On Sun, Jul 30, 2006 at 12:51:24AM +0200, Christopher Zimmermann wrote:
> Hi!
>
> I wrote a small daemon in perl which listens for keystrokes on
> the /dev/input/event[0123] input event devices and executes small
> commands or even complex scripts when certain keys are pressed.
>
> I know that th
also sprach Christopher Zimmermann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2006.07.30.1129 +0100]:
> But hey, this one-liner could be included in the examples since the
> daemon supports scripts. But one question: This will not preserve the
> users environment, will it?
It will overwrite XAUTHORITY, of course, but d
On Sun, 30 Jul 2006 02:15:17 +0300
George Danchev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sunday 30 July 2006 01:51, Christopher Zimmermann wrote:
> > Hi!
>
> Hi,
>
> > I wrote a small daemon in perl which listens for keystrokes on
> > the /dev/input/event[0123] input event devices and executes small
>
also sprach Christopher Zimmermann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2006.07.29.2351 +0100]:
> I know that there are already tools performing similar tasks like
> hotkeys. But all of them rely on X. My script will work even without a
> xserver running. The downside of this approach is that you cannot use
> the
On Sunday 30 July 2006 01:51, Christopher Zimmermann wrote:
> Hi!
Hi,
> I wrote a small daemon in perl which listens for keystrokes on
> the /dev/input/event[0123] input event devices and executes small
> commands or even complex scripts when certain keys are pressed.
>
> I know that there are al
Hi!
I wrote a small daemon in perl which listens for keystrokes on
the /dev/input/event[0123] input event devices and executes small
commands or even complex scripts when certain keys are pressed.
I know that there are already tools performing similar tasks like
hotkeys. But all of them rely on X
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