On Monday, November 27, 2017 at 8:07:47 PM UTC+5:30, Chris Angelico wrote: > On Tue, Nov 28, 2017 at 1:25 AM, Rustom Mody wrote: > > You could go one step more sophisticated and use TeX-input method > > (C-x RET C-\) > > After which \'e will collapse as ÄC > > â £Yeah ok but how the ^)*^$# am I to remember the mantra \'e?!â Ø you may ask > > Trueâ | So as you rightly do, > > - pick it up from google > > - put emacs into tex input mode > > - paste from google into emacs > > - place point on the new char and type C-u C-x = > > Among other things emacs will helpfully inform you (among other things) > > to input: type "\'{e}" or "\'e" with TeX input method > > Which is closely related to the Compose key input method that I use. > First, you assign a key on your keyboard to be Compose (at least on > all my systems, there isn't one by default); I use the key between > left Ctrl and left Alt.
Ha Ha So you wont speak the unspeakable?â¿!â¡ I also have my compose set (to Capslock) And I entered those chars above with C?? and C!! where C is Capslock I most frequently use that for âçÆ (C=>) âåÆ (C->) â1 (C^1) âéü (C_1) etc One can find other goodies at /usr/share/X11/locale/en_US.UTF-8/Compose I didn't start with mentioning that to Skip because his basic requirement (as I got it) was that - input method should be OS-neutral - emacs can be assumed And so the only OS-non-neutrality that I am aware of is that sometimes Alt works as Meta (gui-emacsen) and sometimes not terminal/text emacsen (typically, though I believe some ppl successfully tweak this also) And so M-x can mean Alt-x (chord) or ESC-x (sequence) and a few such anomalies But beyond that emacsen should be same for all OSes (modulo versions)
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