On Fri, Oct 28, 2016 at 11:12 PM, Terry Reedy <tjre...@udel.edu> wrote: > The only specification he has given is reference to the BASIC INKEY$ > variable. I don't know how consistent this was across different BASICs. I > looked in Microsoft's GW-BASIC reference and it says that it returns '', > 'x', or '0x'. This latter represents an extended code "described in > Appendix C'. However, Appendix C only lists the standard ASCII codes 000 to > 128. So I do not know what else was available and would not know from this > book how to emulate GW-BASIC INKEY$.
The return values from INKEY$ are CHR$(0) + "H" for up-arrow, "P" for down-arrow, and I think "K" and "L" for left and right. F1 is CHR$(0) + ";", and the next nine function keys are the subsequent ASCII characters (";<=>?@ABCD"), although F11 and F12 are different, and I don't remember what they are. The codes don't really have any meaning in ASCII - they're just the scan codes, as represented in strings. (CHR$(0) is equivalent to "\0" in saner languages.) This is from memory, but I spent a *ton* of time in BASIC in my earlier days, and there are things you never forget :) ChrisA -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list