Wanrong> > > What I did is:
Wanrong> > > Add some alternative TTY key bindings for some
frequently used
Wanrong> commands,
Wanrong> > > and use "AutoHotkey" to map things like "M-RET" to
those TTY key
Wanrong> > > bindings. Not ideal, but works fine.
Manish> >
Yes, your understanding is correct (I use that for SSH session into my
remote Linux box). The biggest benefit I got from AutoHotKey is now I
can use the right Alt key in Putty sessions, since I mapped the right
Alt key to the left Alt key.
I don't understand why under Putty, a lot of control key
On Fri, Mar 14, 2008 at 8:55 PM, Wanrong Lin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> What I did is:
> Add some alternative TTY key bindings for some frequently used commands,
> and use "AutoHotkey" to map things like "M-RET" to those TTY key
> bindings. Not ideal, but works fine.
>
If I understand you cor
Hi,
maybe one of you guys would like to summarize the different options
together with examples in a longer message to the mailing list, so
that we can make a link in the FAQ to this summary? This kind of
technical discussions should really be documented there.
- Carsten
On Mar 14, 2008,
What I did is:
Add some alternative TTY key bindings for some frequently used commands,
and use "AutoHotkey" to map things like "M-RET" to those TTY key
bindings. Not ideal, but works fine.
Wanrong
Thanks for the pointer. But it really is going to be inconvenient.
Shift-arrow works okay in
On Fri, Mar 14, 2008 at 5:59 PM, Giovanni Ridolfi
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> --- Tim O'Callaghan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ha
> scritto:
> > > On 14/03/2008, Manish
> > > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I personally run the XEmacs windows native port.
> > http://www.xemacs.org/Download/win32/ind
--- Tim O'Callaghan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ha
scritto:
> > On 14/03/2008, Manish
> > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I personally run the XEmacs windows native port.
> http://www.xemacs.org/Download/win32/index.html
>
> There is an up to the minute windows Emacs port:
> http://ntemacs.sourceforge.net/