Re: Changing text direction in KDE apps
On 07/03/2008, Hetz Ben Hamo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: in your ~/.qt/ there is a file called qtrc In this file, there's a line: useRtlExtensions=false Change it to: true restart your application, and use CTRL RIGHT-SHIFT to change dir to RTL and CTRL LEFT SHIFT to ltr. Hetz Thanks. I did not have that line, so I added it to the end of the file. However, after resetting X, it did not enable the feature as you mention. Could you post you qtrc file so that I might add the line in the right place? Thanks. Dotan Cohen http://what-is-what.com http://gibberish.co.il א-ב-ג-ד-ה-ו-ז-ח-ט-י-ך-כ-ל-ם-מ-ן-נ-ס-ע-ף-פ-ץ-צ-ק-ר-ש-ת A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text. Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing?
Re: Hamakor is a PRIVATE organisation?
Amos Shapira wrote: That's what it is, according to Ynet's article about the ministry of (un)education: http://www.ynet.co.il/articles/0,7340,L-3515622,00.html Maybe someone should make them correct this? --Amos (For the slow minded - Hamakor is a PUBLIC organisation, as far as I'm aware). Well, no. It does not belong to the general public, only members can vote, and it is not sponsored by the public (and, specifically, the government). It is a group of people who decided to work together for a cause, and Hamakor has no obligation to represent anyone else but them. The core thing is that, unlike companies, there is no public or private non-profits. In fact, an American relative was not aware of the acronym NPO (Non profit organization). He said the American term is NGO (non governmental organization). Shachar = To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word unsubscribe in the message body, e.g., run the command echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Changing text direction in KDE apps
Sure, it's attached. Hetz PS: Make sure you're using at least QT 3.x, and not using it with VNC On Fri, Mar 7, 2008 at 10:19 AM, Dotan Cohen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On 07/03/2008, Hetz Ben Hamo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: in your ~/.qt/ there is a file called qtrc In this file, there's a line: useRtlExtensions=false Change it to: true restart your application, and use CTRL RIGHT-SHIFT to change dir to RTL and CTRL LEFT SHIFT to ltr. Hetz Thanks. I did not have that line, so I added it to the end of the file. However, after resetting X, it did not enable the feature as you mention. Could you post you qtrc file so that I might add the line in the right place? Thanks. Dotan Cohen http://what-is-what.com http://gibberish.co.il א-ב-ג-ד-ה-ו-ז-ח-ט-י-ך-כ-ל-ם-מ-ן-נ-ס-ע-ף-פ-ץ-צ-ק-ר-ש-ת A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text. Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing? -- Skepticism is the lazy person's default position. my blog (hebrew): http://benhamo.org qtrc Description: Binary data
Re: Changing text direction in KDE apps
On 07/03/2008, Hetz Ben Hamo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Sure, it's attached. Hetz PS: Make sure you're using at least QT 3.x, and not using it with VNC Thanks. How do I check my Qt version number? qt --version didn't do it! And no, I'm not on VNC. Dotan Cohen http://what-is-what.com http://gibberish.co.il א-ב-ג-ד-ה-ו-ז-ח-ט-י-ך-כ-ל-ם-מ-ן-נ-ס-ע-ף-פ-ץ-צ-ק-ר-ש-ת A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text. Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing?
Re: Changing text direction in KDE apps
Adding that what already suggested, you can fire up a qt configuration utility (GUI). In Gentoo at least, its called qtconfig (and it appears that its part of the QT libraries I have on the machine. Under tab interface you can find a check box named enhanced support for languages written in right-to-left. Check it, log out of X, login back, and check again... . Boaz. Dotan Cohen wrote: Does anyone know how to change the direction of text in KDE applications from LTR to RTL and back? In Mozilla apps Ctrl-Shift-X switched direction, for those who did not know. Dotan Cohen http://what-is-what.com http://gibberish.co.il א-ב-ג-ד-ה-ו-ז-ח-ט-י-ך-כ-ל-ם-מ-ן-נ-ס-ע-ף-פ-ץ-צ-ק-ר-ש-ת A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text. Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing? To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word unsubscribe in the message body, e.g., run the command echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Changing text direction in KDE apps
rpm -qi qt (in RPM based distributions) Thanks, Hetz 2008/3/7 Dotan Cohen [EMAIL PROTECTED]: On 07/03/2008, Hetz Ben Hamo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Sure, it's attached. Hetz PS: Make sure you're using at least QT 3.x, and not using it with VNC Thanks. How do I check my Qt version number? qt --version didn't do it! And no, I'm not on VNC. Dotan Cohen http://what-is-what.com http://gibberish.co.il א-ב-ג-ד-ה-ו-ז-ח-ט-י-ך-כ-ל-ם-מ-ן-נ-ס-ע-ף-פ-ץ-צ-ק-ר-ש-ת A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text. Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing? -- Skepticism is the lazy person's default position. my blog (hebrew): http://benhamo.org
Re: Changing text direction in KDE apps
On 07/03/2008, Boaz Rymland [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Adding that what already suggested, you can fire up a qt configuration utility (GUI). In Gentoo at least, its called qtconfig (and it appears that its part of the QT libraries I have on the machine. Under tab interface you can find a check box named enhanced support for languages written in right-to-left. Check it, log out of X, login back, and check again... . Thanks. For archive diggers, in Ubuntu there is qt3-qtconfig and qt4-qtconfig. I installed qt3-qtconfig, which is run with the command qtconfig, and I could set the settings. In fact, the enhanced support for languages written in right-to-left checkbox was already checked, I assume because I added the config line earlier today. However, even with a restart I cannot switch text alignment in KDE applications. Dotan Cohen http://what-is-what.com http://gibberish.co.il א-ב-ג-ד-ה-ו-ז-ח-ט-י-ך-כ-ל-ם-מ-ן-נ-ס-ע-ף-פ-ץ-צ-ק-ר-ש-ת A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text. Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing?
Re: FSCK Error after upgrade Ubuntu 7.1
Hi, On Wed, Mar 5, 2008 at 1:55 PM, Lev Olshvang [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: It had finished successfully and required the reboot. After reboot I got blank screen filled with and so I used the SCD rescue to reinstall grub. So I assume you installed grub correctly at this time? Several strange things happened : 1. fsck on / runs only e2fsk although I know my / is ext3 Not strange. Ext3 is only an extension to ext2. (not exactly, but close enough) There is no problem to mount ext3 filesystem as ext2. fsck is only one of a bunch of tools referred to with the no. 2. (resize2fs is another example) On Kubuntu, e2fsck and fsck.ext3 are hard links for the same inode (check it using 'ls -li') 2. when boot from Hard Disk, grub does not see /boot/vmlinuz (my boot partition is on thirst slice of HD), but it sees it as /vmlinuz The same with initrd That's correct. grub looks for the kernel and the initrd relatively to the boot partition. Also, a file called /boot/grub/device.map defines the mapping between grubs aliasing (hd0 is an example for an alias) and the physical devices. So, you can see in the menu.lst (grub.conf in redhat based distros) that the root line is hd0,0 (the second 0 refers to the first partition of hd0, which is /boot on your case) 3. When grub finally boot the system fsck error on / and was thrown into maintanence shell: fsck 1.40.2 (12-Jul-2007) fsck.ext3: symbol lookup error: fsck.ext3: undefined symbol: et_ext2_error_table fsck.ext3: symbol lookup error: fsck.ext3: undefined symbol: et_ext2_error_table fsck died with exit status 127 Your upgrade did not finish cleanly and completely and there is a missing dependency for the fsck tool. Since / is mounted read-only Try remounting the filesystem r/w (mount -o remount,rw /) I tried to boot from SCD and fix filesystem but SCD thinks it is ext2 and OK Try mounting the filesystem and specify ext3 explicitly (-t ext3). good luck. - Noam