Louis 2021-04-06 23:03 ` Stefan Monnier 2021-04-07 21:02 ` Francis Belliveau 1 sibling, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread From: Jean Louis @ 2021-04-06 21:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs, Hongyi Zhao * Jean Louis <bugs@gnu.support> [2021-04-06 23:58]: > * Philip Kaludercic <philipk@posteo.net> [2021-04-06 18:16]: > > Skip Montanaro <skip.montanaro@gmail.com> writes: > > > > > P.S. Do vi/vim users wonder why its key bindings don't correspond more > > > strongly to common Windows, Mac or Unix/Linux interface standards? I > > > rarely need to use vim, but if they changed the quit command (:q or > > > :q!) I'd be completely lost. How would I ever get back to the shell > > > prompt? Oh, right, C-z followed by kill(1). > > > > I don't think so, as vi(m) is culturally more about the keys than the > > software. People use vi(m) for vi(m), while many use Emacs for {org, magit, > > whatever} and find Emacs to be an obstacle. Or that is at least how I > > I expect on every system to have vi available just because Emacs is > not available. That is where trouble starts. Sometimes use to edit > remote files within M-x shell. Correction: Sometimes I use ed to edit remote files witin M-x shell especially when there are just few lines to be changed. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Why use CTL-x CTL-c to quit instead of CTL-x CTL-q? 2021-04-06 21:00 ` Jean Louis @ 2021-04-06 23:03 ` Stefan Monnier 2021-04-06 23:16 ` Skip Montanaro 0 siblings, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2021-04-06 23:03 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs > Correction: Sometimes I use ed to edit remote files witin M-x shell Well, of course: it's the standard text editor, after all. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Why use CTL-x CTL-c to quit instead of CTL-x CTL-q? 2021-04-06 23:03 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2021-04-06 23:16 ` Skip Montanaro 0 siblings, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: Skip Montanaro @ 2021-04-06 23:16 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Stefan Monnier; +Cc: Help GNU Emacs > > Correction: Sometimes I use ed to edit remote files witin M-x shell > > Well, of course: it's the standard text editor, after all. I was surprised to find it wasn't installed by default on my Manjaro system. I mean, really, what's the world coming to? ;-) (Obviously Manjaro isn't a developer-focused Linux distro. I switched to it for the user interface and have had to install several packages of come to expect from other Linux distros.) Skip ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Why use CTL-x CTL-c to quit instead of CTL-x CTL-q? 2021-04-06 20:52 ` Jean Louis 2021-04-06 21:00 ` Jean Louis @ 2021-04-07 21:02 ` Francis Belliveau 2021-04-07 23:00 ` Philip Kaludercic 1 sibling, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread From: Francis Belliveau @ 2021-04-07 21:02 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs > On Apr 6, 2021, at 16:52, Jean Louis <bugs@gnu.support> wrote: > > If I remember well "vi" stands for "victim": > That sounds wrong to me since the original version was just a full-screen terminal interface for "ed". More likely it would have stood for "video interface" since "ed" was designed to support "paper terminal" interfaces. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: Why use CTL-x CTL-c to quit instead of CTL-x CTL-q? 2021-04-07 21:02 ` Francis Belliveau @ 2021-04-07 23:00 ` Philip Kaludercic 0 siblings, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread From: Philip Kaludercic @ 2021-04-07 23:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Francis Belliveau; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs Francis Belliveau <f.belliveau@comcast.net> writes: >> On Apr 6, 2021, at 16:52, Jean Louis <bugs@gnu.support> wrote: >> >> If I remember well "vi" stands for "victim": >> > That sounds wrong to me since the original version was just a > full-screen terminal interface for "ed". More likely it would have > stood for "video interface" since "ed" was designed to support "paper > terminal" interfaces. AFAIK vi is just the "visual mode/editor" of the ex editor, that in turn was a development on ed, the line editor. -- Philip K. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2021-04-07 23:00 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 13+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2021-04-06 2:49 Why use CTL-x CTL-c to quit instead of CTL-x CTL-q? Hongyi Zhao 2021-04-06 7:59 ` Jean Louis 2021-04-06 12:34 ` Skip Montanaro 2021-04-06 14:53 ` Skip Montanaro 2021-04-06 15:40 ` Stefan Monnier 2021-04-06 16:17 ` Gregory Heytings 2021-04-06 15:15 ` Philip Kaludercic 2021-04-06 20:52 ` Jean Louis 2021-04-06 21:00 ` Jean Louis 2021-04-06 23:03 ` Stefan Monnier 2021-04-06 23:16 ` Skip Montanaro 2021-04-07 21:02 ` Francis Belliveau 2021-04-07 23:00 ` Philip Kaludercic
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