I wrote it, and I'm a SLIME user as well, so obviously I took some ideas
from there. :-)

Regards,
Elias


On 27 April 2014 19:26, Blake McBride <blake1...@gmail.com> wrote:

> I've been an emacs guy for at least 20 years.  I saw your video.  Wow.
>  Very impressive.  Now that I've got my keyboard working, I'll have to take
> a look at it.
>
> It is widely accepted that the emacs slime mode is the best Common Lisp
> development environment.  I'm not sure who wrote the APL mode for emacs,
> but it looks like it is a parallel with slime in terms of no-brainer
> environment to use.
>
> Keep pushing!
>
> Blake
>
>
>
> On Sun, Apr 27, 2014 at 5:48 AM, Elias Mårtenson <loke...@gmail.com>wrote:
>
>> I'm sure you all are annoyed with me for constantly plugging Emacs, but I
>> just can't help myself.
>>
>> The Emacs mode will display Jürgens keymap help in a separate window,
>> automatically updated to correspond the the current active keymap. :-)
>>
>> Regards,
>> Elias
>>
>>
>> On 27 April 2014 18:02, Juergen Sauermann 
>> <juergen.sauerm...@t-online.de>wrote:
>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> at some point in time I started writing a dynamic ]keyb. But then people
>>> started
>>> to complain about me using xmodmap (too old, too static, etc) and we now
>>> have
>>> several other methods as well (see README-3-keyboard).
>>>
>>> The downside is that it has become almost impossible to figure the
>>> current keyboard layout.
>>>
>>> /// Jürgen
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On 04/27/2014 05:43 AM, Blake McBride wrote:
>>>
>>>> ]keyb prints out a diagram of an APL keyboard.  Very helpful.  The
>>>> problem is it appears to be static.  It doesn't reflect the actual keyboard
>>>> mapping you are using.  I kind of doubt APL could figure this out
>>>> dynamically, but I wonder if there isn't a better solution.
>>>>
>>>> Blake
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>

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