Hello. What you want is even easier than you think, assuming I understand what you're asking for. Yasr has the ability to remap all of its keys using the .yasr.conf file in your home directory. With that file, and a little study of the keystrokes Speakup uses, you can "clone" the key mapings of Speakup in Yasr and you don't need to compile a thing. I did this with my Yasr installation to match the key bindings from the old DOS screen reader Flipper. -Brian On May 19, 1:33pm, pj at pjb.com.au wrote: } Subject: yasr with speakup keystrokes ? } Greetings, } } Wouldn't it be possible to make a version of yasr } yasr is a lightweight, portable screen reader. It works by } opening a shell in a pty and intercepting all user input/output, } maintaining a window of what should be on the screen by looking } at the codes and text sent to the screen. } with the speakup keystrokes? preferably using the keypad } (though it might be hard to distinguish in a portable way } between keypad keys and their non-keypad equivalents), } but at least with the laptop keybindings ? } I'd love to be able to run speakup in xterms, for example.... } } I can imagine it as a compile-time option for yasr, or } even as a command-line option or an environment variable. } } Regards, Peter Billam } } http://www.pjb.com.au pj at pjb.com.au (03) 6278 9410 } "Follow the charge, not the particle." -- Richard Feynman } from The Theory of Positrons, Physical Review, 1949 } } _______________________________________________ } Speakup mailing list } Speakup at braille.uwo.ca } http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup >-- End of excerpt from pj at pjb.com.au