Am Montag, 2. Februar 2004 23:38 schrieb Melchior FRANZ:
Who? The Empress? She was actually called Sisi ...
http://dict.leo.org/?search=sissylang=de
That a solution for non-US-keyboards is necessary was never argued about,
and actually discussed a few times already. It's just that nobody
Erik Hofman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Update of /var/cvs/FlightGear-0.9/data/Docs/keyboard
In directory baron:/tmp/cvs-serv21524/keyboard
Added Files:
VERSION map.pdf map.tex
Log Message:
Add a per aircraft keyboard refference
I appreciate your effort - on the other hand I feel
* Martin Spott -- Monday 02 February 2004 11:25:
I appreciate your effort - on the other hand I feel required to note,
that there are still unsolved issues because some of the key controls
work different on different national keyboards.
I know. But having documentation about the current state
Am Montag, 2. Februar 2004 11:51 schrieb Melchior FRANZ:
Don't know. I'm Austrian.
No, seriously: I can't stand German keyboards. Their layout is brain-dead,
so I'm using an US-American one. I'd say that it's up to those who suffer
the most to fix the unfortunate situation. (I use the compose
* Ronny Standtke -- Monday 02 February 2004 18:46:
What exactly do you despise about the layout of German kezboards :-)
The places where they put unimportant things like @, [, ], {, }, \,
etc. Face it: German keyboards may be suitable for secretaries or poets,
but they are a royal pain for
The places where they put unimportant things like @, [, ], {, }, \,
etc. Face it: German keyboards may be suitable for secretaries or poets,
but they are a royal pain for technical stuff like programming.
If you look back in history (damn, I'm not that old) keyboards _have_ been
designed
* Ronny Standtke -- Monday 02 February 2004 23:01:
But dont be a sissy,
Who? The Empress? She was actually called Sisi ...
I am a developer myself [...] and the German keyboard never troubled me
while programming.
But not a TeX programmer, right? :-}
But thats quite OT, because