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From: | Peter Dyballa |
Subject: | Re: Alt vs Meta - Sun keyboard, redhat linux |
Date: | Tue, 4 Jan 2011 23:47:59 +0100 |
Am 04.01.2011 um 18:12 schrieb chengiz:
On Jan 3, 5:53 pm, Peter Dyballa <Peter_Dyba...@Web.DE> wrote:Why do you think the Alt and Meta key modifiers have something to do with MS Losedos?Where do I think that?
Because you inserted the link to some "Windows-Keyboard".
I think the missing piece is what emacs is doing with Alt_L, as in why it is not processing it as A-.Here's my xmodmap output: shift Shift_L (0x32), Shift_R (0x3e) lock Caps_Lock (0x42) control Control_L (0x25), Control_R (0x6d) mod1 Alt_L (0x40), Alt_R (0x71), Alt_L (0x7d) mod2 Num_Lock (0x4d) mod3 mod4 Meta_L (0x73), Meta_R (0x74), Super_L (0x7f), Hyper_L (0x80), Meta_L (0x9c) mod5 Mode_switch (0x5d), ISO_Level3_Shift (0x7c) I cant tell what to put in my xmodmaprc to make sure emacs behaves correctly.
Modifier 5 cannot be Meta, Super, and Hyper altogether.When you launch GNU Emacs with -Q, without any customisation, does it still interpret Alt as Meta? If so, then my assumption about the parity of the modifiers is wrong and it plays a role that mod1 is Meta and mod2 or mod3 is Alt. Then Hyper and maybe Super can follow, but I think Mode_switch is more important, since it's the compose key, which allows to type ΓΈ as o / etc. Num_Lock can be pretty useless.
In case Alt and Meta work correctly in 'emacs -Q', then something in your or your system's customisation (init files) is exchanging them.
-- Greetings PeteWhen people run around and around in circles we say they are crazy. When planets do it we say they are orbiting.
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