Penguin

Differences between version 7 and predecessor to the previous major change of XtermNotes.

Other diffs: Previous Revision, Previous Author, or view the Annotated Edit History

Newer page: version 7 Last edited on Wednesday, October 13, 2004 4:18:43 pm by JohnMcPherson Revert
Older page: version 6 Last edited on Friday, October 24, 2003 8:49:08 pm by AlastairPorter Revert
@@ -1,11 +1,12 @@
+!! Configuration Menu  
 * To access the main menu, hold down the control key and click the left mouse button 
 * Ctrl-Middle Button is the terminal options (Preferences) - hint, you can set reverse video here. 
 * Ctrl-Right Button is the font options. 
  
 To scroll using the scrollbar, grab the grey bar with the middle button. 
  
-!Startup Options 
+! !Startup Options 
  
 Start Xterm as a login shell (load /etc/profile and .bashrc (on redhat, at least)) 
  xterm -l 
  
@@ -25,7 +26,17 @@
  xterm -e <program name> 
  
 Use AntiAliasedFonts in Xterm! 
  xterm -bg white -fg black -fa "bitstream vera sans mono" -fs 8 
+  
+!!Alt vs Meta  
+At some stage (eg xterm version 187 in Debian Unstable), xterm started treating keyboard input differently when the Alt key was pressed. (For PC keyboards, the Alt key has the "mod_1" X keyboard modifier set). For example, pressing Alt+x generates a "ø" and pressing Alt+q  
+now generates "ñ". This isn't very good if you want to use the Alt key in emacs(1) in the terminal. The best solution for this is to add  
+ XTerm*eightBitInput: false  
+to either $HOME/.Xresources (for a single user) or to /etc/X11/app-defaults/XTerm (for a system wide default).  
+  
+Another solution (that isn't as tidy as the above) is to use xmodmap(1)  
+to tell X that your Alt key should generate Meta:  
+ xmodmap -e 'keysym Alt_L = Meta_L'  
  
 ---- 
 For more information see xterm(1).