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authorMats O Jansson <maja@cvs.openbsd.org>2000-03-25 18:17:20 +0000
committerMats O Jansson <maja@cvs.openbsd.org>2000-03-25 18:17:20 +0000
commiteebca53173b43fcb801ad06804b1b183038298d2 (patch)
tree6ff7bc38513004836052fce9056c48bb680167a3 /gnu/usr.bin/lynx/samples/lynx-keymaps
parent0270bc013175ccc71004e1c5f79171acbbc9ae3d (diff)
Upgrade to Lynx 2.8.2. -moj
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+# This is a sample key sequence definition file. It is used by Lynx when
+# built with ncurses or slang, to augment the definitions from your terminal's
+# termcap or terminfo description.
+
+# (Lynx implements this mechanism only if USE_KEYMAPS is defined during
+# compilation, which has nothing to do with the KEYMAP directives in lynx.cfg,
+# see source file LYCurses.h.)
+
+# Lines that start with a '#' are comment lines. Blank lines are ignored.
+
+# The 'setkey' function may be used in two ways:
+#
+# 1. setkey ESC-SEQUENCE KEYSYM
+# 2. setkey ESC-SEQUENCE KEYSYM_NAME
+#
+# where KEYSYM is an integer. A keysym is essentially with the lynx.cfg
+# file calls a 'keystroke', but I think that keysym is a more appropriate
+# name. The keysym is an integer and may be expressed in various ways:
+#
+# as a decimal integer: 97
+# hexadecimal: 0x61
+# Octal: 0141
+# as an ASCII character: 'a'
+#
+# Some keysyms may be expressed symbolically as a keysym name using the
+# second form. The currently recognized symbolic names are:
+#
+# UPARROW
+# DNARROW
+# RTARROW
+# LTARROW
+# PGDOWN
+# PGUP
+# HOME
+# END
+# F1
+# DO_KEY
+# FIND_KEY
+# SELECT_KEY
+# INSERT_KEY
+# REMOVE_KEY
+# DO_NOTHING
+#
+# It does not matter if your keyboard does not have some of the keys
+# implied by the above names. The fact is that lynx uses these keys as an
+# an intermediate representation.
+#
+# The ESC-SEQUENCE should be enclosed in double quotes. The '^' character
+# is special and indicates a control character, e.g., ^K is Ctrl-K. An ESC
+# character (ascii 27) may be represented as ^[. As an example, many
+# terminals have arrow keys that emit 'ESC [ A' for the UP arrow. This may
+# be represented as the escape sequence "^[[A". The default keymapping is
+# given below:
+#
+setkey "\033[A" UPARROW
+setkey "\033OA" UPARROW
+setkey "\033[B" DNARROW
+setkey "\033OB" DNARROW
+setkey "\033[C" RTARROW
+setkey "\033OC" RTARROW
+setkey "\033[D" LTARROW
+setkey "\033OD" LTARROW
+setkey "\033[1~" FIND_KEY
+setkey "\033[2~" INSERT_KEY
+setkey "\033[3~" REMOVE_KEY
+setkey "\033[4~" SELECT_KEY
+setkey "\033[5~" PGUP
+setkey "\033[6~" PGDOWN
+setkey "\033[8~" END
+setkey "\033[7~" HOME
+setkey "\033[28~" F1
+setkey "\033[29~" DO_KEY
+#
+# All other keys map to themselves, e.g,
+#
+setkey "a" 'a'
+#
+# Now suppose that your terminal produces different escape sequences for
+# HOME and END. In particular, suppose that the home key produces 'ESC [
+# H' and that the end key produces 'ESC [ K'. Then these may be defined to
+# map to lynx HOME and END keys via
+#
+setkey "^[[H" HOME
+setkey "^[[K" END
+#
+# Similarly, we may map emacs-like sequences to these functions:
+#
+setkey "^[<" HOME
+setkey "^[>" END
+#
+# Note that it may be impossible to map several sequences to the same
+# keysym (NCURSES only?), in that case the mapping occurring last wins.
+#
+# The following maps a sequence commonly used for Shift+Tab to the
+# corresponding code. It should not be needed if the terminfo file
+# has the correct info for kcbt.
+#
+setkey "^[[Z" 0x10F
+#
+# Other special escapes:
+# \a bell
+# \b backspace
+# \f form-feed
+# \n newline (line-feed)
+# \r carriage-return
+# \t tab
+# \v vertical tab
+# \<number> octal number, up to 3 digits, e.g., "\033".
+# \d<number> decimal number, up to 3 digits, e.g., "\d99"
+# \x<number> hexidecimal number, up to 2 digits, e.g., "\xFF"
+#
+# For Unix-systems (which have termcap or terminfo) you may also use symbols
+# that refer to the termcap/terminfo, by referencing the name bracketed by
+# "^(" and ")", e.g.,
+setkey "^(cuu1)" UPARROW
+setkey "^(up)" UPARROW