On Thu, 2003-04-10 at 21:37, Frank Murphy wrote: > > > I have a keymap "ibook2-de-latin1" of which i thought it might help me > > to get a working alt and/or apple key,anything that lets me have these > > [EMAIL PROTECTED] etc. signs by holding down the alt or the apple key so i > > don't > > loose the special german characters, and enables me to write accents. > > Are you talking about X or the console? Where did you get this > ibook2-de-latin1 keymap? Was it installed by Debian, or did you get it from > somewhere else? > Well, i got the keymap form somewhere else, someone mailed it to me when I was looking for the ~ on the default german layout, anyway, he mailed me some xkb-stuff aswell, which I first didn't understand how to use it, but yesterday I got it working, I had to delete my xkb directory and replace it with his one, put the same rules in the XF86config file and now it works, at least in X I have everything I want.
> > So this mentioned keymap wanted form me the files I mentioned before, > > thats why I asked for them. > > Now I changed the references or includes or links or what they ar called > > in the keymap to the ones you pointed out. > > Now I can load the keymap, but I lost the special german characters and > > still can't write accents. > > What can i do to get a de-keyboard that uses the alt or the apple key to > > produce special-characters like @{}[]\ etc. > > do a dpkg-reconfigure console-data and reselect the keyboard that you think > you have. (Sounds like a modern German layout, with keys that have > a-umlaut/o-umlaut, plus a euro-sign on the 'G' key). Afterwards, in the > console, start vim. Then, press 'i' to get into insert mode, and press the > Right-hand alt key and the G key at the same time to get a Euro symbol. Then > try to press the blue "fn" key, one of the alt keys, and the G. > Well, knowing which keys to press, now I do get all the symbols, at least the ones I might need :-) although I can't do dkpkg-reconfigure console-data it tells me this: get(console-data/keymap/policy) said at /var/lib/dpkg/info/console-data.config line 1066, <STDIN> line 5. I have to load the ibook keymap manualy. This sucks a little bit , especialy cause my keyboard is a bit strange after booting (yes I do have this line in the yaboot.conf). Well it's not too bad, i can log in as a user, do loadkeys and su from there on, but I would like to have the keyboard I want everytime I boot as default. What can be that message form above? for now I'm quiet happy with the X keyboard, will have to change my habbits a bit but for now I'll keep it as it is, doesn't have to be as in MacOS. Just the console... Cheers benjamin > > And how do I get this for both, console and X ? > > Unfortunately, the configurations for console and X are done totally > differently. The dpkg-reconfigure console-data only works on the console. > Configuring X is a different matter. Let's work on the console first. > > > The best would be if the keyboard or what it produces acts like in > > macOS, just changing the apple to the ctrl key of course. > > I mean i don't mind using ctrl+Q to quit instead of apple+Q like in > > macOS. > > The problem with that as a global default is that the Control key is marked > with 'ctrl'. You should be able to reverse these keys for your own setup > though, using xmodmap. > > > by the way, I have no problem switching consoles with alt+fn+Fx or with > > alt+ctrl+fn+Fx in X > > OK. Let me know how the rest works. > > Frank > > > -- > To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] >