On Aug 19 13:55, Andrew DeFaria wrote:
> I understand, however even as a vi user you use the "j" and "k" keys for
> up and down movement, the "h" and "l" keys for left and right movement
> and the "w" for word forward forward, "b" for word back no? I've always
> heard that the reason for that is
Corinna Vinschen wrote:
As vi user I'm not a real emacs person. I'm using the cursor keys a
lot in tcsh, especially to scroll through the history, so it's quite
helpful to do all moving using the cursor keys in tcsh, imho.
I understand, however even as a vi user you use the "j" and "k" keys for
On Aug 18 12:27, Andrew DeFaria wrote:
> Corinna Vinschen wrote:
>
> >On Aug 18 10:50, Corinna Vinschen wrote:
> >>It just doesn't work for a Cygwin rxvt window. For some reason it does
> >>neither recognize Alt + Cursor, nor Ctrl + Cursor keys for me.
> >^
> >scratch that, I was c
Corinna Vinschen wrote:
On Aug 18 10:50, Corinna Vinschen wrote:
It just doesn't work for a Cygwin rxvt window. For some reason it does
neither recognize Alt + Cursor, nor Ctrl + Cursor keys for me.
^
scratch that, I was confused.
Corinna
A real emacs person would use Alt-F (f
On Aug 18 10:50, Corinna Vinschen wrote:
> It just doesn't work for a Cygwin rxvt window. For some reason it does
> neither recognize Alt + Cursor, nor Ctrl + Cursor keys for me.
^
scratch that, I was confused.
Co
Hi,
this time I need help.
I'm used to using xterm for all my terminal needs usually. Yesterday I
tested a scenario which would call for using rxvt in non-X11 mode. All
is fine, except that I'm unable to use my keyboard layout as I'm used to
it.
I'm working under tcsh in emacs edit mode and wh
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