From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Return-Path: Received: (qmail 11293 invoked from network); 22 Nov 2003 22:14:10 -0000 Received: from sunsite.dk (130.225.247.90) by ns1.primenet.com.au with SMTP; 22 Nov 2003 22:14:10 -0000 Received: (qmail 16047 invoked by alias); 22 Nov 2003 22:13:53 -0000 Mailing-List: contact zsh-users-help@sunsite.dk; run by ezmlm Precedence: bulk X-No-Archive: yes X-Seq: 6804 Received: (qmail 16014 invoked from network); 22 Nov 2003 22:13:53 -0000 Received: from localhost (HELO sunsite.dk) (127.0.0.1) by localhost with SMTP; 22 Nov 2003 22:13:53 -0000 X-MessageWall-Score: 0 (sunsite.dk) Received: from [80.184.44.210] by sunsite.dk (MessageWall 1.0.8) with SMTP; 22 Nov 2003 22:13:52 -0000 Received: from opk by athlon with esmtp (masqmail 0.2.20) id 1ANg1G-0Ip-00; Sat, 22 Nov 2003 23:14:22 +0100 cc: ZSH User List In-reply-to: <20031122010501.GA24749@spiegl.de> From: Oliver Kiddle References: <20031121221510.GA18778@spiegl.de> <1838.1069455162@athlon> <20031122010501.GA24749@spiegl.de> To: Andy Spiegl Subject: Re: question about keybinding Date: Sat, 22 Nov 2003 23:14:22 +0100 Message-ID: <1166.1069539262@athlon> Andy Spiegl wrote: > > BTW, there is no way to bind something to Meta+Shift+Backspace, no? That's depends on your terminal emulator and not zsh. By using Ctrl-V or cat -v or whatever, you can see what your terminal program sends for a particular key. Chances are, it'll send nothing useful for Meta-Shift-Backspace. You can use X key translation X resources to make xterm produce your own escape sequence for a particular key combination, though. Oliver