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From: | Chap Harrison |
Subject: | Re: Looking for the "best" notation for key-binding |
Date: | Fri, 21 Sep 2012 09:27:37 -0600 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux i686; rv:15.0) Gecko/20120827 Thunderbird/15.0 |
On 09/21/2012 03:24 AM, Peter Dyballa wrote:
Am 21.09.2012 um 01:11 schrieb Chap Harrison:Isn't there a single, simple, consistent way to create key bindings that will always work?I think the vector notation is a good choice: (global-set-key [C-∫] 'backward-sexp) ; A-C-b (global-set-key [M-S-return] 'other-window) (global-set-key [f1 f5] 'apropos-variable) (global-set-key [f3] 'compare-windows) (global-set-key [A-f1] 'replace-string)
That looks and sounds straightforward enough.I don't know elisp. Is there an exhaustive list of how to express all of the key chords using vector notation? For instance, I wouldn't have guessed that the 'return' key was denoted by 'return' - I usually see it written RET.
As to my problem with C-; I strongly suspect my binding is getting stomped by C++ mode. So I'd also appreciate some guidelines on what keys to use or avoid.
Chap
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