On 2010-11-28 02:29, Michael wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Hello, On Nov 27, 2010, at 9:55 AM, Johnny Billquist wrote:On 2010-11-27 15:29, Frank Wille wrote:Michael wrote:To recap, my opinion is this: - - keys should do what the label says, no shifting things around to match PC layoutsOk.- - we need AltGr, most people will expect it to be the right Alt key, so that should be the (hopefully only ) exceptionAlready works that way, because the right Alt key has the same keycode as AltGr on USB keyboards.- - left/right Command key should become left/right MetaAlready works that way, because the USB keycodes match. Still we have no AltGr on Apple notebooks with just a left Alt. Should ukbd.c, or even wskbd.c be hacked to treat Ctrl-Alt as AltGr? Although I wouldn't like it to press three keys at once, just for a \ or [.I don't get this whole argument. If someone feels the need to have AltGr mapped to (for instance) the CMD key on a Apple notebook, he can just change it that way with xmodmap anyway. Why do we need to try to fiddle around with the base system itself to try and accomodate all kind of wishes?Trivial wishes like being able to type an @ on a german keyboard without having to start X and mucking with xmodmap. have fun Michael
Good point. wsconsctl will do the same without having to start X though.You'll always run into problems when you have keyboards with too few keys though. Do you think we can come up with a solution (mapping) that everyone will agree with? Maybe some good documentation on how to change and muck about with the mappings would be better?
Just askin'... Johnny -- Johnny Billquist || "I'm on a bus || on a psychedelic trip email: bqt%softjar.se@localhost || Reading murder books pdp is alive! || tryin' to stay hip" - B. Idol