Hi; On and off for the last few years I have tried to get readline to bind commands as I want them but they never have. I am sure I am doing something stupid or mis-interpreting the manuals and all the previous advice I have received. I posted this problem over a week ago on the Fedora Forum but got nothing helpful. So here -- slowly -- is my problem. I can find "\e-f": forward-word and "\e-b": backward-word in /etc/inputrc and they work. However, I find the \e- key combination a bit of a finger reach and I use forward-word and backward-word a lot so I wanted to add a key modifier combination that was easier. I have tried several different versions of key binding in ~/.inputrc but nothing seems to work. Here is the latest version of my ~/.inputrc: # Bill's inputrc for ReadLine # '$include' directs readline to the file # with 'universal' settings. $include /etc/inputrc $if mode=emacs "\M-\C-b": backward-word "\M-\C-f": forward-word $endif As I say, I have tried several different versions e.g "\M-\C-b": and "\M-\C-f: but nothing works. Even after using C-xC-r or rebooting. (I am familiar with emacs bindings.) _______________ I have checked that the emacs mode is on: ]$ env ... VISUAL=emacs GIT_EDITOR=emacs .... ]$ set -o (which tells me ) ... emacs on ... vi off. So the mode=emacs has nothing to do with the key binding problem I am having. ________________ For the above file: ]$ bind -P ... backward-word can be found on "\eOd", "\e[1;5D", "\e[5D", "\eb", "\202", ... ... forward-word can be found on "\eOc", "\e[1;5C", "\e[5C", "\ef", "\206". ... __________________ Where do "\202" and "\206" come from and what are they. While we are at it, where can I find a meaningful translation of "\eOd", "\e[1;5D", "\e[5D", etc. I know what \e is but what do [, O, 1 mean? How could I find them on a keyboard? I have tried: ]$ bind "\C-\M-b": backward-word and ]$ bind "\C-\M-f": forward-word to no effect. ___________________ Meta (ALT) -b works (does backward-word) for some reason (as in /etc/inputrc) but \M-\C-b doesn't. Meta (ALT) -f gives me the window menu, as it should. I don't want to change that. But ~/.inputrc gives me nothing with ALT(Meta)-CTRL-f. I was kind of hoping to figure out how to substitute \M-\C- for all or many of the "\e" bindings on my local or users .inputrc. Currently ]$ env doesn't show INPUTRC which should be the correct default. In case it is helpful, my ~/.bash_profile contains # export INPUTRC= $HOME/.inputrc [commented out #, and in at different times]. I am currently using Fedora 12 kernel version 2.6.32.9-67.fc12.x86_64.; but as I said I haven't been able to figure this out over several versions. Others don't seem to be having any problem at all. I would deeply appreciate it if someone could help me sort this out. I am sure that the problem comes from my doing something silly or from staring at it too long, or making it more complex than it really is; but for now I am stumped. -- Regards Bill Fedora 12, Gnome 2.28 Evo.2.28, Emacs 23.1.1 -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines