tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3822757291061444396.post1498300640601336316..comments2024-02-27T03:14:00.412-06:00Comments on From the Canyon Edge: The Hardest Bug I've Ever Solved...Dustin Kirklandhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12464590128908584782noreply@blogger.comBlogger7125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3822757291061444396.post-65195098503857835562012-09-02T14:42:40.546-05:002012-09-02T14:42:40.546-05:00"Finally, a huge thanks to Clint Byrum (and s..."Finally, a huge thanks to Clint Byrum (and so many others) for the final kick in the butt that pushed me over the edge to go and fix this once, and for all ;-)"<br /><br />Not quite. Please see:<br /><br />https://bugs.launchpad.net/byobu/+bug/1045070<br /><br />I've already got my keybinding set to another key (ctrl-t), but byobu ignores .byobu/keybinding and keeps interrupting me!Jeff Bauerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17023308739087864427noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3822757291061444396.post-67147367649064777172011-05-13T13:33:45.148-05:002011-05-13T13:33:45.148-05:00Control-^ is no good on european layouts (portugue...Control-^ is no good on european layouts (portuguese at least),the ^ is available pressing shift-~.<br />I never feel the need to change the default keys on screen/byobu, if i want do go to the begging of the line i press control-a-a . It's only one more key away and never had problems when using someone else's screen.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3822757291061444396.post-51968015900118286042011-05-11T02:09:26.050-05:002011-05-11T02:09:26.050-05:00Ctrl-^ is used in vim to switch to the last file y...Ctrl-^ is used in vim to switch to the last file you've edited (and back).Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3822757291061444396.post-48176771768715245032011-05-10T19:42:36.953-05:002011-05-10T19:42:36.953-05:00Now if you can just get byobu in the default deskt...Now if you can just get byobu in the default desktop install - maybe with some of your other system settings.... ;-)<br /><br />Just upgraded to 11.04. I really like Unity, think it was a great choice. Only took me three days to figure out I can still get my application list sorted by category folders though.<br /><br />Thanks for all the great work! <br /><br />(I think you should write up your byobu presentation for publication at lwn.net.)Keithhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03607876304070718061noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3822757291061444396.post-59126816975589541572011-05-10T13:22:36.337-05:002011-05-10T13:22:36.337-05:00I always use "escape ^^^^" in my .screen...I always use "escape ^^^^" in my .screenrc.<br />That's ctrl-6, aka 0x1e, and I've never seen it used _anywhere_ else.Jimnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3822757291061444396.post-61238896462533747482011-05-10T03:09:23.512-05:002011-05-10T03:09:23.512-05:00Ctrl-P sends character 0x10. Emacs lovers who use...Ctrl-P sends character 0x10. Emacs lovers who use Ctrl-P instead of the up arrow will hate it for the same reasons they hated Ctrl-A. Vim users who use Ctrl-P for the incredibly nifty keyword completion will perhaps have better reasons for their hate.<br /><br />The first 32 control characters can be entered using Ctrl with various letters and symbols (see the last column): Ctrl-@, Ctrl-A...Z, Ctrl-[, Ctrl-\, Ctrl-], Ctrl-^, Ctrl-_.<br /><br />At one point I went through all the letters of the alphabet, looking for an unused Ctrl combination to use as a screen escape key, and Ctrl-B was the only one I didn't already use for something else. I believe tmux, a GNU screen alternative/replacement, uses Ctrl-B by default, and I would recommend Byobu do the same. It's even mnemonic!Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3822757291061444396.post-54255991371275090692011-05-10T01:01:12.329-05:002011-05-10T01:01:12.329-05:00AFAICT, ASCII 16 is what you get when you press CT...AFAICT, ASCII 16 is what you get when you press CTRL-P.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com