Re: Quick pane switching in true text console?

2011-03-25 Thread Walter Dnes
On Thu, Mar 24, 2011 at 10:07:22AM -0700, Micah Cowan wrote It isn't. If the terminal doesn't send something for the key (which you would've seen in cat), then tmux can't see it. Actually, if I type cat ^F or cat ^G I don't get anything on screen either. And no cursor movement (cat ^H

Re: Quick pane switching in true text console?

2011-03-24 Thread Walter Dnes
On Tue, Mar 22, 2011 at 07:19:33PM +, Nicholas Marriott wrote Scroll lock will only work if it generates a key sequence on your terminal, most don't. Find out if it does by doing cat outside tmux and pressing the key to see what it shows. In a text console cat , followed by {PrntScrn}

Re: Quick pane switching in true text console?

2011-03-24 Thread Micah Cowan
(03/24/2011 01:51 AM), Walter Dnes wrote: IANACP (I Am Not A C Programmer), so I'm not certain of this, but {ScrollLock} is the only one of the three that is normal. I.e. pressing it generates a one-byte scancode and releasing it generates that one-byte scancode + 0x80. Is there a way to

Re: Quick pane switching in true text console?

2011-03-22 Thread Nicholas Marriott
On Wed, Mar 16, 2011 at 09:55:46PM -0400, Walter Dnes wrote: Hi all. I'm a new tmux user, and I use it in a different way. I'll explain what I'm doing so you understand what I want. - I have a 24 inch 1920x1200 LCD monitor - I prefer genuine textmode - the latest linux video drivers

Re: Quick pane switching in true text console?

2011-03-17 Thread Christian Neukirchen
Walter Dnes waltd...@waltdnes.org writes: 1) Is it possible to bind one key (e.g. scroll lock) so I can just hit one key to switch panes? {CTRL-A}{O} gets annoying when you do a lot of switching. Alternately (far out wishlist) is it possible to get focus to follow the gpm mouse

Quick pane switching in true text console?

2011-03-16 Thread Walter Dnes
Hi all. I'm a new tmux user, and I use it in a different way. I'll explain what I'm doing so you understand what I want. - I have a 24 inch 1920x1200 LCD monitor - I prefer genuine textmode - the latest linux video drivers default to *TEXT CONSOLES* in the native display resolution. So 8x16