Package: emacs21 Version: n/a Severity: normal On Wed, May 14, 2003 at 01:23:29PM -0600, Terran Lane wrote: > I had to go back and look at my emacs config to remember what was > messed up. > > It's not backspace and delete _directly_ that are the problems. On my > work debian box, the "backspace" key produces the "DEL" emacs > keybinding symbol, while the "delete" key produces the "^D" symbol. > (As you say, I don't care what symbol it produces _internally_ so long > as it _does_the_right_thing_. But it _is_ mystifying why the > "backspace" key doesn't just produce the "BACKSPACE" symbol and let > the "delete" key produce the "DEL" symbol.) > > At _any_ rate, the real brokenness comes in when you hit > meta-backspace or meta-delete, which _both_ produce the "M-DEL" > symbol. The default binding of this symbol is "backward-kill-word", > which makes sense for the "meta-backspace" key combo, but _not_ for > the "meta-delete" key combo (which should, by symmetry, invoke > "kill-word", the forward-going equivalent). I haven't gotten around > to trying to fix this key mapping myself yet, but I'm annoyed that I > should have to. > > Anyway, just my rant for today. ;-) On Wed, May 14, 2003 at 02:10:47PM -0600, Terran Lane wrote: > Behold: on that day, 14 of May in the year 2003, > Branden Robinson spake unto me, saying: > > > Okay. I'm going to file a bug report using the above, and set you > > to be the submitter, if you don't mind. :) > > Sure, go right ahead. If I wasn't such a lazy, grumbly bastard, I > would do it myself. ;-) You might tack on to the report the following: > > "General principle for emacs keybindings: all distinct keypress > combinations should yield distinct internal symbols. The only > exception are aliased keycaps -- e.g., left and right ALT should do > the same thing, left and right CTRL, etc. In the PC keyboard world, > it's also acceptable for both ESC key and ALT to do the same thing. > But DELETE/BACKSPACE should be distinct under all modifier combos. > (As should HOME/END/PAGE UP/MENU KEY, etc.)" -- G. Branden Robinson | "There is no gravity in space." Free Software Developer | "Then how could astronauts walk branden@deadbeast.net | around on the Moon?" http://deadbeast.net/~branden/ | "Because they wore heavy boots."