Re: [libreoffice-users] LO (writer, esp.) and alternative keyboard layouts

2015-02-12 Thread Gary Collins
Thanks for your relpy, Simos.
I had assumed that I was (or should be) getting single Unicode characters, and 
I think you have confirmed that in your reply. 


I was wondering if the language input setting should be regarded as local or 
global; I had assumed global, but a few tests have shown that actually the 
setting is local for each document, so no problem there

I still have a problem with the dead key combinations, which appear to stop 
working at random times, for no apparent reason. This may be a problem with LO, 
or it may be a problem with windows (7); since the problem appears to manifest 
at random times, it's difficult, if not impossible, to know the source or cause.

The problem may be exemplified as follows (I hope these characters still 
display correctly after I press send!!):


Normally, using polytonic Greek keyboard, 
A key gives bare alpha, α
dead key / , followed by A key, gives alpha +smooth breathing + acute, ἄ
dead key Shift+/, followed by A key, gives alpha + rough breathing + acute, ἅ
Adding AltGr to the dead key combination adds an iota subscript, so:
altGr + / followed by A gives ᾄ
altGr + shift + / followed by A gives ᾅ

Then something mysterious, as yet undetected, happens, and most of these stop 
working:
A key still gives alpha, α
dead key / , followed by A still gives ἄ
but all the other combinations now give bare alpha, α.

It's as if the dead keys on their own still work, but combinations with 
shift, or with altGr, or both, stop working.

As I say, I don't know where the problem arises, but it's making life rather 
frustrating at the moment. I can usually, eventually, get the problem to go 
away, at least for a while, but again, there seems to be no consistent way to 
do this; what works some times doesn't work at other times. I'd like to be able 
to get to the bottom of this somehow.

Best,/Gary



   From: Simos Xenitellis simos.li...@googlemail.com
 To: Gary Collins gcatl...@yahoo.co.uk 
Cc: Tom Davies tomc...@gmail.com; users@global.libreoffice.org 
users@global.libreoffice.org 
 Sent: Monday, 9 February 2015, 8:24
 Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] LO (writer, esp.) and alternative keyboard 
layouts
   

 On 6 February 2015 at 10:11, Gary Collins gcatl...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:
 Hi,
 I've been having some trouble lately using in Writer especially when using 
 alternative keyboard mappings (Windows 7). Yesterday, for example, I was 
 using a mapping that was basically English but which included macron vowels 
 (that's vowels with a bar over the top, used, e.g., to indicate a long vowel 
 in works of reference for Latin). I found that the assigned key combination - 
 in this case, AltGr+vowel - was giving me a vowel with something like an 
 acute accent over it instead of a bar - though the key combination was 
 working OK in other applications, e.g. WordPad and even the humble NotePad.It 
 did start to work, however; but in order to get it to do so, I had to set the 
 keyboard in the language bar whilst the LO document was active. Is this the 
 expected behaviour? Should LO override the locale settings in cases like 
 this? (wondering).


When you type characters with diacritics, you can get either a
precomposed character or a character with diacritics. It depends
on the keyboard layout that is active at the moment.
For Windows and the default Latin/Greek keyboard layouts, you get
precomposed characters. These are single Unicode characters that show
the letter with any accents/diacritics drawn on it. They look really
well, because the font designer had to draw them with the diacritics
on top.
The Unicode standard stopped accepting those precomposed characters
into the standard about 15 years ago because you had to have all
combinations of letters with accents into the standard.
The keyboard layouts for Latin and Greek produce precomposed
characters. For some exotic Latin scripts, there are no precomposed
characters, so they use diacritics.

ALPHA with TONOS: ά (precomposed, it's a single character)
ALPHA with TONOS: ά (with diacritic, it's actually two characters!)

I have an impression you are hitting some issue with the above two
different ways to represent characters with accents/diacritics.

 Again, whilst using the polytonic Greek keyboard, I have noticed that from 
 time to time the key combinations required to obtain some of the special 
 characters stop working - that is, the key presses appear to be detected, 
 but they stop having the desired effect. An example: to obtain an alpha with 
 a rough breathing, acute accent and iota subscript, I would have to first 
 press the combination altGr + shift + '/', release those keys, and then 
 press 'a' (for alpha). It's the altGr + shift combination that stops 
 working here; when I press 'a' I get an alpha alright, but without the 
 special diacritics (I think that's the right word).Using a combination 
 without shift and/or altGr still works; e.g. I can press (and release) 
 '/' and then press 'a' and get

Re: [libreoffice-users] LO (writer, esp.) and alternative keyboard layouts

2015-02-09 Thread Simos Xenitellis

 On 6 February 2015 at 10:11, Gary Collins gcatl...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:
 Hi,
 I've been having some trouble lately using in Writer especially when using 
 alternative keyboard mappings (Windows 7). Yesterday, for example, I was 
 using a mapping that was basically English but which included macron vowels 
 (that's vowels with a bar over the top, used, e.g., to indicate a long vowel 
 in works of reference for Latin). I found that the assigned key combination - 
 in this case, AltGr+vowel - was giving me a vowel with something like an 
 acute accent over it instead of a bar - though the key combination was 
 working OK in other applications, e.g. WordPad and even the humble NotePad.It 
 did start to work, however; but in order to get it to do so, I had to set the 
 keyboard in the language bar whilst the LO document was active. Is this the 
 expected behaviour? Should LO override the locale settings in cases like 
 this? (wondering).


When you type characters with diacritics, you can get either a
precomposed character or a character with diacritics. It depends
on the keyboard layout that is active at the moment.
For Windows and the default Latin/Greek keyboard layouts, you get
precomposed characters. These are single Unicode characters that show
the letter with any accents/diacritics drawn on it. They look really
well, because the font designer had to draw them with the diacritics
on top.
The Unicode standard stopped accepting those precomposed characters
into the standard about 15 years ago because you had to have all
combinations of letters with accents into the standard.
The keyboard layouts for Latin and Greek produce precomposed
characters. For some exotic Latin scripts, there are no precomposed
characters, so they use diacritics.

ALPHA with TONOS: ά (precomposed, it's a single character)
ALPHA with TONOS: ά (with diacritic, it's actually two characters!)

I have an impression you are hitting some issue with the above two
different ways to represent characters with accents/diacritics.

 Again, whilst using the polytonic Greek keyboard, I have noticed that from 
 time to time the key combinations required to obtain some of the special 
 characters stop working - that is, the key presses appear to be detected, 
 but they stop having the desired effect. An example: to obtain an alpha with 
 a rough breathing, acute accent and iota subscript, I would have to first 
 press the combination altGr + shift + '/', release those keys, and then 
 press 'a' (for alpha). It's the altGr + shift combination that stops 
 working here; when I press 'a' I get an alpha alright, but without the 
 special diacritics (I think that's the right word).Using a combination 
 without shift and/or altGr still works; e.g. I can press (and release) 
 '/' and then press 'a' and get an alpha with smooth breathing and acute, 
 which is the expected behaviour.


When you press AltGr+Shift+/, you are instructing the operating system
that you are typing a dead key; nothing appears on the screen but if
the next character is a certain one defined in the keyboard layout,
then you will get that letter with the desired accent(s).
I would have to first press the combination altGr + shift + '/',
release those keys, and then press 'a' (for alpha) is indeed the
proper way to hit the dead key, and then hit the letter.
If you do not hit the appropriate letter, then the dead key is
dropped/cancelled so that you can continue typing.
In Windows you can type up to one dead key and then a letter.

 I've no idea why this sometimes goes awry; the focus does not leave the 
 document in question, and I haven't noticed a consistent combination of 
 keystrokes/actions preceding the cessation of functionality. Similarly, I 
 haven't found a consistent way to restore it - I can generally do so, 
 eventually, but it seems to require different steps each time; such steps 
 might include changing the keyboard from polytonic Greek to English and back 
 again, using the language button on the desktop toolbar and/or using my 
 assigned key combinations (in case these are significant, I use ctrl + alt 
 + 1 to change to the polytonic Greek and ctrl + alt + 0 to change to the 
 English layout; Left Alt + Shift changes between languages (default)); 
 clicking an empty area of the desktop to lose the focus from Writer; giving 
 the focus to a different document; and so on.

 Any idea what I might be doing to cause LO Writer to go awry (prevention is 
 better than cure)? Or the reason why it might be going wrong? Or if there 
 is, in fact, a consistent way to restore it (but I just haven't found it 
 yet)?


LO Writer should work without issues. I use it on Ubuntu and I could
not get such a problem.

One cause could be the keyboard layout in Windows sending (sometimes?)
diacritic characters.
You may mistype some of the dead keys, and they produce diacritics
into the document.
Sounds improbable, but it's the only thing I have in mind.
If you can export a sample paragraph 

Re: [libreoffice-users] LO (writer, esp.) and alternative keyboard layouts

2015-02-06 Thread Tom Davies
Hi :)
Blimey that is really difficult to read!  Any chance of breaking it
down into shorter paragraphs with a bigger gap between paragraph?
Regards from
Tom :)


On 6 February 2015 at 10:11, Gary Collins gcatl...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:
 Hi,I've been having some trouble lately using in Writer especially when using 
 alternative keyboard mappings (Windows 7). Yesterday, for example, I was 
 using a mapping that was basically English but which included macron vowels 
 (that's vowels with a bar over the top, used, e.g., to indicate a long vowel 
 in works of reference for Latin). I found that the assigned key combination - 
 in this case, AltGr+vowel - was giving me a vowel with something like an 
 acute accent over it instead of a bar - though the key combination was 
 working OK in other applications, e.g. WordPad and even the humble NotePad.It 
 did start to work, however; but in order to get it to do so, I had to set the 
 keyboard in the language bar whilst the LO document was active. Is this the 
 expected behaviour? Should LO override the locale settings in cases like 
 this? (wondering).
 Again, whilst using the polytonic Greek keyboard, I have noticed that from 
 time to time the key combinations required to obtain some of the special 
 characters stop working - that is, the key presses appear to be detected, 
 but they stop having the desired effect. An example: to obtain an alpha with 
 a rough breathing, acute accent and iota subscript, I would have to first 
 press the combination altGr + shift + '/', release those keys, and then 
 press 'a' (for alpha). It's the altGr + shift combination that stops 
 working here; when I press 'a' I get an alpha alright, but without the 
 special diacritics (I think that's the right word).Using a combination 
 without shift and/or altGr still works; e.g. I can press (and release) 
 '/' and then press 'a' and get an alpha with smooth breathing and acute, 
 which is the expected behaviour.
 I've no idea why this sometimes goes awry; the focus does not leave the 
 document in question, and I haven't noticed a consistent combination of 
 keystrokes/actions preceding the cessation of functionality. Similarly, I 
 haven't found a consistent way to restore it - I can generally do so, 
 eventually, but it seems to require different steps each time; such steps 
 might include changing the keyboard from polytonic Greek to English and back 
 again, using the language button on the desktop toolbar and/or using my 
 assigned key combinations (in case these are significant, I use ctrl + alt + 
 1 to change to the polytonic Greek and ctrl + alt + 0 to change to the 
 English layout; Left Alt + Shift changes between languages (default)); 
 clicking an empty area of the desktop to lose the focus from Writer; giving 
 the focus to a different document; and so on.
 Any idea what I might be doing to cause LO Writer to go awry (prevention is 
 better than cure)? Or the reason why it might be going wrong? Or if there is, 
 in fact, a consistent way to restore it (but I just haven't found it yet)?
 Any helpful info gratefully received!
 /Gary
 --
 To unsubscribe e-mail to: users+unsubscr...@global.libreoffice.org
 Problems? 
 http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/
 Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette
 List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/users/
 All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted

-- 
To unsubscribe e-mail to: users+unsubscr...@global.libreoffice.org
Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/
Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette
List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/users/
All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted


Re: [libreoffice-users] LO (writer, esp.) and alternative keyboard layouts

2015-02-06 Thread Tom Davies
Hi :)
Yesss!!  That is much better! :))  I got so fed up with Yahoo messing
things up that i set-up a GMail account and got it to pull in all my
new and old emails.  It took a lot of getting used to but eventually i
figured it out enough and now it saves me TONS of time.  Sadly GMail
also messes up layout and stuff sometimes but just not as often.

Anyway, the important thing is that your email looks great now.
Thanks and regards from
Tom :)


On 6 February 2015 at 10:40, Gary Collins gcatl...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:
 I'll try; it was not like that when I sent it, that's what yahoo did to it
 :-(
 See if below is any better; unfortunately I can't seem to get many font
 options :-(
 /G.

 

 Hi :)
 Blimey that is really difficult to read!  Any chance of breaking it
 down into shorter paragraphs with a bigger gap between paragraph?
 Regards from
 Tom :)




 On 6 February 2015 at 10:11, Gary Collins gcatl...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:

 Hi,

 I've been having some trouble lately using in Writer especially when using
 alternative keyboard mappings (Windows 7). Yesterday, for example, I was
 using a mapping that was basically English but which included macron vowels
 (that's vowels with a bar over the top, used, e.g., to indicate a long vowel
 in works of reference for Latin). I found that the assigned key combination
 - in this case, AltGr+vowel - was giving me a vowel with something like an
 acute accent over it instead of a bar - though the key combination was
 working OK in other applications, e.g. WordPad and even the humble
 NotePad.It did start to work, however; but in order to get it to do so, I
 had to set the keyboard in the language bar whilst the LO document was
 active. Is this the expected behaviour? Should LO override the locale
 settings in cases like this? (wondering).


 Again, whilst using the polytonic Greek keyboard, I have noticed that from
 time to time the key combinations required to obtain some of the special
 characters stop working - that is, the key presses appear to be detected,
 but they stop having the desired effect. An example: to obtain an alpha with
 a rough breathing, acute accent and iota subscript, I would have to first
 press the combination altGr + shift + '/', release those keys, and then
 press 'a' (for alpha). It's the altGr + shift combination that stops
 working here; when I press 'a' I get an alpha alright, but without the
 special diacritics (I think that's the right word).Using a combination
 without shift and/or altGr still works; e.g. I can press (and release)
 '/' and then press 'a' and get an alpha with smooth breathing and acute,
 which is the expected behaviour.


 I've no idea why this sometimes goes awry; the focus does not leave the
 document in question, and I haven't noticed a consistent combination of
 keystrokes/actions preceding the cessation of functionality. Similarly, I
 haven't found a consistent way to restore it - I can generally do so,
 eventually, but it seems to require different steps each time; such steps
 might include changing the keyboard from polytonic Greek to English and back
 again, using the language button on the desktop toolbar and/or using my
 assigned key combinations (in case these are significant, I use ctrl + alt
 + 1 to change to the polytonic Greek and ctrl + alt + 0 to change to the
 English layout; Left Alt + Shift changes between languages (default));
 clicking an empty area of the desktop to lose the focus from Writer; giving
 the focus to a different document; and so on.


 Any idea what I might be doing to cause LO Writer to go awry (prevention
 is better than cure)? Or the reason why it might be going wrong? Or if there
 is, in fact, a consistent way to restore it (but I just haven't found it
 yet)?


 Any helpful info gratefully received!

 /Gary



-- 
To unsubscribe e-mail to: users+unsubscr...@global.libreoffice.org
Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/
Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette
List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/users/
All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted


Re: [libreoffice-users] LO (writer, esp.) and alternative keyboard layouts

2015-02-06 Thread Gary Collins
I'll try; it was not like that when I sent it, that's what yahoo did to it 
:-(See if below is any better; unfortunately I can't seem to get many font 
options :-(/G.
    
Hi :)
Blimey that is really difficult to read!  Any chance of breaking it
down into shorter paragraphs with a bigger gap between paragraph?
Regards from
Tom :)




On 6 February 2015 at 10:11, Gary Collins gcatl...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:
 Hi,
I've been having some trouble lately using in Writer especially when using 
alternative keyboard mappings (Windows 7). Yesterday, for example, I was using 
a mapping that was basically English but which included macron vowels (that's 
vowels with a bar over the top, used, e.g., to indicate a long vowel in works 
of reference for Latin). I found that the assigned key combination - in this 
case, AltGr+vowel - was giving me a vowel with something like an acute accent 
over it instead of a bar - though the key combination was working OK in other 
applications, e.g. WordPad and even the humble NotePad.It did start to work, 
however; but in order to get it to do so, I had to set the keyboard in the 
language bar whilst the LO document was active. Is this the expected behaviour? 
Should LO override the locale settings in cases like this? (wondering).

 Again, whilst using the polytonic Greek keyboard, I have noticed that from 
 time to time the key combinations required to obtain some of the special 
 characters stop working - that is, the key presses appear to be detected, 
 but they stop having the desired effect. An example: to obtain an alpha with 
 a rough breathing, acute accent and iota subscript, I would have to first 
 press the combination altGr + shift + '/', release those keys, and then 
 press 'a' (for alpha). It's the altGr + shift combination that stops 
 working here; when I press 'a' I get an alpha alright, but without the 
 special diacritics (I think that's the right word).Using a combination 
 without shift and/or altGr still works; e.g. I can press (and release) 
 '/' and then press 'a' and get an alpha with smooth breathing and acute, 
 which is the expected behaviour.

 I've no idea why this sometimes goes awry; the focus does not leave the 
 document in question, and I haven't noticed a consistent combination of 
 keystrokes/actions preceding the cessation of functionality. Similarly, I 
 haven't found a consistent way to restore it - I can generally do so, 
 eventually, but it seems to require different steps each time; such steps 
 might include changing the keyboard from polytonic Greek to English and back 
 again, using the language button on the desktop toolbar and/or using my 
 assigned key combinations (in case these are significant, I use ctrl + alt + 
 1 to change to the polytonic Greek and ctrl + alt + 0 to change to the 
 English layout; Left Alt + Shift changes between languages (default)); 
 clicking an empty area of the desktop to lose the focus from Writer; giving 
 the focus to a different document; and so on.

 Any idea what I might be doing to cause LO Writer to go awry (prevention is 
 better than cure)? Or the reason why it might be going wrong? Or if there is, 
 in fact, a consistent way to restore it (but I just haven't found it yet)?

 Any helpful info gratefully received!
 /Gary

   
-- 
To unsubscribe e-mail to: users+unsubscr...@global.libreoffice.org
Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/
Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette
List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/users/
All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted


[libreoffice-users] LO (writer, esp.) and alternative keyboard layouts

2015-02-06 Thread Gary Collins
Hi,I've been having some trouble lately using in Writer especially when using 
alternative keyboard mappings (Windows 7). Yesterday, for example, I was using 
a mapping that was basically English but which included macron vowels (that's 
vowels with a bar over the top, used, e.g., to indicate a long vowel in works 
of reference for Latin). I found that the assigned key combination - in this 
case, AltGr+vowel - was giving me a vowel with something like an acute accent 
over it instead of a bar - though the key combination was working OK in other 
applications, e.g. WordPad and even the humble NotePad.It did start to work, 
however; but in order to get it to do so, I had to set the keyboard in the 
language bar whilst the LO document was active. Is this the expected behaviour? 
Should LO override the locale settings in cases like this? (wondering).
Again, whilst using the polytonic Greek keyboard, I have noticed that from time 
to time the key combinations required to obtain some of the special characters 
stop working - that is, the key presses appear to be detected, but they stop 
having the desired effect. An example: to obtain an alpha with a rough 
breathing, acute accent and iota subscript, I would have to first press the 
combination altGr + shift + '/', release those keys, and then press 'a' (for 
alpha). It's the altGr + shift combination that stops working here; when I 
press 'a' I get an alpha alright, but without the special diacritics (I think 
that's the right word).Using a combination without shift and/or altGr still 
works; e.g. I can press (and release) '/' and then press 'a' and get an alpha 
with smooth breathing and acute, which is the expected behaviour.
I've no idea why this sometimes goes awry; the focus does not leave the 
document in question, and I haven't noticed a consistent combination of 
keystrokes/actions preceding the cessation of functionality. Similarly, I 
haven't found a consistent way to restore it - I can generally do so, 
eventually, but it seems to require different steps each time; such steps might 
include changing the keyboard from polytonic Greek to English and back again, 
using the language button on the desktop toolbar and/or using my assigned key 
combinations (in case these are significant, I use ctrl + alt + 1 to change 
to the polytonic Greek and ctrl + alt + 0 to change to the English layout; 
Left Alt + Shift changes between languages (default)); clicking an empty area 
of the desktop to lose the focus from Writer; giving the focus to a different 
document; and so on.
Any idea what I might be doing to cause LO Writer to go awry (prevention is 
better than cure)? Or the reason why it might be going wrong? Or if there is, 
in fact, a consistent way to restore it (but I just haven't found it yet)?
Any helpful info gratefully received!
/Gary
-- 
To unsubscribe e-mail to: users+unsubscr...@global.libreoffice.org
Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/
Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette
List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/users/
All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted