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Effective Emacs

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31 points by beffbernard 17 years ago · 12 comments

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mhb 17 years ago

Why not bind <Ctl> to caps-lock instead of swapping them - have <Ctl> on both keys? Except for the rare people who actually use caps-lock.

  • metajack 17 years ago

    That's exactly what I always do, and is easily done in both Mac OS X and in most Linux distributions.

    • dimitar 17 years ago

      In GNOME 2.24: "Keyboard Preferences" > "Layouts" > "Layout Options" > "Ctrl key position" > "Make CapsLock an additional Ctrl" OR "Swap Ctrl and CapsLock"

      You can use the same utility to swap Esc and CapsLock.

  • litewulf 17 years ago

    Because this frees up the ctrl key to be an extra backspace!

travisjeffery 17 years ago

If you're just learning Emacs this is an essential piece of literature to read to get you up to snuff on Emacs.

And always good to check back everyone once and a while for experts.

swombat 17 years ago

Item 1: Swap Caps-Lock and Control

On Mac OS X (Panther and Jaguar) you need to install a modified keyboard driver...

No you don't. Just open your Keyboard&Mouse preferences, select the "Keyboard" tab, and click on the "Modifier Keys" button...

mhb 17 years ago

For Windows, KeyTweak looks like a helpful free utility for remapping the keyboard:

http://webpages.charter.net/krumsick/

capablanca 17 years ago

This is so fucking old.

  • jan_g 17 years ago

    It's not old, it's just wrong to emphasize _the tool_ so much. Don't know about the author, but being productive doesn't equal being masterful typist. I had a member of the team, who was above average productive in notepad (yes, notepad!) and I also had someone who was below average productive in emacs (I always let the programmers decide, what tool they use). And I am not talking about being fast, but about producing quality code.

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