Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!cs.utexas.edu!samsung!uunet!datapg!com50!pai!erc From: erc@pai.UUCP (Eric Johnson) Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.hardware Subject: Re: Apple mice and X windows Summary: Try Apple Extended Keyboard Message-ID: <762@pai.UUCP> Date: 26 Nov 89 17:46:09 GMT References: <3804@puff.cs.wisc.edu> <159@venice.SEDD.TRW.COM> <1083@mit-amt.MEDIA.MIT.EDU> Organization: Prime Automation, Inc., Burnsville, MN Lines: 75 In article <1083@mit-amt.MEDIA.MIT.EDU>, mjkobb@mit-amt.MEDIA.MIT.EDU (Michael J Kobb) writes: > In article <159@venice.SEDD.TRW.COM> verket@venice.SEDD.TRW.COM (Paul Verket) writes: > >From article <3804@puff.cs.wisc.edu>, by keller@rt11.cs.wisc.edu (Matthew Keller): > :: ... > :: How will Apple get a Mac ONE button mouse to function as if it > :: were an X-type mouse with several buttons? > : > :AUX X-windows uses the mouse button as the left button in the X. Left and > :right arrows on the keyboard are mapped to middle and right mouse buttons > :respectively. > > Then how do you move left and right?! Do you have to do something like ^F and > ^B? You do Option-Left, Option-Right, Option-Up, Option-Down to get the arrow keys. For someone who uses vi a lot, this is not much fun. The manual states that the usage is: Left Mouse(button1): actual mouse button Middle Mouse: Left Arrow Right Mouse: Right Arrow Meta: Command or Up Arrow Control: Control or Down Arrow Please note that these key bindings are for the standard (small) Apple ADB keyboard. Personally, I don't like that keyboard for UNIX use, because of the positions of the arrow keys, the "~" (Tilde) and the "|" (pipe in UNIX parlance). The Escape key at least is in the right place. (Right now, I'm using that keyboard on a Mac SE running Kermit to log into a UNIX box, and the keyboard is less than optimal for vi usage.) I use an Apple Extended ADB Keyboard (I think that's the right term), the one that is affectionately called the "Saratoga" keyboard (because it is the size of an aircraft carrier). This keyboard looks a lot like a PC/AT keyboard. The Tilde and pipe keys seem to be in better positions. I like this keyboard much better, and if you go with A/UX, I suggest using the larger keyboard. On this keyboard, the buttons go: Left Mouse: button on mouse (Apple's use a one-button mouse) Middle Mouse: option/alt key Right Mouse: Enter key on keypad Meta Key: Command (the pretzel symbol) (There are two option, command and control keys--on both sides of the space bar.) The arrow keys all work as you would expect. > --Mike Note: When running X on a system with less than three physical mouse buttons, I find a window manager like twm (Tom's window manager--supposedly the standard wm with the upcoming X11R4) preferable to uwm (Ultrix window manager, standard with X11R3). uwm seems to demand three mouse buttons. twm seems nicer--the title bar means that you need less of the Meta-Ctrl-Alt-Delete key combinations to munge the window layout than uwm--which has no title bars). Yes, I know that all this stuff is configurable, I am merely refering to ease of use with a one or two-button mouse (two is typical of PCs). Window managers with title bars seem easier because you need to go to the keyboard less. Hope this helps, -Eric PS. I am constantly amazed to find what is standard with A/UX. When I compare micro-computer versions of UNIX (such as Interactive on the 386 PCs), A/UX comes out lookin' mighty fine. Online man pages, Berkeley sockets and so on are hard to find on PCs. -- Eric F. Johnson, Boulware Technologies, Inc. 415 W. Travelers Trail, Burnsville, MN 55337 USA. Phone: +1 612-894-0313. erc@pai.mn.org - or - bungia!pai!erc (We have a very dumb mailer, so please send a bang-!-style return address.)