Deniz Dogan wrote: > 2010/3/18 Andreas Roehler <andreas.roeh...@online.de>: >> Deniz Dogan wrote: >>> Please, don't bind C-c C-h to anything. This prevents people from >>> viewing all the bindings that start with C-c, which C-c C-h would >>> normally display. >>> >> Hi Deniz, >> >> it may help, if you write your suggestion into the bug-tracker. So it >> doesn't get lost. >> >> https://bugs.launchpad.net/python-mode >> >> When reporting, please explain a little bit more the reasons. What's there >> as mentioned normally for you? >> Exists some coding convention which contradicts? >> >> Thanks taking part >> > > Would someone mind reporting the issue there for me? I don't plan on > using Launchpad any time soon other than for this. If anyone gets > around to doing that, you can use the following description of the > problem: > > I'm not sure there is an actual convention that says one shouldn't use > C-h in a key sequence. However, I often use C-h as a "suffix" key to > find out more about key sequences that start out a certain way. You > can try this by hitting e.g. "C-x n C-h", which should give you: > > C-x n d narrow-to-defun > C-x n n narrow-to-region > C-x n p narrow-to-page > C-x n w widen > > I use this feature quite often in Emacs and I'm sure some other people > do it to. Of course, one can use "C-h m" to find out more about the > mode-specific key bindings, but there is still use for C-h as a > suffix, as it shows you _all_ of the bindings that start with a > particular key sequence. >
You mentioned a binding starting with C-c, not with C-x as your example shows now. So the matter is done? _______________________________________________ Python-mode mailing list Python-mode@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-mode