* Re: Specifying Control-= as a string?
2006-07-19 17:15 ` Specifying Control-= as a string? Ken Manheimer
2006-07-19 19:47 ` Slawomir Nowaczyk
@ 2006-07-21 15:30 ` Kevin Rodgers
1 sibling, 0 replies; 3+ messages in thread
From: Kevin Rodgers @ 2006-07-21 15:30 UTC (permalink / raw)
Ken Manheimer wrote:
> is there any way to specify the one-character key sequence:
>
> [(control =)]
>
> as a lisp string?
>
> the strings "\C-=" and "\^=" complain about "Invalid modifier in string".
>
> this question is mostly academic, at this point. i was thinking about
> using it key as a binding in a keymap, but eventually realized that
> regular (non-window-system) ttys won't pass it as input. though i've
> given up on that, i'd like to better understand the story here, and am
> curious about whether there's any way to express it as a string, or
> whether it's just a bad idea in principle (BIiP).
It is explained in the Init Rebinding node of the Emacs manual:
| If you have a set of key bindings that you like to use all the time,
| you can specify them in your `.emacs' file by using their Lisp syntax.
| (*Note Init File::.)
|
| The simplest method for doing this works for ASCII characters and
| Meta-modified ASCII characters only. This method uses a string to
| represent the key sequence you want to rebind. For example, here's how
| to bind `C-z' to `shell':
|
| (global-set-key "\C-z" 'shell)
...
| When the key sequence includes function keys or mouse button events,
| or non-ASCII characters such as `C-=' or `H-a', you must use the more
| general method of rebinding, which uses a vector to specify the key
| sequence.
|
| The way to write a vector in Emacs Lisp is with square brackets
| around the vector elements. Use spaces to separate the elements. If an
| element is a symbol, simply write the symbol's name--no other
| delimiters or punctuation are needed. If a vector element is a
| character, write it as a Lisp character constant: `?' followed by the
| character as it would appear in a string.
|
| Here are examples of using vectors to rebind `C-=' (a control
| character not in ASCII), `C-M-=' (not in ASCII because `C-=' is not),
| `H-a' (a Hyper character; ASCII doesn't have Hyper at all), <F7> (a
| function key), and `C-Mouse-1' (a keyboard-modified mouse button):
|
| (global-set-key [?\C-=] 'make-symbolic-link)
| (global-set-key [?\M-\C-=] 'make-symbolic-link)
| (global-set-key [?\H-a] 'make-symbolic-link)
| (global-set-key [f7] 'make-symbolic-link)
| (global-set-key [C-mouse-1] 'make-symbolic-link)
The issue of whether a terminal can send a different key code for
control-= than for = depends on the particular terminal. But if
it can be configured to send an escape sequence (like for function
keys), you can get Emacs to recognize that by frobbing function-key-map
(see the Translating Input Events node of the Emacs Lisp manual).
--
Kevin
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