On 27/04/12 17:45, rameo wrote:
> I still have problems mapping keys.
>
> On my keyboard I have these keys I want to map:
> <C-ò>
> <C-à>
> <C-è>
> <C-ù>
> <C-ì>
>
> Tony once told in a message these info:
> ò = (0xF2, o-grave) and <M-r> (Alt+0x72, Alt-r)
> à = (0xE0, a-grave) and <M-`> (Alt+0x60, Alt-backtick)
> è = (0xE8, e-grave) and <M-h> (Alt+0x68, Alt-h)
> ù = (0xF9, u-grave) and <M-y> (Alt+0x79, Alt-y)
> ì = (0xEC, i-grave) and <M-l> (Alt+0x6C, Alt-l)
>
> But how to combine these letters to the Ctrl key?
>
I'm not sure you can.
Try hitting Ctrl-K in Insert mode, followed by the desired key
combination, and see if anything appears. If yes, it is the <> form of
whatever Vim sees.
Or try hitting Ctrl-V in Insert mode followed by the key combination.
Vim will tell you what (if anything) it gets from the keyboard. For
instance if you hit Ctrl-V Ctrl-è and Vim inserts è it means that it
can't tell the difference between è and Ctrl-è. If you hit Ctrl-V Ctrl-à
and Vim doesn't insert anything (and, if 'showcmd' is on, you see that
^V doesn't disappear near the bottom right corner of the Vim screen),
then Vim hasn't got anything from the keyboard interface for your Ctrl-à
combo.
Best regards,
Tony.
--
The years of peak mental activity are undoubtedly between the ages of
four and eighteen. At four we know all the questions, at eighteen all
the answers.
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