* On 2016 05 Jan 10:39 -0600, Thomas Beierlein wrote: > Here just a test with your program for the PgUp and PgDn on three > terminals: > > > xfce terminal xterm rxvt > Ctrl-PgUp -- 550 kPRV5 530 kPRV5 > Ctrl-PgDn -- 545 kNXT5 528 kNXT5 > Alt-PgUp 548 kPRV3 548 kPRV5 338 KEY_NPAGE > Alt-PgDn 543 kNXT3 543 kNXT5 339 KEY_PPAGE
Ahh, RXVT, I recall why I dumped it years ago. ;-) > By the way there is a very easy way to check the plain keycodes from a > terminal. Just type > > $ cat<enter> > > and then you will get all key sequences for any key you press (minus > the ones that your terminal strips out - e.g. for Ctrl-PgUp/PgDn in > xfce terminal). I was never very good at interpreting line noise. ;-) ^[[5;5~^[[6;5~^C That's Ctl-PgUp Ctl-PgDn Ctl-C. Which is why discovering 'showkey -a' was so helpful to me: ^[[5;5~ 27 0033 0x1b 91 0133 0x5b 53 0065 0x35 59 0073 0x3b 53 0065 0x35 126 0176 0x7e ^[[6;5~ 27 0033 0x1b 91 0133 0x5b 54 0066 0x36 59 0073 0x3b 53 0065 0x35 126 0176 0x7e The numeric values are very easy to test in C code and the same character representation is given. I also have Qterm installed and it seems to follow the other desktop terminals for key codes. So far Gnome Terminal as found in Debian Jessie may be my choice of terminal since the shortcuts can be easily disabled. Now if I can convince it to start on X Display 1 instead of 0 I'll be happy. 73, Nate -- "The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true." Ham radio, Linux, bikes, and more: http://www.n0nb.us _______________________________________________ Tlf-devel mailing list Tlf-devel@nongnu.org https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/tlf-devel