Sergey == Sergey Udaltsov [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
If keyboards which use I32 with the kbd driver generate I158 in
evdev I'd make I32 be WWW and if they generate I180 when using evdev
then HomePage.
Sergey Ghm. How could I find this out without having that particular keyboard
Sergey in
I suspect WWW is more likely than HomePage.
Yes, I suspect the same thing. That's why I asked.
But I see that some of the keyboards have both, often with I32 as
HomePage and something else as WWW.
Yes, for those cases we have to distinguish...
Maybe the bsd src for converting from usb to
Here I published the keycodes used for WWW and HomePage (and
VendorHome, just in case):
http://spreadsheets.google.com/ccc?key=pCdLapzoHyYYFYQ5pKV3-QA
Another suspect keycode: I02. May be, we just should state that I32
would be for HomePage, I02 would be for WWW?...
Of course, this is only for
Sergey Udaltsov wrote:
Of course, this is only for kbd driver (which is nearly deprecated
these days, isn't it?;)
Except on non-Linux systems, where kbd is still used since evdev can't be.
--
-Alan Coopersmith- [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sun Microsystems, Inc. - X Window
Hi folks
Today I looked at the usage of I32 in symbols/inet and found
interesting thing. There are 31 cases where it is used as XF86WWW and
17 cases where it is used as XF86HomePage. Could anyone explain the
substantial difference between these 2 keysyms (in the context of
desktop)? May be, we
James,
Thanks for the insightful information - really interesting.
Unfortunately, as we all know, XKB is not that smart - it cannot
distinguish application launch context from application control
context. So a keysym has to be mapped to the keycode unconditionally.
My question was: what would be
Sergey == Sergey Udaltsov [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Sergey Unfortunately, as we all know, XKB ... cannot distinguish
Sergey application launch context from application control context.
Apologies for ambiguity. These are two completely different keys at the
USB level; it is really the keyboard