"Amir" == Amir Karger [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Amir For those wondering what ~S in a bind-file means, from what I
Amir can tell, it would mean anything *except* shift. Except that
Amir according to the comments in kb_sequence::addkey, it's currently
Amir unused. By the way, the problem with
"Amir" == Amir Karger [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Amir For those wondering what ~S in a bind-file means, from what I
Amir can tell, it would mean anything *except* shift. Except that
Amir according to the comments in kb_sequence::addkey, it's currently
Amir unused. By the way, the problem with
> "Amir" == Amir Karger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Amir> For those wondering what ~S in a bind-file means, from what I
Amir> can tell, it would mean anything *except* shift. Except that
Amir> according to the comments in kb_sequence::addkey, it's currently
Amir> unused. By the way, the
For those wondering what ~S in a bind-file means, from what I can tell, it
would mean anything *except* shift. Except that according to the comments in
kb_sequence::addkey, it's currently unused. By the way, the problem with
using ~S for "" is that on a standard American keyboard, you *have* to
For those wondering what ~S in a bind-file means, from what I can tell, it
would mean anything *except* shift. Except that according to the comments in
kb_sequence::addkey, it's currently unused. By the way, the problem with
using ~S for "" is that on a standard American keyboard, you *have* to
For those wondering what ~S in a bind-file means, from what I can tell, it
would mean anything *except* shift. Except that according to the comments in
kb_sequence::addkey, it's currently unused. By the way, the problem with
using ~S for ">" is that on a standard American keyboard, you *have* to