Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view lisp/term/linux.el @ 2417:8b907450718f
[xemacs-hg @ 2004-12-05 08:48:12 by ben]
The section on Troubleshooting (now 2.3) has been completely written and
includes a lot of stuff that is not properly documented anywhere else. A
fair amount of obsolete info has been deleted and I've incorporated the
comments that people (mostly Stephen T) made. Former chapter 3 has been
split up in two, one pertaining to basic I/O and the other to external I/O.
What were formerly chapters 5 and 6 no longer exist as such; the info in
them has been distributed across various other chapters. Old chapter 4 got
split up, part going to the new chapter 4 on external I/O and part going to
the new chapter 5 on the Internet. In this new chapter, stuff not
pertaining to a specific package (e.g. VM or GNUS) was taken out of
package-specific sections and a general mail section was constituted. Part
of old chapter 5 remains in a new chapter 6 devoted to Emacs Lisp and other
advanced stuff, and a section from old chapter 3 on basic init-file Lisp
and some stuff from old chapter 5 on Info. The rest of chapter 5 was just
misc and has gotten scattered to the winds (mostly in chapters 3 and 4).
Old chapter 6 has also gotten quite scattered; there is no longer any
section specifically devoted to Windows except one of the Installation
sections (along with a section specfically devoted to Unix), and the rest
has moved to join the appropriate non-Windows-specific section elsewhere.
A lot of chapters had their sections rearranged and likewise for sections
having entries rearranged, with the intention that the new arrangement
should be more natural. In general I hope that stuff should be much easier
to locate. I also rewrote the entries on the relation between XEmacs and
GNU Emacs on the authors of XEmacs, including lots of info on who wrote
specific subsections. However, this history is certainly not complete; I
hope people will look over this and fix it up as necessary.
author | ben |
---|---|
date | Sun, 05 Dec 2004 08:48:12 +0000 |
parents | 8d7c4af1d6af |
children | 308d34e9f07d |
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;;; 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-8859-1 (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