Helmut Eller e9626484@stud3.tuwien.ac.at writes:
Chisheng Huang cph@chi-square-works.com writes:
Typing C-g after C-c in a buffer editing a Lisp file will get a *sldb* buffer to show up:
Well, C-c C-g is supposed to do that. You are free to rebind the key. I for one quite like C-c C-g. If it should be the default binding is another question. Opinions?
I thought C-g is the universal club with which you can abort anything in Emacs. After reading your reply, I took one more look at Slime's doc and found the following 2 entries: C-c C-b slime-interrupt C-c C-g slime-interrupt I knew and used C-c C-b a few times. I did not know C-c C-g does the same thing as C-c C-b. Could someone tell me what Emacs command to use to unbind C-c C-g? I'd like to do it in my .emacs because I want C-g to be consistent with the rest of my Emacs usage.
Best
-cph