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Re: A problem with eval-after-load
From: |
Emanuel Berg |
Subject: |
Re: A problem with eval-after-load |
Date: |
Sat, 19 Oct 2013 02:43:27 +0200 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/23.4 (gnu/linux) |
Marcin Borkowski <mbork@wmi.amu.edu.pl> writes:
> Wow, now I feel guilty of wasting your time on this
> lengthy email... Thanks for the tips!
No, on the contrary! I love to talk about such
things. All those shortcuts were setup when I needed
them - they are from my initialization files.
If I put them at one place, as I just did, perhaps I can
detect some new things, or someone else will comment,
etc. So it is useful for me too.
I have had *a lot* of troubles with those keys, but now
everything works (and has for some time), so for this
reason I was a bit surprised there was zero consistency
how it was done.
> No need to add/update after writing my code - but my
> solution was indeed a bit faster, as I mentioned.
Did you re-write the key map in the original mode
source? Share if you like. Did you do that in root or
user space? I wonder if an update of Emacs will
overwrite those changes?
>> (define-key input-decode-map [?\u0113] [S-caps])
>> (global-set-key (kbd "<S-caps>") 'buffer-menu)
>>
>> To get weird keys to work. You have to set them up in
>> the ttys (or "the Linux VTs" so they will send those
>> Unicode chars instead of what they normally do).
> I'm not sure I fully understand this, but it seems to
> me to low-level for me.
If you use Emacs in a tty, some of the keystrokes are
undetectable in Emacs unless you have them send
something else, that *is* detectable. In the above case,
shift plus the caps lock key is made to send the Unicode
char (described by the code, whatever that is) and
*this* in turn is used to setup the shortcut. This hack
is one of the coolest and most useful I ever saw, and I
learned it on this very list. More on this, and other
remapping:
http://user.it.uu.se/~embe8573/conf/remap.inc
>> (defun init-C-o-prefix ()
>> (interactive)
>> (define-prefix-command 'C-o-prefix)
>> (global-set-key "\C-o" 'C-o-prefix)
>> (init-C-o-keys) )
>> (add-hook 'after-init-hook 'init-C-o-prefix)
>>
>> A new prefix key. Initialized after everything is done,
>> probably so not to get reset by something else, later.
>>
>> (defun init-C-o-keys ()
>> (interactive)
>> (let ((the-map (current-global-map)))
>> (define-key the-map "\C-od" 'eval-defun)
>> (define-key the-map "\C-o\C-om" 'man) ; etc.
>>
>> How that happens (same old).
>
> Did not understand this. (I could RTFM, of course,
> but I'm too lazy after a day's work... I'll look into
> this later.)
You know the M-x prefix, that is used for "long"
shortcuts. If you are running out of M-x [whatever]
shortcuts, *or* you think the M-x is located at an
un-ergonomic place, you can setup new prefixes (prefix
keys) wherever you want. Above, C-o is made such a
prefix.
> This is more or less what I wanted to achieve in the
> first place.
>
>> (global-set-key [(control x) (k)] 'kill-this-buffer)
>>
>> Yet another notation.
>
> And an interesting one.
Yeah, I don't know what separates all those
styles. Perhaps if you move around different systems
a lot, it matters. To me, they seem the same.
>> (defun sentmail ()
>> "Dired the outbox directory, then focus the most recent mail."
>> (interactive)
>> (dired "~/Mail/sent")
>> (local-set-key (kbd "I") 'sentmail-show-prev-mail)
>> (local-set-key (kbd "K") 'sentmail-show-next-mail)
>> (revert-buffer)
>> (end-of-buffer)
>> (dotimes (i 7) (backward-word)) )
>>
>> Set keys *locally*.
>
> "Locally" in the sense of "this mode", not "this
> buffer", I guess?
No, the buffer. You see, that way it won't affect
regular Dired use. That was a workaround to use Dired as
a "sent mail" archive viewer. Now, thankfully I use Gnus
so I manage without it.
--
Emanuel Berg, programmer-for-rent. CV, projects, etc at uXu
underground experts united: http://user.it.uu.se/~embe8573