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Mail Archives: cygwin/2005/03/02/19:27:56

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Message-Id: <5.1.1.6.1.20050302192433.00a0e360@postoffice.att.net>
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Date: Wed, 02 Mar 2005 19:26:41 -0500
To: cygwin AT cygwin DOT com
From: Charles Davis <davis DOT 1 AT att DOT net>
Subject: Control-modified arrow keys
Mime-Version: 1.0

Sorry to bother you folks with this.  I read several messages in the 
archive on the
topic, but am unsure of the bottom line.  As I understand it in the CYGWIN 
console
(and in apps running under it) Control-modified arrow key combinations 
cannot be
distinguished from their unmodified counterparts.  The same is true for the 
6-Pack
keys.  For example, <C-Left> and <left> are indistinguishable: both emit 
"\e[D".
(That is what I get when I follow ^V by either of these key combinations at 
the console
prompt.)  The upshot is that apps like Emacs cannot distinguish between 
<C-left>
and <left>, say.
The messages in the archive also seemed to suggest that there is no way to 
coerce
either Windows or CYGWIN to remap these distinct key combinations (which 
have distinct
SCANCODES) to distinct escape sequences.
RXVT is not an option.
Did I miss a ray of hope?
Thanks,
Charles Davis


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