Oh, and I forgot the link:
https://github.com/lokedhs/gnu-apl-mode/blob/master/gnu-apl-mode.el#L142

Regards,
Elias


On 26 April 2014 14:36, Elias Mårtenson <loke...@gmail.com> wrote:

> The source for the Emacs mode contains the list you're looking for. Look
> at the definition of gnu-apl--symbols. The comment before that definition
> contains more symbols that are not used by GNU APL.
>
> Regards,
> Elias
>
>
> On 26 April 2014 11:52, Chris Jones <cjns1...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> I have two related questions:
>>
>> 1. Has anyone come up with a GNU/APL XCompose file? The digraphs in
>>    /usr/share/X11/locale/en_US.UTF-8/Compose on debian GNU/Linux require
>>    entering at least one character that is not available on a US QWERTY
>>    keyboard, such as this for instance:
>>
>>    <multi-key> <U2395> <apostrophe>       (U2395 is the QUAD character)
>>
>>    Basically, it looks like you need a keyboard layout where you already
>>    have access to QUAD via something like AltGr or 3rd-level modifier in
>>    order to type the QUOTE QUAD compose sequence, which does not sound
>>    really practical (?)
>>
>> 2. If not, is there a way I can dump all the non-ASCII characters that
>>    are recognized by GNU/APL (or their unicode Uxxxx code-point...) to
>>    a text file so I can easily build a ~/.XCompose file that has all the
>>    required characters and nothing else?
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> CJ
>>
>>
>

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