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- Newsgroups: comp.os.linux
- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!torn!utgpu!utstat!rafal
- From: rafal@utstat.uucp (Rafal Kustra (summer student))
- Subject: Re: Minicom and X?
- Message-ID: <1992Sep2.060748.24238@utstat.uucp>
- Keywords: Minicom X Arrowkeys
- Organization: University of Toronto, Dept. of Statistics
- References: <whitney2.715389864@husc10>
- Date: Wed, 2 Sep 1992 06:07:48 GMT
- Lines: 32
-
- In article <whitney2.715389864@husc10> whitney2@husc10.harvard.edu (Wayne Whitney) writes:
- >Hi,
- >
- >I'm somewhat new to X, having run Linux a while without it, and I
- >noticed a small discrepancy between Minicom's behavior running in an
- >xterm and running not under X: mimciom doesn't recognize the arrow
- >keys while running under an xterm (this makes it difficult to navigate
- >the menus, as well as send the arrow keys to a remote host). Just
- >using the arrow keys at the command line bash prompt of an xterm works
- >OK, though. Does anyone know how to change this behaviour? Thanks.
- >
- >Wayne Whitney
- >whitney2@husc.harvard.edu
- >
- >--
- >---
- >Wayne Whitney
- >whitney2@husc.harvard.edu
-
- Yes, you need to learn using X. I suggest
- X window System User Guide by O'Reilly Associates.
- For now, if you running TWM , hit control-middle
- mouse key and "enable applications cursor keys".
- Good luck.
- Rafal
-
-
- --
- /|| Numbers exist only in our minds. There is no physical entity that
- ||_is_ number 1. If there were, 1 would be in a place of honor in
- || some great museum of science, and past it would file a steady
- ==== stream of mathematicians gazing at 1 in wonder and awe.
-