Re: 5th value in xmodmap

2015-06-07 Thread wettstae
> I haven't found why my keyboard produces keycode 92 for AltGr, though the > layout > uses " = 108;" so it should produce 108. Maybe you looked at the xev output line 'XKeysymToKeycode returns keycode'? If multiple keys produce the same keysym (as here, RALT and LVL3 both produce ISO_Level3_Shi

Re: 5th value in xmodmap (was: ctrl-alt-2 as at (@))

2015-06-07 Thread Ingo Krabbe
I just found one other useful addition to my study below is that the ISO_Level3 is part of the ISO 9995 standard: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO/IEC_9995 > My researches had led me to the statements, that the way xmodmap specifies > the keycode and > modifier combinations isn't flexible enoug

Re: 5th value in xmodmap (was: ctrl-alt-2 as at (@))

2015-06-07 Thread Ingo Krabbe
My researches had led me to the statements, that the way xmodmap specifies the keycode and modifier combinations isn't flexible enough to describe modern Keyboards and the symbols that are produced from them. I assume its the "XKEYBOARD" X Server Extension that configures the keyboard through x

5th value in xmodmap (was: ctrl-alt-2 as at (@))

2015-06-07 Thread Matthias Apitz
Regarding the ayer's discussion, it pop'ed up a small question re/ xmodmap; if I do: $ xmodmap -pke | fgrep ' 24 =' keycode 24 = q Q q Q at Greek_OMEGA at Greek_OMEGA I see that the at-sign in my environment is assigned as the 5th keysym to the keycode 24 and Alt-gr q gives @, even more Alt-gr