Hi,

Dov Feldstern writes:
Actually, F11 is not needed either. The language command is a toggle,
so just using F12 >would toggle between the primary language (whatever
it is) and Hebrew. I don't know why >F11 is needed; I asked Ran about
it, and he said that sometimes F12 didn't work well, but >didn't
provide any further details. I have never had problems with it. So I
would say, the >localized Hebrew bindings should look like this:

\bind_file cua
\bind "F12" "language hebrew"


And that's it. If there really are problems with the toggle not
always working, that should be >fixed. And of course, until then
anyone is free to change their bindings as they please. But I >think
that the "official policy" should be to use only F12, which is at
least *supposed* to work; >and of course, this avoids the problem
JMarc is talking about, of being English-centric.


The "F12" key doesn't work if the default language is Hebrew and you
try to change the language for the first time in the document. You
actually try to switch off Hebrew without specifying an alternative.
Indeed, when the default language is English the F12 works fine. The
F11 key is used for the first language change, when the default
language is Hebrew.

Sincerely,
Ran Rutenberg

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