On Tue, 10 Feb 2015 15:05:47 -0600, Skip Montanaro wrote: [snip] > One of the things I really like about my Skype keyboard (and likely > other "soft" keyboards on Android) is that when you hold down a "key" > for a brief moment, a little mini keyboard pops up, from which you can > easily choose various accented variants and other symbols. [snip] > (C-u 2 5 - suffices in Emacs to > bat out 25 hyphens). Being an American with an American keyboard, I > haven't the slightest idea how to type any accented characters or > common symbols using the many modifier keys on my keyboard, and no key > caps display what the various options are. And I'm getting kind of > tired of going to Google and searching for "degree symbol". :-/ [snip]
Again, not what you asked for, but since you use Emacs . . . Are you aware of Emacs's control-backslash ("toggle-input-method") command? If I'm going to be writing French or Spanish, I hit control-backslash and type "latin-prefix". Then, until I hit control-backslash again, "'e" becomes é, "~n" becomes ñ, '"o' becomes ö, and many other not-too-hard-to-remember things. Many other "input methods" are available for other languages. It's actually reminiscent of how Spanish typewriters used to work, with an accent key that didn't advance the carriage. -- To email me, substitute nowhere->runbox, invalid->com. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list