Re: [Usability] Using Control-Esc and Windows keys to access



Thomas Folz-Donahue wrote:

Super is what the Free World calls the keys that on many keyboards have a Windows logo.

    - What kind of applications actually use Super?


None, so far. Instead, people are free to bind Super themselves. I myself use Super-T to launch gnome-terminal and Super-F to launch Firefox.
Thanks.

    - Are those applications perhaps mainly programming IDE/editors?


Emacs dose not use Super.  Emacs uses control and meta.
Where is then Emacs meta by default? Is not that on Alt? And is not Alt used for the menus and app switching etc in Gnome.


    - Can an application override the global binding of super?


Emacs already overrides Control and Alt, so, probably.

Ok.

    I can see the need for super in certain applications (like Emacs)
    but in
    the case of MS Windows I use the windows keys inside Emacs as
    Emacs-meta.


What the hell do you do that for?
Because I like it ;-) -- and because it feels much easier for me since Alt is available for the menus.

Alt is alot closer to where your thumbs hang out. I bet you still have that useless caps lock key 'cause you're too lazy to open keyboard preferences and rebind it to Control. Well, when you get around to doing that, your hands will thank you.
I am lazy, you are right. I however save my hands using StickyKeys on MS Windows (see http://www.emacswiki.org/cgi-bin/wiki/StickyModifiers). Without that I would not be using Emacs.

Well, and on MS Windows it is not that simple to rebind caps lock (at least not on w2k). Though I surely dislike it since I often use vi key bindings.


Personally, I like things the way they are, which is, Control for apps, Alt for the system, Super for users to bind.

I have one request. Please do not make pressing modifier keys do anything. Windows opens the (bloaty) Start menu when you push the Super key, and that was a terrible UI decision. Pleas use Super-space or some actual character instead.
I guess MS had a hard decision on this too. However MS Windows users are probably used to this. My proposals has been around making it easier for them. On some distros this should probably be the default (in my opinion of course) and on other not. The main point here is that it should be easy to change both for users and distros.



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