Not specifically Linux related but I hope members here can help me with
"antique" hardware question.
I just ordered a couple of MS ergonomic keyboards like this:
http://www.microsoft.com/hardware/en-au/p/natural-ergonomic-keyboard-4000
and now I'm looking to make them Hebrew friendly.
I had an OK
On Monday, January 9th at 18:30, Haifux will gather to hear Amir E.
Aharoni talk about
Maqaf Hataf Patakh - The new standard Hebrew keyboard layout
Abstract
In the last two years a committee in the Standards Institution of Israel
worked, on my initiative and with my active
ation?
xprop -root | grep _XKB
_XKB_RULES_NAMES(STRING) = "xorg", "pc104", "us,il", "dvorak,lyx",
"compose:rwin"
Note that when I change my Hebrew keyboard to "no variant" (that is,
instead of "dvorak,lyx" I get "dvora
On Thu, May 21, 2009 at 12:28:03PM +0300, Herouth Maoz wrote:
> Hi everybody,
>
> I recently upgraded the Linux version on my work machine, and I noticed
> something odd about the Hebrew kxkb layout, which I use in the lyx
> variant. There was no "=" key, and there were two "]" keys. The default
On Thursday 21 May 2009 14:20:48 Dotan Cohen wrote:
> > So, does anybody know where I can get a fully-defined Hebrew layout for
> > kxkb, in the lyx variant? If so, a hint on where to install it will also
> > be appreciated. And finally, how does one convince all the distros to
> > include a full l
> So, does anybody know where I can get a fully-defined Hebrew layout for
> kxkb, in the lyx variant? If so, a hint on where to install it will also be
> appreciated. And finally, how does one convince all the distros to include a
> full layout? It's strange that both Ubuntu and Mandriva have the s
Hi everybody,
I recently upgraded the Linux version on my work machine, and I
noticed something odd about the Hebrew kxkb layout, which I use in the
lyx variant. There was no "=" key, and there were two "]" keys. The
default Hebrew layout had no such artifact.
After comparing my KDE-based
On Thu, Mar 05, 2009 at 12:11:07PM +0200, Yuval Hager wrote:
> I find the lyx variant to be most intuitive. As I don't have time to look for
> the documentation when I need to add diacritics, it makes much sense for פתח
> to be on פ, for קמץ to be on ק, for חיריק to be on ח, and so on. If I don't
On Thursday 05 March 2009, Dotan Cohen wrote:
> 2009/3/5 Yuval Hager :
> > On Thursday 05 March 2009, Baruch Siach wrote:
> >> Hi Yonatan,
> >>
> >> On Thu, Mar 05, 2009 at 08:45:17AM +0200, Jonathan Ben Avraham wrote:
> >> > What is "sta
2009/3/5 Yuval Hager :
> On Thursday 05 March 2009, Baruch Siach wrote:
>> Hi Yonatan,
>>
>> On Thu, Mar 05, 2009 at 08:45:17AM +0200, Jonathan Ben Avraham wrote:
>> > What is "standard Hebrew keyboard layout" (disregarding aleph-tav)?
>>
>> Ho
>> Thanks, Baruch, but those alt- characters don't match _any_ of the
>> layouts on my system! It seems to be closest to Biblical, but the RLM
>> and LRM characters do not work. I have these available keyboard
>> layouts:
>> Default
>> Basic
>> Lyx
>> Phonetic
>> Biblical
>
> Hi Dotan,
> Where do y
> After all these years SI1452 still amazes me. Who would want to replace the
> Shift Numeral keys with nikud? In order to write "SHALOM!" (assuming that
> capital characters are hebrew) you would then need to press [Language
> shift][Shift][1][Language Shift] to get the final exclamation mark. Doe
ng this as a second standard.
> Anyone else have opinions about this?
>
> - yba
>
>
> On Thu, 5 Mar 2009, Dov Grobgeld wrote:
>
> Date: Thu, 5 Mar 2009 11:23:37 +0200
>> From: Dov Grobgeld
>> To: Jonathan Ben Avraham
>> Cc: Baruch Siach , linux-il.
&
On Thursday 05 March 2009, Baruch Siach wrote:
> Hi Yonatan,
>
> On Thu, Mar 05, 2009 at 08:45:17AM +0200, Jonathan Ben Avraham wrote:
> > What is "standard Hebrew keyboard layout" (disregarding aleph-tav)?
>
> How about SI1452?
>
> http://www.qsm.co.il/NewHebr
On Thu, 5 Mar 2009, Dotan Cohen wrote:
Date: Thu, 5 Mar 2009 11:24:40 +0200
From: Dotan Cohen
To: Baruch Siach
Cc: Jonathan Ben Avraham , linux-il.
Subject: Re: RLM mark in standard Hebrew keyboard layout
How about SI1452?
http://www.qsm.co.il/NewHebrew/Key1452e.htm
Thanks, Baruch, but
athan Ben Avraham
Cc: Baruch Siach , linux-il.
Subject: Re: RLM mark in standard Hebrew keyboard layout
After all these years SI1452 still amazes me. Who would want to replace the
Shift Numeral keys with nikud? In order to write "SHALOM!" (assuming that
capital characters are hebrew) you
> How about SI1452?
>
> http://www.qsm.co.il/NewHebrew/Key1452e.htm
Thanks, Baruch, but those alt- characters don't match _any_ of the
layouts on my system! It seems to be closest to Biblical, but the RLM
and LRM characters do not work. I have these available keyboard
layouts:
Default
Basic
Lyx
Ph
ohen , linux-il. > >
>> Subject: Re: RLM mark in standard Hebrew keyboard layout
>>
>> Hi Yonatan,
>>
>> On Thu, Mar 05, 2009 at 08:45:17AM +0200, Jonathan Ben Avraham wrote:
>>
>>> What is "standard Hebrew keyboard layout" (disregarding aleph
Guess that answers the question about RLM/LRM.
- yba
On Thu, 5 Mar 2009, Baruch Siach wrote:
Date: Thu, 5 Mar 2009 09:04:16 +0200
From: Baruch Siach
To: Jonathan Ben Avraham
Cc: Dotan Cohen , linux-il.
Subject: Re: RLM mark in standard Hebrew keyboard layout
Hi Yonatan,
On Thu, Mar 05
Hi Yonatan,
On Thu, Mar 05, 2009 at 08:45:17AM +0200, Jonathan Ben Avraham wrote:
> What is "standard Hebrew keyboard layout" (disregarding aleph-tav)?
How about SI1452?
http://www.qsm.co.il/NewHebrew/Key1452e.htm
baruch
> On Wed, 4 Mar 2009, Dotan Cohen wrote:
>
>>
What is "standard Hebrew keyboard layout" (disregarding aleph-tav)?
- yba
On Wed, 4 Mar 2009, Dotan Cohen wrote:
Date: Wed, 4 Mar 2009 23:13:24 +0200
From: Dotan Cohen
To: linux-il.
Subject: RLM mark in standard Hebrew keyboard layout
Where is the RLM (right to left ma
Where is the RLM (right to left mark) on the standard Hebrew keyboard
layout? I have googled and found that I can configure the Lyx layout
and then the RTM character is at Ctrl-Y, but can I make it Ctrl-{ like
in another popular OS?
Also, where is a list of the Shift characters in Lyx? I have
I thought about this solution. My problem is that I want to use on
both the ALT shift combination to change language. I wish rdesktop had
some "raw" keyboard support..
Thanks,
Hetz
On Mon, Apr 28, 2008 at 12:01 PM, Tomer Cohen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hetz Ben Hamo wrote:
>
>
> >
> > I'm usin
Hetz Ben Hamo wrote:
I'm using rdesktop 1.5.0 (latest) and I found a weird behavior:
when using the standard en-us keyboard layout, it works ok, but trying
to press the hebrew DOT ("nekuda") gives "ץ". When trying the comma,
I'm getting "ת".
Could someone shed some light about this issue?
Nope,
both the "." and the "/" gives me "ץ"
and on top of that, the Q gives me "," and the "W" gives me "." - like
the ancient old hebrew keyboard..
The "fun" part is that if I restart the rdpclient again (not always),
On 28/04/2008, at 12:20, Hetz Ben Hamo wrote:
when using the standard en-us keyboard layout, it works ok, but trying
to press the hebrew DOT ("nekuda") gives "ץ". When trying the comma,
I'm getting "ת".
According to my keyboard layout, you seem to be shifted one key left.
I have nekuda on "
Hi,
I'm using rdesktop 1.5.0 (latest) and I found a weird behavior:
when using the standard en-us keyboard layout, it works ok, but trying
to press the hebrew DOT ("nekuda") gives "ץ". When trying the comma,
I'm getting "ת".
the he keyboard layout works nice, but I cannot switch back to english
On Wednesday May 23 2007, You wrote:
> I simpy don't use KDE's configuration because of that, and use this combo:
> a. install kkbswitch, an alternative kde keyboard switcher
> http://kkbswitch.sourceforge.net/
>
> b. simply add to .bashrc on my account:
> setxkbmap us,il -option grp:alt_shift_togg
ak <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
System: a PC with vanilla Debian Etch installation, with Gnome 2.14.3.6
and KDE 3.5.5 (package version 5:47).
In Gnome, the Hebrew keyboard is properly configured, including LED to
indicate which keyboard is active (Latin or Hebrew).
However, I was not success
On Tuesday May 22 2007, You wrote:
> System: a PC with vanilla Debian Etch installation, with Gnome 2.14.3.6
> and KDE 3.5.5 (package version 5:47).
>
> In Gnome, the Hebrew keyboard is properly configured, including LED to
> indicate which keyboard is active (Latin or Hebrew).
>
System: a PC with vanilla Debian Etch installation, with Gnome 2.14.3.6
and KDE 3.5.5 (package version 5:47).
In Gnome, the Hebrew keyboard is properly configured, including LED to
indicate which keyboard is active (Latin or Hebrew).
However, I was not successful in doing the same in KDE. When
El lun, 14-05-2007 a las 11:08 +0300, Erez D escribió:
> hi
>
> i have an anoying problem with ubuntu when choosing hebrew keyboard
> layout:
I had a similar problem with Kubuntu, but not with Ubuntu. AFAIK the
problem is with KDE and not only with the *ubuntu distros.
> all t
On 14/05/07, Erez D <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
hi
i have an anoying problem with ubuntu when choosing hebrew keyboard
layout:
all the control keys (e.g. ctrl-T for new tab in FF) doesnt work ...
it is probably mapped to CTRL-ALEPH instead, which is no use to me anyway
is there a ubuntu
hi
i have an anoying problem with ubuntu when choosing hebrew keyboard layout:
all the control keys (e.g. ctrl-T for new tab in FF) doesnt work ...
it is probably mapped to CTRL-ALEPH instead, which is no use to me anyway
is there a ubuntu build in solution ?
if not, anyone has a modmap file
--=-Ug3bUmYdmXVr4pAhNZY5
Content-Type: text/plain
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Hi All,
I was able to solve this once and for all (I think).
I've enhanced the il keyboard layer and now when the keyboard layer is
set to Hebrew, I'm still able to get CTRL+a instead of CTRL+shin.
I'm still work
Doesn't work :-/
And I'm running Xorg.
On Mon, 2004-08-16 at 23:11, Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
> On Sun, Aug 15, 2004 at 09:30:15PM +0300, rlinuz wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > When the keyboard layer is set to Hebrew, the CTRL keys (i.e.
> > CTRL+A...CTRL+Z) will not function.
> >
> > Fedora Core 2, KDE
>
On Sun, Aug 15, 2004 at 09:30:15PM +0300, rlinuz wrote:
> Hi,
>
> When the keyboard layer is set to Hebrew, the CTRL keys (i.e.
> CTRL+A...CTRL+Z) will not function.
>
> Fedora Core 2, KDE
Try adding the following to your XkbOptions (or -option parameter of
setxkbmap)
srvrkeys:none
Note tha
managed to set up hebrew keyboard on my KDE, while
> retaining the Alt, Meta, whatever... .
> I used this guide -
> http://www.penguin.org.il/faq/downloads/hebrew_x/6.html and I have this
> command in my .xinitrc - "/bin/cat ~/.xmodmap | /usr/bin/X11/xmodmap -"
> Note t
On Monday 16 August 2004 13:51, ik wrote:
> > It is definitely a bug. Perhaps it shouldn't be fixed in mozilla, but
> > instead it maybe need to be fixed in X, or in the distribution, but you
> > cannot expect every user to tweak there own xmodmap.
>
> Well, I'm one of "those" who think that comput
Haggai Eran wrote:
On Monday 16 August 2004 02:13, ik wrote:
But it's not a bug... it's just keyboard reading... xuv gives you diffrent
values from CTRL+A vs CTRL+Shin and so is in ALT+A,ALT+Shin etc... it's
just telling program to ignore hebrew keyboard... But you will encounter
On Monday 16 August 2004 02:13, ik wrote:
> But it's not a bug... it's just keyboard reading... xuv gives you diffrent
> values from CTRL+A vs CTRL+Shin and so is in ALT+A,ALT+Shin etc... it's
> just telling program to ignore hebrew keyboard... But you will encounter
ing... xuv gives you diffrent values from CTRL+A vs
CTRL+Shin and so is in ALT+A,ALT+Shin etc... it's just telling program to ignore hebrew keyboard...
But you will encounter this problem on every program that does not deal with this situation.
Thats why the first tweak you can do is to contr
On Sunday 15 August 2004 22:59, ik wrote:
> I'm also running debian sid, some of the programs have this problems while
> others not. Konsole (i checked it out afther you wrote) is not having it,
> while Mozilla (every product of them) does have it, and so are many other
> programs.. not all of the
Oh, setting up hebrew was, and still is, a pain. It seems like only
Tzafrir Cohen really knows how to do things right ;-) ...
Anyhow, I've recently managed to set up hebrew keyboard on my KDE, while
retaining the Alt, Meta, whatever... .
I used this guide -
http://www.penguin.org.i
it, and so are many other programs.. not all of them are GTK btw...
I just tried in Konsole, and I was able to break (^C) and to stop (^Z) a
program while using the hebrew keyboard layout.
Tell me more, how do you switch languages? Do you use the kde program (kxkb or
something) or did you s
this): the "Alt Gr" key (at least on my simple
"Microsoft" keyboard it's between the space bar and the "Windows" key
on the right) seems to switch keyboards when it's pressed, so an
"Alt Gr"+"CTRL-C" copied a selected text to the copy bu
I'm running KDE on debian sid, and i don't have this problem.
I just tried in Konsole, and I was able to break (^C) and to stop (^Z) a
program while using the hebrew keyboard layout.
Tell me more, how do you switch languages? Do you use the kde program (kxkb or
something) or did
rlinuz wrote:
On Sun, 2004-08-15 at 21:53, ik wrote:
rlinuz wrote:
Hi,
When the keyboard layer is set to Hebrew, the CTRL keys (i.e.
CTRL+A...CTRL+Z) will not function.
Fedora Core 2, KDE
Any idea?
-S.
I think it self explainning.. but it's hebrew... CTRL+A will CTRL + shin CTRL+Z
will be ctrl+
On Sun, 2004-08-15 at 21:53, ik wrote:
> rlinuz wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > When the keyboard layer is set to Hebrew, the CTRL keys (i.e.
> > CTRL+A...CTRL+Z) will not function.
> >
> > Fedora Core 2, KDE
> >
> > Any idea?
> >
> > -S.
> >
> >
> I think it self explainning.. but it's hebrew... CTR
rlinuz wrote:
Hi,
When the keyboard layer is set to Hebrew, the CTRL keys (i.e.
CTRL+A...CTRL+Z) will not function.
Fedora Core 2, KDE
Any idea?
-S.
I think it self explainning.. but it's hebrew... CTRL+A will CTRL + shin CTRL+Z will
be ctrl+zyn etc..
Cheers,
Ido
--
"The only skills I have the
Hi,
When the keyboard layer is set to Hebrew, the CTRL keys (i.e.
CTRL+A...CTRL+Z) will not function.
Fedora Core 2, KDE
Any idea?
-S.
=
To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with
the word "unsubscribe" in the message b
On Sunday 30 November 2003 18:40, Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
> As of XFree 4.3 the Xkb can mix-and-match Groups. Up until 4.2.1 the
> "il" layout had to assume the the Israeli group will be the second group
> and that the first group will be US-English (see the xkb/symbols/il of
> XFree 4.1.0 - 4.2.1 as
On Sun, Nov 30, 2003 at 06:15:09PM +0100, Arie Folger wrote:
> On Sunday 30 November 2003 10:12, Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
> > What do you mean by 4 layouts?
>
> 4 variants. I assume that the difference is in the layout of certain non
> Alephbetic keys.
As of XFree 4.3 the Xkb can mix-and-match Group
On Sunday 30 November 2003 10:12, Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
> What do you mean by 4 layouts?
4 variants. I assume that the difference is in the layout of certain non
Alephbetic keys.
> As you use Fedora Core 1, you use XFree 4.3. Therefore you can easily
> use one of the two variants of the "il" layo
On Fri, Nov 28, 2003 at 12:39:39PM +0100, Arie Folger wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I followed the recent discussion about developments in the IGLU FAQ, and
> wonder whether somebody could expand on the 4 different keyboard layouts (in
> fact, this needs to be integrated into the KDE help, too). I know that
Hi,
I followed the recent discussion about developments in the IGLU FAQ, and
wonder whether somebody could expand on the 4 different keyboard layouts (in
fact, this needs to be integrated into the KDE help, too). I know that there
are different layouts, but don't have the slightest clue as to w
On Thu, 2 Oct 2003, shlomi wrote:
> Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
>
> > > however, if you are using this method, you shouldn't be using the KDE way
> > > anymore and should use apps like kkbswitch.
> >
> > Which are not on the CD, unfortunetly. I fully agree, though, that kxkb
> > must be rewriten to explo
Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
> > however, if you are using this method, you shouldn't be using the KDE way
> > anymore and should use apps like kkbswitch.
>
> Which are not on the CD, unfortunetly. I fully agree, though, that kxkb
> must be rewriten to exploit the keyboard layouts of XFree 4.3 if possible
On Wed, 1 Oct 2003, shlomi wrote:
>
> Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
> > unlike the text of cheatsheet.txt (and what you read when you press F2)
> > there is a boot-time option 'lang=he' which tries to do something sensible
> > for Hebrew. However the keyboard settings there are:
> >
> > KEYBOARD="il"
> > X
One correction:
On Wed, 1 Oct 2003, Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
> unlike the text of cheatsheet.txt (and what you read when you press F2)
> there is a boot-time option 'lang=he' which tries to do something sensible
> for Hebrew. However the keyboard settings there are:
>
> KEYBOARD="il"
> XKEYBOARD="il"
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> shlomi wrote:
> > I couldn't find it anywhere in the web so i had to build it myself.
> > i guess i'll use if for next Kazit since it's less buggy than the usual
> > KDE switcher.
>
> Why not stick to the X level? Isn't it the "rightest" way to go?
>
> --Amos
i think it
shlomi wrote:
I couldn't find it anywhere in the web so i had to build it myself.
i guess i'll use if for next Kazit since it's less buggy than the usual KDE
switcher.
Why not stick to the X level? Isn't it the "rightest" way to go?
--Amos
==
shlomi wrote:
> however, if you are using this method, you shouldn't be using the KDE way
> anymore and should use apps like kkbswitch.
BTW, debian users: if you're looking for a DEB package, you can find one in
here : (for unstable)
http://t2.technion.ac.il/~shlomil/kkbswitch_deb/
I couldn't f
Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
> unlike the text of cheatsheet.txt (and what you read when you press F2)
> there is a boot-time option 'lang=he' which tries to do something sensible
> for Hebrew. However the keyboard settings there are:
>
> KEYBOARD="il"
> XKEYBOARD="il"
> KDEKEYBOARD="il"
>
Hi,
It seems
/usr/share/keymaps/i386/qwerty/il-heb.gz
(Also on debian).
A reminder: if you happen to get stuck on X with only a Hebrew
keyboard, a quick-fix is to press ctrl-alt-F1 to get to a console
(where X mapping doesn't apply), login as your user ('su - knoppix' in
this case) , and run &
> acording to: http://www.kde.org/info/requirements/3.1.php, konqui can use
> activex's. Anyone knows something about that?
Nope, that was should of work with a part called reaktivate - it's kicked out
now..
Thanks,
Hetz
=
To unsub
ביום חמישי 27 פברואר 2003, 19:07, Hetz Ben Hamo כתב:
> * Tapuz webcam chat - doesn't work (ActiveX)
acording to: http://www.kde.org/info/requirements/3.1.php, konqui can use
activex's. Anyone knows something about that?
- diegp
To
> so now we do know what do you do in your spear time ;)
Well, working at Rotal left me with plenty of free time (same problems with
almost all clients, shitty modems, sending patches which got NOTHING to do
with the problems (anyone got the GCP patches from Rotal? or Via-4in1? ;)
Thank goo
ביום חמישי 27 פברואר 2003, 18:16, Hetz Ben Hamo כתב:
> On Thursday 27 February 2003 05:56 pm, Eli Segal wrote:
> > The applets from netfun, are heavily relay on Microsoft Java
> > and almost all of them wont work at all with mozilla on linux
>
> I contacted Netfun few months ago. They did give a fr
On Thursday 27 February 2003 05:56 pm, Eli Segal wrote:
> The applets from netfun, are heavily relay on Microsoft Java
> and almost all of them wont work at all with mozilla on linux
I contacted Netfun few months ago. They did give a free upgrade to all their
customers, and that upgrade works per
>
> An obvious lame hack is to create an extra group with 8bit chars.
>
> But are yo sure this is "JRE" and not a case of a bad programmer that
> assumes byte=char?
Yes, and I'll tell you why...
If it would only work against MS JVM, then it's a problematic issue from the
programmer side, BUT it
On Thursday 27 February 2003 05:56 pm, Eli Segal wrote:
> The applets from netfun, are heavily relay on Microsoft Java
> and almost all of them wont work at all with mozilla on linux
Well, they DO work, but in order to actually type something in hebrew, you'll
need the "hack" I mentioned in the e
3 5:25 PM
Subject: Sun's JRE and hebrew keyboard in Linux
> Hi,
>
> I don't know why, but this behavior is pretty much irritating...
>
> I'm trying to setup few thin clients to work with some Java based hebrew
chats
> (like Nana, IOL, and some other Netfun based ch
On Thu, 27 Feb 2003, Hetz Ben Hamo wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I don't know why, but this behavior is pretty much irritating...
>
> I'm trying to setup few thin clients to work with some Java based hebrew chats
> (like Nana, IOL, and some other Netfun based chats)...
>
> While it's working OK (in KDE CVS and
Hi,
I don't know why, but this behavior is pretty much irritating...
I'm trying to setup few thin clients to work with some Java based hebrew chats
(like Nana, IOL, and some other Netfun based chats)...
While it's working OK (in KDE CVS and Mozilla), I can only type Hebrew with
the xmodmap hac
ehdad
On Mon, 9 Jul 2001, Micha Feigin wrote:
> How do I create a hebrew keyboard for X/console? There is the default keymap
> for the console which I need to make some changes to. I managed to load a
> keymap using kbdconfig, but it messed up some of the old keys.
>
> Also,
On Mon, 9 Jul 2001, Micha Feigin wrote:
> How do I create a hebrew keyboard for X/console? There is the default keymap
> for the console which I need to make some changes to. I managed to load a
> keymap using kbdconfig, but it messed up some of the old keys.
>
> Also, how do
How do I create a hebrew keyboard for X/console? There is the default keymap
for the console which I need to make some changes to. I managed to load a
keymap using kbdconfig, but it messed up some of the old keys.
Also, how do I make it load automaticaly?
Thanx
Micha Feigin
[EMAIL PROTECTED
On Thu, Mar 01, 2001 at 09:50:43PM +0200, Oleg Goldshmidt wrote:
> Ely Levy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > On 1 Mar 2001, Oleg Goldshmidt wrote:
> > | Yemeni, Saudi, Iraqi, Pakistani. Are we going to make geographical
> > | or ethnic speculations?
> > |
> > that the hebrew names?
> > in en
Ely Levy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On 1 Mar 2001, Oleg Goldshmidt wrote:
> | Yemeni, Saudi, Iraqi, Pakistani. Are we going to make geographical
> | or ethnic speculations?
> |
> that the hebrew names?
> in english pakistanian iraqian .
Yes, it's Saudi, Iraqi, etc in English.
--
Ole
On 1 Mar 2001, Oleg Goldshmidt wrote:
| "Nadav Har'El" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
|
| > It's interesting how Israelis take for granted that we should be called
| > "Israeli" and not "Israelian".
|
| I rather suspect that Anglo-Saxons decided that. The French, as usual,
| beg to differ.
"Nadav Har'El" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> It's interesting how Israelis take for granted that we should be called
> "Israeli" and not "Israelian".
I rather suspect that Anglo-Saxons decided that. The French, as usual,
beg to differ.
> If you think about it for a moment, you'll
> see that mo
On Wed, Feb 28, 2001, Ilya Konstantinov wrote about "Re: Hebrew Keyboard":
> On Wed, Feb 28, 2001 at 08:52:37PM +0200, Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
> > [1] Someone decided that this keyboard is IsraeLy, and not necessarily
> > related to HEbrew. And heb was very keen to sh
On Wed, Feb 28, 2001 at 08:52:37PM +0200, Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
> [1] Someone decided that this keyboard is IsraeLy, and not necessarily
> related to HEbrew. And heb was very keen to show that keymaps relate to
> countries and not to languages (this is irrelevant for us and a bit less
> true for us
Hi
On Wed, 28 Feb 2001, Hetz Ben Hamo wrote:
> I upgraded to XFree 4.0.2 and I installed the hebrew keyboards files:
>
> usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xkb/symbols/he
> usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xkb/symbols/us
> usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xkb/rules/xfree86.lst
> usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xkb/keymap/xfree86
>
> I get hebrew keys, but
Hi,
I upgraded to XFree 4.0.2 and I installed the hebrew keyboards files:
usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xkb/symbols/he
usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xkb/symbols/us
usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xkb/rules/xfree86.lst
usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xkb/keymap/xfree86
I get hebrew keys, but I don't get numbers. I get some weird symbols. same
wi
Hi all
How do i lock hebrew in mandrake7.1 (oidonwloaded the new kbd il file
from tzafir's site) .. and can't lock the keyboard.. so i need always
hold down the leftalt when i type..
thanx
Pavel
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i have mandrake 7 installed.. i selected a israeli keyboard when it
asked me..
then i installed hebrew locales...
added environment variables export LANG=he and export LANGUAGE=he. but
nothing changed
how do i switch my keyboard to type in hebrew and back into english?
i am using gnome and enligh
cent configuration on a 32 MB system, and it
> seems that X and KDE together would not let me load anything heavy.
>
> I have read the Hebrew HOWTO, I have read some other documentation, but
> I still have not fegured out a way to set an optional hebrew keyboard
> layout in my XF86CONFIG
Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
> How do I change the keyboard layout to a hebrew one in X?
> At the moment I use KDE 1.1, which has kjkbd, that does just that. But as
> nice a KDE is, it does require a little bit to much memory (this simple
> kjkbd takes 3.7 MB).
Gnome has an applet that is supposed to d
usually use about 35-40MB.
But I want to install a decent configuration on a 32 MB system, and it
seems that X and KDE together would not let me load anything heavy.
I have read the Hebrew HOWTO, I have read some other documentation, but
I still have not fegured out a way to set an optional hebrew
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