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From: | Lennart Borgman |
Subject: | Re: w32-pass-lwindow-to-system does not work as expected |
Date: | Wed, 06 Jul 2005 08:54:39 +0200 |
User-agent: | Mozilla Thunderbird 1.0.2 (Windows/20050317) |
Eli Zaretskii wrote:
I cannot do anything about your beliefs. I wrote about the caveats because my experience taught me that low-level keyboard hooks bring maintenance headaches in the long run.
Of course you have more experience with this.
I never seen this possibility to enter the scan code before. From the documentation I read that this is new inW2k and XP. I also read that "the mappings stored in the registry work at system level and apply to all users. These mappings cannot be set to work differently depending on the current user".For example, even the simple hook you posted could conceivably raise some issues, if the user did some tweaking of her keyboard operation wrt the lwindow key (e.g., the scan code map can be modified via the registry).
As far as understand this is not something you then can use for problems specific to Emacs.
And - or do I misunderstand this - more important: what you refer to are remapping the *scan codes* and my code used the *virtual keycodes*. That is what is used in Emacs today.
Perhaps, but is not that on another level? Are we not adressing issues within Emacs and how Emacs interacts with the system?On more general grounds, when Emacs users on other systems complain about trouble with key assignments, they are told to use system tools to reassign keys; we never try to solve such problems in Emacs. Why do that for MS-Windows? Shouldn't we simply advise users to use some key remapping tool if they want this feature so badly?
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