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For Linux console, you can customize your keymap. The place to start is with dumpkeys. That's the standard approach. There's no applicable standard for Linux console bindings, but you can certainly imitate GUI (i.e., xterm as hinted by xhienne).

I don't see a duplicate, but these would be helpful:

For Linux console, you can customize your keymap. The place to start is with dumpkeys. That's the standard approach. There's no applicable standard for Linux console bindings, but you can certainly imitate GUI (i.e., xterm as hinted by xhienne).

I don't see a duplicate, but these would be helpful:

For Linux console, you can customize your keymap. The place to start is with dumpkeys. That's the standard approach. There's no applicable standard for Linux console bindings, but you can certainly imitate GUI (i.e., xterm as hinted by xhienne).

I don't see a duplicate, but these would be helpful:

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Thomas Dickey
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For Linux console, you can customize your keymap. The place to start is with dumpkeys. That's the standard approach. There's no applicable standard for Linux console bindings, but you can certainly imitate GUI (i.e., xterm as hinted by xhienne).

I don't see a duplicate, but these would be helpful: