Em 04/11/2013 12:30, "JM" <me...@gmx.fr> escreveu: > > On Mon, 4 Nov 2013 09:53:08 -0200 > Federico Leoni <effe...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > Good morning all, > > please see in line reply. > > Hello, > > Yes, that should be the standard. :-| > > > > > To the people affected by this bug, I would like to suggest trying also > > > to configure > > > their keyboard with dpkg-reconfigure. ie: > > > ********************************************* > > > sudo dpkg-reconfigure keyboard-configuration > > > > > > ********************************************* > > (...) > > > > The reconfiguration is system wide, which is not ideal but at least works: > > > Exec=gksu "xterm -maximized -e 'dpkg-reconfigure keyboard-configuration'" > > > > > > If you try to reconfigure with dpkg-reconfigure and that it provides the > > > right > > > keyboard, the problem would be only in the gui app. I think trying the > > > command line > > > could perhaps give an additional information. > > > > Tested right now without success Melodie. Both on desktop and a TTY1. > > Note that on TTY the keyboard map is stuck on US standard and if I > > press the combination '+c the output is 'c, not ç (correct) or ć. No > > additional informations/errors were given. > > The configuration for tty's is somewhere else (not sure where though, in > another distro > it was somewhere under /etc, /etc/console or such, in Ubuntu we would have to > "grep -R" > for it, supposing it is under /etc and not under /var, /var/lib somewhere... > > If it fails with the "dpkg-reconfigure keyboard-configuration" command then > the gui > application is probably not the guilty, but something under, in some Xorg > part. (In > 12.04, using this method and choosing "fr_FR" with "variant" which > corresponds to "oss" > does what I need). > > Would you remind me which one is your exact configuration language mapping > and variant > chosen? > > Regards, > Mélodie
Hi again, in my case I'm trying to use a pure English setup with US alternative international keyboard. With this setup the keyboard do not act as expected. When I set the whole system to Brazilian Portuguese the keyboard backs to the normal behavior. Nio is suffering of the very same problem with a Swedish environment. I agree with you, there is something wrong under the hood, for that reason I opened a bug against x11-xkb-utils and not against the GUI. Hoping that setxkbmap is the guilty. 2013/11/4 Andre Rodovalho <andre.rodova...@gmail.com>: > When I Go to Preferences --> Language Support -> Choose English as the first > and only language -> Apply System-Wide and reboot I get: ć > > When I change to Portuguese (Brasil) in the first place, and then reboot: ç > > So, it's a matter of language, not keyboard layout I guess. I can switch to > US keyboard (my layout) and also use ABNT-2 (pt-br layout). On pt-br layout, > I get the ç as Nio told before... And I'm starting to think so too André but Nio told us: Acute accent + c prints ç in 12.04.3 but ć in 13.10 so setting the same keyboard in two version of *ubuntu the system work in different ways? Damn, seems there is not any solution out there to solve this problem beside revert all to PT-BR. For me (and I thin for Nio too) it's better testing and debugging with a standard configuration to avoid issues. Let see if some dev will reply on bug report, otherwise it will mean that it is not considered a issue. The end. :) F. -- Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~lubuntu-qa Post to : lubuntu-qa@lists.launchpad.net Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~lubuntu-qa More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp