Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view lisp/term/linux.el @ 867:804517e16990
[xemacs-hg @ 2002-06-05 09:54:39 by ben]
Textual renaming: text/char names
abbrev.c, alloc.c, buffer.c, buffer.h, bytecode.c, callint.c, casefiddle.c, casetab.c, charset.h, chartab.c, chartab.h, cmds.c, console-gtk.h, console-msw.c, console-msw.h, console-stream.c, console-tty.c, console-x.c, console-x.h, console.h, data.c, device-msw.c, device-x.c, dialog-msw.c, dired-msw.c, dired.c, doc.c, doprnt.c, editfns.c, eldap.c, emodules.c, eval.c, event-Xt.c, event-gtk.c, event-msw.c, event-stream.c, event-unixoid.c, events.c, events.h, file-coding.c, file-coding.h, fileio.c, filelock.c, fns.c, font-lock.c, frame-gtk.c, frame-msw.c, frame-x.c, frame.c, glyphs-eimage.c, glyphs-msw.c, glyphs-x.c, glyphs.c, glyphs.h, gpmevent.c, gui-x.c, gui-x.h, gui.c, gui.h, hpplay.c, indent.c, insdel.c, insdel.h, intl-win32.c, keymap.c, line-number.c, line-number.h, lisp-disunion.h, lisp-union.h, lisp.h, lread.c, lrecord.h, lstream.c, lstream.h, md5.c, menubar-msw.c, menubar-x.c, menubar.c, minibuf.c, mule-ccl.c, mule-charset.c, mule-coding.c, mule-wnnfns.c, ndir.h, nt.c, objects-gtk.c, objects-gtk.h, objects-msw.c, objects-tty.c, objects-x.c, objects.c, objects.h, postgresql.c, print.c, process-nt.c, process-unix.c, process.c, procimpl.h, realpath.c, redisplay-gtk.c, redisplay-msw.c, redisplay-output.c, redisplay-tty.c, redisplay-x.c, redisplay.c, redisplay.h, regex.c, search.c, select-common.h, select-gtk.c, select-x.c, sound.h, symbols.c, syntax.c, syntax.h, sysdep.c, sysdep.h, sysdir.h, sysfile.h, sysproc.h, syspwd.h, systime.h, syswindows.h, termcap.c, tests.c, text.c, text.h, toolbar-common.c, tooltalk.c, ui-gtk.c, unexnt.c, unicode.c, win32.c: Text/char naming rationalization.
[a] distinguish between "charptr" when it refers to operations on
the pointer itself and when it refers to operations on text; and
[b] use consistent naming for everything referring to internal
format, i.e.
Itext == text in internal format
Ibyte == a byte in such text
Ichar == a char as represented in internal character format
thus e.g.
set_charptr_emchar -> set_itext_ichar
The pre and post tags on either side of this change are:
pre-internal-format-textual-renaming
post-internal-format-textual-renaming
See the Internals Manual for details of exactly how this was done,
how to handle the change in your workspace, etc.
author | ben |
---|---|
date | Wed, 05 Jun 2002 09:58:45 +0000 |
parents | 11502791fc1c |
children | 8d7c4af1d6af |
line wrap: on
line source
;;; linux.el --- define function key sequences for the Linux console ;; Author: Ben Wing ;; Keywords: terminals ;; Copyright (C) 1996 Ben Wing. ;; This file is part of XEmacs. ;; XEmacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it ;; under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by ;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) ;; any later version. ;; XEmacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but ;; WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of ;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU ;; General Public License for more details. ;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License ;; along with XEmacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the Free ;; Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA ;; 02111-1307, USA. ;;; Synched up with: FSF 21.0.103. ;;; (All the define-keys are our own.) ;;; Commentary: ;;; Code: ;; The Linux console handles Latin-1 by default. (if-fboundp 'set-terminal-coding-system (unless (declare-fboundp (terminal-coding-system)) (set-terminal-coding-system 'iso-8859-1))) ;; Make Latin-1 input characters work, too. ;; Meta will continue to work, because the kernel ;; turns that into Escape. (let ((value (current-input-mode))) ;; The third arg only matters in that it is not t or nil. (set-input-mode (nth 0 value) (nth 1 value) 'iso-latin-1 (nth 3 value))) ;; The defines below seem to get automatically set in recent Termcaps. ;; It was probably the case that in 1996, there was no good Linux termcap, ;; which is why such a file was needed. ; ;; Termcap or terminfo should set these next four? ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[A" [up]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[B" [down]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[C" [right]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[D" [left]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[[A" [f1]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[[B" [f2]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[[C" [f3]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[[D" [f4]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[[E" [f5]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[17~" [f6]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[18~" [f7]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[19~" [f8]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[20~" [f9]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[21~" [f10]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[23~" [f11]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[24~" [f12]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[25~" [f13]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[26~" [f14]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[28~" [f15]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[29~" [f16]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[31~" [f17]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[32~" [f18]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[33~" [f19]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[34~" [f20]) ;; But they come out f13-f20 (see above), which are not what we ;; normally call the shifted function keys. F11 = Shift-F1, F2 = ;; Shift-F2. What a mess, see below. (define-key function-key-map "\e[25~" [(shift f3)]) (define-key function-key-map "\e[26~" [(shift f4)]) (define-key function-key-map "\e[28~" [(shift f5)]) (define-key function-key-map "\e[29~" [(shift f6)]) (define-key function-key-map "\e[31~" [(shift f7)]) (define-key function-key-map "\e[32~" [(shift f8)]) (define-key function-key-map "\e[33~" [(shift f9)]) (define-key function-key-map "\e[34~" [(shift f10)]) ;; I potentially considered these. They would make people's Shift-F1 and ;; Shift-F2 bindings work -- but of course they would fail to work if the ;; person also put F11 and F12 bindings. It might also be confusing because ;; the person with no bindings who hits f11 gets "error shift-f1 unbound". ;; #### If only there were a proper way around this. ;(define-key global-map 'f11 [(shift f1)]) ;(define-key global-map 'f12 [(shift f2)]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[1~" [home]) ;; seems to not get handled correctly automatically (define-key function-key-map "\e[2~" [insert]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[3~" [delete]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[4~" [end]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[5~" [prior]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[6~" [next]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\e[G" [kp-5]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\eOp" [kp-0]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\eOq" [kp-1]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\eOr" [kp-2]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\eOs" [kp-3]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\eOt" [kp-4]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\eOu" [kp-5]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\eOv" [kp-6]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\eOw" [kp-7]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\eOx" [kp-8]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\eOy" [kp-9]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\eOl" [kp-add]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\eOS" [kp-subtract]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\eOM" [kp-enter]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\eOR" [kp-multiply]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\eOQ" [kp-divide]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\eOn" [kp-decimal]) ; (define-key function-key-map "\eOP" [kp-numlock]) ;;; linux.el ends here