Hello. Branden Robinson:
> Hmm, according to compose.dir, pl_PL.UTF-8 > *should* be using the en_US.UTF-8 compose map. Yes, it should. The catch is it doesn't. The interesting thing is, when I overwrite /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/locale/iso8859-2/Compose with /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/locale/en_US.UTF-8/Compose nothing changes. > I'm a bit confused. I'm using LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8 > myself, and getting the en_US.UTF-8 compose map. Can you compose UTF-8-only characters (as opposed to ISO-8859-1-compatible) as well? Can you use <Multi_key> <percent> <o> : "‰" U2030 # PER MILLE SIGN I tried running X (GNOME) with Option "XkbLayout" "en" and locale en_US.UTF-8, but I still can input ą (aogonek) with <Multi_key> <a> <comma> and can't, for example, get the above-mentioned per mille sign. > Except that it doesn't seem to work at all in bash. However, I can > compose characters into the Mozilla location bar just fine. Weird. Mozilla location bar is a different beast altogether - when typing <Multi_key> <minus> <minus> nothing happens, then when I press the third <minus> a minus appears, and in the drop-down I can see the option to "Search for "--"", with two minuses. <Multi_key> <minus> <minus> <period> produces a period. Also, I can't get the UTF-8-specific per mille sign, while easily getting the <Multi_key> <a> <comma> (which is not present in the en_US.UTF-8/Compose map). I don't think Mozilla's location bar is a good testing-area (Galeon's location bar acts the same as bash inside gnome-terminal, i.e. seems to use iso8859-2/Compose). Cheers, -- Shot (Piotr Szotkowski) -- SCO is the thief who puts a gun to his own head and says "give me your money or I'll shoot." ~~~ Bruce Perens, /. ~~~ http://shot.pl/hovercraft/