Actually, even better would be if someone implemented the same thing in
vim. I looked at vimscript, and although it's much less flexible than
Emacs, it should certainly be possible.

Regards,
Elias


On 27 April 2014 19:03, Juergen Sauermann <juergen.sauerm...@t-online.de>wrote:

>  Hi Elias,
>
> cool!
>
> I guess I will change to emacs if vi stops working  :-) .
>
> /// Jürgen
>
>
>
> On 04/27/2014 12:48 PM, Elias Mårtenson wrote:
>
> I'm sure you all are annoyed with me for constantly plugging Emacs, but I
> just can't help myself.
>
>  The Emacs mode will display Jürgens keymap help in a separate window,
> automatically updated to correspond the the current active keymap. :-)
>
>  Regards,
> Elias
>
>
> On 27 April 2014 18:02, Juergen Sauermann 
> <juergen.sauerm...@t-online.de>wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> at some point in time I started writing a dynamic ]keyb. But then people
>> started
>> to complain about me using xmodmap (too old, too static, etc) and we now
>> have
>> several other methods as well (see README-3-keyboard).
>>
>> The downside is that it has become almost impossible to figure the
>> current keyboard layout.
>>
>> /// Jürgen
>>
>>
>>
>> On 04/27/2014 05:43 AM, Blake McBride wrote:
>>
>>> ]keyb prints out a diagram of an APL keyboard.  Very helpful.  The
>>> problem is it appears to be static.  It doesn't reflect the actual keyboard
>>> mapping you are using.  I kind of doubt APL could figure this out
>>> dynamically, but I wonder if there isn't a better solution.
>>>
>>> Blake
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
>

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