On Wed, Jun 26, 2002 at 08:55:19PM -0500, David Dyer-Bennet wrote:
> Carl Wilhelm Soderstrom <chrome at real-time.com> writes:
> 
> > > WTF is a compose key?  
> > 
> > look at an honest-to-God DEC VT dumbterm, and you'll see a 'compose' key on
> > it. other dumbterms probably have them as well.
> > As Mr. Goldman implies, it's used for composing foreign characters like the
> > Spanish characters that have the ~ over them, and such like.
> 
> Well, maybe on the new enough ones.  Not on any of the ones I remember
> working with, and not on the two in the next room.  (Did it come in
> with the VT220 series, in which case I actually did have one on my
> desk in Marlboro briefly, or was it later, in which case I really
> never did see it?)

I never sat in front of vt102 or vt220 terms enough to learn any differences
between them and the vt420s I used to live in front of.

my wyse 185 has a compose key as well.

<ramble>
I never got ahold of any of the vt420s when they got rid of them at Winona
State. :( 
On the other tentacle, I *did* find a DEC PS/2 keyboard at a customer site,
that's pretty much *exactly* the same as the vt420 keyboard. :) :) :) I was
so excited with joy at merely the sight of such a thing, that the customer
gave it to me. :) :) :)
In retrospect, the keys are a bit mushy compared to my mid-80s IBM Type-Ms;
but for nostalgia it's a great thing. :) :) :)
</ramble>

Carl Soderstrom.
-- 
Network Engineer
Real-Time Enterprises
www.real-time.com