>>>> Stephen J Turnbull <stephen(a)xemacs.org> writes:
Stephen> ... Based on your report (that you don't see a keysym in the echo
Stephen> area when you press that key) and a look at the
Stephen> implementation, I believe that XEmacs simply doesn't see
Stephen> those keysyms at all, so binding it won't help even if you
Stephen> know what it is. ...
Could it be that the keyboard driver maps those keys some esoteric
feature and don't let it through to XEmacs? From the very little I
have just learned about the keyboard by surfing the net it seems like
the G-keys can be used in gaming to define different kinds of
macros. So the driver is likely to catch the keys!?
I have had similar experience with mouse drivers. Mouses with many
buttons etc comes with a driver that allows you to map the buttons to
different features. With XEmacs I often have to disable the default
behavior, as defined by the driver, tide to the middle button. As an
old X-windows user I like the middle press just to be sent to
XEmacs. Nothing else.
Maybe you are experiencing something similar with the G-keys? Either
you can bind them to some keys that XEmacs do recognise or just
disable any special treatment on them? But I'm just a standard
keyboard user ...
Yours
--
%% Mats
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