diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'nx-X11/programs/xterm/gen-pc-fkeys.pl')
-rwxr-xr-x | nx-X11/programs/xterm/gen-pc-fkeys.pl | 98 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 98 deletions
diff --git a/nx-X11/programs/xterm/gen-pc-fkeys.pl b/nx-X11/programs/xterm/gen-pc-fkeys.pl deleted file mode 100755 index c7ba80268..000000000 --- a/nx-X11/programs/xterm/gen-pc-fkeys.pl +++ /dev/null @@ -1,98 +0,0 @@ -#! /usr/bin/perl -w -# Author: Thomas E. Dickey -# $XTermId: gen-pc-fkeys.pl,v 1.5 2005/04/03 16:58:29 tom Exp $ -# $XFree86: xc/programs/xterm/gen-pc-fkeys.pl,v 1.2 2005/03/29 04:00:32 tsi Exp $ -# -# Construct a list of function-key definitions corresponding to xterm's -# Sun/PC keyboard. This uses infocmp to obtain the strings to modify (and -# verify). -use strict; - -my(@old_keys); -my($min_fkeys,$max_fkeys,$max_modifier,$modify_opt,$terminfo); - -$min_fkeys=12; # the number of "real" function keys on your keyboard -$max_fkeys=64; # the number of function-keys terminfo can support -$max_modifier=8; # modifier 1 + (1=shift, 2=alt, 4=control 8=meta) -$modify_opt=2; # xterm's modifyCursorKeys resource -$terminfo="xterm-new"; # the terminfo entry to use - -my($cur_modifier, $cur_fkey); - -# apply the given modifier to the terminfo string, return the result -sub modify_it { - my $code = $_[0]; - my $text = $_[1]; - if ($code != 1) { - my $piece = substr $text, 0, length ($text) - 1; - my $final = substr $text, length ($text) - 1; - my $check = substr $piece, length ($piece) - 1; - if ($check =~ /[0-9]/) { - $code = ";" . $code; - } - $text = $piece . $code . $final; - } - return $text; -} - -# compute the next modifier value -sub next_modifier { - my $code = $_[0]; - my $mask = $code - 1; - if ($mask == 0) { - $mask = 1; - } elsif ($mask == 1) { - $mask = 4; - } elsif ($mask == 2) { - $mask = 3; # FIXME - } elsif ($mask == 4) { - $mask = 5; - } elsif ($mask == 5) { - $mask = 2; - } - # printf ("# next_modifier(%d) = %d\n", $code, $mask + 1); - return $mask + 1; -} - -# Read the terminfo entry's list of function keys $old_keys[]. -# We could handle $old_keys[0], but choose to start numbering from 1. -sub readterm() { - my($key,$n,$str); - my(@list) = `infocmp -1 $terminfo`; - for $n (0..$#list) { - chop $list[$n]; - $list[$n] =~ s/^[[:space:]]//; - if ( $list[$n] =~ /^kf[[:digit:]]+=/ ) { - $key = $list[$n]; - $key =~ s/^kf//; - $key =~ s/=.*//; - $str = $list[$n]; - $str =~ s/^kf[[:digit:]]+=//; - $str =~ s/,[[:space:]]*$//; - # printf "$n:%s(%d)(%s)\n", $list[$n], $key, $str; - $old_keys[$key] = $str; - } - } - # printf ("last index:%d\n", $#old_keys); -} - -readterm(); - -# Cycling through the modifiers is not just like counting. Users prefer -# pressing one modifier (even if using Emacs). So first we cycle through -# the individual modifiers, then for completeness two, three, etc. -printf "xterm+pcfkeys|fragment for PC-style keys, \n"; -for ($cur_fkey = 1, $cur_modifier = 1; $cur_fkey < $max_fkeys; ++$cur_fkey) { - my $index = (($cur_fkey - 1) % $min_fkeys); - if ($index == 0 && $cur_fkey != 1) { - $cur_modifier = next_modifier($cur_modifier); - } - my $input = $old_keys[$index + 1]; - my $result = modify_it($cur_modifier,$input); - printf "\tkf%d=%s, \n", $cur_fkey, $result; - if (defined $old_keys[$cur_fkey]) { - if ($old_keys[$cur_fkey] ne $result) { - printf "# diff %s\n", $old_keys[$cur_fkey]; - } - } -} |