[Bug 1830637] [NEW] Keyboard layout LED stays on after first toggle

2019-05-27 Thread Paulo Fino
Public bug reported:

When using two different keyboard layouts (English and Russian in my
case) and setting xkb-options to use a keyboard LED to indicate the
alternative layout ('grp_led:caps' in my case), in Gnome on Wayland
session the LED turns on after the first time I toggle the layout, nad
then stays on, no matter how many times or in which way I switch
layouts. It's supposed to turn on on switching to Russian and then turn
off on switching back to English. In Gnome on Xorg session, the LED
works correctly, turning off when I switch back to the main layout.

Steps to reproduce:
1. Add a second keyboard language/layout
2. Add 'grp_led:caps' or 'grp_led:scroll' to 
/org/gnome/desktop/input-sources/xkb-options in dconf editor
3. Switch layouts, the respective LED turns on
4. Switch layouts again, the LED stays on under Wayland, but turns off under 
Xorg

** Affects: wayland (Ubuntu)
 Importance: Undecided
 Status: New


** Tags: keyboard wayland xorg

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Title:
  Keyboard layout LED stays on after first toggle

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[Bug 1226962]

2014-03-11 Thread Paulo Fino
Hello everyone!

After months of switching layouts and banging my head against this bug,
I thought I should check LibreOffice settings (I'm using 4.1.5.3 now).
What figures? I did find something. And in just a few clicks.

This is not a bug! It's simply a matter of configuration.

For the regular keyboard shortcuts (like Ctrl+C, Ctrl+V, etc.) to remain
operational in LibreOffice applications while using a non-latin keyboard
layout (like Greek or Russian), go to Tools -> Options -> Language
Settings -> Languages, check the Ignore system input language option,
save, and Bob's your uncle.

Hope this helps.

Cheers!

PS
Technically, though, shortcuts still remain language-dependent. This means if 
you enable this option, you will have to set your document languages manually.

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Title:
  Hotkeys not functional in non-latin keyboard layout in 13.10 and 14.04

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[Bug 1246583]

2014-03-05 Thread Paulo Fino
Hello everyone!

After months of switching layouts and banging my head against this bug,
I thought I should check LibreOffice settings (I'm using 4.1.5.3 now).
What figures? I did find something. And in just a few clicks.

This is not a bug! It's simply a matter of configuration.

For the regular keyboard shortcuts (like Ctrl+C, Ctrl+V, etc.) to remain
operational in LibreOffice applications while using a non-latin keyboard
layout (like Greek or Russian), go to Tools -> Options -> Language
Settings -> Languages, check the Ignore system input language option,
save, and Bob's your uncle.

Hope this helps.

Cheers!

PS
Technically, though, shortcuts still remain language-dependent. This means if 
you enable this option, you will have to set your document languages manually.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1246583

Title:
  All hotkeys of LibreOffice don't work in non-English keyboard layout
  [ubuntu 13.10]

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[Bug 1246583] Re: All hotkeys of LibreOffice don't work in non-English keyboard layout [ubuntu 13.10]

2014-03-05 Thread Paulo Fino
Hello everyone!

After months of switching layouts and banging my head against this bug,
I thought I should check LibreOffice settings (I'm using 4.1.5.3 now).
What figures? I did find something. And in just a few clicks.

This is not a bug! It's simply a matter of configuration.

For the regular keyboard shortcuts (like Ctrl+C, Ctrl+V, etc.) to remain
operational in LibreOffice applications while using a non-latin keyboard
layout (like Greek or Russian), go to Tools -> Options -> Language
Settings -> Languages, check the Ignore system input language option,
save, and Bob's your uncle.

Hope this helps.

Cheers!

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1246583

Title:
  All hotkeys of LibreOffice don't work in non-English keyboard layout
  [ubuntu 13.10]

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[Bug 668415] Re: Movement of Unity launcher

2013-03-25 Thread Paulo Fino
Dear Mark,

Can there be a 180 degree switch? Moving most of what's on the left to
the right (launcher, Ubuntu button, window controls) and vice-versa?

Ubuntu and Unity are the result of an amazing effort millions of people have 
accompanied and contributed to over all these years. My deepest respect for 
that. Unity does fit very well into the new "touch everything" paradigm, that's 
taking over devices whether we want it or not. Still, on the desktop, there is 
one thing about Unity that makes the whole thing feel awkward. It's as if it 
was designed for left-handed users. I have seen this opinion quite some times 
online lately, and I can't help to agree. You just want to flip the desktop 180 
degrees.
Menus and launchers are not that frequently accessed in between launching and 
closing applications, and switching between windows. The human (right-handed) 
brain tends to perceive information on a screen from the top left corner in a 
Z-shaped path. So that corner, from a purely practical point of view, would be 
the most useful for a system/notification tray + clock. And keeping start and 
launcher on the right would feel more natural for right-handed people because 
they wouldn't need to jerk the cursor far left to switch apps, hitting the 
laptop/keyboard while doing it.
I hope you would consider an integrated flipping solution to allow a degree of 
customization which wouldn't break the other wonderful thinks Ubuntu brings 
people.

Thank you for your continuous effort to promote Linux.

Kind regards,
Psulo Fino

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Title:
  Movement of Unity launcher

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