Eduard Bloch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > - Most keyboards have AltGr-e as Euro > - the French keymap (relative to US layout: <AltGr><]>) > - the Hungarian keymap (relative to US layout: <AltGr><\>) > - the Norwegian and Swedish keymap (relative to US layout: <Shift><4>) > > Did I miss anything or is something wrong?
I bought my i386 laptop in the US with a US qwerty keyboard. Soon after I bought it the keyboard sunk slightly near the plus key, it did not affect my typing, but it was visible, so I did not bother getting it fixed. Moved back to the UK and it was coming close to the end of the one year warranty period. Sent the laptop off so they could fix some other problems that had shown up, and asked for the keyboard to be fixed whilst they were at it. I knew that the policy was to replace with local parts, so when I got the laptop back I was not surprised that it had a UK qwerty keyboard, took me a while to get used to the new layout, but not a problem. The Euro is on the `4' of my keyboard, I think it should display a Euro when used with the `Alt gr' modifier. Most UK keyboards that have been made in the last few years have a Euro symbol in the same place. I have only seen one exception, my Dad bought a new computer last month, and it has the Euro symbol on the `e' key, otherwise it is similar to other UK keyboards I have seen (it has a £ symbol) and so on. The machine is running Windows, and `Alt gr' + `e' gives an accented `e' of some kind, while `Alt gr' + `4', gives the Euro (nasty looking character in the typeface it was using). So I guess it is just some cheap keyboard, made abroad, and they put the euro symbol in the wrong place. -- The enemy's gate is down