markus schnalke dixit (2008-04-24, 08:37): > Antoni Grzymala <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Martin Sander dixit (2008-04-24, 01:27): > > > > Which, in my case, is mapped to the control-key > > so you're probably an emacs user ;-9 > vi friends would map escape to caps lock instead
Nah. I'm a rather dedicated vim user (though I think emacs could have its uses too if I learned it well. I'm interested in getting to know some Lisp-related stuff deeper). Instead of pressing the Esc-key I press ^[ or ^c in Vim. The latter is not exactly the same as Esc, but both are usually sufficient to get out of insert mode for most editing situations and obviously far more comfortable than reaching for Esc-key. > ... however, you'll increase your working speed > (if you dont work on foreign computers too often) I still need a comfortable ctrl-key for commandline editing and such, and such placement had also been a standard on my way-back workstations. > tutorial for X > (uses `xmodmap' which is in package xbase-clients on Debian systems) > > in the .xinitrc: > /usr/bin/xmodmap $HOME/.xmodmaprc > > in .xmodmaprc > ! have CAPS_LOCK as second ESC > remove Lock = Caps_Lock > keysym Caps_Lock = Escape Here's my .Xmodmaprc; it's being used by my Xsession scripts automatically OOTB: keycode 66 = Control_L clear Lock add Control = Control_L keycode 117 = ISO_Level3_Shift As a bonus it clears the useless right-hand windows key (contextual menu key) and turns it into a secondary r-alt. A blessing for vim. Best, -- [a]
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