144 lines
4.4 KiB
Plaintext
144 lines
4.4 KiB
Plaintext
|
.\" $Id: eight-bit.me,v 3.1 1991/09/12 09:25:57 christos Exp $
|
||
|
How to use 8 bit characters
|
||
|
by
|
||
|
Johan Widen
|
||
|
(jw@sics.se)
|
||
|
and
|
||
|
Per Hedeland
|
||
|
(per@erix.ericsson.se)
|
||
|
|
||
|
.pp
|
||
|
(Disclaimer: This is really a sketch of an approach rather
|
||
|
than a "how-to" document.
|
||
|
Also, it is mostly relevant to Swedish X Window users...)
|
||
|
|
||
|
.pp
|
||
|
The way I use this facility at present is to add lines such as the following
|
||
|
to my .cshrc:
|
||
|
|
||
|
.nf
|
||
|
setenv NOREBIND
|
||
|
setenv LC_CTYPE iso_8859_1
|
||
|
foreach key ( \\\\304 \\\\305 \\\\326 \\\\344 \\\\345 \\\\366 )
|
||
|
bindkey $key self-insert-command
|
||
|
end
|
||
|
.fi
|
||
|
|
||
|
.pp
|
||
|
Note that if I used a system with a reasonably complete NLS
|
||
|
(and a tcsh compiled to use it),
|
||
|
all of the above could be replaced with simply setting the LANG environment
|
||
|
variable to an appropriate value - the NLS would then indicate exactly which
|
||
|
characters should be considered printable, and tcsh would do the rebinding
|
||
|
of these automatically. The above works for tcsh's simulated NLS and for
|
||
|
the NLS in SunOS 4.1 - without the NOREBIND setting, all of the
|
||
|
Meta-<non-control-character> bindings would be undone in these cases.
|
||
|
|
||
|
.pp
|
||
|
These keybindings are the codes for my national characters, but the bindings
|
||
|
(M-d, M-e etc) are not conveniently placed.
|
||
|
They are however consistent with what other programs will see.
|
||
|
|
||
|
.pp
|
||
|
Now: I actually want the character \\304 to be inserted when I press say '{'
|
||
|
together with a modifier key. I want the behavior to be the same not only
|
||
|
in tcsh but in say cat, an editor and all other programs. I fix this by
|
||
|
performing a keyboard remapping with the
|
||
|
.i xmodmap
|
||
|
program (I use X Windows).
|
||
|
|
||
|
.pp
|
||
|
I give xmodmap an input something like the following:
|
||
|
|
||
|
.nf
|
||
|
keycode 26 = Mode_switch
|
||
|
add mod2 = Mode_switch
|
||
|
! if you want Mode_switch to toggle, at the expense of losing
|
||
|
! Caps- or whatever Lock you currently have, add the two lines below
|
||
|
! clear Lock
|
||
|
! add Lock = Mode_switch
|
||
|
! Binds swedish characters on ][\\
|
||
|
!
|
||
|
keycode 71 = bracketleft braceleft adiaeresis Adiaeresis
|
||
|
keycode 72 = bracketright braceright aring Aring
|
||
|
keycode 95 = backslash bar odiaeresis Odiaeresis
|
||
|
.fi
|
||
|
|
||
|
or:
|
||
|
|
||
|
.nf
|
||
|
keysym Alt_R = Mode_switch
|
||
|
add mod2 = Mode_switch
|
||
|
keysym bracketleft = bracketleft braceleft Adiaeresis adiaeresis
|
||
|
keysym bracketright = bracketright braceright Aring aring
|
||
|
keysym backslash = backslash bar Odiaeresis odiaeresis
|
||
|
.fi
|
||
|
|
||
|
Another, more portable way of doing the same thing is:
|
||
|
|
||
|
.nf
|
||
|
#!/bin/sh
|
||
|
# Make Alt-] etc produce the "appropriate" Swedish iso8859/1 keysym values
|
||
|
# Should handle fairly strange initial mappings
|
||
|
|
||
|
xmodmap -pk | sed -e 's/[()]//g' | \\
|
||
|
awk 'BEGIN {
|
||
|
alt["bracketright"] = "Aring"; alt["braceright"] = "aring";
|
||
|
alt["bracketleft"] = "Adiaeresis"; alt["braceleft"] = "adiaeresis";
|
||
|
alt["backslash"] = "Odiaeresis"; alt["bar"] = "odiaeresis";
|
||
|
}
|
||
|
NF >= 5 && (alt[$3] != "" || alt[$5] != "") {
|
||
|
printf "keycode %s = %s %s ", $1, $3, $5;
|
||
|
if (alt[$3] != "") printf "%s ", alt[$3];
|
||
|
else printf "%s ", $3;
|
||
|
printf "%s\\n", alt[$5];
|
||
|
next;
|
||
|
}
|
||
|
alt[$3] != "" {
|
||
|
printf "keycode %s = %s %s %s\\n", $1, $3, $3, alt[$3];
|
||
|
}
|
||
|
NF >= 5 && ($3 ~ /^Alt_[LR]$/ || $5 ~ /^Alt_[LR]$/) {
|
||
|
printf "keycode %s = %s %s Mode_switch\\n", $1, $3, $5;
|
||
|
if ($3 ~ /^Alt_[LR]$/) altkeys = altkeys " " $3;
|
||
|
else altkeys = altkeys " " $5;
|
||
|
next;
|
||
|
}
|
||
|
$3 ~ /^Alt_[LR]$/ {
|
||
|
printf "keycode %s = %s %s Mode_switch\\n", $1, $3, $3;
|
||
|
altkeys = altkeys " " $3;
|
||
|
}
|
||
|
END {
|
||
|
if (altkeys != "") printf "clear mod2\\nadd mod2 =%s\\n", altkeys;
|
||
|
}' | xmodmap -
|
||
|
.fi
|
||
|
|
||
|
.pp
|
||
|
Finally, with the binding of the codes of my national characters to
|
||
|
self-insert-command, I lost the ability to use the Meta key to call the
|
||
|
functions previously bound to M-d, M-e, and M-v (<esc>d etc still works).
|
||
|
However, with the assumption that
|
||
|
most of my input to tcsh will be through the
|
||
|
.i xterm
|
||
|
terminal emulator, I can get that ability back via xterm bindings!
|
||
|
Since M-d is the only one of the "lost" key combinations that was
|
||
|
actually bound to a function in my case,
|
||
|
and it had the same binding as M-D, I can use the following in
|
||
|
my .Xdefaults file:
|
||
|
|
||
|
.nf
|
||
|
XTerm*VT100.Translations: #override \\n\\
|
||
|
Meta ~Ctrl<Key>d: string(0x1b) string(d)
|
||
|
.fi
|
||
|
|
||
|
- or, if I really want a complete mapping:
|
||
|
|
||
|
.nf
|
||
|
XTerm*VT100.Translations: #override \\n\\
|
||
|
:Meta ~Ctrl<Key>d: string(0x1b) string(d) \\n\\
|
||
|
:Meta ~Ctrl<Key>D: string(0x1b) string(D) \\n\\
|
||
|
:Meta ~Ctrl<Key>e: string(0x1b) string(e) \\n\\
|
||
|
:Meta ~Ctrl<Key>E: string(0x1b) string(E) \\n\\
|
||
|
:Meta ~Ctrl<Key>v: string(0x1b) string(v) \\n\\
|
||
|
:Meta ~Ctrl<Key>V: string(0x1b) string(V)
|
||
|
.fi
|