I had a similar problem after upgrading from 8.04 to 9.04 and using the KDE
3.5.10 from an alternate repo. The kmenuedit did not let me assign a key.
As workaround, open ~/.kde3/share/config/khotkeysrc
search for the key combination and remove the entry where it is found.
After this, it is possibl
We are closing this bug report because it lacks the information we need
to investigate the problem, as described in the previous comments.
Please reopen it if you can give us the missing information, and don't
hesitate to submit bug reports in the future. To reopen the bug report
you can click on t
Since it's been a very long time since any additional info was added to
this bug, I'm just checking to see if this is still an issue, and find
out what additional work should be done on this bug.
--
Lost key combinations in KDE
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/90405
You received this bug notificat
** Changed in: meta-kde (Ubuntu)
Assignee: Dan O'Huiginn (daniel-ohuiginn) => (unassigned)
--
Lost key combinations in KDE
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/90405
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu.
--
ubuntu-bugs mailing
Hi,
I do the following:
1) Open the K menu
2) Right click, edit menu
3) Browse to the konqueror item (there is only one konqueror in the whole menu)
4) Click on current shortcut key, which is currently set to "none"
5) Press win + K
6) A dialog pops up: "The key win+K can not be used here because
Hi,
Thanks for sending in this report. I'm trying to understand what you're
experiencing.
You say:
"I then decided to make a new menu item and map that to win + K; however, I
can't, because it's already in use."
Could you describe this more fully? Are you doing this from kcontrol?
What exactly