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Re: [PATCH] Let input queue deal gracefully with up-events
From: |
David Kastrup |
Subject: |
Re: [PATCH] Let input queue deal gracefully with up-events |
Date: |
Wed, 28 Jan 2015 20:50:34 +0100 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/25.0.50 (gnu/linux) |
Stefan Monnier <address@hidden> writes:
>> * keyboard.c (apply_modifiers_uncached, parse_solitary_modifier)
>> (parse_modifiers_uncached): React gracefully to "up-" modifiers:
>> those may easily be injected by user-level Lisp code.
>
> Can you provide some context? When would Lisp code inject events with
> an "up-" modifier?
How else would you want to call the key release from a piano keyboard?
It is basically auxiliary information that can often be discarded: the
key press event is much more important when using a piano keyboard.
I'll append my current context. Note that when you remove the code
pre-filling the modifier-cache (and haven't applied the given patch),
Emacs will crash when you press (actually when you release) a key on the
connected Midi keyboard, generating a [Ch1 up-C_4] event (for example).
The long-term goal is to integrate Midi event generation into the Emacs
binary. But at the current point of time, I am still experimenting
around with figuring out just what information should arrive in what
form, and feeding Emacs with such non-native events should be possible
as well.
If you don't have actual Midi hardware, install vmpk (a virtual Midi
keyboard) and do
sudo insmod snd_virmidi
then use the "Connections" menu of vmpk for connecting the keyboard
output to the first virtual Midi device, load the attached file, and
then do M-x midikbd-open RET RET in order to have keypresses and
releases from the keyboard arrive in Emacs. If the "... is undefined"
messages are not helpful enough, try
M-: (while t (message "%S" (read-event))) RET
to see more details. End with C-g of course.
--
David Kastrup
midi-kbd3.el
Description: application/emacs-lisp