Hi again, I got it working, there was a problem in my custom file (evil-intercept-esc was being set to (quote always) instead of always... Sorry if I made you lose time with this last one!
Thanks for the fix, seems perfect! Alessandro Piras On 11 March 2013 23:46, Alessandro Piras <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi again. This solution works perfectly when starting emacs in > graphical mode "normally", thanks! > > I have a problem when starting it as a daemon though. > I tried starting emacs with > $ emacsclient --alternate-editor="" -c > C-[ does not work, but esc does. > > Alessandro Piras > > > On 7 March 2013 08:40, Frank Fischer <[email protected]> wrote: >> On 2013-03-03, Alessandro Piras <[email protected]> wrote: >>> Hi Frank, >>> Yes, I meant pressing Ctrl and [ simultaneously :-) >>> I can understand what you mean about the german keyboard, it's as >>> crazy on an italian keyboard, but I usually type using the US layout, >>> and my laptop has a real US-ansi layout. >>> This happens on X, everything works as expected on the terminal. >>> >>> As a half-baked fix, I put this in my evil configuration: >>> >>> (define-key input-decode-map (kbd "C-[") [escape]) >> >> This is dangerous, because several meta-key-translations are contained >> in `input-decode-map`. Furthermore `input-decode-map` is >> 'keyboard-local', so you have to ensure to modify this map on each >> frame. Furthermore, evil now uses more or less the same trick, so you >> could easily interfere with Evil. >> >> Because `input-decode-map` is keyboard-local (or better >> terminal-local), Evil now only modifies this map when the current >> frame is in a terminal and leaves it untouched in X (the philosophy is >> to tweak Emacs as less as possible, and in X not intercepting ESC >> should be fine for most users). This works because in X the plain >> escape key generates the 'escape event, which will eventually be >> converted to ESC in `function-key-map` unless it is bound to some >> command. Unfortunately C-[ generates the 'terminal' ESC event. >> >> IMO, the easiest fix is to instruct Evil to do its ESC magic in X, >> too. I've committed a change to esc24.3 that introduces the >> (customization) variable `evil-intercept-esc`. Setting this variable >> to 'always makes Evil intercept the ESC event in any frame, not only >> in terminal frames, i.e. something like >> >> (setq evil-intercept-esc 'always) >> >> should solve your problem and, hopefully, not break something else (by >> default this variable is t which means 'terminal-only'). >> >> Hope this helps, >> Frank >> >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> implementations-list mailing list >> [email protected] >> https://lists.ourproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/implementations-list _______________________________________________ implementations-list mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ourproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/implementations-list
