18

Is there an easy way to use Emacs key-bindings when you are using a not-English (Russian) keyboard layout?

Whenever an international layout is on, all keystrokes are interpreted literally, M-ф instead of M-a. As a result I can't use commands.

It would also be nice if Linux could interpret non-prefixed and shift-prefixed keys according according to an international layout, while keeping the rest English.

1
  • 4
    One way is to use English layout while you are on Emacs.. if you want write Russian in emacs change emacs input method by pressing C-\
    – kindahero
    May 17, 2012 at 16:18

5 Answers 5

13

You can set input method (kudos go to kindahero) by typing

M-x set-input-method RET cyrillic-yawerty RET

or

M-x set-input-method RET cyrillic-jcuken RET

To store it permanently, add

(setq default-input-method "cyrillic-yawerty")

to ~/.emacs config (and use C-\ to switch between keyboard layouts).

1
  • 1
    You mean M-x set-input-method, and then C-\ to switch between Russian and English? At least that's what worked for me
    – sabof
    May 18, 2012 at 4:20
7

Here is an alternative solution that uses the OS language, based on syndikat's answer.

Some key translations are missing, but it should be easy to add them.

;; USAGE:
;; Put in your .emacs:
;; 
;; (translate-keystrokes-ru->en)
;; (add-hook 'text-mode-hook
;;           (lambda () (literal-insert-mode 1)))
;; 
;; Only buffers with literal-insert-mode active will be sensitive to the
;; environment language. Prefixed keybindings will still be usable.

(defun translate-keystrokes-ru->en ()
  "Make emacs output english characters, regardless whether
the OS keyboard is english or russian"
  (flet ((make-key-stroke (prefix char)
           (eval `(kbd ,(if (and (string-match "^C-" prefix)
                                 (string-match "[A-Z]" (string char)))
                            (concat "S-" prefix (string (downcase char)))
                            (concat prefix (string char)))))))
    (let ((case-fold-search nil)
          (keys-pairs (mapcar* 'cons
                               "йцукенгшщзхъфывапролджэячсмитьбюЙЦУКЕНГШЩЗХЪФЫВАПРОЛДЖ\ЭЯЧСМИТЬБЮ№"
                               "qwertyuiop[]asdfghjkl;'zxcvbnm,.QWERTYUIOP{}ASDFGHJKL:\"ZXCVBNM<>#"))
          (prefixes '(""    "s-"    "M-"    "M-s-"
                      "C-"  "C-s-"  "C-M-"  "C-M-s-")))
      (mapc (lambda (prefix)
              (mapc (lambda (pair)
                      (define-key key-translation-map
                          (make-key-stroke prefix (car pair))
                        (make-key-stroke prefix (cdr pair))))
                    keys-pairs))
            prefixes))))

(defun literal-insert ()
  (interactive)
  (insert-char last-input-event 1))

(define-minor-mode literal-insert-mode
    "Make emacs output characters corresponging to the OS keyboard,
 ignoring the key-translation-map"
  :keymap (let ((new-map (make-sparse-keymap))
                (english-chars "qwertyuiop[]asdfghjkl;'zxcvbnm,.QWERTYUIOP{}ASDFGHJKL:\"ZXCVBNM<>#"))
            (mapc (lambda (char)
                    (define-key new-map (string char)
                      'literal-insert))
                  english-chars)
            new-map))
0
3

Not sure, where did sabof got 150 billion. I ran this code (thanks to Yuri Khan, taken from EmacsWiki):

(loop
 for from across "йцукенгшщзхъфывапролджэячсмитьбюЙЦУКЕНГШЩЗХЪФЫВАПРОЛДЖ\ЭЯЧСМИТЬБЮ№"
 for to   across "qwertyuiop[]asdfghjkl;'zxcvbnm,.QWERTYUIOP{}ASDFGHJKL:\"ZXCVBNM<>#"
 do
 (eval `(define-key key-translation-map (kbd ,(concat "C-" (string from))) (kbd ,(concat     "C-" (string to)))))
 (eval `(define-key key-translation-map (kbd ,(concat "M-" (string from))) (kbd ,(concat     "M-" (string to))))))

It's only 128 combinations. Unfortunately, combinations with single letters like C-x b don't work. I'm still trying to find a better solution.

2
  • 1
    This means you didn't understand my comment. I've added an improved version as an answer, in case someone needs it
    – sabof
    Jun 5, 2012 at 2:20
  • It seems you can make <kbd>C-x b</kbd> combinations with something like (loop for from across "йцукенгшщзхъфывапролджэячсмитьбюЙЦУКЕНГШЩЗХЪФЫВАПРОЛДЖ\ЭЯЧСМИТЬБЮ№" for to across "qwertyuiop[]asdfghjkl;'zxcvbnm,.QWERTYUIOP{}ASDFGHJKL:\"ZXCVBNM<>#" do (global-set-key (kbd (concat "C-x " (string from))) (key-binding (kbd (concat "C-x " (string to))) t)) ) ` Apr 30, 2016 at 23:06
1

I use following snippet for Cyrillic keyboard and it works fine for me:

(defun reverse-input-method (input-method)
  "Build the reverse mapping of single letters from INPUT-METHOD."
  (interactive
   (list (read-input-method-name "Use input method (default current): ")))
  (if (and input-method (symbolp input-method))
      (setq input-method (symbol-name input-method)))
  (let ((current current-input-method)
        (modifiers '(nil (control) (meta) (control meta))))
    (when input-method
      (activate-input-method input-method))
    (when (and current-input-method quail-keyboard-layout)
      (dolist (map (cdr (quail-map)))
        (let* ((to (car map))
               (from (quail-get-translation
                      (cadr map) (char-to-string to) 1)))
          (when (and (characterp from) (characterp to))
            (dolist (mod modifiers)
              (define-key local-function-key-map
                (vector (append mod (list from)))
                (vector (append mod (list to)))))))))
    (when input-method
      (activate-input-method current))))

(reverse-input-method 'russian-computer)

Except:

The only issue I know is that recalculation of OrgTable formulas isn't working in Russian layout because it is mapped to C-c-* and * change its location.

source

0

If you want to keep using the Russian layout in Emacs (rather than use Emacs's own input methods), the only way I know of for now is to add bindings of the form:

(define-key function-key-map [?\M-ф] [?\M-a])

This will tell Emacs that in case M-ф is not bound, it should try to lookup M-a instead. Sadly, you'll need a lot of these bindings. If someone writes up a patch/package that can automatically provide all these bindings, I'd be happy to include it in Emacs.

3
  • I did a rough calculation and end up with 150 billion combinations, assuming 4 modifier keys, a 4-long chord, and 40 keys. A on-the-fly translator function might be nicer
    – sabof
    May 19, 2012 at 19:53
  • I've written a snippet that takes care of the bindings. It's half-cooked - it could take maps from mule to provide bindings for all keyboards. It also conflicts with modes that override the self-insert command, such as cua-rectangle.
    – sabof
    Jun 5, 2012 at 2:58
  • @sabof: whilte the number of combinations needed to cover all cases is large, it's not quite as large as you think because this remapping is applied within key sequences. So the single example I showed will already cover C-x M-ф or M-ф M-ф for example. But yes, 40-keys combined with 4 modifiers gives you 480 bindings and clearly doing it programmatically on-the-fly would be much better.
    – Stefan
    Jun 13, 2012 at 12:18

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