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bug#20499: bug#16082: bug#20499: [PROPOSED PATCH] C-x 8 shorthands for c
From: |
Eli Zaretskii |
Subject: |
bug#20499: bug#16082: bug#20499: [PROPOSED PATCH] C-x 8 shorthands for curved quotes, Euro, etc. |
Date: |
Mon, 04 May 2015 19:31:34 +0300 |
> From: Ivan Shmakov <ivan@siamics.net>
> Date: Mon, 04 May 2015 16:12:28 +0000
>
> >>>>> Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> writes:
> >>>>> From: Ivan Shmakov Date: Mon, 04 May 2015 15:20:56 +0000
>
> […]
>
> >> I tend to agree with that, but is there currently an easy way to
> >> switch between /two/ input methods?
>
> > I simply use "C-u C-\".
>
> Given that I edit texts which may be deemed bilingual (Russian
> prose interspersed with source code or command line examples)
> not just occasionally, /and/ need C-s, C-r at that, – no,
> I don’t think it’d work all that well for me.
Don't you have a dual-language keyboard on your system that can switch
languages without Emacs being involved? Input methods are for
characters not directly supported by your keyboard; most systems have
at least 2, sometimes 3 different languages switchable by a hot key.
IOW, I won't expect you to need an input method to type Cyrillic
characters.
> > Granted, if every 2nd character you type is U+2018, switching input
> > methods is gonna hurt.
>
> It’s not that bad, but still; consider, e. g.:
>
> «Ты пророк», вскричал я, «вещий! Птица ты иль дух зловещий,
> Этим Небом, что над нами — Богом скрытым навсегда —
> Заклинаю, умоляя, мне сказать, — в пределах Рая
> Мне откроется ль святая, что средь ангелов всегда,
> Та, которую Ленорой в небесах зовут всегда?»
> Каркнул Ворон: «Никогда».
>
> Nine such characters per 43 words.
Those aren't quotes Paul was talking about. Those are Cyrillic-style
quotes frequently used in Cyrillic languages, and I'd expect them to
be directly available from your keyboard.
Paul's use case is with the original of this poem.
> > But that's not what happens normally, at least not to me, and you
> > save those Alt-[ etc. for more useful tasks.
>
> My ‘Alt’ is ‘Meta’ most of the time, so it’s rather C-x 8 [,
> C-x 8 ], etc. for me, and reserving that for typography isn’t
> really a big deal.
That's exactly the issue: most keyboards will have Alt taken already,
and typing "C-x 8 [" is a PITA, IMO. By contrast, 'C-\ "' is easy.
But if there are people who'd like to go iso-transl way, who am I to
object?
- bug#20499: [PROPOSED PATCH] C-x 8 shorthands for curved quotes, Euro, etc., Paul Eggert, 2015/05/03
- bug#20499: [PROPOSED PATCH] C-x 8 shorthands for curved quotes, Euro, etc., Eli Zaretskii, 2015/05/04
- bug#16082: bug#20499: [PROPOSED PATCH] C-x 8 shorthands for curved quotes, Euro, etc., Ivan Shmakov, 2015/05/04
- bug#20499: bug#16082: bug#20499: [PROPOSED PATCH] C-x 8 shorthands for curved quotes, Euro, etc., Eli Zaretskii, 2015/05/04
- bug#20499: bug#16082: bug#20499: [PROPOSED PATCH] C-x 8 shorthands for curved quotes, Euro, etc., Ivan Shmakov, 2015/05/04
- bug#20499: bug#16082: bug#20499: [PROPOSED PATCH] C-x 8 shorthands for curved quotes, Euro, etc.,
Eli Zaretskii <=
- bug#20499: C-x 8 shorthands for curved quotes, Euro, etc., Ivan Shmakov, 2015/05/04
- bug#20499: C-x 8 shorthands for curved quotes, Euro, etc., Eli Zaretskii, 2015/05/04
- bug#20499: bug#16082: bug#20499: [PROPOSED PATCH] C-x 8 shorthands for curved quotes, Euro, etc., Stefan Monnier, 2015/05/04
bug#20499: [PROPOSED PATCH] C-x 8 shorthands for curved quotes, Euro, etc., Paul Eggert, 2015/05/04
bug#20499: [PROPOSED PATCH] C-x 8 shorthands for curved quotes, Euro, etc., Richard Stallman, 2015/05/04
- bug#20499: [PROPOSED PATCH] C-x 8 shorthands for curved quotes, Euro, etc., Eli Zaretskii, 2015/05/04
- bug#20499: [PROPOSED PATCH] C-x 8 shorthands for curved quotes, Euro, etc., Ivan Shmakov, 2015/05/04
- bug#20499: [PROPOSED PATCH] C-x 8 shorthands for curved quotes, Euro, etc., Eli Zaretskii, 2015/05/04
- bug#20499: C-x 8 shorthands for curved quotes, Euro, etc., Ivan Shmakov, 2015/05/04
- bug#20499: C-x 8 shorthands for curved quotes, Euro, etc., Stefan Monnier, 2015/05/04