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Re: C-M-anything gives no response
From: |
Le Wang |
Subject: |
Re: C-M-anything gives no response |
Date: |
9 Jul 2006 13:32:15 -0700 |
User-agent: |
G2/0.2 |
Robin Wilson wrote:
> Eli Zaretskii wrote:
> >
> > Also, does it help to invoke "emacs -nw -q"? Perhaps your .emacs
> > customizations are the culprit?
> >
>
> Hi
>
> I have in fact managaged to solve it, as I was writing this email to you
> I thought of something to check, and found that it was the problem! It
> was a binding I had in my .emacs which had never worked properly so I'd
> stopped using, but I'd left in my .emacs. It bound TAB to a function
> called indent-or-complete which meant that TAB either indented the line,
> or completed it if there was something to complete. Obviously in W32
> Emacs this was causing some problems, and removing that binding has made
> it all work again.
So, that binding worked for you in TTY mode? Strange.
If you had to use "emacs -q -nw" to get it to work. That is a very
revealing piece of information, which would've been helpful when you
posed your question. Always use "emacs -q" to try to repro your
problem; and if the problem goes away with "-q", suspect your init
files.
> Thanks for your help in solving this problem, and I'll try using W32
> Emacs with Cygwin now. How is it best to set it up so that I can run
> emacs filename in my cygwin terminal and get W32 emacs to load?
Look into gnuclient/gnuserv to run only one emacs session. You can
send files to emacs in the same way you get cygwin to interoperate with
other "native" programs:
% gnuclient `cygpwth -w <file>`
Emacs understands "-m" paths too. You only need to do this for unix
style absolute paths, e.b. /usr/* /home/*, it should "just work" for
relative paths.
--
Le