view etc/ms-kermit-7bit @ 788:026c5bf9c134

[xemacs-hg @ 2002-03-21 07:29:57 by ben] chartab.c: Fix bugs in implementation and doc strings. config.h.in: Add foo_checking_assert_at_line() macros. Not clear whether these are actually useful, though; I'll take them out if not. symsinit.h, emacs.c: Some improvements to the timeline. Rearrange a bit the init calls. Add call for reinit_vars_of_object_mswindows() and declare in symsinit.h. event-Xt.c, event-gtk.c, event-msw.c, event-stream.c, event-tty.c, events.c, events.h: Introduce new event methods for printing, comparing, and hashing magic events, to avoid event-type-specific stuff that had crept into events.c. (And was crashing, since the channel in MS Windows magic events may be nil.) Implement the methods in event-{tty,gtk,Xt,mswindows}.c. Make wrapping functions event_stream_{compare,hash,format}_magic_event() to check if everything's OK and call the actual callback. Fix events.c to use the new methods. Add a new event-stream-operation EVENT_STREAM_NOTHING -- event stream not actually required to be able to do anything, just be open. (#### This event-stream-operation stuff needs to be rethought.) Fixed describe_event() in event-Xt.c to print its output to a stream, not always to stderr, so it can be used elsewhere. (e.g. in print-event when a magic event is encountered?) lisp.h, lrecord.h: Define new assert_at_line(), for use in asserts inside of inline functions. The assert will report the line and file of the inline function, which is almost certainly not what you want as it's useless. what you want to see is where the pseudo-macro was called from. So, when error-checking is on, we pass in the line and file into the macros, for accurate printout using assert_at_line(). Happens only when error-checking is defined so doesn't slow down non-error-checking builds. Fix XCHAR, XINT, XCHAR_OR_INT, XFOO, and wrap_foo() in this fashion. lstream.c, lstream.h: Add resizing_buffer_to_lisp_string(). objects-gtk.c: Fix typo. objects-msw.c: Implement a smarter way of determining whether a font matches a charset. Formerly we just looked at the "script" element of the font spec, converted it to a code page, and compared it with the code page derived from the charset. Now, as well as doing this, we ask the font for the list of unicode ranges it supports, see what range the charset falls into (#### bogus! need to do this char-by-char), and see if any of the font's supported ranges include the charset's range. also do some caching in Vfont_signature_data of previous inquiries. charset.h, text.c, mule-charset.c: New fun; extracted out of Fmake_char() and declare prototype in charset.h. text.h: introduce assert_by_line() to make REP_BYTES_BY_FIRST_BYTE report the file and line more accurately in an assertion failure. unicode.c: make non-static (used in objects-msw.c), declare in charset.h. mule\mule-category.el: Start implementing a category API compatible with FSF. Not there yet. We need improvements to char-tables. mule\mule-charset.el: Copy translation table code from FSF 21.1 and fix up. Eventually we'll have them in XEmacs. (used in ccl) Not here quite yet, and we need some improvements to char-tables. mule\cyril-util.el, mule\cyrillic.el, mule\devan-util.el, mule\ethio-util.el, mule\korea-util.el, mule\mule-tty-init.el, mule\tibet-util.el, mule\viet-util.el, mule\vietnamese.el: Fix numerous compilation warnings. Fix up code related to translation tables and other types of char-tables. menubar-items.el: Move the frame commands from the View menu to the File menu, to be consistent with how most other programs do things. Move less-used revert/recover items to a submenu. Make "recover" not prompt for a file, but recover the current buffer. TODO.ben-mule-21-5: Create bug list for latest problems.
author ben
date Thu, 21 Mar 2002 07:31:30 +0000
parents 376386a54a3c
children
line wrap: on
line source

;;; This file is designed for 7-bit connections.
;;; Use the file ms-kermit if you have an 8-bit connection.

;;; This kermit script maps the IBM-PC keyboard for use with Gnu Emacs.
;;; The ALT key is used to generate Meta characters and, in conjunction
;;; with the CTRL key, Control-Meta characters.  A few other useful
;;; mappings are also performed.
;;; Andy Lowry, May 1989

;;; Exchange ESC and backquote... tilde stays put (shift-backquote)
set key \27 `
set key ` \27

;;; BACKSPACE deletes backward one character
set key scan \270 \127

;;; The following mappings affect certain special keys... all the keys
;;; are duplicated on the numeric keypad when NUM LOCK is off, but
;;; the keypad versions are NOT mapped (string definition space too small 
;;; for that)

;;; INSERT toggles overwrite mode
set key scan \4434 \27xoverwrite-mode\13
;;; HOME moves point to beginning of buffer
set key scan \4423 \27<
;;; PAGE-UP scrolls backward one screen
set key scan \4425 \27v
;;; DELETE deletes one character *forward*
set key scan \4435 \4
;;; END moves point to end of buffer
set key scan \4431 \27>
;;; PAGE-DOWN scrolls forward one screen
set key scan \4433 \22
;;; ARROW keys move in the appropriate directions
set key scan \4424 \16
set key scan \4427 \2
set key scan \4432 \14
set key scan \4429 \6

;;; META versions of all the printing characters except uppercase 
;;; letters are generated by using the ALT key.  The definition string 
;;; consists of an ESC character followed by the META-ized character.
;;; The characters are listed roughly left-to-right and top-to-bottom
;;; as they appear on the keyboard
set key scan \2345 \27`
set key scan \2424 \27\o61	; need to use char code, since digit
set key scan \2425 \27\o62	; would not terminate '\27'
set key scan \2426 \27\o63
set key scan \2427 \27\o64
set key scan \2428 \27\o65
set key scan \2429 \27\o66
set key scan \2430 \27\o67
set key scan \2431 \27\o70
set key scan \2432 \27\o71
set key scan \2433 \27\o60
set key scan \2434 \27\45
set key scan \2435 \27=
set key scan \2857 \27~
set key scan \2936 \27!
set key scan \2937 \27@
set key scan \2938 \27#
set key scan \2939 \27$
set key scan \2940 \27%
set key scan \2941 \27^
set key scan \2942 \27&
set key scan \2943 \27*
set key scan \2944 \27(
set key scan \2945 \27)
set key scan \2946 \27_
set key scan \2947 \27+
set key scan \2469 \27\9
set key scan \2320 \27q
set key scan \2321 \27w
set key scan \2322 \27e
set key scan \2323 \27r
set key scan \2324 \27t
set key scan \2325 \27y
set key scan \2326 \27u
set key scan \2327 \27i
set key scan \2328 \27o
set key scan \2329 \27p
set key scan \2330 \27[
set key scan \2842 \27{
set key scan \2331 \27]
set key scan \2843 \27}
set key scan \2347 \27\
set key scan \2859 \27|
set key scan \2334 \27a
set key scan \2335 \27s
set key scan \2336 \27d
set key scan \2337 \27f
set key scan \2338 \27g
set key scan \2339 \27h
set key scan \2340 \27j
set key scan \2341 \27k
set key scan \2342 \27l
set key scan \2343 \27\59
set key scan \2855 \27:
set key scan \2344 \27'
set key scan \2856 \27"
set key scan \2348 \27z
set key scan \2349 \27x
set key scan \2350 \27c
set key scan \2351 \27v
set key scan \2352 \27b
set key scan \2353 \27n
set key scan \2354 \27m
set key scan \2355 \27,
set key scan \2867 \27<
set key scan \2356 \27.
set key scan \2868 \27>
set key scan \2357 \27/
set key scan \2869 \27?

;;; CONTROL-META characters are generated by using both the CTRL and
;;; ALT keys simultaneously.  All the lowercase letters are included.
;;; The definition string consists of an ESC character followed by
;;; the control character corresponding to the letter.
set key scan \3344 \27\17
set key scan \3345 \27\23
set key scan \3346 \27\5
set key scan \3347 \27\18
set key scan \3348 \27\20
set key scan \3349 \27\25
set key scan \3350 \27\21
set key scan \3351 \27\9
set key scan \3352 \27\15
set key scan \3353 \27\16
set key scan \3358 \27\1
set key scan \3359 \27\19
set key scan \3360 \27\4
set key scan \3361 \27\6
set key scan \3362 \27\7
set key scan \3363 \27\8
set key scan \3364 \27\10
set key scan \3365 \27\11
set key scan \3366 \27\12
set key scan \3372 \27\26
set key scan \3373 \27\24
set key scan \3374 \27\3
set key scan \3375 \27\22
set key scan \3376 \27\2
set key scan \3377 \27\14
set key scan \3378 \27\13

end of msiem2.ini
------------------

msiema.hlp
-----------
Date:     Wed, 14 Sep 88 05:20:08 GMT
From:     spolsky@YALE.ARPA
Subject:  Using MS kermit 2.31 with emacs
Keywords: MS-DOS Kermit 2.31, EMACS, Meta Key

If you are using kermit (version 2.31 only) with emacs on a mainframe, the
following file may help you. It assigns all the Alt-keys so that the Alt key
may be used as a "Meta" shift, e.g. Alt-x produces M-x, etc.  Note that it
will distinguish correctly between upper and lower case and accepts all
printables. (If anybody has the patience to do the Meta-Ctrl combinations,
please post them!)  This actually sends "escapes" so you don't need 8 bits.
This file also sets up the cursor keys to behave as expected.

On extended keyboards (the ones with a separate cursor pad, like PS/2s) you
also get assignments for Page Up/Down, Home, End, Insert, Delete, etc.

Please let me know if you find any problems with this.

Joel Spolsky             bitnet: spolsky@yalecs     uucp: ...!yale!spolsky
Yale University          arpa:   spolsky@yale.edu   voicenet: 203-436-1483

[Ed. - Thanks, Joel!  Your key definitions file has been put in the kermit
distribution area as msiema.ini ("ms" for MS-Kermit, "i" because it's an
initialization file, "ema" for EMACS), along with this message as msiema.hlp.]

end of msiema.hlp
-----------------


msiema.ini
------------
; Emacs keyboard layout for Kermit 2.31
; by Joel Spolsky, Yale Univ.  Save this in a file, then
; initialize it by issuing the kermit command
; take filename
; It will set up the keyboard to allow ALT to be used
; as a meta-key, and will allow cursor keys to be used
; with emacs.

; First, define all the ALT keys to send ESC+key
; to simulate "meta"

set key \2320 \27q  ;; letters: unshifted
set key \2321 \27w
set key \2322 \27e
set key \2323 \27r
set key \2324 \27t
set key \2325 \27y
set key \2326 \27u
set key \2327 \27i
set key \2328 \27o
set key \2329 \27p
set key \2334 \27a
set key \2335 \27s
set key \2336 \27d
set key \2337 \27f
set key \2338 \27g
set key \2339 \27h
set key \2340 \27j
set key \2341 \27k
set key \2342 \27l
set key \2348 \27z
set key \2349 \27x
set key \2350 \27c
set key \2351 \27v
set key \2352 \27b
set key \2353 \27n
set key \2354 \27m
set key \2832 \27Q ;; letters: shifted
set key \2833 \27W
set key \2834 \27E
set key \2835 \27R
set key \2836 \27T
set key \2837 \27Y
set key \2838 \27U
set key \2839 \27I
set key \2840 \27O
set key \2841 \27P
set key \2846 \27A
set key \2847 \27S
set key \2848 \27D
set key \2849 \27F
set key \2850 \27G
set key \2851 \27H
set key \2852 \27J
set key \2853 \27K
set key \2854 \27L
set key \2860 \27Z
set key \2861 \27X
set key \2862 \27C
set key \2863 \27V
set key \2864 \27B
set key \2865 \27N
set key \2866 \27M
set key \2857 \27\126    ; ALT + ~   ;; special symbols begin here
set key \2345 \27\96     ; ALT + `
set key \2936 \27\33     ; ALT + !
set key \2937 \27\64     ; ALT + @
set key \2938 \27\35     ; ALT + #
set key \2939 \27\36     ; ALT + $
set key \2940 \27\37     ; ALT + %
set key \2941 \27\94     ; ALT + ^
set key \2942 \27\38     ; ALT + &
set key \2943 \27\42     ; ALT + *
set key \2944 \27\40     ; ALT + (
set key \2945 \27\41     ; ALT + )
set key \2946 \27\95     ; ALT + _
set key \2947 \27\43     ; ALT + +
set key \2842 \27\123    ; ALT + {
set key \2843 \27\125    ; ALT + }
set key \2330 \27\91     ; ALT + [
set key \2331 \27\93     ; ALT + ]
set key \2859 \27\124    ; ALT + :
set key \2347 \27\92     ; ALT + \
set key \2867 \27<       ; ALT + <
set key \2868 \27>       ; ALT + >
set key \2343 \27\59     ; ALT + ;
set key \2855 \27\58     ; ALT + :
set key \2344 \27\39     ; ALT + '
set key \2856 \27\34     ; ALT + "
set key \2355 \27\44     ; ALT + ,
set key \2356 \27\46     ; ALT + .
set key \2357 \27\47     ; ALT + /
set key \2869 \27\63     ; ALT + ?
set key \2424 \27\49  ;; numbers
set key \2425 \27\50
set key \2426 \27\51
set key \2427 \27\52
set key \2428 \27\53
set key \2429 \27\54
set key \2430 \27\55
set key \2431 \27\56
set key \2432 \27\57
set key \2433 \27\48

;; These 6 special keys for extended (PS/2) keyboards:
set key \4434 \25      ;; Insert is like ^Y - yank from kill ring
set key \4435 \23      ;; Delete is like ^W - kill to ring
set key \4423 \1       ;; Home is ^A
set key \4431 \5       ;; End is ^E
set key \4425 \27V     ;; Page up is Esc-V
set key \4433 \22      ;; Page dn is ^v

set key \328 \16       ;; up cursor is ^P
set key \331 \2        ;; left cursor is ^B
set key \333 \6        ;; right cursor is ^F
set key \336 \14       ;; down cursor is ^N
set key \4427 \2       ;; left cursor on extended kbd
set key \4432 \14      ;; down cursor on extended kbd
set key \4424 \16      ;; up cursor on extended kbd
set key \4429 \6       ;; right cursor on extended kbd

set key \5491 \27b     ;; ctrl-left cursor is M-b
set key \5492 \27f     ;; ctrl-right cursor is M-f

;; move kermit's screen scroll (playback) features to Alt- Home,End,PgUp,PgDn
;; (this is an issue for extended keyboards only)

set key \2455 \khomscn
set key \2463 \kendscn
set key \2457 \kupscn
set key \2465 \kdnscn