Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!tut.cis.ohio-state.edu!ucbvax!pasteur!ames!hc!lll-winken!uunet!brunix!cs004004 From: cs004004@brunix (Jon Feinberg) Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac Subject: Re: Making Word feel like emacs? Summary: Quickeys! Message-ID: <5557@brunix.UUCP> Date: 4 May 89 01:00:11 GMT References: Sender: news@brunix.UUCP Reply-To: cs004004@pebbles.UUCP (Jon Feinberg) Distribution: na Organization: Brown University Department of Computer Science Lines: 28 In article ghh@clarity.princeton.edu (Gilbert Harman) writes: >Is there a macro key package that could be used to put emacs >commands into Word (4)? E.g. -f would go forward >one word, ^x^c would quit, etc. In other words, what's >needed is the ability to assign a macro not just to a single >(possibly modified with the command, option, and/or shift >keys) but to a sequence, like ^x^c. I think QuicKeys will allow you to do just that, through a combination of aliases and sequences. (Keep in mind that Word has its own lovely set of keyboard macros, like command-right arrow for forward one word, but if you're addicted to E-macs...) I use the mouse less and less nowadays, thanks to Quickeys. It's wunnerful. [Just a satisfied customer, as they say.] >Can this sort of thing be done in NISUS? Don't know... >-- > Gilbert Harman > Princeton University Cognitive Science Laboratory > 221 Nassau Street, Princeton, NJ 08542 > > ghh@princeton.edu > HARMAN@PUCC.BITNET No .sig, but Jonathan Feinberg cs004004@pebbles.cs.brown.edu