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Re: `C-b' is backward-char, `left' is left-char - why?
From: |
Mohsen BANAN |
Subject: |
Re: `C-b' is backward-char, `left' is left-char - why? |
Date: |
Fri, 27 May 2011 17:46:16 -0700 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/24.0.50 (gnu/linux) |
>>>>> On Fri, 27 May 2011 16:19:16 -0700, "Drew Adams" <address@hidden> said:
>> why do you need "C-f" and "right" to be the same thing?
Drew> I don't. Why do we need them to be different, by default?
Drew> That's the question I posed (`C-b' and `left', actually).
Drew> Haven't seen an answer yet, except that bidi needs them to be
different. The
Drew> question then is why bidi's-need-for-this needs to become
Drew> Emacs's-need-in-general (all the time, everywhere, for everyone)?
Drew> As I said clearly several times, if it must, it must. Really not a big
deal.
Drew> Just asking whether and why it must.
...
Drew> I don't have a better idea than a minor mode, but I know _zero_ about
bidi and
Drew> its implementation. Better ideas are certainly welcome. As you said,
"what's
Drew> the point of changing stuff that works fine?" If we must, we must.
But must
Drew> we? Why?
If you were to view emacs as a gift from the
engineering profession to humanity, and if you
were to re-read Eli's previous note your questions
are answered.
Additionally, please let me present the
perspective of one who needs, cares-about and uses
bidi -- note that after Latin, Perso/Arabic script
is the most widely used character set family on
this planet.
Just like you, I fire up emacs with its default
settings, I go into Gnus and open a message.
That message could be in English/Globish or
Farsi/Arabic/Hebrew (فارسى/عربى) or mixed.
Then I try to reply and edit it in Farsi and use
<right> and <left> keys as they make sense in my
context. Why should that natural behavior not be
default? Why should I, as a bidi user, have to over
write any defaults to do what could be natural for
both you (non-bidi-user) and I (bidi-user).
Are non-Latin character set users of emacs second
class citizens in your view?
Because left-to-right got done before
right-to-left, now <left> can not be different
from 'C-b'?
Sure, there could be some lines of code related to
this that would need to change as we go from 23 to
24 (how big of a deal is that anyway?)
Please explain to us why you think that Eli's
solution is not the most reasonable? I am curious.
...محسن
...Mohsen
- `C-b' is backward-char, `left' is left-char - why?, Drew Adams, 2011/05/27
- Re: `C-b' is backward-char, `left' is left-char - why?, Pascal J. Bourguignon, 2011/05/27
- Re: `C-b' is backward-char, `left' is left-char - why?, Eli Zaretskii, 2011/05/27
- Re: `C-b' is backward-char, `left' is left-char - why?, Eli Zaretskii, 2011/05/27
- RE: `C-b' is backward-char, `left' is left-char - why?, Drew Adams, 2011/05/27
- Re: `C-b' is backward-char, `left' is left-char - why?, Antoine Levitt, 2011/05/27
- RE: `C-b' is backward-char, `left' is left-char - why?, Drew Adams, 2011/05/27
- Re: `C-b' is backward-char, `left' is left-char - why?,
Mohsen BANAN <=
- RE: `C-b' is backward-char, `left' is left-char - why?, Drew Adams, 2011/05/27
- Re: `C-b' is backward-char, `left' is left-char - why?, Mohsen BANAN, 2011/05/27
- Re: `C-b' is backward-char, `left' is left-char - why?, Eli Zaretskii, 2011/05/28
- Re: `C-b' is backward-char, `left' is left-char - why?, PJ Weisberg, 2011/05/27
- RE: `C-b' is backward-char, `left' is left-char - why?, Drew Adams, 2011/05/27
- Re: `C-b' is backward-char, `left' is left-char - why?, PJ Weisberg, 2011/05/27
- RE: `C-b' is backward-char, `left' is left-char - why?, Drew Adams, 2011/05/27
- Re: `C-b' is backward-char, `left' is left-char - why?, David Kastrup, 2011/05/28
- Re: `C-b' is backward-char, `left' is left-char - why?, Eli Zaretskii, 2011/05/28
Re: `C-b' is backward-char, `left' is left-char - why?, Stefan Monnier, 2011/05/27