Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sun 11th Nov 2007 15:52 UTC
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RE[2]: Mode of application
by mdmkolbe on Mon 12th Nov 2007 03:56
in reply to "RE: Mode of application"
Indeed, Shift-Insert is not only more universal than any other paste key sequence (e.g it works on Windows Notepad *and* GNU Emacs) but it is also the only way to paste to an RXVT terminal from the keyboard (Ctrl-Y and Ctrl-V are rightly passed through to the underlaying application).




Member since:
2006-05-26
Other than the Capslock key difference mentioned above, this is yet another case where (at least with the new Mac keyboard I got with my computer) Apple has made a change: there's exactly one set of arrow keys, and no numlock key at all. Perhaps someone at Apple had too many bad experiences with such keyboards
The one I miss because I've got my muscle memory setup for doing it efficiently is that on this keyboard, there's no Insert key, which, while it can be used by software for modal input mode switching between insert=overwrite and insert at cursor, using Control-Insert to copy and then Shift-Insert to paste is easier and less likely for me to make mistakes, and I've been using that a very long time. Instead, there's an "fn" key there which is a quasimodal key that goes with a lot of the function keys above to map them back into function keys, as opposed to media functions and other machine control functions. Of course, I promptly mapped things back to regular function keys without using fn, because I far more often use keyboard commands for various things than the mouse option, and it's no big deal for me to select fn for the various machine control/system-wide things.