On Thursday, September 13 at 04:04 PM, quoth Mutt:
On 2007-09-13 08:53:59 -0500, Kyle Wheeler wrote: > And what of keyboards without a key named "backspace"?The key can't be used, so that its configuration doesn't matter.
The configuration of the BackSpace key *does* matter because it is not simply ignored for keyboards that do not have keys named "backspace". On the contrary, mutt will still insist that a <BackSpace> key exists, and is signified by ^H. Thus, when another key is pressed that happens to emit ^H, mutt presumes that the BackSpace key was pressed. In other words, mutt recognizes the backspace key by what it *does* rather than by how it is *named*. Any key that emits the appropriate byte sequence is assumed to be the backspace key, regardless of what that key *actually* is.
But in general, one finds a key on the keyboard and use it as backspace.
Precisely. This key then becomes "the backspace key" by virtue of its function rather than any other detail about the key.
~Kyle --The only fool bigger than the person who knows it all is the person who argues with him.
-- Stanislaw Jerszy Lec
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