comparison lisp/term/README @ 2251:216f86e5891d

Initial revision
author Eric S. Raymond <esr@snark.thyrsus.com>
date Thu, 18 Mar 1993 22:31:30 +0000
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children 8d18b4730895
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1 This directory contains files of elisp that customize Emacs for certain
2 terminal types. When Emacs starts, it checks the TERM environment variable to
3 see what type of terminal the user is running on, checks for an elisp file
4 named "term/${TERM}.el", and if one exists, loads it.
5
6 When writing terminal packages, there are some things it is good to keep in
7 mind.
8
9 First, about keycap names. Your terminal package can create any keycap
10 cookies it likes, but there are good reasons to stick to the set recognized by
11 the X-windows code whenever possible. The X key symbols recognized by Emacs
12 are listed in src/term.c; look for the string `keys' in that file.
13
14 For one thing, it means that you'll have the same Emacs key bindings on in
15 terminal mode as on an X console. If there are differences, you can bet
16 they'll frustrate you after you've forgotten about them.
17
18 For another, the X keysms provide a standard set of names that Emacs knows
19 about. It tries to bind many of them to useful things at startup, before your
20 .emacs is read (so you can override them). In some ways, the X keysym standard
21 is a admittedly poor one; it's incomplete, and not well matched to the set of
22 `virtual keys' that UNIX terminfo(3) provides. But, trust us, the alternatives
23 were worse.
24
25 This doesn't mean that if your terminal has a "Cokebottle" key you shouldn't
26 define a [cokebottle] keycap. But if you must define cookies that aren't in
27 that set, try to pattern them on the standard terminfo variable names for
28 clarity; also, for a fighting chance that your binding may be useful to someone
29 else someday.
30
31 For example, if your terminal has a `find' key, observe that terminfo
32 supports a key_find capability and call your cookie [key-find].
33
34 Here is a complete list, with corresponding X keysyms.
35
36 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
37 Variable name cap X Keysym Description
38 -------------- --- ------------ -------------------------------------
39 key_down kd down Sent by terminal down arrow key
40 key_up ku up Sent by terminal up arrow key
41 key_left kl left Sent by terminal left arrow key
42 key_right kr right Sent by terminal right arrow key
43 key_home kh home Sent by home key.
44 key_backspace kb Sent by backspace key
45 key_dl kd deleteline Sent by delete line key.
46 key_il kA insertline Sent by insert line.
47 key_dc kD Sent by delete character key.
48 key_ic kI insertchar (1) Sent by ins char/enter ins mode key.
49 key_eic KM Sent by rmir or smir in insert mode.
50 key_clear kC Sent by clear screen or erase key.
51 key_eos kS Sent by clear-to-end-of-screen key.
52 key_eol kE Sent by clear-to-end-of-line key.
53 key_sf kF Sent by scroll-forward/down key
54 key_sr kR Sent by scroll-backward/up key
55 key_npage kN next (2) Sent by next-page key
56 key_ppage kP prior (2) Sent by previous-page key
57 key_stab kT Sent by set-tab key
58 key_ctab kt Sent by clear-tab key
59 key_catab ka Sent by clear-all-tabs key.
60 key_enter @8 kp-enter Enter/send (unreliable)
61 key_print %9 print print or copy
62 key_ll kH Sent by home-down key
63 key_a1 K1 kp-1 Upper left of keypad
64 key_a3 K3 kp-3 Upper right of keypad
65 key_b2 K2 kp-5 Center of keypad
66 key_c1 K4 kp-7 Lower left of keypad
67 key_c3 K5 kp-9 Lower right of keypad
68 key_btab kB backtab Back tab key
69 key_beg @1 begin beg(inning) key
70 key_cancel @2 cancel cancel key
71 key_close @3 close key
72 key_command @4 execute (3) cmd (command) key
73 key_copy @5 copy key
74 key_create @6 create key
75 key_end @7 end end key
76 key_exit @9 exit key
77 key_find @0 find key
78 key_help %1 help key
79 key_mark %2 mark key
80 key_message %3 message key
81 key_move %4 move key
82 key_next %5 next (2) next object key
83 key_open %6 open key
84 key_options %7 menu (3) options key
85 key_previous %8 previous (2) previous object key
86 key_redo %0 redo redo key
87 key_reference &1 ref(erence) key
88 key_refresh &2 refresh key
89 key_replace &3 replace key
90 key_restart &4 reset (3) restart key
91 key_resume &5 resume key
92 key_save &6 save key
93 key_sbeg &9 shifted beginning key
94 key_select *6 select select key
95 key_suspend &7 suspend key
96 key_undo &8 undo undo key
97
98 key_scancel &0 shifted cancel key
99 key_scommand *1 shifted command key
100 key_scopy *2 shifted copy key
101 key_screate *3 shifted create key
102 key_sdc *4 shifted delete char key
103 key_sdl *5 shifted delete line key
104 key_send *7 shifted end key
105 key_seol *8 shifted clear line key
106 key_sexit *9 shifted exit key
107 key_sf kF shifted find key
108 key_shelp #1 shifted help key
109 key_shome #2 shifted home key
110 key_sic #3 shifted input key
111 key_sleft #4 shifted left arrow key
112 key_smessage %a shifted message key
113 key_smove %b shifted move key
114 key_snext %c shifted next key
115 key_soptions %d shifted options key
116 key_sprevious %e shifted prev key
117 key_sprint %f shifted print key
118 key_sredo %g shifted redo key
119 key_sreplace %h shifted replace key
120 key_sright %i shifted right arrow
121 key_sresume %j shifted resume key
122 key_ssave !1 shifted save key
123 key_suspend !2 shifted suspend key
124 key_sundo !3 shifted undo key
125
126 key_f0 k0 f0 (4) function key 0
127 key_f1 k1 f1 function key 1
128 key_f2 k2 f2 function key 2
129 key_f3 k3 f3 function key 3
130 key_f4 k4 f4 function key 4
131 key_f5 k5 f5 function key 5
132 key_f6 k6 f6 function key 6
133 key_f7 k7 f7 function key 7
134 key_f8 k8 f8 function key 8
135 key_f9 k9 f9 function key 9
136 key_f10 k; f10 (4) function key 10
137 key_f11 F1 f11 function key 11
138 : : : :
139 key_f35 FP f35 function key 35
140 key_f36 FQ function key 36
141 : : : :
142 key_f64 k1 function key 64
143
144 (1) The terminfo documentation says this may be the 'insert character' or
145 `enter insert mode' key. Accordingly, key_ic is mapped to the `insertchar'
146 keysym if there is also a key_dc key; otherwise it's mapped to `insert'.
147 The presumption is that keyboards with `insert character' keys usually
148 have `delete character' keys paired with them.
149
150 (2) If there is no key_next key but there is a key_npage key, key_npage
151 will be bound to the `next' keysym. If there is no key_previous key but
152 there is a key_ppage key, key_ppage will be bound to the `previous' keysym.
153
154 (3) Sorry, these are not exact but they're the best we can do.
155
156 (4) The uses of the "k0" capability are inconsistent; sometimes it
157 describes F10, whereas othertimes it describes F0 and "k;" describes F10.
158 Emacs attempts to politely accomodate both systems by testing for
159 "k;", and if it is present, assuming that "k0" denotes F0, otherwise F10.
160 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
161
162 The following X keysyms do *not* have terminfo equivalents. These are
163 the cookies your terminal package will have to set up itself, if you want them:
164
165 break
166 system
167 user
168 kp-backtab
169 kp-space
170 kp-tab
171 kp-f1
172 kp-f2
173 kp-f3
174 kp-f4
175 kp-multiply
176 kp-add
177 kp-separator
178 kp-subtract
179 kp-decimal
180 kp-divide
181 kp-0
182 kp-2
183 kp-4
184 kp-6
185 kp-8
186 kp-equal
187
188 In general, you should not bind any of the standard keysym names to
189 functions in a terminal package. There's code in loaddefs.el that does that;
190 the less people make exceptions to that, the more consistent an interface Emacs
191 will have across different keyboards. Those exceptions should go in your
192 .emacs file.
193
194 Finally, if you're using a USL UNIX or a Sun box or anything else with the
195 USL version of curses(3) on it, bear in mind that the original curses(3) had
196 (and still has) a very much smaller set of keycaps. In fact, the reliable
197 ones were just the arrow keys and the first ten function keys. If you care
198 about making your package portable to older Berkeley machines, don't count on
199 the setup code to bind anything else.
200
201 If your terminal's arrow key sequences are so funky that they conflict with
202 normal Emacs key bindings, the package should set up a function called
203 (enable-foo-arrow-keys), where `foo' becomes the terminal name, and leave
204 it up to the user's .emacs file whether to call it.
205
206 Before writing a terminal-support package, it's a good idea to read the
207 existing ones and learn the common conventions.