On Sat, 2002-02-02 at 19:42, andre wrote:
> Op zo 03-02-2002, om 04:19 schreef Peter Ruskin:
> > On Sunday 03 Feb 2002 02:58, andre wrote:
> > > Op zo 03-02-2002, om 03:50 schreef David Walser:
> > > > Yeah try it in a KDE or Gtk+ app.  For some reason it
> > > > won't work in a terminal (even though a terminal is
> > > > capable of displaying the character).
> > > >
> > > > --- andre <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > > > Op zo 03-02-2002, om 03:19 schreef David Walser:
> > > > > > No it works with standard US
> > > > > >
> > > > > > those special characters are just in the 128-255
> > > > >
> > > > > ASCII
> > > > >
> > > > > > --- andre <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > > > > > This is only with us-international(or a locale
> > > > > > > keymap) not with standard
> > > > > > > us.
> > > > >
> > > > > I us standard US keyboard/keymap with locales nl.
> > > > > Like a normal dutch
> > > > > person. So how should i get this to work. Please be
> > > > > verbose.
> > > > >
> > > > > When i tried xmodmap -e "keycode 116 = Multi_key" in
> > > > > an xterm,
> > > > > Than right windows key(released) than [r i got [r
> > > > > which is not �
> > >
> > > There is movement
> > > andr�(rig_win e ')
> > > but the right windows [r gives now only r not �
> > 
> > It's right windows ( r
> > 
> You are right. � Weird thing is that people who complain about writing
> their name with a c instead of a � make a distribution where this isn't
> out-of-the-box behaviour.
> 

C'est bien vrai �a!

Thanks for all the answers.

Now I have a bunch of key sequences to learn ;-)

���
kk1


Reply via email to