On Thu, Jul 24, 2003 at 09:25:09PM +0100, Mark Brown wrote: > On Thu, Jul 24, 2003 at 02:05:44PM -0500, Branden Robinson wrote: > > On Thu, Jul 17, 2003 at 04:19:41PM +0200, Mark Brown wrote: > > > > (I'm at debcamp if you want to examine this directly.) > > > I don't recall that we did, but... > > No, we didn't unfortunately.
Hmm, damn. > > 1) Do you have an AltGr key? Does it work? > > No, so obviously not. Okay. > > > 3) According to the 4.2.1 gb symbols file, you get a "numbersign" keysym > > by pressing the key that is located where the backslash key is on a > > U.S. keyboard (it's not an ISO-standardized key location, apparently, > > so XFree86 just calls it "<BKSL>".). Again according to the file, > > this key should also be engraved with a tilde, so SHIFT-# should get > > you ~. Is this correct? > > No. Yeah, that gb symbols file is obviously not a good fit for your keyboard. > > I haven't sorted my pictures from DebCamp/DebConf yet, so I don't know > > if I took a picture of a UK keyboard yet. > > The UK Powerbook keyboard is a bit different to a standard UK keyboard > (although perhaps not a UK Apple keyboard). > > I also ought to note that there's a dead key on the keyboard - between > the left shift and Z is a key engraved ` with ~ above it which does > nothing. On a US keyboard (Macintosh or otherwise), that key appears to the immediate left of the 1/! key. XFree86 calls that keycap <TLDE> and it scans with keycode 49. (See /etc/X11/xkb/keycodes/xfree86.) > At the top left below ESC and next to 1 is a key with a +- > sign as the shifted character and a § as the unshifted one (kind of a S > with an o through it if it doesn't come through OK). That's called a section sign. I can't remember ever seeing a keycap like that before. Can you tell me what scancode that key produces? You can use xev to determine this. -- G. Branden Robinson | We either learn from history or, Debian GNU/Linux | uh, well, something bad will [EMAIL PROTECTED] | happen. http://people.debian.org/~branden/ | -- Bob Church
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