Jeremy wrote:
That clashes with "Cut". Select some text in the URL window and <ctrl>+x will delete it. I think it's not a good idea to grab something that (a) already has a conventional action, and (b) already performs that conventional action in the GUI.
And while we're talking about conventional use: Dillo is highly unconventional when it uses <ctrl>+q to close a tab. Everyone else[1] uses <ctrl>+w to close a tab (<ctrl>+<shift>+q to close a window) and <ctrl>+q to quit. Which can be annoying when switching between the two.
Firefox uses Escape to stop, and arora[2] uses <ctrl>+. .
You know, if dillo just changed all of its default bindings to whatever firefox does, that would probably be a relief to every single casual user, and probably would only force a little relearning or keysrc editing on the subset of the population interested enough to be subscribed to dillo-dev.