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If your keyboard has keys that send non-ASCII characters, such as
accented letters, rebinding these keys is a bit tricky. There are two
solutions you can use. One is to specify a keyboard coding system,
using set-keyboard-coding-system
(see section Q.9 Specifying a Coding System).
Then you can bind these keys in the usual way(16), like this:
(global-set-key [?char] 'some-function) |
Type C-q followed by the key you want to bind, to insert char.
If you don't specify the keyboard coding system, that approach won't work. Instead, you need to find out the actual code that the terminal sends. The easiest way to do this in Emacs is to create an empty buffer with C-x b temp RET, make it unibyte with M-x toggle-enable-multibyte-characters RET, then type the key to insert the character into this buffer.
Move point before the character, then type C-x =. This displays a message in the minibuffer, showing the character code in three ways, octal, decimal and hexadecimal, all within a set of parentheses. Use the second of the three numbers, the decimal one, inside the vector to bind:
(global-set-key [decimal-code] 'some-function) |
If you bind 8-bit characters like this in your init file, you may find it convenient to specify that it is unibyte. See section Q.2 Enabling Multibyte Characters.