On 12/18/13 01:24, Baptiste Daroussin wrote:
> On Wed, Dec 18, 2013 at 02:21:56AM +0200, Aleksandr Rybalko wrote:
>> On Tue, 10 Dec 2013 23:49:38 +0100
>> Andreas Tobler <andre...@freebsd.org> wrote:
>>
>>> On 10.12.13 14:43, Tijl Coosemans wrote:
>>>> On Tue, 10 Dec 2013 15:31:44 +0200 Aleksandr Rybalko wrote:
>>>>> That keyboards have no Shift key for that? :)
>>>>> I will be glad to apply your changes, but I have to know how it
>>>>> should be controlled.
>>>>>
>>>>> RU and UA PC keyboards have same 3 symbols '2', '"', '@'
>>>>> To get '2' i have to press only '2'
>>>>> To get '@' I have to press Shift+'2'
>>>>> To get '"' I have to switch to UA or RU and press Shift+'2'
>>>>>
>>>>> Ahh, or use some called Third-Level (IIRC) in Xorg terms. Temporary
>>>>> lang switch. Which commonly mapped to one of Alt. Right?
>>>>> So R-Alt+Shift+'2'?
>>>>
>>>> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AltGr
>>>
>>> Thanks Tijl!
>>>
>>> To get the @ I have to press AltGr + '2'.
>>> There are combinations where I have to press AltGr+Shift. e.g to get
>>> the 'broken bar, ¦', AltGr+Shift+'7'.
>>>
>>> Andreas
>>>
>>
>> Hello Andreas and Tijl!
>>
>> Since I think not a whole world have AltGr key (read as "not most
>> keyboards on the Earth") :)
>> Think it is OK to use R.Alt as an Alt by default, and enable AltGr with
>> sysctl kern.vt.enable_altgr.
>>
> I tend to disagree with you, lots of keyboards mapping are concerned here.
> 

alt-gr is there on most, if not all, western european keyboard layouts,
and probably more layouts than that.  Have a look at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AltGr_key
for instance.
Regards!
-- 
Niclas
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