What are the OA and OB inserted by emacs?
It happens, I think, when I press ESC several times. I use emacs in the -nw mode.
I would rather do without these insertions.
What are the OA and OB inserted by emacs?
It happens, I think, when I press ESC several times. I use emacs in the -nw mode.
I would rather do without these insertions.
In text terminals, many keys (like up) work by sending a sequence of bytes, such as ESC O A. Emacs normally recognizes these sequences and turns them into a more meaningful up event, using input-decode-map. But there's no way for Emacs to know for sure whether you hit up or you hit ESC O A. So if you type ESC ESC up, Emacs will see ESC ESC ESC O A and will think that's what you typed (because ESC ESC ESC is a valid key sequence, so it will first consume this and then will see O A separately which it won't recognize as a part of the escape sequence of up).
F1 l) after you encounter this problem. – Dec 21 '17 at 12:23emacs -Q -nwin(GNU Emacs 25.3.1 (x86_64-unknown-cygwin, GTK+ Version 3.22.20) of 2017-09-11)onmintty. PressingESC ESC <down>insertsOBandESC ESC <up>insertsOA.describe-keyESC ESC <up>saysESC ESC ESC runs the command keyboard-escape-quit. – Tobias Dec 21 '17 at 13:19