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Re: Using ergonomic shortcuts and cua mode


From: Lennart Borgman
Subject: Re: Using ergonomic shortcuts and cua mode
Date: Sat, 17 Apr 2010 15:54:45 +0200

You could try binding ctl-x-map to a new key and removing it from Ctrl-X.


On Sat, Apr 17, 2010 at 9:47 AM, Markus Haider
<markus.haider@student.uibk.ac.at> wrote:
> Thank you very much, (define-key cua--cua-keys-keymap [(meta ?v)] nil)
> worked.
>
> Do you also know how I could move the C-x prefix to a different
> combination?
>
> Greetings,
> Markus
>
> Am Samstag, den 17.04.2010, 02:18 +0200 schrieb Lennart Borgman:
>> On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 3:17 PM, Markus Haider <markus.haider@uibk.ac.at> 
>> wrote:
>> > Hi,
>> >
>> > I use Emacs 23 with the ergonomic shortcuts
>> > http://xahlee.org/emacs/ergonomic_emacs_keybinding.html
>> > However, when I also use cua-mode at the same time, M-v gets bound to
>> > cua-repeat-replace-region. Is there a way to keep M-v bound to yank?
>> >
>> > One possible solution would be to work without cua-mode, and I could
>> > manually define the shortcuts C-c, C-v, C-x. However I cannot change C-x
>> > via global-set-key as it is a prefix. I would not mind to move the
>> > Control-X-prefix to another key, but I don't know how to do it...
>>
>> I think you can undefine M-v in the cua keymap where it is defined, like 
>> this:
>>
>> (define-key cua--cua-keys-keymap [(meta ?v)] nil)
>>
>>
>> Tip: In nXhtml there is a modified version of the normal "C-h c" help
>> that shows the key binding + the key map where it is bound. This
>> latter is a guess, but most of the time it is correct. I bind this
>> command to "f1 c":
>>
>>   <f1> c runs the command describe-key-and-map-briefly, which is an
>>   interactive compiled Lisp function in `ourcomments-util.el'.
>>
>>
>
>
>




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