> If you need a full time ESC key then you are just "typing it wrong" as Steve > Jobs > would say if he wasn't dead.
Shouldn't the use of ESC, C-[, Alt, or some other mapped key be treated as a valid personal preference? I've been using some variety of Emacs (there have been many) since the early 80s on many different operating systems, with keyboards (or terminals - think VT100, VT52, or ADM3a) of all types. I think when I first started using Gosmacs on a VMS machine, ESC was the prefix key, and Alt wasn't used. Over the years, I have remapped the backtick and Caps Lock, keys, used C-[ or Alt, none of which I find suitable, either because I don't wind up with the same setup across multiple machines (what's the Windows equivalent of xmodmap?), the darn thing moves around (Sun and PC101 keyboards were always different), is hidden (Alt keys are always hiding somewhere under my left or right hands), or actually use those remapped keys for useful stuff already. By-in-large, the ESC key has remained in the same place on all the keyboards I've ever used. I trust that a soft ESC key on the Touch Bar will probably be in just about the right place. My fingers know where the ESC key is without thinking. I use multiple platforms from time-to-time (typing right now on a Dell keyboard connected to a Windows machine running Remote Desktop to connect to a DMZ-hosted Windows machine). My current aging MBP has a physical ESC key, as does the Apple keyboard attached to my wife's iMac (which I sometimes use). I'm specifically interested in how the lack of a physical ESC key affects people who do are used to the real deal. If nobody has any experience because the Touch-Bar-equipped MBPs are too new, that's fine. I thought some people would have purchased it by now. Skip -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list