Re: keyboard events

2000-01-22 Thread Andreas Beck
The symbol is the unicode value of the symbol the key is supposed to produce under the current locale and the modifiers in effect. cool. so what modifiers can (possibly) exist ? There is a modifiers field in the event that has a bitfield of the modifiers that are currently in effect.

CVS anoncvs.us.ggi-project.org down ??

2000-01-22 Thread John Fortin
Is anoncvs.us.ggi-project.org down ?? I tried to get to it Friday night and Saturday Morning with no success. John

Re: IRC

2000-01-22 Thread Tijs van Bakel
Mardy [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: Is irc.ggi-project.org down? Is there any place you met? I'm feeling very lonely in #ggi on the Open Projects Net IRC network, for some time now. Every now and then someone pops in. http://openprojects.nu/ has a list of servers -- Tijs van Bakel, [EMAIL

Eastern language keyboard events

2000-01-22 Thread Jon M. Taylor
My new roomate just spent three years in Japan and is knows quite a bit about Japanese computing, the Japanese language, and Linux. I told him about this post and he gave me a little half-hour lecture about Japanese keyboard input methods. So On Sat, 22 Jan 2000, Andreas Beck

Re: Eastern language keyboard events

2000-01-22 Thread Stefan Seefeld
"Jon M. Taylor" wrote: * Method 0: Romanji (sp?). Standard Roman character input. * Method 1: Key-per-Hiragana-character. Hiragana is a native Japanese phonetic alphabet, with each key/modifier mapped in a similar manner to roman alphabets. Fairly easy to handle. * Method 2:

Re: Eastern language keyboard events

2000-01-22 Thread Dan Hollis
On Sat, 22 Jan 2000, Jon M. Taylor wrote: Luckily, although this is all quite complex, I do not think it impossible. One or more LibGII translation modules will need to sit in the input stream and perform the various translation steps, wile also sending events back and forth to the