Dixitur illum [EMAIL PROTECTED] scribere...
>There is a much neater alternative standardized in
>
> ISO/IEC 14755 - Input methods to enter characters from
> the repertoire of ISO/IEC 10646 with a keyboard or other input devices
> http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/volatile/ISO-14755.pdf
I second t
Danilo Segan wrote on 2004-08-05 10:51 UTC:
> Yesterday at 19:35, Jörg Henne wrote:
>
> > Markus Kuhn wrote:
> >
> >> If you do something in this area, please implement the ISO 14755 hex
> >>
> >>input method, and not the old MS-Windows one. (Or implement both
> >>together, if you really need MS-W
Yesterday at 19:35, JÃrg Henne wrote:
> Markus Kuhn wrote:
>
>> If you do something in this area, please implement the ISO 14755 hex
>>
>>input method, and not the old MS-Windows one. (Or implement both
>>together, if you really need MS-Windows compatibility here. They don't
>>interfere with each
Robert Currey wrote:
I do think that this goal is achievable, because the Alt-Numpad
functionality is so limited: all it does is to generate the same symbols
without regard to any codepage, keyboard mapping etc. And that's what
makes it useful im some cases (see below). And exactly because the
func
I'm going to chime in ...
> > X, on the other hand, is not supposed to be defining policy. Let's
> > assume your solution was implemented. What would you expect to happen
> > when you do Alt-227? What symbol would it be, and in what character
> > set? Is it the same with a German keyboard layo
Markus Kuhn wrote:
If you do something in this area, please implement the ISO 14755 hex
input method, and not the old MS-Windows one. (Or implement both
together, if you really need MS-Windows compatibility here. They don't
interfere with each other, because the ISO 14755 technique uses
Ctrl-Shift
Tim Roberts wrote:
Jörg Henne wrote:
That sounds really interesting. I've just read a few things about X
and input methods. What irritates me about this solution is that it
seems like it would need special support for each and every
application. However, I'm looking for a solution which works wi
Alan Coopersmith wrote on 2004-08-04 15:00 UTC:
> > What I am trying to do is to emulate the
> > MS-Windows behaviour which lets one enter arbitrary characters by using
> > the Alt-Key while entering the character code on the numerical keypad.
The MS-Windows behaviour is somewhat cumbersome for
Jörg Henne wrote:
That sounds really interesting. I've just read a few things about X
and input methods. What irritates me about this solution is that it
seems like it would need special support for each and every
application. However, I'm looking for a solution which works with
every or most o
Paulo César Pereira de Andrade wrote:
Alan Coopersmith wrote:
Hi,
I am not sure either what would be the correct place for this code.
One possible place is keep some state code in
xc/programs/Xserver/hw/xfree86/common/xf86Events.c:xf86PostKbdEvent(),
maybe handle it in xkb code or as Alan said,
Alan Coopersmith wrote:
Hi,
I am not sure either what would be the correct place for this code.
One possible place is keep some state code in
xc/programs/Xserver/hw/xfree86/common/xf86Events.c:xf86PostKbdEvent(),
maybe handle it in xkb code or as Alan said, a new input method.
I'm not familiar
Alan Coopersmith wrote:
I'm not familiar with all the details, but it sounds like this may be
easiest done by adding a new input method on the client side - I've
cc'ed the i18n list in the hopes someone there can confirm or deny my
suspicion.
That sounds really interesting. I've just read a few thi
I'm not familiar with all the details, but it sounds like this may be
easiest done by adding a new input method on the client side - I've
cc'ed the i18n list in the hopes someone there can confirm or deny my
suspicion.
-Alan Coopersmith- [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sun Microsystems
Hi,
well, even after digging through lots of source code and documentation,
I could really use some help. What I am trying to do is to emulate the
MS-Windows behaviour which lets one enter arbitrary characters by using
the Alt-Key while entering the character code on the numerical keypad.
What
Hi,
(I seem to be out of luck on the XFree86 list, therefore I repost this
message to devel)
is it possible with a stock XF86 to emulate the Windows/DOS behavior
where the combination of Alt (held down) plus a combination of three
numpad digits is translated into a corresponding key code? For in
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