John,

It depends on the distribution you're on. Try

      locate Keymap.html

The result should point you to a file you can load in your browser. It's
relatively thorough. You made me look ... I haven't touched mine in years,
and I'm like you, only slightly reprogrammed :-)

--Jim--
James S. Tison
Senior Software Engineer
TPF Laboratory / Architecture
IBM Corporation
"If I wanna hear the pitter-patter of little feet, I'll put shoes on my
dog."



                      "McKown, John"
                      <[EMAIL PROTECTED]        To:       [EMAIL PROTECTED]
                      tr.com>                  cc:
                      Sent by: Linux on        Subject:  x3270 keymap
                      390 Port
                      <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
                      IST.EDU>


                      06/02/2003 13:29
                      Please respond to
                      Linux on 390 Port






Sorry for the total ignorance question. Is there a simple to understand
document on how to set up the keymap for x3270? I've looked a bit at what I
could find, but to be blunt, I just didn't understand it. I'm an old 3270
user whose fingers are permenantly encoded as to where the "special" keys
such a ENTER (right cntl), NewLine (Enter), and RESET (left cntl) are
supposed to be. Along with Insert, Home, PA1 (PgUP), PA2 (PgDN), ATTN
(Esc),
clear (Pause). I really wish that there we some "keymap editor" around
which
would do this for me. OK, it is one thing I like about Windows.


--
John McKown
Senior Systems Programmer
UICI Insurance Center
Applications & Solutions Team
+1.817.255.3225

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